Growing Old in Gasoline Alley: Ninety-four Years And Counting
A multi-generational strip recalled.
A multi-generational strip recalled.
Richard Gehr talks to Jack Ziegler, whose innovative cartoons, often on the topics of food, cowboys and classical literature, have populated The New Yorker for thirty years.
PARENTS: Is *this* the kind of girl your son is dating? A shocking cautionary tale inside!
In the span of about five years, Chuck Forsman has become not just a promising young cartoonist but also an intriguing mover and shaker in the world of micropublishing with Oily Comics.
The three weeks at ACA are over.
The comics of 2013 are off to an … excellent start.
Road trip to Gainesville.
That grubby minicomic you grabbed off the bar, or found plugging the vent in the convention hall bathroom, which made no sense to you at the time, and probably makes even less now, was likely signed Dongery.
Work and play in Florida.
The residents settle in…
Several indelicate thrusts toward a taxonomy of experiential comics, starring the young and the dead.
Ron Rege Jr. talks to Jay Babcock about the rich mixtures of ideas and references embedded in his new book, The Cartoon Utopia, encompassing everything from Nicola Tesla to Yoko Ono.
The first day of Gabrielle Gamboa’s diary, documenting her residency at the Atlantic Center of the Arts last fall.
2012: there weren’t a lot of great comics, but there were a few, and there were quite a lot of really good comics. Very, very few of them came out of left field, which is to be expected–the internet certainly blesses us with access to new talent, but it can’t create new talent, and the… Read more »
In this 2003 interview, translator Alan Gleason talks to Keiji Nakazawa about how his firsthand experiences informed Barefoot Gen, his manga contemporaries and his career.