Monthly Archive: September 2007

COMICS LINKS: Gorey Tribbles

COMICS LINKS: Gorey Tribbles

Comics Links

Shaenon Garrity imagines what Edward Gorey’s adaptation of “The Trouble With Tribbles” might have been like.

The Beat takes a look at DC’s sales in July.

Comicon interviews James Kochalka, whose new children’s book Squirrely Grey has just been published.

Comicon also talks to Scott Shaw! about the rebirth of Captain Carrot.

The Wall Street Journal reports on Japan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, which is trying to use manga’s popularity in the West to improve Japan’s image.

Ridiculopathy has the sarcastic version of the old how-to-create-a-webcomic story.

Comic Book Resources interviews what looks like every person connected with the new Marvel Comics Presents series.

CBR also interviews Joe Casey about his new series Pilot Season: Velocity.

Comics Reviews

AppScout reviews the preview chapter of a new graphic novel, Shooting War.

Chris’s Invincible Super-Blog covers this week’s comics, starting with Avengers: The Initiative #5.

Graeme McMillan of The Savage Critics learns that Gene Simmons’s Dominatrix #1 is just as bad as he thought it would be.

Awards

According to Charles Stross, his novel Glasshouse has won the 2006 Prometheus Award, given by the Libertarian Futurist Society to the best Libertarian SF novel of the year.

SF/Fantasy Links

Tobias Buckell runs down a current SFWA kerfuffle: one particular officer is a bit extreme on fighting copyright infringement, and has demanded the website Scribd take down a whole bunch of things are aren’t actually infringements. (And here’s the original report from Cory Doctorow of Boing Boing.)

One more Worldcon report today, from Pat Cadigan.

Robert J. Sawyer walks the Great Wall of China – and takes pictures.

Commonwealth of Fantasy, you can rest easy tonight. The SF Diplomat is taking his ball and going home.

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Happy anniversary, science fiction films!

Happy anniversary, science fiction films!

Georges Méliès’s Le Voyage Danse La Lune (A Trip To The Moon) was released in Paris 105 years ago today — by any definition of the term, the first science fiction special effects summer spectacular. And now, through the magic of the internet, we bring it here to you.

Enjoy it before some bozo decides to remake it for Summer 2009.

Hugo, girls and guys!

Hugo, girls and guys!

Yesterday in Japan, which I believe is today here, the Hugo Awards (which some of us jokingly refer to as the Eisners of science fiction) were handed out in the first-ever Asian-based World Con, Nippon 2007.  Congratulations to all the winners (see below), especially ComicMix friend Patrick Nielsen-Hayden!

Novel: Rainbow’s End by Vernor Vinge (Tor)

Novella: "A Billion Eves" by Robert Reed (Asimov’s, October/November 2006)

Novelette: "The Djinn’s Wife" by Ian McDonald (Asimov’s, July 2006)

Short Story: "Impossible Dreams" by Timothy Pratt (Asimov’s July 2006)

Non-fiction Book: James Tiptree, Jr.: The Double Life of Alice B. Sheldon edited by Julie Phillips (St. Martin’s Press)

Professional Editor: Patrick Nielsen Hayden (Tor Books)

Professional Artist: Donato Giancola

Dramatic Presentation: Pan’s Labyrinth Screenplay by Guillermo del Toro. Directed by Guillermo del Toro (Picturehouse)

Short Dramatic Presentation: Doctor Who "Girl in the Fireplace" Written by Steven Moffat. Directed by Euros Lyn (BBC Wales/BBC1)

Semiprozine: Locus, edited by Charles N. Brown, Kirsten Gong-Wong, & Liza Groen Trombi

Fanzine: Science Fiction Five-yearly edited by Lee Hoffman, Geri Sullivan & Randy Byers

Fan Writer: Dave Langford

Fan Artist: Frank Wu

Campbell Award: Naomi Novik

The full list of nominees can be found here.

MARTHA THOMASES: We Shall Not Be Moved

MARTHA THOMASES: We Shall Not Be Moved

Unlike almost everyone else in Manhattan, my family doesn’t usually go away for Labor Day Weekend. Ten years ago, we went to Cape May for the week, but it was so much effort to drive home through the Lincoln Tunnel that any benefit derived from relaxing on the beach, playing ski-ball or bird-watching was burned up thoroughly on the drive back.

Now, we find it more relaxing to sit on our terrace and listen to the tide of traffic on Varick Street, backed up from the tunnel as people rush to their respite.

New York City, on these holiday weekends, is like the Bottle City of Kandor. The city seems built up tall and sparse, with an overcast of humidity and exhaust. Most of the people on the streets are tourists, who walk in the careful cadence of out-of-towners that infuriates those of us who live here all the time and have to get down the street right now because we’re very important people with very important business to take care of so stop gawking and get out of my way!

Ahem. Excuse me. Kandor probably doesn’t have this particular problem with tourists.

New York City in the summer is, as David Letterman once said, the city that makes its own gravy. It’s hot, and it’s humid, and the streets are lined by skyscrapers whose air-conditioning blasts hot air onto the sidewalks. The garbage on the sidewalk cooks in the heat. Different neighborhoods seem to have their own weather conditions: a wind always blowing through the canyon that is the Avenue of the Americas; Broadway in the Twenties is a Delhi street, with bargains and music blasting from the stores.

Central Park is an oasis within the oasis, making New York feel like a chocolate covered cherry of a city, with sticky green replacing the cherry. I imagine that Kandor feels like that, too, with the air recyled in the bottle for decades.

We have no Wal-Marts here. That’s another thing that makes New York feel like it’s separate from the rest of the country. The retail Goliath tried to open stores in the outer boroughs, but New York is a union town, and we weren’t having any of it. We know that “everyday low prices” aren’t free, but come at the cost of low wages, child labor and no health insurance. We’d rather pay a little more and have neighbors who can afford their rent. Also, have you ever been to Loehman’s, or Century 21? That’s a New Yorker’s idea of a bargain.

Unions are important to New York. We depend on them, and the people who belong to them. Teachers, fire fighters, police, sanitation – the city would stop without them. You would think that Labor Day in New York would be a glorious city holiday, with politicians courting endorsements, and dancing in the street.

It’s not like that. Labor Day means the end of summer, and the start of the fall season. The newspapers on Sunday are really thin, and the stories, written far in advance, are dull previews of upcoming movies, television, and theater, not real news.

Union members are like most other New Yorkers. They’re taking a break, at the shore or in the mountains, or in their backyards, tending to the grill. They know that on Tuesday they’ll be back on the job, and, for the most part, they’d rather spend their free time with their families than with politicians.

There was a Tuesday in September six years ago, a beautiful day with none of summer’s humidity. The fall season had started, and most of the tourists were gone. The kids were back in school, and the streets bustled with business. When the World Trade Center was attacked, it was these uniform services – the fire fighters, the police, the emergency medical technicians – who ran in to save their fellow citizens. It was these heroes who died by the hundreds, more than ten percent of the total lost that day.

For nearly a year, they were celebrated, as they deserved to be. A fireman who runs into a burning building to rescue a stranger is the very definition of a hero. In the months that followed, other union members, even those not employed by the city, were on the ground, digging out the rubble and inhaling poison smoke. They were heroes, too. I remember seeing a group of people on the West Side Highway, every day, waving flags and signs and cheering every truck that went downtown.

It was a bittersweet time in our bottle city. We mourned, and we bled, and we helped each other with our recovery. For a week or so, some of us even slowed down.

And then, the politicians decided we needed a war, and the fire fighters and police heroes New Yorkers (and others) admired were replaced with soldiers. Soldiers sacrifice at least as much as fire fighters, but they also kill people. It’s part of the job. Fire fighters don’t.

In Kandor, I imagine, they’re more like New Yorkers. They revere their civil servants. I bet Labor Day there is fun.

Martha Thomases, ComicMix Media Goddess, is a member of the National Writers Union.

Happy belated 55th birthday, Paul Reubens!

Happy belated 55th birthday, Paul Reubens!

I actually was aware of Paul Reubens’s birthday this past Monday, August 27, but I didn’t really know what to say about it– I mean, we all know Pee-Wee Herman, readers of this site remember him in Batman Returns, Murphy Brown and You Don’t Know Jack, and we all remember the other stuff, but really, what was there to add?

Then I was reminded that he’s responsible for the Best. Death Scene. Evah.

Okay, so it’s probably the worst version out there. So sue me. Go rent Buffy The Vampire Slayer and watch it yourself.