zine, [zeen] noun. 1. abbr. of fanzine; 2. any amateurly-published periodical. Oxford Reference

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Tuesday, September 23, 2008

Epa Isidoro, anarcopunk fanzine from Caracas, Venezuela



 
 

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via punks is hippies - the blog! by Slobodan Burgher on 9/11/08



Hi Tony! Other zine from Venezuela:

"Epa Isidoro, anarcopunk fanzine from Caracas, print in 2004. Los Crudos history (Chicago), interview with Apatia No, comic, disc reviews and more... Horror movies design with spanish language".


Thank you... i send more stuff later.

Salud y anarquia

Rafael

DOWNLOAD PDF HERE


 
 

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Kids Comics



 
 

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via M.A.D. Rants by symphonyoftheuniverse@gmail.com (MAD) on 8/24/08

So with Mid-Ohio Con coming up PANEL is working on releasing a kids themed book. This is what I referenced in Scripting for Kids Comics many moons ago.

This is the back cover Brent Bowman created:


Nifty aint it? I'm working on making an illustrated version of Aesop's Fable the Fox and Crow. Should be fun stuff so I just wanted to share. I love kids books. I recently found a copy of Ten Apples Up On Top for my son. I only had to beg him for two days in a row before he'd let me read it to him. I bet he would have preferred another Star Wars video game. But he seemed to like it just fine once he was willing to give it a chance.

 
 

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Stainless Steel Lens #1



 
 

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via (title unknown) by admin on 8/24/08

Stainless Steel Lens #1 / $1 / 7 by 14 (about) / 24 Pages / Love Bunni Press, 2641 Euclid Heights #3, Cleveland Heights, OH 44106 This is probably the third photo zine I have ever gotten in my hands for review in NF/IS. The first was by an Albertan, and I believe it was [...]

 
 

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Friday, August 22, 2008

i'm not angry (anymore)




 
 

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via Zine Writers Guild by Mrs. Noggle on 7/23/08

this  is a mini zine i did for the 24 Hour Zine Thing!
it's about my anger issues. (it also contains drawings by my very talented husband!)


I'm not angry(anymore)

it's a dollar from My Etsy Store. 
get it
here.


 
 

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Fw: Weird Science 1



 
 

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via Comics Village Reviews by John Thomas on 7/23/08

How often are archival comics this much better than the originals? Rarely this beautiful, thorough and fun. These classic tales have never looked so good.

 
 

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[sic] #30






 
 

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via (title unknown) by admin on 7/23/08

Even though I received not one, but two copies of this magazine months before I received #31, here I am still doing the reviews in a reversed order. For those who do not know what [sic] was, it was this excellent little zine that collected all sorts of writings, poetry, interviews, reviews, pictures, art, anything, [...]

 
 

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Saturday, August 16, 2008

Lucky Vol. 2 Issue 2 By Gabrielle Bell



 
 

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via The Daily Cross Hatch by bheater on 7/17/08


Lucky Vol. 2 Issue 2
By Gabrielle Bell
Drawn & Quarterly

What makes your life so damned interesting? It's one of those key questions that has steadily devolved into cliché, over the years, something that every artist flirting with autobiographical modes of expression must ask themselves, a question that will no doubt be repeated ad naseum with every subsequent interview and public appearance, a phenomenon that seems to go double in the world of independent comics, where autobiography is very nearly the default form of narrative structure. For those who have led lives chalk full of extraordinary circumstances, the answer is clear. For the vast majority of us, things are decidedly less cut and dry.

Until recently, perhaps—with her large-scale acclaim in the comics medium and forthcoming forays into the world of film—Gabrielle Bell largely occupied the latter category, leading a fairly typical existence as a young artist, bouncing around various big cities. It's a life that carries over into this second volume of her largely autobiographical series, Lucky. This second issue is a collection of vignettes whose subject matter really deviates from the sorts of goings-on to which, one expects, a large portion of her readership can directly relate. Any atypical experiences, like, say, co-scripting a film with Michel Gondry, largely occur outside 8.5 x 5.5 card stock that envelops the book.

Such narrative modesty proves a wise decision on Bell's part, never straying too far from the everyday—oft internal—struggles that defined its predecessors. And while it will doubt be fascinating to watch her sometimes introverted protagonist confront that mythological beast, Hollywood, should she pen her own seemingly inevitable version of Our Movie Year several issues down the line, the author clearly still has ample fodder to mine from more seemingly banal topics.

Unlike Pekar, that spiritual forefather to every subsequent work of graphic autobiography that has dabbled in the mundane, however, Bell's magic doesn't always rely solely on life's in-between moments. Rather she often opts to let her visuals paint their own truths, be it through overly literal translations of a friend's story that she's chosen to reappropriate, or fantastical graphic depictions of one of her own otherwise straightforward tales, like her struggle to wean herself off of Myspace, which culmitnates with a panel in which the author is stabbing her page's physical personification (ostensibly stabbing herself) in the chest, whilst dousing a wall of flames in the hall it occupies with a canister of gasoline.

The book's other highlights seemingly occupy the opposite end of the emotional spectrum. Bell's storytelling is oft at its best when at its most quiet and internally reflective. The most powerful moments of "When I was Eleven," a brief childhood aside that closes out the book, occur in a handful of largely wordless panels that make up much of the story's midsection. Narration would have no doubt seemed a touch overbearing, juxtaposed with the emotionally powerful silent images of a young Bell walking alone through an autumn leaf-covered summer camp.

It's a lesson Bell demonstrates that she has happily learned at various moments in the latest issue of Lucky, which, while growing more complex visually—thanks in no small part to Bell's far more confident lines and newfound affinity for shading—regularly finds the author more confident working with fewer words. As Bell's visual style has come more into its own, she has proven herself more and more willing to let it relieve her text of much of its storytelling load. It's Bell's increasing mastery in the delicate balance of these two sometimes opposing forces that make even the most banal moments of her life so incredibly readable.

–Brian Heater


 
 

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Tuesday, August 12, 2008

Second Street #1



 
 

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via (title unknown) by admin on 7/14/08

This magazine is just too short to do a proper reviewing of. However, I will try my best to properly review it. First off, it has as a cover one of the cutest little girls that I've ever seen. There can be said to be about 3 articles in this magazine. These articles are [...]

 
 

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she's so very... issue 11!



 
 

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via Zine Writers Guild by melissa ann! on 7/13/08



issue number eleven. 2.0 oz $3.00
38 half sized pages.
text with full color cover designed by Meghan Weinstein.
winter/spring (january - may) 2008.
I hope to make 2008 a year full of new experiences! This issue documents my first trip to California and other new and exciting things I'm trying to accomplish, details of my booking a show with The Old Haunts (featuring Tobi Vail from Bikini Kill), being interviewed for Hannah Neurotica's Zine Core radio show, JERK ALERT! recording our first "real" album and my continued attempts at dealing with sexuality, relationships and life. It also includes an interview with actress/musician Krysten Ritter (from Veronica Mars and Gilmore Girls) and my friends answer my two favorite music questions! It's a great issue and features a full color cover, which is another first!

you can purchase it via snail mail for $3, or via paypal for $3.50 - i'm sorry, but i can't accept trades at this time : ( but if you are desperate for a zine and can't afford the price, please contact me and we'll try to work it out! xoxoxoxoxo







for $3.50

 
 

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Sunday, August 10, 2008

Small Press Review (Mother Planet)



 
 

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via M.A.D. Rants by noreply@blogger.com (MAD) on 7/13/08

Okay, I've got two of these right'chere in front of me. Mother Planet is a nice little fanzine which circulates in the gaming stores round these parts. Which reminds me, I should go visit the Guardtower sometime soon. Side note: on a quick google search for the Guardtower's url, I rapidly found a forum where my husband was posting away. Ah, gamers. Gotta love them.


Mother Planet is put together by a collective of four: Mike Getridge, Graeme Henson, Tim Razler, and Ed Shields. They seem to have a few rotating contributors also, who they thank on the front page of each issue. I had the pleasure of meeting Ed once IRL, the test of them remain mystery men to me. Really, I should be hunting these guys down, at least through the interwebs and saying hidey--hidey--hidey--ho. In the tune of Minnie the Moocher, ala Danny Elfman in the Forbidden Zone:



Okay, maybe I shouldn't do that. Maybe there are better ways to say hello.

So on to the review. Basically, this magazine features a few short articles. It is printed on legal sized paper (8.5x14) and is about 8 pages long printed on front and back. The overall graphic design is very well done for a small publication. My repressed inner editor approves of the graphic design and notes that the text is aligned very well along the the end of each article, with a good amount of runaround on the pictures and small advertisements throughout. My less repressed non-prick non-editor self forgives the fact that the small page numbering header at the top of the page is occasionally cutoff.

As you can tell by the covers, this is a humorous fanzine. The short articles contain gaming advice, movie reviews, gaming reviews and comic book reviews. I enjoyed reading Ed's Kung Fu Christmas Review, in which he identifies the top 5 Asain martial arts movies (in his opinon, of course). Which are Shogun Assassin, Sanjuro, Yojimbo, The Legend and Return of the Dragon. I still need to see Shogun Assassin. I also got a kick out of Tim Razler's scathing review of the comic book adaption of City of Heroes.

The back page of the Mother Planet has a listing of gaming store locations around Ohio and an events listing. I imagine that it is circulated at said gaming stores: Alley Cat Games & Comics, Armoury Games, British Paper Mill, Comic Town, Darkwood Manor, Dave's Clubhouse, the Guardtower, The Laughing Ogre, The Soldiery & Ravenstone games. So next time you are getting your comics & gaming fix, check the free table and see if you can pick up some issues.

 
 

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Penny Reads a Zine



 
 

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via Marek's Blog on www.MarekBennett.com by Marek on 7/11/08

PhotoByJulieBaudler1.JPGI was so happy to finish my zine for Teen Zine Week and bring it home tonight. It's a new edition of the Henniker*Star, similar to past editions, but eight whole pages long! It's also the perfect size for a cat to read, and most of the articles… nay, ALL the articles are tailored to a feline audience. (It has a lot of news about the ongoing cat elections, for example.)

I showed the cat newspaper to Penny. At first, it was kind of hard to get her attention…

DSCN5288.JPG

But once she saw an article about her own catpaign for Cat President, she was hooked:

DSCN5289.JPG

Now she's a regular reader!

DSCN5285.JPG


 
 

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KSENOFOBIJA # 4



 
 

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via punks is hippies - the blog! by Papst Benedikt XVI on 7/12/08

Hello zine lovers! Well, I don't know much about this fanzine, but I'm sure you know that the title comes from the word Xenophobia. I got this fanzine from a friend but I don't have a clue where he got it. It's from Croatia (a place called Našice) and it's also written in croatian; it was published somewhere in 1998/1999. Format is A4. It has a lot of concert reports (G.B.H., The Vibrators, Monte Paradiso festival in Pula and other great local gigs), punk photographs, crossword on the back side, new bands, Našice punk scene, adventurous stories about being a punk, getting drunk and other funny and/or serious stuff. Just a good ol' fanzine :) hope you like it. Cheers! dunjchi


 
 

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Saturday, August 9, 2008

Scorpi-Oh #3



 
 

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via (title unknown) by admin on 7/11/08

1/2 size - 24 pages. This zine is completely different from most others that I've seen since it deals exclusively with mix tapes. All the magazine is is mainly lists and different descriptions of each of the mixtapes, which seems like a pretty bland topic for a zine, but Joolie makes it interesting by [...]

 
 

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Small Press Review (Sunday Comix)



 
 

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via M.A.D. Rants by noreply@blogger.com (MAD) on 7/10/08

Here we have the "Sunday Comix Jams", and this is the book that got this whole small press reviewing party started.

A comic jam is basically like a music jam. I imagine that is where the term comes from. A band sitting together each one contributing to the overall song, having a "jam" session.

In a comic jam, one artist starts a panel and then passes the page around so that the next artist can add a panel to it, and so on and so on until the page is filled. The end result is usually something like someone's game of mad libs. Part of the problem with this though, is that, who wants to read someone else's game of mad libs? Especially if the mad libs are full of injokes and potty humor.

Comic jams are fun to make, sometimes, they are fun to read. But that is the problem. At least as I see it. I wonder if someone has the same complaint about 24 hour comics. Having an understanding of what 24 hour comics are, maybe a bit more leeway should be given...but comics should be fun to read, hell, I think everything except maybe that prospectus report from your insurance company should be fun to read.

Sunday Comix Jams
features (among other things) extreme close ups of an ass, piles of shit sold on ebay, and bird dispensing suicide advice and plenty of ways to kill Max Ink. At times it is very humorous, but for the most part it is just what you'd imagine going panel to panel - random. Really really random. The art is varied, as one can only imagine, and some panels are rendered much much better then others.

I really like the back page though, which is very much an example of Mike Lucas' humor and art style. Appropriate since Mike Lucas is the one who drew it. This book was published in 2003. There are 23 contributors listed on the inside back page. 23! I recognize only a handful of those names as continuing members of Sunday Comix.

I gave plenty of copies of this book away at Gem City Comic Con, but flipping through it, I thought, why not do something that showcases the group's work a little better? So I pushed Max Ink a bit and got the ball rolling for a new publication called Sunday Comix Showcase. It is that publication which I am writing all these small press reviews for. That and my sending out everything to zine libraries and clearing my shoebox so it can be ready to refill with the next batch of trades I make at SPACE.

It is always good to have something to give away. I know what a comic book jam is now, but only because I've done a few of them. The first time I was asked to do one, I had no idea what was being requested of me. In website design, part of the goal is to make everything as easily and instantaneously comprehensible as possible. That is why "Don't make me think" is a great book on web design.

At one of my shows, a casual browser looked at my table and asked "Are those greeting cards?" It took me a moment to realize what he was talking about. My books. He thought they were greeting cards.

I feel like I need to create a giveaway that explains to people what small press comics are. I have a wonderful collection in this shoebox here, all different sizes, different styles, some screen printed, some photocopied, some produced through print on demand. I can look at all those and see comics, comics, comics. But other people might not know that at first glance. That is obviously something which is on my mind, see my last blog for more on that idea.

Sunday Comix Showcase was one idea of a giveaway that I thought might benefit the whole group. Each person taking a page for their particular style. Letting their cartoons show the world what it is they do. It has actually grown far beyond that. For one, the Wexner Center had quite a lineup of cartoonists coming in town for their Jeff Smith: Bone Exhibit. One of the members of Sunday Comix was able to get an interview with Harvey Pekar at the Ohioana Book Festival. Another member of Sunday Comix has written an article about the correlation between comics and music. I'm curious to see how the final presentation will come out.

I'm taking advantage of my insomnia tonight instead of letting it take advantage of me, but that is all I have to say about this particular book.

 
 

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Friday, August 1, 2008

Small Press Reviews (Ray Tomczak)



 
 

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via M.A.D. Rants by noreply@blogger.com (MAD) on 6/26/08

Ray Tomczak is rather dedicated. There is a long list of websites in which his comics appear, on drunk duck, comic space, smackjeeves, webcomicsnation and wasted-potentialcomics.blogspot.com. That is only one of his blogs. He has several. A more complete list of his links are located on his blog.

The first comic I have here from Ray is Fit 2 Print. This is a mini which looks like it may have been printed 2 up on an 8.5x11 sheet and then cut in half. It is a collection of the Wasted Potential comic strips that appeared in Columbus, Ohio newspapers, "The Atomic Tomorrow" and Columbus Alive in 2005-2006, along with the reprinted Pop Darts strips from "The Atomic Tomorrow" and bios of Wasted Potential's main characters.

The back of this comic contains a little bio on Ray himself. It talks about how he majored in Communications at Clarion University of Pennsylvania and produced the comic Norm's Dorm for their student newspaper, The Clarion Call. He revived the lead characters of Norm's Dorm into a new strip called Wasted Potential which has appeared in Oh! Comics; Rap Sheet, the Official Newsletter of the Small Press Syndicate and of course the newspapers I mentioned above.

I also found Ray listed in the Denver Zine Library, so I don't know how much of a minor favor sending his books out might be in this case. But hey, at least that is another zine library to send books to. The list that I am using for sending these out is here: www.zinebook.com/resource/libes.html

Before I get too sidetracked, I'm going back to this review. Fit 2 Print contains newspaper strip style comics, most are Wasted Potenial but a few of them are Pop Darts a lot of these strips are available online for free if you follow the links you'll see what I'm talking about.

In Fit 2 Print, we follow around the life of the main character Norm, other characters include Norm's sister, Norm's roommate Bill Warner and Bill's on-again-off-again girlfriend Sheila. Generally these strips are about 4 or 5 panels long, with a gag line at the end.

Norm is a cartoonist with a day job working in a fast-food drive thru. Norm's bouts of self-loathing and depression can be clocked, and often are by Norms semi-calloused roommate and buddy Bill Warner. See what I mean below:


 
 

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Cheapest SOBs #1

Cheapest SOBs #1
16 Pages Pocket Size
$1

Holy crap. This may be the funniest and all-around best zine ever. Written as a series of single frame comics, these two or three sentence stories tell the story of Kelly's insanely cheap grandparents. I laughed my freakin ass off. My only complaint is it ended too soon! I hope Kelly never runs out of material, and I look forward to more.

Kelly Froh
706 Belmont Ave East #4
Seattle WA 98102
www.scubotch.com




Review first appeared in Zine World

Friday, July 11, 2008

Night of the Locust zine Issue 4 is out now.



 
 

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via Thumped - Home Publishing by Grenouille on 7/9/08

Night of the Locust zine Issue 4 is out now.

This issue houses interviews with Frigits and Class Destruction, articles by Dirtbag, Note Vole, Sarah Usher and Trev Meehan, a short story by Kieran Griffin as well as reviews and a piece on busting wheel clamps.

It costs one euro from : Kollin, No. 3 Shanakiel Place, Sundays Well Road, Cork. E-mail : neverinamillion@gmail.com

I'll keep ye posted on who has it in Galway and beyond.

If anybody wants to take some to sell, get in touch.

I'll happily trade for other zines, demos or mixtapes.

 
 

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I do not want you to leave

Indy Media Reviews - June 2008

Zine Review - I do not want you to leave

June 27th 2008 22:38


I do not want you to leave, By Jacinta Bunnell: I do not want you to leave is a high-production value litzine with several well-told short stories. These aren't the sort of stories you and just blow through and zip, you're done, these are stories where it's clear the author has taken a bit of thought and has a bit of practice in writing, which is always refreshing to see in a litzine. Jacinta's introduction explains the title's name, odd as it is. The interior pages are well laid out, and the binding is hand down with embroidery thread of various colours. Of the stories therein, I personally was drawn to "Coke Tricks" which, while initially is a story about the properties of Coke on automotive paint is actually a deeper discussion about the priorities of friendships and gender issues. I also enjoyed, "Fruit Stripes" having consumed many sticks of the gum in question as a youth. It ends with an interesting, albiet surreal story entitled, "Scratch". I liked the variety of stories in this zine, and would like to see an even greater diversity in future. 24 pages, Black and White, photocopies, Digest sized $2.00

Paradox, #12, Spring 2008

Paradox, #12, Spring 2008

Paradox, #12, Spring 2008


There are fewer stories in issue #12 of Paradox due to the presence of the longest piece the 'zine has published yet, a novelette by David Erik Nelson. All these stories have to do with war, either between cultures or nations. Though there are a couple of settings that have become very familiar to longtime readers of Alternate History, the handling is fresh and interesting. In short, this is a strong issue, the stories well written and complex.


The first two stories take place in the most familiar settings. The first, A.C. Wise's "Strange Fruit," is set in the South during the time of slavery. Stories set in this time period tend heavily toward retro-justice. This one begins when Ceri, a young slave, returns home bleeding horribly. Seems that Master Charlie, the plantation owner, had taken advantage of her, and she got rid of the result…at the cost of her own life. But not before she has something to say to him. At that point, the story veers off into the seriously weird. Master Charlie is married, with a daughter who isn't quite all there. His wife has issues with that, and with her life in general. Master Charlie cared about the slave girl, he cares about everyone, but does he see them as people or as objects? Speaking of objects, what is he going to do about the horrible things now hanging from the plantation's trees? It's easy to reduce plantation owners to cardboard cutouts of Snidely Whiplash, but Wise avoids that, delivering a creepy story in which the bizarre and fantastic elements serve to highlight realistic moral and emotional issues.


Shakespearian England has long been a staple setting for Alternate History, with or without elements of the fantastic. During the recent fin-de-siècle, John Dee popped up in most of the stories I saw—though he's far less interesting a historical character than Agrippa, Melancthon, or Paracelsus, to name a few of his contemporaries on the continent. Since the turn of the millennium, he seems to have been replaced by that slashy bad boy, Christopher Marlowe.


Marie Brennan's contribution to the iconography of Kit in her "The Deaths of Christopher Marlowe" is confined to observing Marlowe's "fine-boned face" and his "long-fingered hands." Brennan delivers a taut, lapidary triptych depicting what might have happened that 30th of May, 1593. Her scholarship is sure, her sense of pace impeccable. The story weaves in actual testimony, reflecting the many faces truth wore during the Age of Astraea.

It seemed singular to him, then, that the war as he experienced it should be notable chiefly for its awful silences.

That sentence occurs near the beginning of Nick Wolven's "Señor Hedor," a dark, beautifully written story set at the end of the Spanish Civil War—a war which the Germans won, aided by their ally Franco.

Alfonso is in charge of three men as they poke about what appears to be an empty cloister. They are starving, looking for food, when a machine gun opens fire on them and wounds one of the men. They retreat into a room where they find a dead German soldier—who becomes Señor Hedor, the word meaning "stink" or "stench." Sounds and silences are the tools Wolven uses as he spins his tale of four—no, five—men, examining meaning and the splintering of custom, culture, and civilization by the brutal hammer of war.


Set in China during 1450 B.C., "Plastromancer" by David Sakmyster is another very dark look at the effects of war. Down the left side, the illustration depicts Chinese oracle bone script. A plastromancer divines the future from the cracks in turtles' shells—made while the creatures are systematically burned alive. Xian Li used to be the village's Diviner until her region was conquered by the Shang. She's been replaced by Zhai Tong, who is desperate to find the future that the Shang overlords want. Though they have their own form of divination, the Shang fear a last reading done by the locals, which predicted their downfall through someone born in the village. Though they took savage steps to make certain that future would not come to pass, they are still uneasy. Like many people made desperate by circumstance, Xian Li has made the shift from civilized behavior to survival; what she does, and why, forms the rest of this painful and powerfully absorbing story.


That brings the reader to the story mentioned above, David Erik Nelson's "Tucker Teaches the Clockies to Copulate." Set in Lost Creek, Utah, after the Long War that defeated the Confederacy (after Sherman marched on Atlanta with his mechanized Chinese mechanomen), this concerns the period after the slaves were freed. The same pen stroke that accomplished the end of slavery also set the mechanical beings free. The ones that settled near Lost Creek found space out on a mesa and built a second generation, a little more human looking.


The narrator is a displaced man of Japanese descent, known locally as Doctor Kansas, a veterinarian. There is mystery hinted at in his past—he must at one point have been a physician—but now he only does private types of procedures, of which the locals are ashamed. He's unacceptable socially, being Asian, but unmolested as he cruises around town observing people, especially Dickie Tucker, a veteran of the war who is a drunk, a hashish smoker, and who had lots of personal experience with the mechanomen, or "Clockies," during the war. Drunken Dickie tries to teach the Clockies human activities, which is largely ignored by the locals until he tries to teach them sex. When the locals realize that the Clockies have taken their mimicry a step further, a massive lynch mob is organized.


The story is poignant, sad and funny, bitter and hopeful, and altogether amazing in its examination of exactly what it means to be human—and to live among humans. It makes a terrific end to a good issue.


The Fix - http://thefix-online.com

What It Is by Lynda Barry



 
 

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via The Daily Cross Hatch by farfalla1278 on 6/17/08


What It Is
By Lynda Barry
Drawn and Quarterly

What It Is is many things. Part autobiographical comic, part watercolor and collage, part instructional manual, and part workbook, the book is that rare breed that tries to be many thing at once and succeeds in its own grand ambitions, transitioning from one section to the next rather gracefully. Author Lynda Barry successfully arranges the different parts of the book so that they compliment each other nicely, giving each other value and depth that they wouldn't necessarily have on their own.

What It Is would be far less interesting as a straight autobiography. Or just collage. Or a book about how to write. Barry's collage pages, which reveal some of the inner workings of her mind with their clever and thoughtful essay questions—"When images come to us, where do they come from?"—resonate with her autobiographical comics because of the thematic links she creates. The comics depicting Barry's personal struggle to find her own creativity and maintain it make the writing instruction section much less pedantic and much more exciting, because we know that she's struggled as we have. The existence of the book itself gives the how-to section credibility as well, because knowing that Barry has created such a fantastic work using the methods she teaches means there's gotta be something to it.

Granted, I am a writer who is a sucker for books that encourage and try to teach you how to write. But even if that's not your interest, What It Is is still worth a look, because Barry's amazing abilities as an artist and her great sense of humor shine throughout. The collage "essay question" pages, as she introduces them at the beginning of the book, are dense and take a while to appreciate. She spares us nothing, throwing in book and newspaper clippings, handwritten notes, painted and drawn pictures, and difficult questions at us all at once. But somewhere in the midst of them, you realize how impressive they are, in addition to which, alongside her comics, they prove her incredible artistic range. They translate the philosophical, thoughtful sensibility that has always pervaded her comics into much more complex, mature collage format.

The comics hold their own, though, and as always, Barry's caricature of her young self is fabulous for its unabashed awkwardness and complete lack of romanticization. Reenactments of young Lynda talking to herself as she pours over the paper on which she draws—"The lady goes to the volcano. It's exploding with lava. She is not afraid! She waves at her people and—Ahhh!"—are a welcome break from the philosophical musings of the main text. Barry's sense of humor is, at times, spot on in this book, making her comics funnier than ever.

At the very end of the book, Barry includes some of the pages from her side notebook—the pad she keeps at her side while working so that she will have a place to doodle and keep her pen moving when her mind draws a blank. These pages are the best part of What It Is. A chance to see someone else's doodles—the unaffected, spontaneous wanderings of someone else's mind—is rare, particularly someone as creative and talented as Barry. She has created a deliberately complicated book for our benefit, and the result is fantastic.

–Jillian Steinhauer


 
 

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