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Terry Hooper-Scharf

Thursday, 28 April 2016

Clallam Bay Comicon "Bezango, Washington" film to be shown

From Donna Barr

The filmmakers of "Bezango, Washington" - interviews with Pacific Northwest Cartoonists - have given the 2016 Clallam Bay Comicon permission to show the film during the convention. 
Screening starts at 8:00 pm, Friday, July 8, 2016, in the Lion's Club at 90 Bogachiel Street, Clallam Bay, on Washington State's Olympic Peninsula.

Contact: donnabarr01@gmail.com and 360 963 2935
Bezango, WA is a documentary chronicling the art, history and lives of prominent Pacific Northwest cartoonists and comic artists. Produced by Ron Austin and Louise Amandes. www.bezango.com

Which Country and Are People Buying things They See On CBO?

I like comparing to see if the same countries visit all the blogs but....

Black Tower Comics Blog
United States

Poland

United Kingdom

Germany

Portugal

France

Russia

Spain

Pakistan

United Arab Emirates

Alan Class Blog

Poland

United States

United Kingdom

Norway

Russia

Ukraine

Germany

China

France

Spain


Comic Bits Online 

United States

Ukraine

France

United Kingdom

Germany

Russia

Japan

Poland

Spain

United Arab Emirates






As I've noted before, the countries viewing at any one time can vary though the US is always present and fairly high up in the views (usually at 1 but Poland beat them to that spot on the Class blog -wassap US???).
The only country I've not seen in views before was Pakistan. Welcome, Pakistani comic fans!

The United Arab Emirates seems to show up regularly on the Black Tower blog and here on CBO. Again -anyone from the UAE want to invest in comics get in touch (I have to try)!

Japan is now also a regular viewer on CBO. Youkoso!

A lot of countries do not show up on views because, as I found out after a great deal of digging, Blogger/Google does not recognise some operating systems (tell me about it!) and so the countries where those are the OS in use do not get included.  In fact some OS, it seems, are actively blocked.

Pity because it means the daily stats do not show an accurate picture of who is viewing -I know people from Australia and New Zealand view CBO because I'm in contact with them on my Yahoo groups and yet those countries do not appear on any of the blog view stats but, again, from emails, I KNOW they are visiting those blogs.

Not showing up on CBO, though a few using the "right" OS system do on the Class blog, are those from China. Again, I know a LOT of people in the PRC/HK, etc., do visit CBO but they are not counted.

Apparently, according to people who do this sort of thing for a living (and are comic fans), CBO should add at least 3,000 views to the daily view stats.  I'm not really that worried about the stats as I am about seeing who/which countries view CBO because it means I can research comics from those countries for posts.  You could make total blog views 65667987 and it still is not going to impress me!

Talking on my Yahoo groups and emails, I know that at least four people have ordered the three volume Tarzan books from Titan.  A good few also order the Cinebook The 9th Art books when they see them on CBO.  Good. I've not asked from whom the people are buying the Tarzan books because that's none of my business.  I hope from Titan or a UK outlet, though. That, along with Cinebook purchases, puts money into UK businesses.

I hear from people on Yahoo groups, Pinterest, Google+, Twitter, Face Book and elsewhere so that helps me find out who/where is viewing but it also helps me because I find out people are buying based on what they see on CBO.

Just not my books it seems (that is a great big hint, by-the-way!).

Now, need to get back to work.  Comics do not write or draw themselves.

"And Green Flame in the sky shall herald the coming of the Many-Eyed One"
Mayan Prophecy, 1000 AD































BilBOlbul Newsletter - 28 aprile 2016

Ricevi questa mail in quanto regolarmente iscritto alla lista BILBOLBUL.
Non vedi bene questa mail? Guardala nel browser. Non sei interessato? Disiscriviti qui.

28 aprile 2016

BBB - PRIMAVERA/ESTATE

BilBOlbul 2016 in realtà è già iniziato: ad accompagnarci verso gli eventi dell’autunno, un ciclo di cinque incontri e una mostra che scandiranno la bella stagione e che avranno per protagonisti giovani autori e maestri del fumetto di fama internazionale.
Per informazioni: www.bilbolbul.net

INCONTRO CON TERRY MOORE

Il terzo incontro si terrà giovedì 5 maggio, alle ore 18.00, presso l’Aula Magna dell’Accademia di Belle Arti di Bologna (via Belle Arti, 54).
Terry Moore, nato nel 1954, e residente in Texas, ha debuttato sulla scena fumettistica americana nel 1993, con il primo numero della sua serie autoprodotta Strangers in Paradise, divenendo da subito una delle icone della rinascita del fumetto e degli autori statunitensi indipendenti. Al termine della lunga serie, nel 2007, ha lanciato Echo, un thriller fantascientifico, che è terminato nel 2011. Attualmente si dedica a Rachel Rising, terza saga di sua invenzione, ma in passato ha occasionalmente scritto e disegnato fumetti per Marvel e DC Comics. Ha vinto nel 1996 il premio Eisner come miglior serie per Strangers in Paradise, e nel 2009 il premio Harvey come miglior nuova serie perEcho. Ha sempre sognato però di lavorare a una striscia umoristica per i quotidiani, e recentemente è riuscito infine a fondere insieme questo desiderio con la sua serie più famosa: in SiP Kids Moore racconta, a cavallo tra il "what if" e lo "spin off", come sarebbe se il cast di Strangers in Paradise frequentasse la scuola elementare e abitasse in un quartiere che ricorda quello dei Peanuts di Schulz. I suoi lavori sono attualmente pubblicati in italia da Bao Publishing.

A presentare e dialogare con l’autore Michele Foschini, direttore editoriale di Bao Publishing.
Per informazioni: www.bilbolbul.net

GLI INCONTRI DI MAGGIO

Incontro con Davide Reviati
Giovedì 19 maggio ore 17.30
Aula Magna – Accademia di Belle Arti di Bologna, via Belle Arti 54
Interviene Emilio Varrà
Promosso da Coconino Press / Fandango
Incontro con Martín López Lam, Olaf Ladousse, Klari Moreno Roberto Massó
Giovedì 26 maggio ore 15
Aula Magna – Accademia di Belle Arti di Bologna, via Belle Arti 54
Intervengono Andrea Bruno e Cristina Portolano
Promosso dalla Real Academia de España en Roma
Mostra “Parco Falafel” di Martín López Lam
27 maggio – 9 giugno 2016
inaugurazione giovedì 26 maggio ore 19
Museo Internazionale e biblioteca della Musica di Bologna, Strada Maggiore 34
Promosso dalla Real Academia de España en Roma

Seguiteci anche su Facebook e Twitter.

TOCCAFONDO PER BOLOGNA JAZZ FESTIVAL E BILBOLBUL

Continua e si rafforza la collaborazione tra Bologna Jazz Festival e BilBOlbul, manifestazioni che hanno in comune, oltre alla contiguità del calendario, una vocazione al dialogo tra diversi linguaggi artistici.

L’artista invitato a unire col suo tratto il mondo del jazz e quello dell’illustrazione è il pittore, illustratore e cineasta Gianluigi Toccafondo, noto per le sue animazioni per clienti quali Sambuca Molinari, Rai e Fandango, e per il suo lavoro con registi del calibro di Matteo Garrone e Ridley Scott.

Il suo lavoro si concretizza sin da subito con la realizzazione delle immagini per la Bologna Jazz Card, sorta di anteprima alle opere che l’artista realizzerà poi per l’edizione 2016 dei due festival.

La nuova Bologna Jazz Card 2016-2017 illustrata da Toccafondo (in tre diverse versioni) verrà ufficialmente lanciata domenica 8 maggio. In questa data all’Oratorio di San Filippo Neri (ore 21:15) si terrà un concerto ‘fuori programma’ del Bologna Jazz Festival, di cui saranno protagonisti Dave Liebman (sassofoni) e Richie Beirach (pianoforte). Nel corso della serata sarà possibile sottoscrivere la nuova Bologna Jazz Card.
Per informazioni: www.bolognajazzfestival.com

RITORNA "COOP FOR WORDS"

L'anno scorso vinsero Marco e Riccardo Tabilio, che esposero il proprio lavoro durante il festival 2015 presso RAM Hotel.

Quest'anno il concorso compie quattordici anni, e oltre alle consuete categorie poesia, racconti dello scontrino, fumetto (immaginandosi il prologo di un'opera letteraria contemporanea), ricette bastarde, propone una grande novità: il testo di un brano hip-hop, da comporre sulla base musicale firmata dal rapper e musicista Ice One.

Possono partecipare gli autori tra i 18 e i 35 anni che abitano nei territori delle cooperative, inviando la propria opera dal 15 aprile al 15 giugno, tramite il form presente sull'home page del sito.

I vincitori saranno proclamati al Festivaletteratura di Mantova a settembre; in palio la pubblicazione in un’antologia, la possibilità di partecipare ad Ad Alta Voce, l’esposizione della propria opera a BilBOlbul, ma anche borse di studio per la scuola “Bottega Finzioni” di Lucarelli e un contributo in un volume edito da Chiarelettere.

Per informazioni: http://www.coopforwords.it

DONA IL TUO 5XMILLE A HAMELIN

Ha da poco preso il via la campagna fiscale 2016 che permette a tutti i contribuenti di destinare una quota pari al 5XMILLE dell’Irpef a enti con finalità di interesse sociale.

Puoi quindi scegliere di destinare il tuo 5XMILLE a Hamelin Associazione Culturale, codice fiscale 92047890378, che da ormai dieci anni cura e organizza BilBOlbul. Festival internazionale di fumetto.

Il tuo sostegno è fondamentale affinché possiamo continuare a portare avanti le nostre attività. Grazie.

CONTENUTI

  • BBB - Primavera/Estate
  • Incontro con Terry Moore
  • Gli altri incontri di maggio
  • Toccafondo per Bologna Jazz Festival e BilBOlbul
  • Ritorna "Coop for Words"
  • Dona il tuo 5XMILLE a Hamelin
BilBOlbul Festival internazionale di fumetto fa parte della
Rete dei Festival del Contemporaneo di Bologna

Wednesday, 27 April 2016

Regarding Personal Interviews

Please understand that I have stated I no longer consider myself involved in the UK comics 'scene'.  I have had three requests for me to take part in interviews but I have never liked interviews.  I do not think I really need another long interview.

Firstly, I will have no say in how any interview, including my responses would be cut. No.  Secondly, I appreciate the offer but 24 questions requiring some lengthy responses is too time consuming considering there is no publication or web site that has arranged to publish it.

I have done two long interviews as well as a couple of printed interviews since the 1990s. On most of my sites you will find the interview by Phil Latter with me which is lengthy.  The QRD interview was recently posted on CBO.

I do not have the ego to want to do countless interviews. All you require is in the above interviews.

I will, however, gladly take part in interviews which are aimed to a non-UK audience whether in Europe, the United States or beyond!  Just ask. Sadly, the QRD interview seems to have created no reaction -but that's comics!

Again, it's not being snooty.  If I start jumping into interviews where I do not have a guaranteed final say in what is published I am certainly not interested. Also, I would be a hypocrite since I would be backing out of everything I have written and said in the last year.

If you can't find but need the interview links just let me know.

Tarzan in TV Comic....


Above: TV Tornado cover by Don Lawrence


To answer a query by John schiltz: I know Don Lawrence at least drew Tarzan for TV Tornado though there was at least one other. Sadly I cannot find a sample of a TV Comic weekly Tarzan strip but if one can be forwarded (my TV Comics are no more) it might help identify who the artist was.

Don Lawrence drew the following stories:

 The Lionhunter - Barchak - Krauk The Crocodile - Bongi's Adventure - Wild Chagra - The Mighty Olombo - The Monster Of M'Tambi - Servant Of The Gods - Urogi - The River God - People On The Run - Bad Manu - You Little Monkey You - The Roar Of The Lion - The Power Of Water - The Elephanthunters - The Holy Mask - A Family Quarrel - The Jungle Queen - A Busy Day For Tarzan - The Secret Of The Lions - Captured - A New Leader - Elephant Walk - The Fish Thief - Chained - The Owigi Gold - Malubu - Poison - The Iron Elephant - Mask Of The Devil - Okopi's Sacrifice - Carnivore Plants - Sharing - The Deadly Eye - Aerobatics - The Black Gold

This is a Don Lawrence Tarzan page and it is, unmistakably, Lawrence!

Titan Books - Powers: The Secret History of Deena Pilgrim


Powers: The Secret History of Deena Pilgrim

Brian Michael Bendis  and Neil Kleid

Dimensions: 198 x 130 mm

Paperback: 320pp

Publication date: 15 March 2016

ISBN: 9781785651281

£7.99

Synopsis

The Secret History of Deena Pilgrim, starring the fan favorite character from the comic series, is the story of a cold case that reopens when evidence from a new murder points back to Deena's own family tree. Pilgrim is forced to investigate her family's sordid past in law enforcement and must turn to her estranged partner Walker for help.

or if you want more:

Ever since she could walk, Homicide Detective Deena Pilgrim followed in her father’s footsteps. A man with a badge, Waldo Pilgrim surrounded himself with what Deena believed to be the cream of the crop when it came to serving and protecting. These days, Deena won’t discuss her father or the life she left behind in Atlanta years ago, a life before she partnered with Christian Walker to investigate homicide cases in a city where perps and victims boast incredible, dangerous powers. Now, nearly a decade of bringing Powers to justice has broken down Deena’s resolve, along with the walls she erected long ago to protect herself from prying eyes. Walls that kept her from a past best left alone, and from those determined to get close and bring horrible, heartbreaking memories to the surface once more.

But when a cold case reopens a series of unsolved murders that point back to Deena’s family tree, she is unavoidably reacquainted with a former boyfriend with ties to both sets of killings, along with her sordid past. Forced to question the choices, decisions, and steps she’s taken in life, love, and career---including her long-standing partnership with Walker, a former Power whose secret history intersects with Deena’s own---Detective Deena Pilgrim must bring a killer to justice and, in doing so, hopefully come to terms with the kind of cop she wants to be . . . assuming that she wants to continue being a cop at all.

Written by Powers cocreator Brian Michael Bendis and novelist Neil Kleid, The Secret History of Deena Pilgrim is the first-ever prose story set in the world of the award-winning, critically acclaimed comic book series by Bendis and artist Michael Avon Oeming. Powers tells the stories of human police officers attempting to solve crimes in a world inhabited by superheroes and supervillains. In January 2015, the Playstation Network debuted it as its first-ever hour-long scripted programming, featuring characters and plots from the comic book series.

On this I'm lost.  Know nothing about it and reading over 300 pages of prose just ain't going to work. It seems that some people purchased without first finding out what the book was about.  I've found three people who've purchased the book presuming and not doing anything normal like, say, finding out what they were buying, so were "Very disappointed. Not a comic book" and "I presumed this was a graphic novel".

Sigh.

So, I'll let you have the quotes and hope you at least know what you are thinkiung of buying!

"Like the comic? Like the show? What’re you waiting for? Buy the damn book or Deena comes and breaks your arms. There’s a reason we love the character―in every medium. ―Brad Meltzer, bestselling author of The President’s Shadow

“[Brian Michael Bendis] is - and has been, for many years - Marvel's chief ambassador for converting moviegoers into comic readers.” ―Vulture.com on Brian Michael Bendis

“Brian Michael Bendis' 'passion resonates with fans'” ―The Washington Post on Brian Michael Bendis

Titan Books: Tarzan volume 3 -Tarzan Versus The Nazis


Tarzan - Versus The Nazis (Vol. 3)
The Complete Burne Hogarth Sundays and Dailies Library
Burne Hogarth


Dimensions: 324 x 246mm
Hardback
164pp 
full colour
Publication date: 17 April 2016 ISBN: 9781781163191
 RRP £29.99 BUY NOW


THE WORLD-FAMOUS COMIC STRIP, RESTORED AND COLLECTED FOR THE FIRST TIME IN ITS ENTIRETY!

Following on from Tarzan in the City of Gold and Tarzan Versus The Barbarians, Tarzan Versus The Nazis is the third of four exclusive volumes authorized by the Edgar Rice Burroughs estate, collecting the entire run of the legendary Tarzan comic strip by one of the most influential artists of the 20th Century, Burne Hogarth (with Don Garden).

Burne Hogarth and writer Don Garden produced some of the most acclaimed stories ever to appear in the pages of newspapers worldwide with the iconic character TARZAN!

You can see my reviews of the previous Titan volumes here:

Vol. 1 Tarzan In The City Of Gold

http://hoopercomicart.blogspot.co.uk/2014/05/titan-books-tarzan-in-city-of-gold.html

Vol. 2 Tarzan versus the Barbarians


A guide to collecting UK Tarzan comics that I posted is here: http://hoopercomicart.blogspot.co.uk/2016/02/a-rough-guide-to-collecting-uk-tarzan.html

I think that the 1982 interview with Burne Hogarth included in this volume is very interesting.  Remember that Hogarth made his name and career off the whole Tarzan story. I write "the Tarzan story" for a very good reason.

Here is the basic plot guideline to Tarzan comic stories:

#1 -Tarzan fights an animal and kills it.
#2 -Tarzan kills and animal.  No reason -things were just going that way.
#3 -Tarzan is feared by superstitious natives because he is The Great White Ape. And that's code for          "Tarzan is a White man therefore superior to the uppity blacks."
#4 -some princess or white woman goes all gooey-eyed over the great hunk.
#5 -Tarzan kills an animal....he hasn't done that in a few panels so....
#6 -Tarzan finds a lost city or empire.....jeez, they ever heard of maps or basic "how not to get lost"?
#7 -Tarzan gets captured and leads a revolt.
#8 -Tarzan gets to kill an animal.  Donna Barr said it "Tarzan movies are just animal snuff films" and            that says it all.

Take away the constant animal killing and you have three plots.

I mean, he comes across a fella about to fight a very badly drawn T-Rex type critter and thinks: "Dinosaur...supposed to be extinct a hundred million years ago!" then "KREEGAH! TARZAN BUNDOLO!" and he gets all stabbie and snuffs the dino.   Also, Tarzan seems to go from being quite intelligent to  not that bright.  I mean, he was born and raised in the jungle, right? So at what point did he get to read about dinosaurs and their extinction?

Oddly, #1-8 above sums up the whole Hal Foster and Burne Hogarth newspaper strips. I decided to re-read the collected books and at one point (it was 0300 hrs) fell asleep and the pages of the book flipped and when I woke I continued reading until I realised the woman who had gone all googly-eyed over Tarzan looked different!!  I also started realising even more just how casually Tarzan killed animals -oh and "His" apes were different from ordinary gorillas....?
Burne Hogarth.jpg
Above: Burne Hogarth at the 1982 San Diego Comic Con
Unsavoury.  Even the UK reprints -in Tarzan Super Adventure Quarterly- followed this theme.  A white hunter-guide "only" wanted to lead his party of businessmen to shoot a rhino but, you guessed it, the natives were getting uppity again! So Tarzan goes along to ensure the white guys get to kill their rhino...I like the whole lost cities and fantasy type of stories and whereas comics should have been educating kids that animals were not just there to kill for fun, they were saying "They are wild animals -it's our right to kill them".

Now bearing this in mind and getting back to that 1982 Hogarth interview: you see, Hogarth said he would never want to draw super heroes such as Batman, Superman and Spiderman.  He told George T. McWhorter, the interviewer and former Curator of the Edgar Rice Burroughs  Memorial Collection at the University of Louisville: "They follow a rather sterile formula which seems to rule out any character development" to which a rather fawning McWhorter responded "Exactly".

I actually read that several times. Hogarth points out that he'd never gone to Africa nor studied the flora or fauna but made up jungle settings as he went along and so inspired a couple of generations into believing so much fantasy was real.  Africa, even at the time of these strips, had been filmed and photographed but I guess to keep the story going and add the right elements, Hogarth did what Burroughs did -made it up.  But most comic creators do that. But, with the greasing of ego by McWhorter, we get to see that Hogarth was actually quite into himself -it may explain why some veteran comic artists, such as John Buscema, did not like Hogarth.

"They follow a rather sterile formula which seems to rule out any character development"-that had to be ego because by 1982 Marvel Comics was recognised for the fact that it was heavy on characterisation and story-telling.  It seems Hogarth thought comic books beneath him because his statement -there's more in the book- shows he had not read any. Tarzan cannot be called heavily characterised.

But these strips are lovingly cleaned up and presented in nice sturdy books with equally sturdy pages; you are not going to accidentally tear a page while turning it. For students of comic strip/book history -and remember that Hogarth's worth was still being reprinted in Tarzan comics in the 1980s (and probably still is somewhere) as well as art and, of course, the Tarzan fans of which there are many, these books are "must haves".

It is interesting to see Hogarth's work and then look at the other artists linked to Tarzan.  Hogarth drew the 'Tarzan' Sunday page  from 1937 to 1945 and then from 1947 to 1950.  

Before him, and often forgotten, was Hal Foster though he is mainly known for Prince Valliant.  Titan has not released a volume covering Foster's Tarzan which is a pity, though 1970s UK Tarzan comics did reprint the work. 


Above: Hal Foster.  Below -an unmistakable Foster Tarzan page.
Jesse Marsh drew Tarezan for Dell/Western up until 1964 when he handed over the reigns. Marsh is a name hardly mentioned in comics today -orknown- yet he drew a huge number of Tarzan comics.
 Above: Jesse Marsh.  Below: A Marsh Tarzan page.
Marsh handed over the art chores to Russ Manning.  Manning later produced Tarzan strips solely for Europe -these were not published in the United States.  I'm not sure whether they have been collected though I do know Dark Horse in the US has produced a Jesse Marsh collection as well as a Hal Foster collection.
 Above: The legend that is Russ Manning.  Below a Manning Tarzan page.

jjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjj
Then we come to the modern masters of Tarzan comics. Joe Kubert needs no introduction to comic fans.
 Above: Joe Kubert and, below, a Kubert Tarzan page.


"Big" John Buscema was no Hogarth fan but his Tarzan comics are still legendary, even if no one seems to be chasing back issues -even Kubert's work tends to be ignored these days.
 Above: John Buscema c. 1975 and, below, a page of his Tarzan work -one of the few titles he actually pencilled and ink himself.

So there is a very long Tarzan history in comics and if you can get the Marsh book(s) you have a lot of the1950s-1964 covered.  The Hal Foster collection will take you right up to Hogarth.  And Hogarth is the artist most associated with the character and these three volumes from Titan Books are well worth getting.

Maybe one day they'll do a Foster collection?  Never know.

Monday, 25 April 2016

Checking CBO Out...Right NOW!

Man, I love the "Viewing right now" function because you get a different combination of countries every time -though the United States stays at pole position each time.  Ahem...HEY AMERICA -I HAS COMICS!!!  
Was that too blatant? Good -you'll find the link to the online store on the right.  
EntryPageviews
United States            
198
Ukraine
152
Germany
80
United Kingdom
80
Russia
53
France
50
Poland
35
Colombia
17
Japan
17
Netherlands
17

X-Men: Apocalypse | Final Trailer [HD] | 20th Century FOX

Really not that happy with the Quicksilver characterisation in this which seems to be "loud-mouth, smart arsed American" as opposed to the comic characters origins. But this ain't the old Marvel comics nor THE characters just a movie to watch.

In A World Full Of Horrors.....



Green Skies -The Fallen


Mr Dilworth

Letter received replying in next few days!

Take Care

Sunday, 24 April 2016

Time For A Zaucer Of Zilk

Or, A Re-post of A Zaucer Of Zilk, A Strange Spider Fever And Just Who Will Wield The Shield





Well, yes, the original posting did have most of the images missing.  I have no idea why as it seems
to be a problem with blogger.

Having just re-read Zaucer and Spider Fever, I thought there just was not enough Brendan McCarthy out there. And I got a buzz from the comics which I rarely get these days.  So, for those who came to CBO late.....

********************************************************************************


Was it really in 2012 that IDW published the two issues The Zaucer Of Zilk?  Having given up on comic shops by that time I missed the event -and it was an event with both issues selling out.  So, in 2013 I stumbled across the IDW special which published both issues in one ad-free book!

I say that I stumbled upon it but here is the very strange thing.  Normally, I will say "I picked this up at --no comic shop name cuz thats free publicity for them!"  But for the life of me I cannot remember where I got it.  Seriously. It is a bulky edition -76 pages- so I would normally remember.

But what is this story about? Well here is one blurb for it:

"Get Zaucy! After instantaneous sell-outs of the single issues, IDW is proud to announce this special reprint of the collaboration with 2000 AD and Rebellion Publishing, The Zaucer of Zilk! Brendan McCarthy & Al Ewing’s phantasmagorical psychedelic extravaganza from beyond the fringes of imagination features an inter-dimensional magician who travels across the realms to save his number-one fan from the dank clutches of arch-nemesis Errol Raine, as visualized by the brilliantly surreal artist McCarthy!"

That covers it -very briefly!

This even out-shone the excellent 2010 McCarthy led Spider-Man: Fever 3 issue series.  Now if anyone -anyone- should have been handed Dr Strange as a series it was McCarthy and Co.  I mean -look!
 

  







And does anyone else remember this?  From the Who Will Wield The Shield  special.  Brendan McCarthy with Matt Fraction.





Anyway, back to The Zaucer Of Zilk, by  Brendan McCarthy, Al Ewing, Len O'Grady which is, after all, what I am supposed to be posting about!

I read it straight away. Looked at the art.  Looked at the art again...then again....then read it again.  Then I realised that the second time I read it I had a slightly different take on the story.  A month later I read it again and I found lots more subtleties than before.




This book just kept on giving!

And the art.....I must stop drooling.  The art, well, let's give a credit check here: the story was a joint effort between Brendan McCarthy and Al Ewing and Al Ewing wrote the script.  Brendan McCarthy did the art and the colours....oooh, the colours....were by Len O'Grady.  And I need to say that O'Grady did a feckin incredible job.  Ellie De Ville did the lettering which is just as important and if you've read this you'll know why.

Put this all together into one book with no ads, add a strong cup of coffee and your daily meds and you'll be tripping.  I just cannot rave enough about this and if Marvel ain't going to hand Dr Strange over to McCarthy (and I don't mean in a hostage style way) then McCarthy better bloody create his own version and find a publisher.  



Was that a little too angry?  Sorry.

Spider-Man: Fever and The Zaucer Of Zilk are two books I read if I get too down.  

Things just brighten up and get very entertaining.  And it is fun.  In all seriousness that is what comics are supposed to be -entertaining and fun.

For me this is a class of the comic book genre and we need MORE!!