Books received 1/20/09

Let’s take a quick look to see what’s arrived in the mail here at the Geek Compound.

House of Mystery Vol. 01: Room and Boredom Written by Matthew Sturges and Bill Willingham Art by Luca Rossi, Ross Campbell, Sean Murphy, Zachary Baldus, Steve Rolston and Jill Thompson Cover by Sam Weber

Promo copy:
"This is the next Vertigo pillar to watch!" — Wizard

Welcome to the House of Mystery! Filled with peculiar, otherworldly characters from all walks of life, this series from Matthew Sturges (JACK OF FABLES) and Bill Willingham (FABLES) focuses on five people trapped in the reality-warping House of Mystery, a supernatural bar where tales are the legal tender and only the finest storytellers are patrons! But how – and why – they’re stuck inside is all just a little piece of the puzzle in this first volume, which collects issues #1-5 of the all-new acclaimed series and special bonus material.

Download issue #1

Dragon in Chains by Daniel Fox

Promo copy:

From award-winning author Daniel Fox comes a ravishingly written epic of revolution and romance set in a world where magic is found in stone and in water, in dragons and in men–and in the chains that bind them.

Deposed by a vicious usurper, a young emperor flees with his court to the small island of Taishu. There, with a dwindling army, a manipulative mother, and a resentful population–and his only friend a local fishergirl he takes as a concubine–he prepares for his last stand.

In the mountains of Taishu, a young miner finds a huge piece of jade, the potent mineral whose ingestion can gift the emperor with superhuman attributes. Setting out to deliver the stone to the embattled emperor, Yu Shan finds himself changing into something more than human, something forbidden.

Meanwhile, a great dragon lies beneath the strait that separates Taishu from the mainland, bound by chains that must be constantly renewed by the magic of a community of monks. When the monks are slaughtered by a willful pirate captain, a maimed slave assumes the terrible burden of keeping the dragon subdued. If he should fail, if she should rise free, the result will be slaughter on an unimaginable scale.

Now the prisoner beneath the sea and the men and women above it will shatter old bonds of loyalty and love and forge a common destiny from the ruins of an empire.

Outcast (Star Wars: Fate of the Jedi, Book 1) by Aaron Allston

Promo copy:

THE NEXT CHAPTER IN THE EXTRAORDINARY HISTORY OF THE STAR WARS GALAXY BEGINS HERE. . . .

After a violent civil war and the devastation wrought by the now-fallen Darth Caedus, the Galactic Alliance is in crisis–and in need. From all corners, politicians, power brokers, and military leaders converge on Coruscant for a crucial summit to restore order, negotiate differences, and determine the future of their unified worlds. But even more critical, and far more uncertain, is the future of the Jedi.

In a shocking move, Chief of State Natasi Daala orders the arrest of Luke Skywalker for failing to prevent Jacen Solo’s turn to the dark side and his subsequent reign of terror as a Sith Lord. But it’s only the first blow in an anti-Jedi backlash fueled by a hostile government and suspicious public. When Jedi Knight Valin Horn, scion of a politically influential family, suffers a mysterious psychotic break and becomes a dangerous fugitive, the Jedi become the target of a media-driven witch hunt. Facing conviction on the damning charges, Luke must strike a bargain with the calculating Daala: his freedom in exchange for his exile from Coruscant and from the Jedi Order.

Though forbidden to intervene in Jedi affairs, Luke is determined to keep history from being repeated. With his son, Ben, at his side, Luke sets out to unravel the shocking truth behind Jacen Solo’s corruption and downfall. But the secrets he uncovers among the enigmatic Force mystics of the distant world Dorin may bring his quest–and life as he knows it–to a sudden end. And all the while, another Jedi Knight, consumed by the same madness as Valin Horn, is headed for Coruscant on a fearsome mission that could doom the Jedi Order . . . and devastate the entire galaxy.

Without Warning by John Birmingham

Promo copy:

In Kuwait, American forces are stacked up, locked and loaded for the invasion of Iraq. In Paris, a covert agent, a woman who inhabits a twilight of lies and death, is close to cracking a terrorist cell. And just north of the equator, a forty-foot wood-hulled sailboat, manned by a drug runner, a pirate, and two gun-slinging beauties, is witness to the unspeakable. In one instant, all around the world, for politicians and peasants, from Gaza to Geneva, things will never be the same. A wave of inexplicable energy has slammed into the continental United States.

America, as we know it, is gone. . . .

WITHOUT WARNING

Now U.S. soldiers are fighting a war without command or control. A correspondent records horrors for no one. Washington is gone and the line of succession is in tatters; the functioning remnants of government are in Pearl Harbor, Guantánamo Bay, and one desperate, isolated corner of the Northwest. For the jihadists, it’s Allah’s miracle. For Saddam, it’s a chance to attack. Iran declares war on an America that doesn’t exist–except in the hearts and souls of the men and women who want it to.

In this astounding work of alternate fiction, John Birmingham hurtles us into a scenario that is unimaginable but shatteringly real: a world of financial ruin where a cloud of noxious waste–from America’s burning cities–darkens Europe, while men and women in offices around the globe struggle to make decisions that cannot hold and opportunists unleash their secret demons.

From a slick Texas lawyer who happens to be in the right place at the right time to a hard-working city engineer in Seattle who becomes his terrified city’s only hope, from the cancer-stricken secret agent to a drug runner off the Mexican coast and a U.S. general in Cuba, Without Warning tells a fast, furious story of survival, violence, and a new, soul-shattering reality. The first in an epic trilogy that will leave readers breathless and astounded, Without Warning offers a world without its policeman, its Great Satan, or its savior–as an unknowable future struggles to be born.

C.O.U.S.: Reflections from Rick’s Collection #15

While "researching" a recent Nexus Graphica, I had reason to look through my collection of Comics Of Unusual Size. This set of the big and small and odd of comicdom offers many gems. Deciding that I really should share some of these largely forgotten and sometime rare pieces, I’m taking you through a tour of the more interesting selections.

Click on images for full sized versions.

An interesting combination of lucha libre and noir (lucha noir), Sonambulo relates the adventures of the eponymous masked-Mexican wrestler private eye! Following the publication of the first full-sized issue of the initial series, Sonambulo: Sleep of the Just (1996), the mini-comic Sonambulo Sneak Preview #2 came out in 1997.


Page from Sonambulo Sneak Preview #2

For his efforts, creator Rafael Navarro received a grant from the prestigious Xeric Foundation. In the over ten years since the character’s introduction, Sonambulo has became a cult figure with numerous comic book appearances, multiple foreign language editions, and even a potential feature film!


Inside Back Cover to Sonambulo Sneak Preview #2

Navarro contributed storyboards to Rugrats and (fittingly) ¡Mucha Lucha!, produced numerous lucha noir tales for the legendary From Parts Unknown magazine (collected in Lucha Noir), and continues to develop new Sonambulo adventures.


Back Cover to Sonambulo Sneak Preview #2

C.O.U.S.: Reflections from Rick’s Collection #14

While "researching" a recent Nexus Graphica, I had reason to look through my collection of Comics Of Unusual Size. This set of the big and small and odd of comicdom offers many gems. Deciding that I really should share some of these largely forgotten and sometime rare pieces, I’m taking you through a tour of the more interesting selections.

Click on images for full sized versions.

Like many of the objects from my shelf, I have no idea how I acquired the Defective People Ashcan Edition #1. This odd 1999 publication, created by Edward Vertigo— he claims that’s his real name. With a name like Klaw who am I to argue?– relates a non-nonsensical tale starring Delirious-Ed, a floppy-eared rabbit, and Hello-Amy, an anime-inspired cat, centering around food.


From Defective People Ashcan Edition #1 (Spring 1999)

Currently, Vertigo lives and works in the Austin area, primarily in the computer gaming field.


Back cover

News to me!

At Lewis Shiner’s Fiction Liberation Front, I stumbled across this interesting piece of info in the author’s notes that accompanies the legendary essay "Confessions of an Ex-Cyberpunk."

In the original 1991 New York Times op-ed piece Shiner wrote:

Quote:
As one reader told me: "We’re the first generation that spent our entire lives around computers and video games. We don’t see computers as threats; we see them as toys. Cyberspace [computer-generated reality] is just an enhancement of video games. We can see the future. We can see this happening."

In his notes among several other interesting tidbits, Shiner divulges this "shocking" information:

Quote:
By the way, the "one reader" I quote is my friend Rick Klaw, who’s gone on to write a lot of criticism.

This was certainly news to me. I’m very familiar with the essay. It elicited some serious discussion within the sf field. And even though I was hanging out with Shiner at the time, I did not realize that "reader" was me until I read his revelation.

If you’ve never read "Confessions of an Ex-Cyberpunk," it offers a unique insider’s account of the rise and downfall of the Movement.

C.O.U.S.: Reflections from Rick’s Collection #13

While "researching" a recent Nexus Graphica, I had reason to look through my collection of Comics Of Unusual Size. This set of the big and small and odd of comicdom offers many gems. Deciding that I really should share some of these largely forgotten and sometime rare pieces, I’m taking you through a tour of the more interesting selections.

Click on images for full sized versions.

Before they worked on their first Star Wars comics, created the cult phenomenon Maxell Strangewell, or published the first tales of the Hunter S. Thompson-inspired Captain Freebird, the Fillbäch Brothers produced the 1997 mini-comic Memories of Green.


Memories of Green back cover

Limited to 250 signed and numbered copies, Memories of Green contains four short sequential tales and two pieces of flash fiction (including a Captain Freebird prose story).

Each story relates a tale of minor rebellion.


"The Metal Machine. Or: Beyond Empyrean II" p.1 (Memories of Green, 1997)


"The Metal Machine. Or: Beyond Empyrean II" p.2 (Memories of Green, 1997)

The prose stories include an illustration.


"The Man Who Stole Time" (Memories of Green, 1997)

Overall, an excellent product that successfully showcases the many talents of the Fillbäch Brothers.

Books received 1/15/09

Let’s take a quick look to see what’s arrived in the mail here at the Geek Compound.

The Domino Men by Jonathan Barnes

Promo copy:

In an earlier century, Queen Victoria made a Faustian bargain, signing London and all its souls away to a nefarious, inhuman entity. Now, generations later, the bill has finally come due. . . .

Jonathan Barnes caused a considerable splash in the literary pool when he dove in with his head-spinning debut, The Somnambulist, a novel of the truly odd and exceptional that the Washington Post called "strange, magical, and darkly hilarious . . . an original and monumental piece of work" and Denver’s Rocky Mountain News dubbed "the best fantasy novel of the year." In his second endeavor, the acclaimed author returns us to a strikingly similar world—albeit at a different time—ushering fortunate readers into his latest breathtaking cabinet of curiosities.

Henry Lamb, an amiable and anonymous file clerk, pushes paper in the Storage and Record Retrieval section of the Civil Service Archive Unit. His life has always been quiet and unremarkable—until the day he learns that he’s expected to assume the covert responsibilities of his universally despised grandfather, now lying comatose in the hospital.

Summoned to the gargantuan Ferris wheel known as the London Eye, Henry receives his orders from Dedlock, a gilled and wrinkled old gentleman eternally floating in a pool of amniotic fluid. London, it seems, is at war, resisting an apocalyptic fate foisted upon it by a long-dead queen. A shadowy organisation known (to very few) as the Directorate wishes to recruit Henry to the cause. All he has to do is find "the girl" and save the world from the monster Leviathan, who can already taste the succulent metropolis that will soon be his to devour. Simple enough.

But there are formidable enemies lining up to oppose Henry, all gathering in and around the royal family. His Royal Highness, Crown Prince Arthur Aelfric Vortigern Windsor—the sniveling, overbored, underappreciated sole heir to the British throne—has been shaken from his resentful malaise by grisly, seductive visions of unrestrained power . . . and by an extremely potent narcotic called ampersand. And an unspeakable evil lurks in the cellar of 10 Downing Street: the twin, serial-slaying schoolboy nightmares, the Domino Men—so-called for their hideous desire and terrifying ability to topple every towering edifice in the city, one after the other . . . just for a giggle.

I thought so highly of Barnes’ first book The Somnambulist that I included it in my portion of this year’s "What Is Best In Life" feature. The Domino Men moves high up on my list of must reads for 2009.

The Steel Remains by Richard Morgan

Promo copy:

In just a few short years, Richard K. Morgan has vaulted to the pinnacle of the science fiction world. Now he turns his iconoclastic talents to epic fantasy, crafting a darkly violent, tautly plotted adventure sure to thrill old fans and captivate new readers. The Steel Remains is the first of a trilogy–a stunning reinvention of the fantasy genre that places Morgan in the elite company of modern mythmakers like China Miéville and George R. R. Martin.

A dark lord will rise. Such is the prophecy that dogs the footsteps of Ringil Eskiath–Gil, for short–a washed-up mercenary and onetime war hero whose world-weary cynicism is surpassed only by the quickness of his temper and the speed of his sword. That sword, forged by a vanished eldritch race known as the Kiriath, has brought him unlooked-for notoriety, as has his habit of poking his nose where it doesn’t belong.

Gil is estranged from his aristocratic family, but that doesn’t stop his mother from enlisting his help in freeing a cousin sold into slavery. Grumbling all the way, Gil sets out to track her down. But it soon becomes apparent that more is at stake than the fate of one luckless young woman. Grim sorceries that have not been seen for centuries are awakening in the land. Some speak in whispers of the return of an all-but-legendary race known as the Aldrain, cruel yet beautiful demons feared even by the Kiriath.

Now Gil and two old comrades–Egar, a fierce warrior from the savage Majak tribes, and Archeth, a half-Kiriath fighter still mourning her departed brethren–are all that stand in the way of a prophecy whose fulfillment will drown an entire world in blood. But with heroes like these, the cure is likely to be worse than the disease.

Rasl Volume 1: The Drift by Jeff Smith

Promo copy:

Cartoon Books proudly presents Jeff Smith’s new adventure series, RASL – a stark, sci-fi series about a dimension-jumping art thief, a man unplugged from the world who races through space and time searching for his next big score – and trying to escape his past. In this first of three graphic novels, Rasl faces an assassin’s bullet and stumbles across a mystery that not only threatens to expose his own illicit activities, but could also uncover one of the world’s most dangerous and sought after secrets!

Volume 1 of Smith’s long awaited follow-up to his now-classic YA fantasy epic Bone. Unlike his previous series, this beautiful oversized book bares the warning: "contains mature content." Another title that moves to the top of the must read stack!

C.O.U.S.: Reflections from Rick’s Collection #12

While "researching" a recent Nexus Graphica, I had reason to look through my collection of Comics Of Unusual Size. This set of the big and small and odd of comicdom offers many gems. Deciding that I really should share some of these largely forgotten and sometime rare pieces, I’m taking you through a tour of the more interesting selections.

Click on images for full sized versions.

Brian Biggs‘s 7 3/4" x 7 3/4" graphic novel Frederick & Eloise (Fantagraphics, 1993) remains one of the prides of my collection. Biggs expertly uses his Gorey-esque stylings to relate this unusual, disturbing love story.


Page from Frederick & Eloise

Judging from the book’s back cover, I wasn’t alone in my assessment.

The quality isn’t the only reason I hold this copy in high regard.


Inscription from title page of my copy

I first learned of Brian Biggs when he lettered "Scales" (written by Lewis Shiner Art by Carlos Kastro) in my anthology Modern Perversity (Blackbird Comics, 1991).


Page from "Scales", Modern Perversity (Blackbird Comics, 1991)
Written by Lewis Shiner Art by Carlos Kastro Letters by Brian Biggs

Soon after, Brian sent me a proposal for Frederick & Eloise. Okay, actually, he sent me the entire book photocopied at the original art size of 3 3/4" x 4 1/2"! His initial plan was to produce the book with one panel per page as opposed to the two per page in the final version.


Sample page from original Frederick & Eloise submission


Envelope from original Frederick & Eloise submission

Even though Blackbird (where I was editing at the time) passed on the project (I don’t recall why), I managed to convince Brian to illustrate the second issue of my never completed series Wings. Through no fault of the creators, the entire project fell apart. Brian completed six incredible pages.


Unpublished p.9 from Wings #2
Words by Rick Klaw Art by Brian Biggs


Unpublished p.11 from Wings #2
Words by Rick Klaw Art by Brian Biggs

I did include a story by Brian in my Eisner-nominated anthology Weird Business.


Page from "The Stranger", Weird Business (Mojo Press, 1995)
by Brian Biggs

Brian Biggs has gone on to a career as a successful, award-winning children’s illustrator. He’s currently developing Frederick & Eloise as a film.

C.O.U.S.: Reflections from Rick’s Collection #11

While "researching" a recent Nexus Graphica, I had reason to look through my collection of Comics Of Unusual Size. This set of the big and small and odd of comicdom offers many gems. Deciding that I really should share some of these largely forgotten and sometime rare pieces, I’m taking you through a tour of the more interesting selections.

In the late eighties and early nineties, cyberpunk was all the rage. Not just in literature but as a lifestyle complete with it’s own fashions, language, and media. The mini-comic, kata sutra in Beyond Cyberpunk! was produced by Mark Frauenfelder & Gareth Branwyn to promote their Computer Lab production Beyond Cyberpunk: a Do-It-Yourself Guide to the Future. This was 1991, long before the days of the World Wide Web or even cd-roms. Computer Lab offered their essential guide on four 800k floppies for $29.95! It came complete with this mini-comic and an intro booklet. Thankfully, the entire contents are now available for free online.

The comic itself is nothing special. More or less an advertisement for the far more interesting stack. Basically, our heroine kata sutra saves the day thanks to the vital info found within Beyond Cyberpunk: a Do-It-Yourself Guide to the Future.


Interiors of kata sutra in Beyond Cyberpunk!

Perhaps my favorite part of the comic is at the very end of the story that informs the purchaser that they "MUST lick this sticker before booting up the program." How Timothy Leary of them!

And let’s not forget the advertisement for the PRINT version of boing boing, the precursor of both the Boing Boing blog and Wired!

Top Graphic Novels for 2008

Diamond announced their best selling graphic novels for the year.

2008 TOP 10 GRAPHIC NOVELS & TRADE PAPERBACKS

Quantity
Rank Description Price Publisher
1 WATCHMEN TP $19.99 DC Comics
2 BATMAN THE KILLING JOKE SPECIAL ED HC $17.99 DC Comics
3 JOKER HC $19.99 DC Comics
4 Y THE LAST MAN TP VOL 10 WHYS AND WHEREFORES $14.99 DC Comics
5 WALKING DEAD TP VOL 08 MADE TO SUFFER $14.99 Image Comics
6 BATMAN DARK KNIGHT RETURNS TP $14.99 DC Comics
7 FABLES TP VOL 10: THE GOOD PRINCE $17.99 DC Comics
8 WANTED GN $19.99 Image Comics
9 BUFFY THE VAMPIRE SLAYER SEASON 8 TP
VOL 02: NO FUTURE FOR YOU $15.95 Dark Horse Comics
10 Y THE LAST MAN TP VOL 01 UNMANNED $12.99 DC Comics

Also included were the rankings of the top comic book publishers. (These figures include individual comic book issue sales.)

2008 TOP COMIC BOOK PUBLISHERS

QUANTITY SHARE RETAIL SHARE
MARVEL COMICS 45.82% 40.81%
DC COMICS 31.67% 29.94%
DARK HORSE COMICS 5.05% 6.49%
IMAGE COMICS 3.32% 3.73%
IDW PUBLISHING 2.92% 3.08%
OTHERS 11.22% 15.95%

While this is all very interesting, I would like to see the rankings for all bookstores. I imagine that Viz sneaks in there, probably 3rd behind Marvel and DC. Also, with the popularity of Batman and name recognition of Superman, I wouldn’t be surprised to see DC overtake Marvel in general bookstores.

The other thought is what about traditional comic publishers like Fantagraphics whose entire line is geared toward older, general bookstore readers? Where do they fit in when all the numbers are tabulated?

And of course there are the traditional prose publishing houses such as Del Rey, Pantheon, and Scholastic who have produced popular graphic novels. How do they affect the overall picture?

All things to ponder as comics continue to move away from the specialty stores and into the mainstream.