The “Avengers Day” New, Mighty, Ultimate, Secret SALE

May 18th, 2010

The “Avengers Day” New, Mighty, Ultimate, Secret SALE

Starting tomorrow at Noon and running through Friday at 5pm New World Manga is having it’s biggest Sale yet.

    Get 50% OFF select Trade Paperbacks, Hardcovers, and Manga.

We’re covering our tables with hundreds of great books.

    Great new prices on Variant Cover Comics

New and older variant comics books priced at $5, $10, and $15+

    WANT MORE?!

There is! But THAT’S the secret part – you’ll have to come to the store to find out what else is on sale…

Avengers Day 5/19 – New Comics, Trade, & Manga Releasing

May 14th, 2010

It’s Avengers Day at New World Manga on Wednesday May 19th. We’re celebrating the release of Avengers #1 with giveaways (while supplies last), extra variants, and a great big SALE. I’m not giving away the details of this sale, but it is the biggest sale in New World Manga history (and if you remember the Manga sale in February you know how big BIG can be)

Click on any of the covers below for more information on that title.

New Comics, Trades & Manga Releasing 5/12

May 7th, 2010

Click on any of the covers below for more information on that title. Previous weeks releases can be found on the NEW COMICS & MANGA page

FCBD Costume Contest Winners!

May 4th, 2010

Thanks to everyone who came out for the 1st New World Manga Free Comic Book Day Costume Contest! You can start getting your costumes ready for next year because there WILL BE a Second Annual FCBD Costume Contest! Here are your winners!

Best Costume (over 13) Nick as KICK ASS


Best Costume (under 13) Christian as Spider-Man

Best Group The Watchmen

Technical Achievement Jesse as Deadpool

Best Anime Autumn as Misty

Free Comic Book Day TODAY!!!

April 30th, 2010

The biggest day in comic books is finally here! Come on down and be part of the action!

Saturday May 1st, 2010
10am until 9pm

This year is our biggest Free Comic Book Day Event ever! The comic industry’s spectacular annual event is the perfect opportunity to introduce friends and family to the world of comics at New World Manga. From super-heroes to science fiction to action/adventure and manga, Free Comic Book Day has a comic for everyone!

OVER ONE THOUSAND FREE COMICS!
Every visitor to New World Manga can receive up to FOUR free comic books (while supplies last) from our selection of over 30 titles specially created for Free Comic Book Day. Choose from: Archie, Superman, Shrek, Toy Story, GI Joe, Iron Man, Sonic, The Simpsons, Lady Gaga, Green Hornet, Avatar the Last Airbender, Owly, The Tick, and much more!

COSTUME CONTEST!
Come in your best Super-Hero, Manga, Anime, or Comic Character costume for a chance to win FABULOUS PRIZES! All costumed attendees can have their photo taken at the store between the hours of 10am and 5pm for entry into the contest. Winners will be selected in the following categories: Best Solo Child (under 12), Best Solo Adult (13 and up), and Best Group. Prize packages will consist of New World Manga store merchandise featuring comics, manga and more! Contest Hours 10am until 5pm.

SPECIAL GUESTS!
• Captain America (winner of the MarvelFest NYC 2009 Costume Contest) will be appear at New World Manga to sign autographs and for photo opportunities!
• Writer, Frank J. Barbiere from Arcana Studios will be on hand with a free 24-page preview of his upcoming graphic novel Divine Intervention.

2010 Eisner Award Nominations

April 9th, 2010

2010 Eisner Nominations Encompass Wide Range of Works

Official Press Release

SAN DIEGO — Comic-Con International (Comic-Con) is proud to announce the nominations for the Will Eisner Comic Industry Awards 2010. The nominees, chosen by a blue-ribbon panel of judges, reflect the wide range of material being published in comics and graphic novel form today, from multivolume deluxe hardcovers to online stories to traditional comic book format.

Topping the 2010 nominees with 4 nominations is David Mazzucchelli’s Asterios Polyp, a highly acclaimed literary graphic novel published by Pantheon. Several works have received 3 nominations, including two French graphic novels, My mommy is in America and she met Buffalo Bill (by Jean Regnaud and Émile Bravo, published by Fanfare/Ponent Mon) and The Photographer (by Emmanuel Guibert, published by First Second). Japanese manga master Naoki Urasawa is represented by multiple nominations for two of his works, 20th Century Boys and Pluto: Urasawa X Tezuka (both published by VIZ Media), nominated not only in the International category but also for Best Continuing Series (20th Century Boys) and Best Limited Series (Pluto). Another manga title with 3 nominations is Yoshihiro Tatsumi’s A Drifting Life (published by Drawn & Quarterly). Other publications with 3 nominations are Robert Crumb’s illustrated version of The Book of Genesis (published by Norton), Mike Carey and Peter Gross’s comic book series The Unwritten (Vertigo/DC), and Mark Waid and Peter Kraus’s series Irredeemable (BOOM!), which also has a shared nomination. The big DC event miniseries of the year, Blackest Night, is also on the ballot, with 2 nominations and 1 shared.

The creators with the most nominations are Urusawa (5) and Mazzucchelli (4), followed by several creators with 3: Crumb, Bravo, Guibert, Carey, Waid, and writer Ed Brubaker (Captain America, Criminal, and Incognito, published by Marvel).

DC Comics has the most nominations for a publisher, with its various imprints (DCU, Vertigo, WildStorm, Zuda) garnering 20 nominations (plus 2 shared). The DC Universe has 11 of those nominations, spread among multiple titles and creators. The Vertigo imprint’s 7 nominations are led by 3 for The Unwritten. The publisher emerging with the second most nominations this year is Fantagraphics Books, with 17 (plus one shared). The company dominates the categories for Archival Collections, with 5 out of the 11 nominees in those categories. Two of the archival works also have design nods: The Brinkley Girls: The Best of Nell Brinkley’s Cartoons and Gahan Wilson: 50 Years of Playboy Cartoons. The rest of Fantagraphics’ nominations are spread throughout the ballot, with the only other multiple nominations being for Carol Tyler (Best Writer/Artist and Best Painter/Multimedia Artist for You’ll Never Know: A Good and Decent Man) and the French graphic album West Coast Blues.

Abrams CartoonArts has six titles on the ballot (led by The TOON Treasury of Classic Children’s Comics), toting up 8 nominations in all. Also with 8 nominees (plus 2 shared), Marvel Comics posseses multiple nominations for The Wonderful Wizard of Oz (by Eric Shanower and Skottie Young), Wolverine: Old Man Logan (by Mark Millar, Steve McNiven, and Dexter Vines), and the Marvel Icon titles Incognito and Criminal (by Brubaker and Sean Phillips). Three publishers have 7 nominees: Fanfare/Ponent Man (for 3 titles), IDW (for 5 titles, plus 1 shared nomination), and W. W. Norton (for 3 titles, including Crumb’s Book of Genesis and David Small’s Stitches). Close behind are First Second (6 nominations plus 1 shared), VIZ Media (6 nominations), BOOM! (5 nominations plus 2 shared), and Dark Horse (4 nominations plus 2 shared). Drawn & Quarterly and Image each have 4 nominees.

This year’s judges made some significant changes in the categories, restoring one that last year’s judges omitted (Best Single Issue/One Shot), changing the names of two (”U.S. Edition of International Material-Japan” revised to “U.S. Edition of International Material-Asia” and “Limited Series” changed to “Limited Series or Story Arc”), and splitting the Best Writer/Artist category into two, with the second being Best Writer/Artist-Nonfiction. They also added the category of Best Adaptation from Another Work. This addition reflects the large number of comics and graphic novels now being based on other sources. The nominees here include not only Crumb’s Genesis but also adaptations of Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451, Darwin’s On the Origin of Species, Richard Stark’s The Hunter, and Jean-Patrick Manchette’s West Coast Blues.

Named for acclaimed comics creator the Will Eisner, the awards are in their 22nd year of highlighting the best publications and creators in comics and graphic novels. The 2010 judging panel consists of academic Craig Fischer (associate professor of English, Appalachian State University), librarian Francisca Goldsmith (staff development instructor/consultant, Infopeople), reviewer John Hogan (GraphicNovelReporter.com), writer James Hudnall (Harsh Realm, The Psycho), and retailer Wayne Winsett (Time Warp Comics, Boulder, Colorado).

Ballots with this year’s nominees will be going out in mid-April to comics creators, editors, publishers, and retailers. A downloadable pdf of the ballot will also be available online, and a special website has been set up for online voting. The results in all categories will be announced in a gala awards ceremony on the evening of Friday, July 23 at Comic-Con International.

Voting in one Eisner Awards category, Hall of Fame, is already completed. The judges chose the nominees earlier this year, and voting was conducted solely online, with voting ending on March 31.

The Eisner Awards are presented under the auspices of Comic-Con International, a nonprofit educational organization dedicated to creating awareness of and appreciation for comics and related popular art forms, primarily through the presentation of conventions and events that celebrate the historic and ongoing contributions of comics to art and culture. Jackie Estrada has been administrator of the Awards since 1990.

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The 2010 Will Eisner Comic Industry Award Nominees

Best Short Story
•”Because I Love You So Much,” by Nikoline Werdelin, in From Wonderland with Love: Danish Comics in the 3rd Millennium (Fantagraphics/Aben malen, APR090828E, $29.99)
•”Gentleman John,” by Nathan Greno, in What Is Torch Tiger? (Torch Tiger)
•”How and Why to Bale Hay,” by Nick Bertozzi, in Syncopated (Villard, MAR094445F, $16.95)
•”Hurricane,” interpreted by Gradimir Smudja, in Bob Dylan Revisited (Norton, AUG091135H, $24.95)
•”Urgent Request,” by Gene Luen Yang and Derek Kirk Kim, in The Eternal Smile (First Second, MAR094260H, $16.95)
Best Single Issue (or One-Shot)
•Brave & the Bold #28: “Blackhawk and the Flash: Firing Line,” by J. Michael Straczynski and Jesus Saiz (DC)
•Captain America #601: “Red, White, and Blue-Blood,” by Ed Brubaker and Gene Colan (Marvel)
•Ganges #3, by Kevin Huizenga (Fantagraphics)
•The Unwritten #5: “How the Whale Became,” by Mike Carey and Peter Gross (Vertigo/DC)
•Usagi Yojimbo #123: “The Death of Lord Hikiji” by Stan Sakai (Dark Horse)
Best Continuing Series
•Fables, by Bill Willingham, Mark Buckingham, Steve Leialoha, Andrew Pepoy et al. (Vertigo/DC)
•Irredeemable, by Mark Waid and Peter Krause (BOOM!)
•Naoki Urasawa’s 20th Century Boys, by Naoki Urasawa (VIZ Media)
•The Unwritten, by Mike Carey and Peter Gross (Vertigo/DC)
•The Walking Dead, by Robert Kirkman and Charles Adlard (Image)
Best Limited Series or Story Arc
•Blackest Night, by Geoff Johns, Ivan Reis, and Oclair Albert (DC)
•Incognito, by Ed Brubaker and Sean Phillips (Marvel Icon)
•Pluto: Urasawa X Tezuka, by Naoki Urasawa and Takashi Nagasaki (VIZ Media)
•Wolverine #66-72 and Wolverine Giant-Size Special: “Old Man Logan,” by Mark Millar, Steve McNiven, and Dexter Vines (Marvel, AUG090551D, $34.99)
•The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, by Eric Shanower and Skottie Young (Marvel, JUL090457D, $29.99)
Best New Series
•Chew, by John Layman and Rob Guillory (Image)
•Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? by Philip K. Dick, art by Tony Parker (BOOM!)
•Ireedeemable, by Mark Waid and Peter Krause (BOOM!)
•Sweet Tooth, by Jeff Lemire (Vertigo/DC)
•The Unwritten, by Mike Carey and Peter Gross (Vertigo/DC)
Best Publication for Kids
•Lunch Lady and the Cyborg Substitute, by Jarrett J. Krosoczeka (Knopf)
•The Secret Science Alliance and the Copycat Crook, by Eleanor Davis (Bloomsbury, SEP090664F, $10.99)
•Tiny Tyrant Vol. 1: The Ethelbertosaurus, by Lewis Trondheim and Fabrice Parme (First Second, APR090815F, $9.95)
•The TOON Treasury of Classic Children’s Comics, edited by Art Spiegelman and Francoise Mouly (Abrams ComicArts/Toon, JUN090668F, $40.00)
•The Wonderful Wizard of Oz HC, by L. Frank Baum, Eric Shanower, and Skottie Young (Marvel, JUL090457D, $29.99)
Best Publication for Teens
•Angora Napkin, by Troy Little (IDW, NOV084158E, $19.99)
•Beasts of Burden, by Evan Dorkin and Jill Thompson (Dark Horse, FEB100057V, $19.99)
•A Family Secret, by Eric Heuvel (Farrar Straus Giroux/Anne Frank House, JUN090906H, $9.99)
•Far Arden, by Kevin Cannon (Top Shelf, FEB098560F, $19.99)
•I Kill Giants TP, by Joe Kelly and JM Ken Niimura (Image, SEP090286D, $39.99)
Best Humor Publication
•Drinky Crow’s Maakies Treasury, by Tony Millionaire (Fantagraphics, DEC084026E, $29.99)
•Everybody Is Stupid Except for Me, And Other Astute Observations, by Peter Bagge (Fantagraphics, APR090823E, $16.99)
•Little Lulu, vols. 19-21, by John Stanley and Irving Tripp (Dark Horse Books, Volume 19: JAN090094V, $14.95)
•The Muppet Show Comic Book: Meet the Muppets, by Roger Langridge (BOOM Kids!, MAY090750F, $9.99)
•Scott Pilgrim Vol. 5: Scott Pilgrm vs. the Universe, by Brian Lee O’Malley (Oni, DEC084184E, $11.95)
Best Anthology
•Abstract Comics, edited by Andrei Molotiu (Fantagraphics, APR090824E, $39.99)
•Bob Dylan Revisited, edited by Bob Weill (Norton, AUG091135H, $24.95)
•Flight 6, edited by Kazu Kibuishi (Villard, APR091050F, $25.00)
•Popgun Vol. 3, edited by Mark Andrew Smith, D. J. Kirkbride, and Joe Keatinge (Image, JAN092368D, $29.99)
•Syncopated: An Anthology of Nonfiction Picto-Essays, edited by Brendan Burford (Villard, MAR094445F, $16.95)
•What Is Torch Tiger? edited by Paul Briggs (Torch Tiger)
Best Digital Comic
•Abominable Charles Christopher, by Karl Kerschl,
www.abominable.cc
•Bayou, by Jeremy Love,
http://zudacomics.com/bayou
•The Guns of Shadow Valley, by David Wachter and James Andrew Clark,
www.gunsofshadowvalley.com
•Power Out, by Nathan Schreiber,
www.act-i-vate.com/67.comic
•Sin Titulo, by Cameron Stewart,
www.sintitulocomic.com/
Best Reality-Based Work
•A Drifting Life, by Yoshihiro Tatsumi (Drawn & Quarterly, FEB094254H, $29.95)
•Footnotes in Gaza, by Joe Sacco (Metropolitan/Holt, SEP090917H, $29.95)
•The Imposter’s Daughter, by Laurie Sandell (Little, Brown, MAY090977F, $24.99)
•Monsters, by Ken Dahl (Secret Acres)
•The Photographer, by Emmanuel Guibert, Didier Lefèvre, and Frédéric Lemerier (First Second, MAR094261H, $29.95)
•Stitches, by David Small (Norton, JUL091143H, $24.99)
Best Adaptation from Another Work
•The Book of Genesis Illustrated, by R. Crumb (Norton, FEB094254H, $29.95)
•Charles Darwin’s On the Origin of Species: A Graphic Adaptation, adapted by Michael Keller and Nicolle Rager Fuller (Rodale)
•Fahrenheit 451, by Ray Bradbury, adapted by Tim Hamilton (Hill & Wang, JUN090928H, $16.95)
•Richard Stark’s Parker: The Hunter, adapted by Darwyn Cooke (IDW, MAY090880E, $24.99)
•West Coast Blues, by Jean-Patrick Manchette, adapted by Jacques Tardi (Fantagraphics, JUL090863E, $18.99)
Best Graphic Album-New
•Asterios Polyp, by David Mazzuccheilli (Pantheon, MAR094389F, $29.95)
•A Distant Neighborhood (2 vols.), by Jiro Taniguchi (Fanfare/Ponent Mon, Volume 1: MAR094248I, Volume 2: JUN090890I, $23.00 each)
•The Book of Genesis Illustrated, by R. Crumb (Norton, JUL091141H, $24.95)
•My mommy is in America and she met Buffalo Bill, by Jean Regnaud and émile Bravo (Fanfare/Ponent Mon, JAN094222F, $25.00)
•The Photographer, by Emmanuel Guibert, Didier Lefèvre, and Frédéric Lemerier (First Second, MAR094261H, $29.95)
•Richard Stark’s Parker: The Hunter, adapted by Darwyn Cooke (IDW, MAY090880E, $24.99)
Best Graphic Album-Reprint
•Absolute Justice, by Alex Ross, Jim Krueger, and Doug Braithewaite (DC, APR090204D, $99.99)
•A.D.: New Orleans After the Deluge, by Josh Neufeld (Pantheon, JUN091048F, $24.95)
•Alec: The Years Have Pants, by Eddie Campbell (Top Shelf, HC: FEB098160F, $49.95; SC: FEB098161F, $35.00)
•Essex County Collected, by Jeff Lemire (Top Shelf, HC: FEB098163F, $49.95; SC: FEB098164F, $29.95)
•Map of My Heart: The Best of King-Cat Comics & Stories, 1996-2002, by John Porcellino (Drawn & Quarterly, SEP090806H, $24.95)
Best Archival Collection/Project-Strips
•Bloom County: The Complete Library, Vol. 1, by Berkeley Breathed, edited by Scott Dunbier (IDW, AUG090908E, $39.99)
•Bringing Up Father, Vol. 1: From Sea to Shining Sea, by George McManus and Zeke Zekley, edited by Dean Mullaney (IDW, SEP090892E, $49.99)
•The Brinkley Girls: The Best of Nell Brinkley’s Cartoons 1913-1940, edited by Trina Robbins (Fantagraphics, OCT084161E, $29.99)
•Gahan Wilson: 50 Years of Playboy Cartoons, by Gahan Wilson, edited by Gary Groth (Fantagraphics, AUG090882E, $125.00)
•Prince Valiant, Vol. 1: 1937-1938, by Hal Foster, edited by Kim Thompson (Fantagraphics, FEB094278E, $29.99)
•Queer Visitors from the Marvelous Land of Oz, by L. Frank Baum, Walt McDougall, and W. W. Denslow (Sunday Press, APR090986I, $75.00)
Best Archival Collection/Project-Comic Books
•The Best of Simon & Kirby, by Joe Simon and Jack Kirby, edited by Steve Saffel (Titan Books, DEC084249F, $39.95)
•Blazing Combat, by Archie Goodwin et al., edited by Gary Groth (Fantagraphics, DEC090865E, $19.99)
•Humbug, by Harvey Kurtzman et al., edited by Gary Groth (Fantagraphics, DEC084024E, $60.00)
•The Rocketeer: The Complete Adventures deluxe edition, by Dave Stevens, edited by Scott Dunbier (IDW, AUG090961E, $29.99)
•The TOON Treasury of Classic Children’s Comics, edited by Art Spiegelman and Francoise Mouly (Abrams ComicArts/Toon, JUN090668F, $40.00)
Best U.S. Edition of International Material
•My mommy is in America and she met Buffalo Bill, by Jean Regnaud and Émile Bravo (Fanfare/Ponent Mon, JAN094222F, $25.00)
•The Photographer, by Emmanuel Guibert, Didier Lefèvre, and Frédéric Lemerier (First Second, MAR094261H, $29.95)
•Tiny Tyrant Vol. 1: The Ethelbertosaurus, by Lewis Trondheim and Fabrice Parme (First Second, APR090815F, $9.95)
•West Coast Blues, by Jean-Patrick Manchette, adapted by Jacques Tardi (Fantagraphics, JUL090863E, $18.99)
•Years of the Elephant, by Willy Linthout (Fanfare/Ponent Mon, MAY090842H, $18.95)
Best U.S. Edition of International Material-Asia
•The Color Trilogy, by Kim Dong Haw (First Second)
•A Distant Neighborhood (2 vols.), by Jiro Taniguchi (Fanfare/Ponent Mon, Volume 1: MAR094248I, Volume 2: JUN090890I, $23.00 each)
•A Drifting Life, by Yoshihiro Tatsumi (Drawn & Quarterly, FEB094254H, $29.95)
•Oishinbo a la Carte, written by Tetsu Kariya and illustrated by Akira Hanasaki (VIZ Media, Vol. 7: OCT091121E, $12.99)
•Pluto: Urasawa X Tezuka, by Naoki Urasawa and Takashi Nagasaki (VIZ Media, Vol. 7: OCT091123E, $12.99)
•Naoki Urasawa’s 20th Century Boys, by Naoki Urasawa (VIZ Media, Vol. 6: SEP091016E, $12.99)
Best Writer
•Ed Brubaker, Captain America, Daredevil, Marvels Project (Marvel) Criminal, Incognito (Marvel Icon)
•Geoff Johns, Adventure Comics, Blackest Night, The Flash: Rebirth, Superman: Secret Origin (DC)
•James Robinson, Justice League: Cry for Justice (DC)
•Mark Waid, Irredeemable, The Incredibles (BOOM!)
•Bill Willingham, Fables (Vertigo/DC)
Best Writer/Artist
•Darwyn Cooke, Richard Stark’s Parker: The Hunter (IDW, MAY090880E, $24.99)
•R. Crumb, The Book of Genesis Illustrated (Norton, FEB094254H, $29.95)
•David Mazzuccheilli, Asterios Polyp (Pantheon, MAR094389F, $29.95)
•Terry Moore, Echo (Abstract Books, Vol. 1: JUN083602E, $15.95)
•Naoki Urasawa, Naoki Urasawa’s 20th Century Boys, Pluto: Urasawa X Tezuka (VIZ Media, Vol. 6: SEP091016E, $12.99)
Best Writer/Artist-Nonfiction
•Reinhard Kleist, Johnny Cash: I See a Darkness (Abrams ComicArts, JUL090639F, $17.95)
•Willy Linthout, Years of the Elephant (Fanfare/Ponent Mon, MAY090842H, $18.95)
•Joe Sacco, Footnotes in Gaza (Metropolitan/Holt, SEP090917H, $29.95)
•David Small, Stitches (Norton, JUL091143H, $24.99)
•Carol Tyler, You’ll Never Know: A Good and Decent Man (Fantagraphics, FEB094281E, $24.99)
Best Penciller/Inker or Penciller/Inker Team
•Michael Kaluta, Madame Xanadu #11-15: “Exodus Noir” (Vertigo/DC)
•Steve McNiven/Dexter Vines, Wolverine: Old Man Logan (Marvel)
•Fiona Staples, North 40 (WildStorm)
•J. H. Williams III, Detective Comics (DC)
•Danijel Zezelj, Luna Park (Vertigo/DC)
Best Painter/Multimedia Artist (interior art)
•É Bravo, My mommy is in America and she met Buffalo Bill (Fanfare/Ponent Mon, JAN094222F, $25.00)
•Mauro Cascioli, Justice League: Cry for Justice (DC)
•Nicolle Rager Fuller, Charles Darwin on the Origin of Species: A Graphic Adaptation (Rodale Books)
•Jill Thompson, Beasts of Burden (Dark Horse); Magic Trixie and the Dragon (HarperCollins Children’s Books, APR090841F, $7.99)
•Carol Tyler, You’ll Never Know: A Good and Decent Man (Fantagraphics, FEB094281E, $24.99)
Best Cover Artist
•John Cassaday, Irredeemable (BOOM!); Lone Ranger (Dynamite)
•Salvador Larocca, Invincible Iron Man (Marvel)
•Sean Phillips, Criminal, Incognito (Marvel Icon); 28 Days Later (BOOM!)
•Alex Ross, Astro City: The Dark Age (WildStorm/DC); Project Superpowers (Dynamite)
•J. H. Williams III, Detective Comics (DC)
Best Coloring
•Steve Hamaker, Bone: Crown of Thorns (Scholastic); Little Mouse Gets Ready (Toon)
•Laura Martin, The Rocketeer: The Complete Adventures (IDW); Thor, The Stand: American Nightmares (Marvel)
•David Mazzuccheilli, Asterios Polyp (Pantheon, MAR094389F, $29.95)
•Alex Sinclair, Blackest Night, Batman and Robin (DC)
•Dave Stewart, Abe Sapien, BPRD, The Goon, Hellboy, Solomon Kane, Umbrella Academy, Zero Killer (Dark Horse); Detective Comics (DC); Northlanders, Luna Park (Vertigo)
Best Lettering
•Brian Fies, Whatever Happened to the World of Tomorrow? (Abrams ComicArts, MAR094038F, $24.95)
•David Mazzuccheilli, Asterios Polyp (Pantheon, MAR094389F, $29.95)
•Tom Orzechowski, Savage Dragon (Image); X-Men Forever (Marvel)
•Richard Sala, Cat Burglar Black (First Second); Delphine (Fantagraphics)
•Adrian Tomine, A Drifting Life (Drawn & Quarterly, FEB094254H, $29.95)
Best Comics-Related Periodical/Journalism
•Alter Ego, edited by Roy Thomas (TwoMorrows)
•ComicsAlliance, edited by Laura Hudson www.comicsalliance.com
•Comics Comics, edited by Timothy Hodler and Dan Nadel
(www.comicscomicsmag.com) (PictureBox)
•The Comics Journal, edited by Gary Groth, Michael Dean, and Kristy Valenti (Fantagraphics)
•The Comics Reporter, produced by Tom Spurgeon
(www.comicsreporter.com)
Best Comics-Related Book
•Alan Moore: Comics as Performance, Fiction as Scalpel, by Annalisa Di Liddo (University Press of Mississippi, FEB094598I, $22.00)
•The Art of Harvey Kurtzman: The Mad Genius of Comics, by Denis Kitchen and Paul Buhle (Abrams ComicArts, FEB094599F, $40.00)
•The Art of Osamu Tezuka: God of Manga, by Helen McCarthy (Abrams ComicArts, JUL091247F, $40.00)
•Manga Kamishibai: The Art of Japanese Paper Theater, by Eric P. Nash (Abrams ComicArts)
•Will Eisner and PS Magazine, by Paul E. Fitzgerald (Fitzworld.US)
Best Publication Design
•Absolute Justice, designed by Curtis King and Josh Beatman (DC, APR090204D, $99.99)
•The Brinkley Girls, designed by Adam Grano (Fantagraphics, OCT084161E, $29.99)
•Gahan Wilson: 50 Years of Playboy Cartoons, designed by Jacob Covey (Fantagraphics, AUG090882E, $125.00)
•Life and Times of Martha Washington, designed by David Nestelle (Dark Horse Books, FEB100021V, $29.99)
•Queer Visitors from the Marvelous Land of Oz, designed by Philippe Ghielmetti (Sunday Press, APR090986I, $75.00)
•Whatever Happened to the World of Tomorrow? designed by Neil Egan and Brian Fies (Abrams ComicArts, MAR094038F, $24.95)

Have you checked out Kidscomics.com

April 6th, 2010

Visit kidscomics.com for the best in kids comics

Some of the great new titles releasing in June

April 2nd, 2010

How about joining our subscription program and never missing an issue. Ask for details!

Here are some of the new titles releasing in June:
DARK HORSE
• Predators LS #1 of 4 (Prequel to the July movie)
• Serenity: Float Out OS – By Patton Oswalt
• Troublemaker Book 1 HC – A Barnaby and Hooker Graphic Novel by Janet Evanovich
• King Conan Vol 1 TPB – collects issues #1-5 of the original Marvel series
• Abe Sapien: The Abyssal Pain LS #1 of 2 – by Mike Mignola
• Buzzard LS #1 of 3 – by Eric Powell from the pages of The Goon!
• Star Wars Adventures: The Will of Darth Vader TPB

DC
• Brightest Day Crossovers: Brightest Day #3 -4, Green Arrow #1, Green Lantern #55, Green Lantern Corps, #49, Justice League Generation Lost #3 & #4, Birds of Prey #2, The Flash #3, Justice League of America #46, Titans #24
• Superman #700 – New Writer J. Michael Straczinski
• Batman #700 – New Writer Grant Morrison
• Wonder Woman #600 – Finally renumbered to celebrate 600 issues New Writer J. Michael Straczinski
• Green Arrow #1 – JT Krul continues the story (why the renumber? I don’t know)
• The Joker’s Asylum OS: Riddler
• The Joker’s Asylum OS: Harley Quinn
• The Joker’s Asylum OS: Mad Hatter
• The Joker’s Asylum OS: Killer Croc
• The Joker’s Asylum OS: Clayface
• Red Hood: Lost Days LS #1 of 6 – Tales of Jason Todd by Judd Winick
• Batman Beyond LS #1 of 6 – from the original TV show writer
• Superman/Batman Annual #4 – Batman Beyond and the Future Man of Steel
• Green Lantern: Rage of the Red Lanterns TPB
• Batman: Whatever Happened to the Caped Crusader? TPB – by Neil Gaiman
• Superman: Whatever Happened to the Man of Tomorrow? TPB – by Alan Moore
• Superman vs Muhammad Ali HC
HAVE YOU RESERVED YOU COPY OF
• Birds of Prey #1 – NEW ONGOING by Gail Simone
• Batman The Return of Bruce Wayne LS #1 of 6 by Grant Morrison
• The Legion of Superheroes #1 – NEW ONGOING by Paul Levitz
• Zatanna #1 – NEW ONGOING by Paul Dini
• Flash #1 – New Ongoing series by Geoff Johns
• Doc Savage #1 – New Ongoing by Paul Malmont spinning out of the First Wave mini series
• The Spirit #1 – New Ongoing by Mark Schultz spinning out of the First Wave mini series

DC WILDSTORM
• Tom Strong and the Robots of Doom LS #1 of 6 – by Peter Hogan
• Astro City: Silver Agent LS #1 of 2
• Fringe: Tales from the Fringe LS #1 of 6 – based on the TV show, continuing on the last Fringe LS

DC VERTIGO
• Dark Rain: A New Orleans Story HC – by Mat Johnson
HAVE YOU RESERVED YOU COPY OF
• I, Zombie #1 – NEW ONGOING by Chris Roberson (Cinderella: From Fabletown With Love)

IDW PUBLISHING – IDW is now a headlining publisher
• Jurassic Park #1 – NEW ONGOING SERIES
• The Murder of King Tut #1 – NEW ONGOING by James Petterson!
• Yours Truly, Jack The Ripper #1 – NEW ONGOING by Robert Bloch!
• Spike: The Devil You Know #1
• Star Trek: Burden of Knowledge #1 – NEW ONGOING newest adventures of the Classic Enterprise Crew

IMAGE COMICS
• The Bulletproof Coffin LS #1 of 6
• Hack/Slash: My First Maniac LS #1 of 4
• Dynamo 5: Sins of the Father LS #1 of 5
• Dust Wars LS #1 of 3
• Meta LS #1 of 5 – by Ted McKeever
• Brigade #1 – NEW ONGOING by Rob Liefeld (as writer not artist)
• Sea Bear & Grizzly Shark – NEW ONGOING
• The Pro OS – by Garth Ennis
• Age of Bronze #30 – back with continuing stories of the Trojan War

IMAGE/TOP COW
(Nothing new this month)

MARVEL
PLEASE NOTE: The following Titles have been cancelled – some will be replaced by new titles others will not: Avengers: The Initiative, Dark Avengers, New Avengers, Mighty Avengers, Ms Marvel, Spider-Woman, Deadpool Merc with a Mouth, X-Men Forever.
• Marvelman Classic Primer #1 OS
• Namora #1 OS
• Heralds LS #1 of 5 – Sue Storm, She-Hulk, Emma Frost, Agent Brand, Hellcat, Valkrie, Monica Rambeau
• Ender in Exile LS #1 of 5
• The Stand: Hardcases LS #1 of 5
• X-Campus LS #1 of 2 – European Reimaging of the X-Men
• Deadpool: Wade Wilson’s War LS #1 of 4
• Amazing Spider-Man Presents: Black Cat LS #1 of 4
• Spider-Ham 25th Anniversary Special #1 OS – by Tom DeFalco
• Avengers Academy #1 – NEW ONGOING by Christos Gage – Hank Pym leads a core team in training future Avengers
• New Avengers #1 – NEW ONGOING by Brian Bendis – New Team, New Home, taking on the threats too dangerous for any other team
• Avengers Prime LS #1 of 5 – by Brian Bendis – Thor, Iron Man, Steve Rogers in the aftermath of Siege
• Iron Man: Kiss and Kill #1 OS – Tony Stark International Spy
• Captain America: The 1040s Newspaper Strip LS #1 of 3
• Darkstar and the Winter Guard LS #1 of 3
• Fantastic Four in Ataque Del MODOK! #1 OS
• Hercules: Twilight of a God LS #1 of 4
• Hawkeye & Mockingbird #1 – NEW ONGOING by Jim McCann
• The Rawhide Kid LS #1 of 4 – The most fabulous, best dressed gunslinger returns.
• Dracula LS #1 of 2 – Bram Stokers Dracula drawn by Dick Giordano
• Young Allies #1 – NEW ONGOING by Sean McKeever – Nomad, Arana, Toro, Gravity, and Firestar
• The Thanos Imperitive LS #1 of 6
• X-Men Forever 2 #1 – NEW ONGOING by Chris Claremont. New team
HAVE YOU RESERVED YOU COPY OF
• Black Widow #1 – NEW ONGOING SERIES by Marjorie Liu
• Ultimate Comics Avengers 2 #1 – NEW ONGOING Nick Fury, Punisher, black-ops…
• Iron Man: Legacy #1 – NEW ONGOING
• Spider-Man Marvel Adventures #1 – reboot of the Marvel Adventures Line
• Super Heroes Marvel Adventures #1
• S.H.I.E.L.D. #1 – NEW ONGOING
• Astonishing Spider-Man/Wolverine #1 NEW ONGOING by Jason Aaron & Adam Kubert
• Spectacular Spider-Girl #1 – NEW ONGOING by Tom DeFalco
• Avengers #1 – NEW ONGOING by Brian Michael Bendis
• Atlas #1 – NEW ONGOING by Jeff Parker (Agents of Atlas)
• Secret Avengers #1 – NEW ONGOING by Ed Brubaker
• Dream Logic #1 – NEW ONGOING by Kabuki creator David Mack

OTHER TITLES OF NOTE
• Time Lincol: Fists of the Fuhrer #1 OS – Antarctic Press
• The Last Zombie LS #1 of 5 by Brian Keene – Antarctic Press
• Archie Loves Veronica – NEW ONGOING following the wedding series
• Archie Loves Betty – NEW ONGOING following the wedding series
• Mindfield #1 – NEW ONGOING by JT Krul (JLA, Green Arrow) – Aspen – Psychic Warfare, CIA espionage
• Uncle Scrooge #392 – becomes Uncle Scrooge in DuckTales – BOOM
• Darkwing Duck: The Duck Knight Returns LS #1 of 4 – BOOM
• Robert E Howard’s Hawks of Outremer LS #1 of 4 – BOOM
• Disney’s Alice in Wonderland GN – TPB or HC – BOOM
• Pale Horse LS #1 of 4 – BOOM
• Prince of Persia: Before the Sandstorm LS #1 of 4 – Dynamite
• Bullet to the Head #1 – NEW ONGOING by Matz – Dynamite
• Stargate: Daniel Jackson #1
• Penny Arcade vol 6 TPB – Del Rey
• Avatar the Last Airbender Film Comic vol 1 TPB – Del rey
• Avatar the Last Airbender Movie Adaptation TPB – Del Rey
• Grimm Fairy Tales Swimsuit Special – Zenescope
• Grimm Fairy Tales 2011 Calendar – Zenescope
• Charmed #1 – NEW ONGOING based on the TV Show – Zenescope
• Tales From Wonderland: The Red Rose OS – Zenescope
HAVE YOU RESERVED YOU COPY OF
• Shrek #1 – NEW ONGOING
• Mouse Guard: Legends of the Guard LS #1 of 4
• Crossed: Family Values LS #1 of 6
• Armory Wars: In Keeping Secrets of Silent Earth LS #1 of 12
• The Green Hornet Strikes #1
• Kato Origins #1
• Stargate: Vala Mal Doran #1

OTHER COOL STUFF!!!
• Watchmen as Literature SC
• Batman 1966 Batboat Model Kit
• War Machine Bowen Statue
• Psylocke Bowen Statue
• Hulk Kotobukia Statue
• Dr Doom Kotobukia Statue
• Watchmen Heroclix Collector’s Box Set – 25 figures $99.99

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January 8th, 2010

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Graphic Novels for Kids

September 10th, 2009

FROM “THE PARENT PAPER”

Graphic novels for kids

BY PAT VASILIK

A generation or two ago, comics were the reading of choice for a huge number of kids. You bought them, traded them, saved them and read and re-read them. The one thing you didn’t do was borrow them from the library. After all, said the grown-ups of the time, comics are not “real” reading. Well, that has certainly changed in the last decade or so. Now it would be hard to find a library without a selection of what are now called “graphic novels.” And big bookstores have dozens of bookshelves devoted to these and the very popular manga, imported mainly from Japan.

While many of the popular manga series are aimed more at young adults, there are a number that are great for kids. Some are connected with animated television shows or card games, like Dragon Ball Z, Pokemon and Yu-Gi-Oh. These stories are filled with adventure and fantasy quests. While they do contain some violence, the good guys are clearly good and fight only the obvious villains. There are some other great manga series for kids to read that are a little lesser known – except of course among Japanese Anime fans! One is Hikaru No Go by Takeshi Obata. A young boy finds a game board possessed by the ghost of an ancient Go master. When the Go master is linked to Hikaru’s consciousness, the two make an unstoppable team. Another is Yotsuba by Kiyohiko Azuma. This series follows a green-haired, adopted girl on her everyday adventures, discovering the world around her. For slightly older children, Cardcaptor Sakura by the well-regarded Clamp and Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind by the master Hayao Miyazaki are both wonderful examples of manga at its best.

But the graphic format offers much more than manga for young readers. Even very young children have a selection to choose from. In a funny book called Meanwhile, author-illustrator Jules Feiffer introduces readers to Raymond. Raymond, engrossed in his comic book, ignores his mother when she calls for him. As his mother becomes more insistent, Raymond notices that his comic uses the word “meanwhile” to change scenes, and decides to try it himself. Soon Raymond finds himself transported to a pirate ship. When he is forced to walk the plank, his scene-changing device comes in handy yet again, and so Raymond jumps from one adventure to another. This frantic and funny look at a boy, who is literally absorbed by his reading, will have kids eagerly turning the pages to see where Raymond ends up next.

Younger kids will also enjoy the antics of a funny feline in the Comic Adventures of Boots by Satoshi Kitamura. From trying to claim the best place to sleep on the wall to getting Madam Quark, a duck, to teach him how to fly, Boots never seems to run out of ways to get himself in and out of trouble. All of his escapades will be sure to bring a smile and a giggle to young readers.
For slightly older children, the sister and brother team of Jennifer and Matt Holm have created a terrific character called Babymouse. From the first volume, Babymouse, Queen of the World to the newest, Babymouse, the Musical, this heroine has been delighting a growing number of fans.

Although the pink covers may, at first, make you think that this is a book for girls only, Babymouse has the spunk, smarts and daring that make her appealing to both boys and girls. Drawn as a mouse, kids recognize that Babymouse is really every kid, as she struggles with fitting in at school, figuring out how to cope at camp and in her latest adventure, handling the starring role in the school play.

While kids are waiting for the next Babymouse adventure, they can try Scott Morse’s very funny Magic Pickle. Created (by accident, of course) by Dr. Jekyll Formaldehyde, our superhero has been brought out of his decades’ long sleep to fight the Brotherhood of Evil Produce and protect mankind from the likes of the Phantom Carrot and the fiery Chili Chili Bang Bang. The tongue-in-cheek humor is broad enough for kids and the stories and the art are packed with both adventure and silly puns. This

Books and Series Mentioned:

Hikaru No Go by Takeshi Obata (Viz Media, $7.95); ages 9-12.
Yotsuba by Kiyohiko Azuma (ADV Manga, $9.99); ages 9-12.
Cardcaptor Sakura by Clamp (TokyoPop, $9.99); ages 10-14.
Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind by Hayao Miyazaki (Viz Media, $9.95); ages 11-14.
Meanwhile by Jules Feiffer (HarperCollins, $6.99); ages 4-8.
Comic Adventures of Boots by Satoshi Kitamura (Farrar, Straus, available out of print); ages 4-8.
Babymouse: Queen of the World by Jennifer L. Holm and Matt Holm (Random House, $5.95); ages 6-10.
Magic Pickle by Scott Morse (Graphix, $9.99); ages 8-12.
Bone: Out of Boneville, vol. 1 by Jeff Smith (Scholastic, $9.99); ages 9-13.
Amelia Rules! The Whole World’s Crazy by Jimmy Gownley (Atheneum, $9.99); ages 8- 12.
Alison Dare: Little Miss Adventures by J. Torres (Tundra, $12.95); ages 9-12.
The Boxcar Children, A Graphic Novel, #1 by Gertrude Warner and Mike Dubisch (Albert Whitman, $6.99); ages 8-12.
Coraline: the Graphic Novel by Neil Gaiman (HarperCollins, $9.99); ages 10-14.
Black Beauty by Anna Sewell, adapted by Jane Brigman (Puffin, $10.99); ages 9-12.
Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson, adapted by Hamilton Tim (Puffin, $10.99); ages 10-13.
Call of the Wild by Jack London, adapted by Neil Kleid (Puffin, $10.99); ages 11-14.
To Dance by Siena Siegel and Mark Siegel (Aladdin, $9.99); ages 9-12.