New York Review Comics
Reviews
Poor Helpless Comics! The Cartoons (and More) of Ed Subitzky
New York Review Comics
Social Fiction
New York Review Comics
Discipline
New York Review Comics
Trots and Bonnie
New York Review Comics
Pittsburgh
New York Review Comics
Mitchum
New York Review Comics
The Man Without Talent
New York Review Comics
MacDoodle St.
New York Review Comics
Articles
Joe Kessler and The Gull Yettin
Cartoonist and film director Dash Shaw catches up with cartoonist, art director and designer Joe Kessler in a sprawling conversation about the intersections of fine art and comics, the challenges and restrictions of the medium, and what their ideal reader might think of Kessler’s upcoming The Gull Yettin.
Speaking Out of the Silence: A Conversation with Dash Shaw about Discipline
In this conversation between Dash Shaw and Greg Hunter which took place earlier this month via Brooklyn’s Community Bookstore, Shaw discusses the background to his latest graphic novel Discipline, how his own Quaker upbringing informed its depictions of silence, and the real world Civil War letters that birthed the project.
Excerpt: Discipline
Check out this extended look at Dash Shaw’s latest graphic novel, Discipline, courtesy of NYRC!
SHOWCASE: Shary Flenniken’s Trots and Bonnie
And now for something very special – a collection of recent Trots and Bonnie illustrations from creator Shary Flenniken!
Adventurous Girls: Shary Flenniken’s Trots and Bonnie
To celebrate the new edition of her influential, hilarious and still-vital Trots And Bonnie, Shary Flenniken spoke with James Romberger about the trip it took to get here, all the Air Pirates and Lampoons along the way, and what is occupying her time these days.
“Rhyme With The Images”: An Interview with Frank Santoro
Frank Santoro sits down with Caitlin McGurk to talk in detail about Pittsburgh, his most widely anticipated release from New York Review Comics.
The Green Hand and Other Stories
Nicole Claveloux’s comics give fantastic flight to common emotions in colors and landscapes that border on the surreal, and are glimpses of a road not taken, in which comics evolved differently.