Toronto: Kramers Ergot 7 Book Launch Tonight!

KRAMERS ERGOT 7 TOURS TORONTO
Presented by The Beguiling Books & Art

Featuring Shary Boyle, Sammy Harkham, Kevin Huizenga, John Pham, Ron Rege Jr., Souther Salazer, and Seth!

Thursday December 11th, 2008, 7PM-10PM
918 Bathurst Street (Former Buddhist Temple)
1 Block North of Bathurst TTC [Google Map]

http://facebook.com/event.php?eid=30811628299
FREE

Kramers Ergot is the name of the groundbreaking comix anthology that has taken up the tradition of Art Spiegelman and Francoise Mouly’s RAW MAGAZINE in bringing the most innovative, challenging, and beautiful comics work to the masses… and volume 7 is the greatest yet! This massive new tome includes brand new comics from some of the world’s greatest living graphic novelists, and this December several of the contributors will be in Toronto to officially launch the new book!

Kramers Ergot Volume 7 is sure to top many critics’ Best Comics Of 2008 Lists, thanks to its all-star line-up of contributors including Seth, Chris Ware, Shary Boyle, Andrian Tomine, Dan Clowes, Ivan Brunetti, and Gabrielle Bell to name just a few. But equally as stunning is the book’s presentation: Kramers Ergot Volume 7 is a massive 16 inches by 21 inches in hardcover, with each contributor offering up an original double-page spread of brand new work for the book. Kramers Ergot Volume 7 will make its official debut at this launch event, and will not be available in stores before then. It is sure to be in short supply this holiday season.

“People are focusing on the enormous size of this book, and with good reason,” says Peter Birkemoe of The Beguiling. “But the sheer talent assembled into this volume, from established names and friends of The Beguiling like Seth and Shary Boyle, to relative newcomers including John Pham, that’s what will have people lining up for this one.”


The Kramers Ergot Volume 7 Tour will feature appearances by series Editor and contributor Sammy Harkham, as well as Shary Boyle (Otherworld Uprising), Kevin Huizenga (Ganges, Curses), John Pham (Sublife), Ron Regé Jr. (Skibber Bee Bye), Souther Salazar (Destined for Dizziness), and Seth (Palookaville, Clyde Fans) and publisher Alvin Buenaventura. At 7:30PM the contributors will be interviewed on stage by The Beguiling’s Peter Birkemoe, and a signing will follow. Doors open at 7PM.

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The event will be held at the beautiful new event space ‘918’ located at 918 Bathurst. A former Buddhist Temple, the space is a classic A-frame building located just a block north of Bathurst Subway station and 3 blocks from The Beguiling.– Chris

5 Questions For Bryan Lee O’Malley

scott_pilgrim_vol_5_final_200.jpgComics212.net: So Scott Pilgrim 5 is coming out in February?

Bryan Lee O’Malley: Yes. Feb 4th in-store.

Comics212: Your art’s been getting tighter and tighter with every volume, in my humble opinion. Do you think your artistic style or ideology has evolved as you’ve worked on the series, or do you think it’s more that your abilities have been honed to the point where you put down on paper exactly what’s been in your head all along?

BLOM: I think it’s a little of both. I definitely am more comfortable with my abilities – I’m at the point where I can usually put a page together in a satisfying way, and draw the things I need to draw. My Inking is still pretty variable, but ink and brushes and paper are so fickle, so I like to blame the tools.

I think my “style goals” have also evolved (or developed from nothing), but it’s all in tandem. Can’t have style if you can’t execute it properly.

Comics212: I understand that you’re not taking on any other projects until
Scott Pilgrim is done (commendable!). But if you could draw one thing that wasn’t SP right now, what would it be?

BLOM: Honestly, nothing. I have a few ideas for future projects, but I’m enjoying the gentle sound of them percolating in the back of my head. Part of the Great Experiment of Scott Pilgrim is to increase my overall abilities to the point where I can start future projects from a totally different place, craft-wise, than where I started Scott Pilgrim.

Comics212: Not that you get a say, but, as a dude who’s got a movie coming out based on his comic book, would you be happier if the trend of big comics-to-film adaptations stayed popular through the SP film release? Or would you rather it died-down and cleared the deck a little so that the Scott Pilgrim film was judged independent of other efforts?

BLOM: I really think the trend/wave of comics adaptations has little in common with Scott Pilgrim, aesthetically or culturally. All I can think of is superheroes, and while it uses a little bit of that language, Scott Pilgrim is much broader, and the movie studio talks about it in those terms (like “four-quadrant hit!”). Really, though, I feel like the wave has already crested, we’re doomed, and Scott Pilgrim will probably be the last major studio picture before we all go to the salt mines.

Comics212: How do you feel about much of your oldest work remaining online in various places? I’ve seen you give shit to Halliday or whoever when they bring up ‘Winged Misa‘ or ‘World End Solution‘ but you do archive that stuff. Is it tempting to revisit your past characters and ideas?

BLOM: I like to keep my old stuff around (some of it) for those people who are interested in looking at my development as a creator, or whatever. Aspiring cartoonists can look at my stuff from ten years ago and realize that it’ll all be okay and they can’t possibly suck that bad. And I give shit to the people who bring up my old stuff because they’re usually bringing it up in order to give me shit.

Is it tempting to revisit? Kinda yes and kinda no. A lot of old ideas just naturally get recycled or organically re-created in new things. I mean, elements of Scott Pilgrim date back to high school. But then, many aspects of my unfinished works were just derivative of bad influences, like superficial cues from anime or video games, that sort of thing.

I think the germs of the unfinished works, and sometimes characters and titles, are things that I keep in the back of my head in case they ever apply again.

So, yes and no.

Bryan Lee O’Malley used to live with me, but now he lives in North Carolina. He’s the creator of Scott Pilgrim, a character and series of graphic novels published by Oni Press. His website is radiomaru.com. I will be 5 Questionsing more creators soon.

Quick Linkblogging

Here’s a few things that you might want to take a look at.

– Are you a frustrated writer? Jim Munroe, author of numerous novels as well as the excellent 2007 graphic novel Therefore, Repent! offers up 10 Ways To Get Your Writing Out There at his blog. The post comes out of a talk that I sort-of commissioned from Munroe from this fall’s The Word On The Street festival. Accompanying each “way” is an illustration by Ramon Perez, author of the webcomic Kukuburi amongst other works.

– Lynda Barry was just as lovely in person as she seems in all of these wonderful interviews that keep popping up. I got to meet her in Toronto at The International Festival of Authors this past fall. The most recent Barry interview comes courtesy of Canadian lit-mag The Walrus. Check out Part One and Part Two.

– I’ve started contributing to the group-blog at Tor.com. I’ll be sticking mainly to the subject of comic books, and even then only stuff of interest to the sci-fi and fantasy readers that visit the site. My first post is a wrap-up/overview of the cancellation of Blue Beetle from DC Comics, and all of the responses to it. It’ll be published sometime tomorrow, so bookmark Tor.com and subscribe to their feed reader in anticipation. Please?

Edit: And it’s up. http://www.tor.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=blog&id=9514. I’d love a bit of feedback on this actually, if you’ve got any.
– Christopher

Just A Reminder – New York Comic Con Pro-Reg Closes Today

If you’re a comics professional planning on braving the windy streets of New York this February for the fourth New York Comic-Con, this is the last day to get free/discounted registration at the New York Comic Con website, http://newyorkcomiccon.com/.

I just checked it out, and it looks like retailer weekend badges are going to run $10 this year (Diamond had been making them available for free to retailers), which is still a pretty significant discount off of the weekend ticket price. I usually get at least $10 of enjoyment out of the con-floor, so I’m not worried. What I really need to get, somehow, is an exhibitor badge…

– Christopher