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| "[Aya] wittily delves into both the political and the pop during an enchanted era when anything seemed possible." --Vibe Vixen |
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Before blogs, there were zines. Before zines, there were scrapbooks. Sometimes overlooked in the quest to produce high culture, these most direct and intimate means of communication and recording memory are the tools favoured by Sonja Ahlers in the making of her art. A self-taught artist and writer, Ahlers wears her pop culture obsessions on her sleeve, professing her love for such visual icons as Princess Di, Holly Hobbie and Stevie Nicks. Focusing on found objects such as stickers, greeting cards, magazine photos collected in collage framework, complete with song lyrics hand-lettered in cursive script and heartbreaking, melancholic water colors, Ahlers explores and exposes the social construction of roles, feminine and otherwise. Beginning with incipient childhood self-awareness and traversing high school status jockeying to adult social climbing, the cultural imagery that supports and informs personal identity is given uneasy new meanings and importance in Ahlers' visual remixes. With The Selves, the schizophrenic nature of an identity foraged from modern cultural sources is laid bare. |
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| The first installment in the series by French cartoonist David B. |
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| What It Is demonstrates a tried-and-true creative method that is playful, powerful, and accessible to anyone with an inquisitive wish to write or remember. Each page is a full-color collage that is not only a gentle guide to this process, but an invigorating example of exactly what it is: "The ordinary is extraordinary." |
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| Short stories, including the adapted-to-film original "Cecil and Jordan in New York" (a.k.a. Interior Design directed by Michel Gondry). |
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| A wry daily comics journal of urban ennui. Gabrielle Bell fascinatingly documents the mundane details of her below-minimum wage, twenty-something existence in Brooklyn, NY with a subtle humor. |
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| Gabrielle Bell continues her journal comics in a new volume. #1 is filled with the simple excursions and technicalities of an emerging cartoonist's lifestyle, and includes her surreal tale of unlikely love, "My Affliction." |
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Fine Ahtwerks: 2001-2008 A gifted…cartoonist… the delight of his work is in the play of free-associating and funny imagination.”– Ken Johnson, New York Times “Boundary-destroying, wacked-out (and beautifully drawn) material from Canadian artist Marc Bell that will leave you feeling as if you have bees in your head.”–Minneapolis Star Tribine
“Marc Bell is a riddle wrapped in a conundrum further wrapped in salty bacon.”–LA Weekly Marc Bell’s HOT POTATOE seamlessly combines decade-plus comics activities with a lifelong devotion to, as Bell calls it, "Fine Ahtwerks." Part art monograph, part comics collection, HOT POTATOE is filled with mixed media cardboard constructions, watercoloured drawings, altered found texts and Bell’s most intense, dizzying comics from the contemporary avant-garde comics anthologies – Kramers Ergot and The Ganzfeld. Bell’s works have their roots in draftsmanship, typography and old-fashioned gags, but morph into assemblages that connect his images into real space. His comics are funny, seat-of-the pants narratives that give the characters an inner-life. Represented by the Adam Baumgold Gallery in Manhattan, Bell is one of the leading lights in the new emphasis on drawing in the art world. He comes on like a stepchild of R. Crumb, Ray Johnson and Basquiat; armed with a dashing and looping rapidograph. Hardcover/276 pp/9” x 11.5” |
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| A tale in three symphonic acts |
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INTRODUCTION BY SETH Talking Lines is the first ever comprehensive short story collection of R. O. Blechman, one of the most prolific and influential visual artists of the twentieth century. This oeuvre of his graphic stories is, at once, jocular, wry and profound. Blechman ruminates on such various topics as nuclear weapons, war,wiretapping, Christopher Columbus, Leo Tolstoy, William Shakespeare and Virginia Woolf. The stories have appeared in the seminal magazine Humbug (edited by Harvey Kurtzman), The Nation, Nozone (edited by his son, Nicholas Blechman), The New York Times and The New York Times Book Review. Blechman is a modern master of all things visual whose timeless intellect and stripped-down artistry propels his nonstop relevancy. He is one of the few artists who has been able to balance the commercial and the artistic in a polished and unparalleled career that heralds him as one of the great cartoonists, the author of one of the first modern graphic novels, an Emmy and Cannes Film festival award-winning animator with a retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art, a Hall of Fame Art Director and even as a blogger for the Huffington Post.
Hardcover/6.5X9 inches/272 pages
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| First published in 1913 by P. F. Volland and Co. of Chicago, IL, Oh Skin-nay! is a collaboration between Briggs and poet Wilbur D. Nesbit and portrays a year in the life of small town America through the eyes of the twelve-year-old boy. |
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| A graphic novel classic from one of the world's best-known cartoonists |
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| This second issue kicks off with the infamous "The Man Who Couldn't Stop" (no descriptions given here!) and continues right through to Ed's unusual manner of breaking out of prison! |
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| The third issue of this legendary comic series introduces all the important elements that became synonymous with Ed The Happy Clown. |
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| The end of the Ed saga. Or, rather, one of the endings. |
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| What do you say when there's a secret at home? (200 p, B/W, 6x9", PB) |
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| "It has the thoroughness of a history book yet reads with the personalized vision of a novel."--Time Magazine. |
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| New edition! New notes! New Covers! Includes Chester Brown's first published strip that he drew when he was 12! |
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| D+Q's first graphic novel! A teenager discovers the adult magazine. (170p, B/W, PB) Out of print |
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| The first issue in Chester Brown's surreal series, from an infant's point of view. Accurately featuring almost no English! (24p, B/W) |
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| The secret Underwater alphabet revealed! Pay close attention. (24p, B/W) |
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| FINAL ISSUE OF YUMMY FUR! ONLY AVAILABLE ONLINE |
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| A first-time opportunity for fans to see the omni-talented Burns� photographs. |
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| In his first all-new graphic novel, one of the leading cartoonists of our time, Daniel Clowes, creates a thoroughly engaging, complex and fascinating portrait of the modern egoist—outspoken and oblivious to the world around him, but who sincerely wants to find his place in the world. Working in a single-page gag format and drawn in a spectrum of styles, the cartoonist of Ghost World, Ice Haven and David Boring gives us his funniest and most deeply affecting novel to date. |
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| Translated as "folk tales" or "storybook", Pohadky provides a tapestry of interwoven fables and morose, allegorical iconography, bringing a harsh light to the greed, loss, and submission that marks the origins of so many cultural folk tales and legends. |
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| The story of Dennis Cote, a friend of Collier's youth. Another portrait of one of the denizens of downtown life in Toronto in the early 80s. (2001, 24p, B/W) |
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| Canadian artist trades in wind-swept prairie town for a big city. (152p, B/W, 7x10") |
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| Observational and idiosyncratic, this book collects ten years of drawn essays from the inimitable pen of David Collier. |
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| The true story of a Canadian falsely convicted of a grisly murder. (24p, B/W) |
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| Collier's intriguing graphic novel/sketchbook combo! |
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| Women literally lose their heads as they swap limbs and lovers in a collection of 26 sublimely perverse wordless strips by Guy Delisle, best known for his internationally successful books from D+Q, Pyongyang and Shenzhen. 72 pages, softcover. |
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| A timely and incisive portrait of a country on the tipping point. |
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| The internationally bestselling graphic novel about the "hermit country" now in paperback. |
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| Shenzhen is entertainingly compact with Guy Delisle's observations of life in a cold urban city in southern China that is sealed off by electric fences and armed guards from the rest of the country. |
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| A year in the life of a world-renowned artist. |
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| First issue of Julie Doucet's legendary comic book series. |
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| From breast cancer to cannibalism in 24 pages. |
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| Doucet's messy bedroom and more. |
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| Heartbrake in the New York Subway. |
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| Julie visits a comic book store. |
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| Part one of "My New York Diary". |
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| The final issue of the classic series Dirty Plotte! |
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| Art beyond the borders of comix. (120 p. color, 5" x 8", Hardcover) |
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| Adventures in urban living with Julie Doucet. (56 p, B/W, 7x10") |
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| My Most Secret Desire is considered to be Doucet’s most innovative work, exploring the longings, pressures, and exploits of the feminine subconscious. |
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| Collects top material from D+Q's first 2 years, 1990-92. |
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| Second volume of award winning series begins here. |
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| Stories by Graham Chaffee, Pentti Otsamo, Maurice Vellekoop and Jacques Tardi. Covers and endpapers by J. D. King. |
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| From "Summer of Love". ONLY AVAILABLE ONLINE |
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| From the graphic novel "Summer of Love". ONLY AVAILABLE ONLINE |
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The New Girl in Town. (142p, 2 colour) |
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The New Girl in Town--in a signed and numbered edition. ONLY AVAILABLE ONLINE (140p, 2 colour) |
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| A surprising, wry, and deeply moving reflection on despair and the way back out. |
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| Melancholic yet joyful reflections on past loves, favorite authors, marriage, and fatherhood are laid out in a breezy, comic style. |
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| An inside look at France’s superstar cartooning team. Maybe Later sees Dupuy & Berberian working separately for the first time, each cartoonist taking turns to tell the behind-the-scenes “making of” their bestselling Mr. Jean series. |
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| A graphic novel from the author of the beloved children's classic Corduroy. |
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| The return of comic art legend, Luc Giard, whose bold, intense drawings were a regular fixture in the early issues of the D+Q anthology. This book marks his first solo collection, featuring all-new material. 2005. softcover, 5x7, 96pgs. |
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| “A touching memoir that's as heartfelt as anything I've read.”–Jeffrey Brown, Cartoonist of Clumsy, Unlikely and Big Head. |
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| With Crickets, Sammy Harkham, editor of the ground-breaking anthology Kramer's Ergot begins a new regular comic book series with D+Q! |
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| A true cornerstone of the Japanese underground scene of the 1960s |
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Argentinean artist Pablo Holmberg creates a bucolic, medieval folktale in Eden, where nature is the protagonist, and characters are the scenery. Follow a king as he converses with the moon, a star as it is born, and many more in four-panel strips that combine the playfulness of a Sunday comic with the simplicity of a haiku. Surreal yet friendly and approachable, each strip celebrates the thrill of being alive and encourages the reader to do the same. Eden is Holmberg’s chimerical cosmos where the author’s imaginative storytelling is purposely reliant on the reader’s interpretation.
A playful new collection of comic strips which were originally syndicated on his website, Holmberg reinvents the comic strip convention by emphasizing situations and natural landscapes rather than personalities and human interaction
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| The first issue and companion series to Hicksville. |
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| Stories in this pocket-sized issue include an adaptation of a Giorgio Manganelli tale about a desolate world that is stricken with religious fanaticism and violence, a "special report" on household insects, a profile of a loquacious conversationalist, and an exploration of such important questions as "How are we spending our Tuesday?" |
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| The classic 1951 woodcut graphic novel inspired by the atomic bomb testing in the South Pacific. |
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May 2010
"Charming and upbeat, filled with curiosity and warmth" -Newsarama
"It's like watching someone write with her art but then also put in bold moments of decoration around that writing." -The Comics Reporter
"Moomin remains a wistful paean to the joyos of relaxing and enjoying life and the importance of play...It's wish fulfillment at its finest" -Christ Mautner (Comic Book Resources)
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| More delightful tales from the legendary Finnish artist |
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| More delightful tales from the legendary Finnish artist |
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THE TREASURED CHILDREN'S CLASSIC, LOVINGLY BACK IN PRINT
"My favourite is THE BOOK A BOUT MOOMIN, MYMBLE AND MY, by Tove Jansson. [I] discovered it when [I was ] in Finland. It's just an awful lot of fun." - James Billington, NEWSWEEK
"For those wanting more gentle escapism, Tove Jansson's THE BOOK ABOUT MOOMIN, MYMBLE AND LITTLE MY is a joy...teases and beguiles at every turn." - THE OBSERVER
"THE BOOK ABOUT MOOMIN, MYMBLE N DLITTLE MY is a what-happens-next? tale with cut-outs. It is charmingly dated but delightful, and has an oddenss to which modern illustrators might aspire." - SUNDAY TIMES (UK)
In a delightful, curious game of what come next, Moomintroll travels through the woods to get home with milk for Moominmamma. A simple trip turns into a colorful adventure as Moomintroll meets Mymble who has lost her sister Little My. Along the way, they endue the hijinks of all teh charming characterse of the Moomin world including the Fillijonks and Hattifatteners. Will Moomin ever make it home safe and sound? A beautiful and boisterous story by internationally acclaimed children's author Tove Jansson, this picture book is sure to tickle the fancies of parents and kids as well as Moomintroll fans everywhere!
Hardcover/colour/20 pages/8.2X11.25 |
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| Keith Jones comes from a doodle world tradition that belongs to underground giants like Marc Bell and Ron Rege, Jr. A "Petits Livres" art book. (December 2005) |
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| Catland Empire is like a Phillip K. Dick twisted with a Saturday morning cartoon graphic novel. There will exist a future world where “human beings have become empty husks stripped of all memory when it comes to things like how to have fun and play games” or so says Mr. Space to his associate Mr. Time. The solution? Get the cats to teach humans how to have fun again. This is all the Cat People do with their lives. They are the fun and game masters. What follows is a tangled web of psychedelic science fiction blending anti-consumerism politics and intergalactic liaisons between cats and dogs—bitter enemies kept secret from each other to avoid a planetary race war. Victor Burg is plotting to wipe out all of mankind by having his brain chip implanted drones commit genocide. |
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| A stunning memoir of a mother and her daughter's survival in WWII and their subsequent lifelong struggle with faith. |
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AN AWARD-WINNING BOOK FROM A LEGENDARY MANGA-KA AUTHOR
Red Snow continues D+Q’s groundbreaking exploration of the fascinating world of Gekiga in this collection of short stories drawn with great delicacy and told with subtle nuance by legendary Japanese artist Susumu Katsumata. The setting is the pre-modern Japanese countryside of the author’s youth, a slightly magical world where ancestral traditions hold sway over a people in the full vigor of life, struggling to survive the harsh seasons and the difficult life of manual laborers and farmers. While the world they inhabit has faded into memory and myth, the universal fundamental emotions of the human heart prevail at the center of these tender stories.
Susumu Katsumata began publishing comic strips in the legendary avant-garde magazine Garo (which also published his contemporaries Yoshihiro Tatsumi and Yoshiharu Tsuge) in 1965 while enrolled in the faculty of Science in Tokyo. He abandoned his studies in 1971 to become a professional comics artist, alternating the short humorous strips, upon which he built his reputation, with stories of a more personal nature in which he tenderly depicted the lives of peasants and farmers from his native region. In 2006, Susumu Katsumata won the 35th Japanese Cartoonists Association Award Grand prize for Red Snow.
Hardcover/232 pages/6.25 x 8.5 inches |
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| Introduction by Jeet Heer, Walt & Skeezix is the first-ever collection of the classic twentieth-century newspaper strip Gasoline Alley. BOOK ONE is the beginning of a handsome multi-volume series edited and designed by comics virtuoso Chris Ware. |
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| Collects Gasoline Alley from 1923 - 1924 |
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| The third volume of the much-praised Walt & Skeezix reprint series, collecting years 1925-1926. |
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| In the long awaited-volume of Walt and Skeezix, the newly married Walt Wallet settles into domestic life with his wife, Phyllis, and their adopted son, Skeezix, but their family bliss is soon disrupted by a man who claims to be Skeezix’s natural father. A long custody battle erupts, raising questions as to the importance of blood ties compared to a loving environment. Later, Walt and Phyllis have to deal with all the dilemmas of a young couple’s life as their family starts to unexpectedly expand. This is the very stuff of life—paying the bills, nursing a sick child, finding the right job while spending quality time with family—expertly explored with cartoonist Frank King’s unerring fidelity to reality. In unfolding the drama of the Wallet family’s life, King displays his full mastery of long and complex narratives, which made his work a forerunner to the modern graphic novel. In his introduction to the series, Jeet Heer explores King’s storytelling prowess and links the concerns of the strip with changes in American culture in the 1920s. Lavishly illustrated with King’s family photos, the book is designed by Chris Ware, whose elegant and detail-rich books have revolutionized the graphic novel field. |
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| A deal for all three volumes published so far! Get six years of Gasoline Alley strips and save $15! |
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| A bird's eye view of the city of Berlin. The first issue. |
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| Conflict between fascists and communists circa 1928. |
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| The rise of the National Socialists. |
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| Last weeks of the winter of 1929. |
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The first issue of the second volume Berlin: City of Smoke. |
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| The penultimate chapter to Berlin: City of Smoke, the second volume in Jason Lutes' trilogy about the decline of the Weimar Republic, finds its broad cast of characters searching for solid footing in a chaotic cityscape. |
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| Blood spatters the street, a life's work goes up in flames, and lovers take flight in the final chapter of Berlin: City of Smoke. |
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| The first volume in the ambitious Berlin Trilogy collecting issues #1-8. |
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| The second installment of the epic historical trilogy. |
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| Is there a magic trick for mending broken hearts? (Rev. ed.,152 p, B/W, 6x9") New printing with Sherman Alexie introduction |
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| Some things you should know about Joe Matt’s Graphic Novel (128p, B/W 6x9) |
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| Joe Matt's younger years, collected from Peepshow issues #7-10. |
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| The first issue of the long running comic book series. |
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| Joe's girlfriend dumps him at last. |
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| (October 1993, 24 p) Joe gets turned down. Again. |
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| Final chapter of The Poor Bastard. |
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| Beginning of new storyline by Joe, his best yet. |
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| Joe, Seth & Chester have lunch. (February 2002, 32p, 2 colour) |
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| After a nearly 5 year absence from comics, Joe Matt returns with his funniest, and possibly best issue of Peepshow yet. |
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| Everything is fodder for Matt’s autobiographical comics, and his biggest target for ridicule is himself. SPENT collects the story originally serialized in issues #11 - 14 of his infamous comic book series, Peepshow. |
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| Signed and Number Cloth Edition, collects Peepshow issues #1-6. (168 p, B/W, 6x9") |
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| (168p, B/W, paperback) The first Peepshow graphic novel. |
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| What's so funny about death and dying? Find out from a 93-year-old! |
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| NOW IN PAPERBACKRutu Modan's debut graphic novel that won the Eisner Award! New edition with interview by Joe Sacco! |
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| A collection of short stories from the cartoonist of Exit Wounds. |
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| October 2007. Night fall at the crash site. Tensions flare among the birds while the crows watch, amused, and make way for wild dogs. |
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| Acclaimed cartoonist Anders Nilsen continues his surrealist trek through the queries and conundrums of life that plague the minds of reptile, fowl, and mammal alike. |
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The wounded bird Clay completes his slow crawl over the rim and into to the bomb crater. There he finds the lonely and depressed Betty. The two compare notes on the cataclysm's effects, and are shortly thereafter descended upon by three upstart crows on a lark and mission of revenge.
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| The Ignatz award-winning Dogs & Water follows a young man and his bear as they wander further into the middle of nowhere and away from everything they think they know. |
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| A sad and cautionary tale of mystery, fame, murder and innocence. |
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| Since 1989, John Porcellino has released over 65 issues of his self-published comic King-Cat Comics and Stories. This large collection focuses on the first fifty issues with extensive endnotes and an index along with selections of all the extra ephemera that makes an individual issue of K-C it's own unique experience—essays, articles, stories, and letters from friends. |
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CELEBRATING THE TWENTIETH ANNIVERSARY OF THE KING CAT ZINE
"[KING CAT COMICS] swell with passion and heart." - USA TODAY'S POP CANDY
"Since 1989, John prcellino's simple, and simpy beautiful, comics (along with letters, lists, and a few photographs) have been self published to growing acclaim." - MINNEAPOLIS CITY PAGES
"Porcellino is a master at miniature poignance." - ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY
MAP OF MY HEART celebrates the twentieth anniversary of John Porcellino's seminal and influential comics zine, KING CAT COMICS, which he started self publishing in 1989 and which has been his predominant means of expression. In this collection, while Porcellino is living in isolation and experiencing the pain of divorce he crafts a melancholic, tender graphic ballad of heartbreak and reflection. Known for his sad, quiet honesty rendered in his signature deceptively minimalist style, Porcellino has a command of graphic storytelling as sophisticated as the medium's more visually intricate masters. Few other artists are able to so expertly contemplate the sadness, beauty, and wonder of life in so few lines.
Black and White/304 pages/6X9
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| Road trips, drunken concerts, and late-night make-out sessions all swirl together in this coming-of-age graphic novel by King Cat cartoonist John Porcellino. |
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| Everyone's favorite comic book character is back after six long years! Archer Prewitt delivers his third issue of SOF BOY! |
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| This fourth installment in Michel Rabagliati's semi-autobiographical series finds Paul settling comfortably into adult life, occasional twinges of anxiety aside. |
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| Rabagliati's thinly veiled autobiography tells a geniunely moving coming-of-age story of a summer as a camp counsellor. Charmingly illustrated, the book follows Paul as he moves from self-pity to self-confidence, learning to live outside himself through falling in love and helping others." -The Ottawa Citizen |
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| (32 p, B/W, 7.5 x 9.75") 2001 Harvey Award for Best New Talent |
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| Michel Rabagliati delivers another charming, thinly veiled memoir, this book won the Doug Wright Award for Best book of 2005 and is a Golden Oak Award nominee. |
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| The first collection of short stories from the radiant 'cute-brut' world of a truly remarkable artist. |
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| Ron Regé, Jr.'s epic in a new edition. |
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| Ron Regé Jr’s Yeast Hoist #13 |
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| A little boy is haunted by terrible dreams until he meets a man with strange powers. |
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THE COMPLETE SOFTCOVER COLLECTION OF BOSNIAN WAR SHORT STORIES FROM THE AUTHOR OF PALESTINE AND SAFE AREA GORAZDE “Sacco is one of the most astute war-zone correspondents working today”¬–Rolling Stone
“A searing and amusing look at the motley collection of reporters, war profiteers, criminals, soldiers and hapless civilians trapped in ware zone.”–New York Times
“Sacco doesn’t try to lay claim to the truth. He’s simply telling one man’s story, and it makes for an excellent book.”–Washington Post
“Sacco demonstrates that the narrative arts, including comics, can gather up complicated social truths with a gradual patience that often eludes the camera.”–Boston Globe
Using old-fashioned pen and paper, award-winning cartoonist Joe Sacco reports from the sidelines of wars around the world. THE FIXER AND OTHER STORIES is a new softcover that collects Joe Sacco’s landmark short stories on the Bosnian Ware that previously comprised the hardcover editions of THE FIXER and WARS END.
Black and White/216 pages/7 x 10 inches
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| THE FIRST STORY TO BE TRANSLATED IN ENGLISH FROM THE SURREALIST AND ALTERNATIVE MANGA-KA |
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| Palooka-Ville #10-15 collected in one beautiful hardcover volume |
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| On the surface, George seems a charming, foolish old man--but who is he? And who was he? New from Seth. |
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| The classic first issue in a new deluxe 10th Anniversary edition. |
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| Part 4 of "It's A Good Life If You Don't Weaken". |
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| The Clyde Fans story contines... |
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| After one more disastrous attempt at being a travelling salesman, Simon Matchcard returns to the office defeated and unsure of what he'll do next. |
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| (24p, 2 colour) The first single issue continuing the story from Clyde Fans: Book One. |
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(212p, 4-color, 9x12”) The Sketchbooks of Seth
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| Seth's gorgeous graphic novel tale, pulled from the pages of his sketchbook. A comic about collecting comics! |
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HILARIOUS PARODIES OF CLASSIC LITERATURE REIMAGINED WITH CLASSIC
COMICS
“A provocative collision.”–Entertainment Weekly
“A brilliant parable about literature, history and what telling stories tells us about ourselves.”–Toronto Star
“Disconcerting and fascinating... a canny fusion of overlapping fictional legacies”–Globe and Mail
HILARIOUS PARODIES OF CLASSIC LITERATURE REIMAGINED WITH CLASSIC COMICS
Masterpiece Comics adapts a variety of classic literary works with the most iconic visual idioms of twentieth-century comics. Dense with exclamation marks and lurid colors, R. Sikoryak’s parodies remind us of the sensational excesses of the canon, or, if you prefer, of the economical expressiveness of classic comics from Batman to Garfield. In "Blond Eve,” Dagwood and Blondie are ejected from the Garden of Eden into their archetypal suburban home; Oscar Wilde’s Dorian Gray is reimagined as a foppish Little Nemo; and Camus’s Stranger becomes a brooding, chain-smoking Golden Age Superman. Other source material includes Dante, Shakespeare, Dostoyevsky, bubblegum wrappers, superhero comics, kid cartoons, and more.
Sikoryak’s classics have appeared in landmark anthologies such as RAW and Drawn & Quarterly, all of which are collected in Masterpiece Comics, along with brilliant new graphic literary satires. His drawings have appeared on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart, as well as in The New Yorker, The Onion, Mad, and Nickelodeon Magazine. 64 pages,Hardcover
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| The classic children's comic strip in a handsome new archival series, designed by Seth |
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| The second volume of NANCY in D+Q’s John Stanley Library elegantly designed by Seth stars the beloved Brillo-headed Nancy in her own comic book series written by the greatest children's comics writer of all time, John Stanley. Stanley who is the author of MELVIN MONSTER, LITTLE LULU, 13 GOING ON 18, puts his own deft sense of humor and superior cartooning on the Ernie Bushmiller creation with spooky Oona Goosepimple, Spike, and Mr. McOnion. Nancy, along with her sidekick Sluggo, will charm readers young and old with her hilarious, scheming hijinks. |
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| Precious classic comics from the writer of Melvin Monster and Little Lulu. |
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THE LATEST TITLE IN THE JOHN STANLEY LIBRARY DESIGNED BY THE CARTOONIST SETH
In the early to mid-1960s, John Stanley turned his attentions to drawing and writing his own series, specifically Melvin Monster, Around the Block with Dunc and Loo, Kookie, and the most interesting of these titles, Thirteen Going on Eighteen, rather than working with already established licensed characters he is most well known for such as Little Lulu. D+Q has embarked on an archival series of Stanley’s comics including Melvin Monster, Around the Block with Dunc and Loo, Kookie and Thirteen Going on Eighteen.
Thirteen Going on Eighteen focuses on the friendship and rivalry of two teenage girls, Val and Judy. Each comic is a darkly hilarious look at the social maneuverings and betrayals of the teen set. Stanley’s stripped down approach perfectly captures the fever pitch of teenage years. He creates a teenage sit-com and turns it into an anguished character study.
Hardcover/336 pages/7.75” x 11” |
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| A deluxe comic book collecting two out of print stories "The Revival" and "Hundreds of Feet Below Daylight." |
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| Sturm's stories The Revival, Hundreds of Feet Below Daylight, and The Golem's Mighty Swing are collected in this American trilogy of religious fervor, greed, and entertainment through the eras. |
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| An expectant father, Mendleman's life goes through an upheaval when he discovers he can no longer earn a living doing the work that defines him— making well-crafted rugs by hand. A proud artisan, he takes his donkey-drawn cart to the market only to be turned away when the distinctive shop he once sold to now only stocks cheaply manufactured merchandise. As the realities of the market place sink in, Mendleman unravels. Sturm draws a quiet, reflective and beautiful portrait of eastern European in the early 1900s–bringing to life the hustle and bustle of an old-world market place on the brink of the Industrial Revolution. Market Day is a timeless tale of how economic and social forces can affect a single life. |
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| A Jewish baseball team in trouble create a monster. |
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INDOOR VOICE collects pen, brush, ink, watercolor, and collage experiments that show how Tamaki arrives at her illustration work, as well as more polished and personal comics work examining her relationship to her parents and their influence on her art.
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| The epic autobiography of a mangaka master |
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| Created in the late 1950s, BLACK BLIZZARD is Yoshihiro Tatsumi’s remarkable first full-length graphic novel and one of the first published examples of Gekiga. Tatsumi documented how his love for Mickey Spillane and hardboiled crime novels led him to create this landmark genre of manga in his epic critically acclaimed 2009 autobiography, A DRIFTING LIFE. With BLACK BLIZZARD, Tatsumi explores the dark underbelly of his working-class heroes that five deacdes later will make him one of the most well known Japanese cartoonists in North America.to an abandoned ranger station where they take shelter from the storm. As they sit around the fire they built, Susumu relates how love drove him to become a murderer. A cinematic adventure story, BLACK BLIZZARD uncovers an unlikely love story and an even unlikelier friendship |
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| A collection of short stories from the grandfather of Japanese alternative comics edited and designed by Adrian Tomine. |
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| Book Five features Anneli Furmark (Sweden), Amanda Vähämäki (Finland), and T. Edward Bak (United States), with cover art by Vähämäki. |
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| Book Four features three North American cartoonists, Dan Zettwoch ("The Ghost of Dragon Canoe") of St. Louis, Gabrielle Bell (When I�m Old) of Brooklyn and Martin Cendreda (Dang!) of Los Angeles. |
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| The complete Optic Nerve mini-comics |
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| Adrian Tomine created this poster to celebrate D+Q's 20th! hand silk screened poster+adrian+TV on the Radio= act now, as this is limited edition! |
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| "Optic Nerve is less your traditional comic than a combination of great minimalist art and literature." —Jane magazine |
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| Optic Nerve #10 is the second of a three part series, begins with our protagonist Ben Tanaka diving head-first into the world of dating, only days after his unwitting, long-term girlfriend has left for an internship in New York. |
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| The final issue in the three-part Shortcomings epic. |
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| Features 4 stories, including the Eisner Award-nominated "Pink Frosting". |
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| Four stories including "Dylan & Donovan". |
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| Three stories featured here, including "Hazel Eyes". |
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| A successful young writer becomes obsessed with finding the girl he had a crush on in high school. |
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| Hilary the retail customer service agent spins out of control. |
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| A beautiful young woman finds herself besieged by the attention of three obsessive, lustful men. |
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| A high school in the shadow of the first Gulf War. |
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| Part 1 of 3. A Japanese-American male searches for the perfect girl. |
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| 18 x 24 " ONLY AVAILABLE ONLINE |
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| The ultimate collection by one of the most recognized talents in graphic novels and includes over a decade of comics and illustrations by Adrian Tomine. |
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| Originally serialized in his series Optic Nerve, Adrian Tomine's Shortcomings is his first long-form story, and the most anticipated graphic novel of 2007. |
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| Paperback edition of Adrian Tomine's critically acclaimed Shortcomings |
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| Collects Optic Nerve #5-8 in paperback. |
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| 18 x 24" ONLY AVAILABLE ONLINE |
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| Gayer than a day in May. (112p, 4 colour PB) |
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| Von Szombathy’s surreal illustrations explore the bold juxtaposition of color and use of iconic imagery characteristic of modern underground screenprinting. |
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| Straggling behind the mild 2003 success of cartoonist Chris Ware's first facsimile collection of his miscellaneous sketches, notes, and adolescent fantasies arrives this second volume, updating weary readers with the last ten years of Ware's clichéd and outmoded insights. |
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| This print portfolio, somewhat hedgingly entitled The ACME Novelty Library, No. 18.5, contains all four "Thanksgiving" covers drawn by cartoonist and cultural commentator F. C. Ware for the November 27th, 2006 issue of the New Yorker, as well as the additional fifth comic strip which heretofore only appeared in digital form, all carefully printed in full color at an oversized 15" x 20" size on heavy paper and folded in half for easy recycling. As if this wasn't dreary enough, included is a new supplementary folded comic strip, measuring 16" x 11," which is also folded in half. Presented as the "Lower East Side" version of the even more ridiculously priced signed "Upper East Side" portfolio (which is, however, not folded in half) the consumer is asked to carefully weigh whether purchase of this object is truly necessary, and to act accordingly. |
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| A career-spanning retrospective of one of the masters of North American cartooning |
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