Archive for the ‘manga general’ Category

Comic Book Tattoos, Hellcats and Cupcakes

10.06.2008
11:07


 

  • Holy crap, the dummies of Comic Book Tattoo (pictured above) are gorgeous, no? Rantz, you should be very proud. You have the patience of a saint, corralling eight gazillion creators the way you did, but it looks as though it’s going to pay off in spades. I’m certainly proud to be a part of it.
  • Preview Kathryn Immonen‘s Hellcat here. (Kathryn, on whom I have a truly embarrassing girl crush, was kind enough to let me read the pitch for this series and I assure you it’s a HOOT with a capital HOO.) I should also note that I will get to SEE the lovely lady live and in the flesh at Heroes Con next week. Here’s the kicker: if you come to Heroes Con YOU CAN SEE HER TOO. And me. And Fraction. And Stuart, even. And even more lovelies, all of whom are listed here.
  • I’m working on the very last volume of Black Cat today. Sniff, sniff. I’ll miss you Train Heartnet. You’re a scamp.
  • In domestic news, I made a batch of Green Tea cupcakes at 7am this morning and had walked the dogs 2.75 miles before 9. I like mornings. Go. Me.
  • EDITED TO ADDKevin Mellon sent me a link to this girl’s awesome softies.  Thanks, Kevin.  Wow.  
  • Okay… back to work.

Last Night I Dreamed I Went to Manderlay Again

01.09.2007
10:24
  • 37 Weeks
  • I need to work on Black Cat Vol. 15 today.
  • The editor on two of my as-yet-unannounced Viz projects is leaving.  I’d be more bummed, but KIT FOX is taking over at least one of the titles.  I heart Kit Fox.  So… yay.  Here’s hoping Kit’s got room in his schedule to take both.
  • Speaking of Kit, I just got the comp copy of our last project together — Portus — in the mail yesterday.  [Thank you, Kit.]  For some reason the Amazon pre-order page lists Annette Roman as the editor… it was Kit though.  Huh.  I wonder how that happened.  (Don’t get me wrong — Annette’s great; we’re on a different title together right now in fact.)
  • Pregnancy Progress: 37 weeks, as of yesterday.  What does that mean?  We made it to full term!  The kid’s not due until September 21st, but could come any time now.
  • What else?  I’m freaking out.  A little.  Here’s a tip: don’t try to tell me I shouldn’t be worrying — I’ll rip your head off.  Apparently, it’s hormonal, but honestly, even when I’m not pregnant I’m not fond of having my concerns poo-poo’d.  Who is?  Also:  I’m mean.  Probably meaner than you are.  I will hurt your delicate feelings.  I will find your button and I will smoosh it… I wouldn’t risk it.
  • Last night I dreamed not of Manderlay actually, but of the kid’s impending birth.  Suddenly in the middle of everything, I realized I’d been given an epidural.  I didn’t remember asking for one or having one placed and no one would answer any of my questions.  I wasn’t exactly disappointed that the birth was painless, but I was angry that I wasn’t given the chance to even try the low-intervention approach.  As merely the vessel, I wasn’t consulted.  When the kid was born I was informed that Fraction had changed its name from what we’d agreed upon.  …Think I’m having some control issues?
  • Mom and Frank are here, helping us with the nursery.  [Read: Mom and Frank are working on the nursery while I work downstairs, avoiding the wallpaper stripper fumes and Fraction remains chained to his desk cranking out scripts.  I feel horribly rude, but that wallpaper stripper stinks.]  Hopefully we’ll have something like a closet for the kid by Tuesday.
  • Speaking of Fraction and cranking out scripts, we’ve GOT to get him a new set up. Poor guy’s wrists are about to explode.  I think the desk is the problem.  One day, when we have money again [Buy comics, you bastards!], we’ve got to get him a set up that will allow us to mount they keyboard on some kind of pullout drawer.  We should probably invest in one of those ergonomic keyboards, too.
  • As I write this I’m drinking half a mug of coffee and a non-alcoholic beer.  From separate glasses.  Fraction is nonplussed.
  • 20th Century Boys is being adapted to anime.
  • I feel bad for Barklage’s ass, but this made me laugh.
  • I’m so far behind on thank you notes I should be shot. (Speaking of, does anyone have a mailing address for Lolokickyou? Han? Jill?)
  • Fat Cobra Strikes!! on Facebook.

Ow, My Aching Vagina

03.07.2007
08:34

The Upper Cabinets Are In!

  • Go read: Paul Gravett on the New York Times’ dismissal of manga as “those Japanese comic books that feature slender, wide-eyed teenage girls who seem to have a special fondness for sailor suits.”
  • The upper kitchen cabinets are in, the lower cabinets and pulls go in today. The guys have tomorrow off for the holiday, then the tile people start on Thursday. The cabinetry looks great. I’m especially enamored of the large cabinet over the refrigerator that’s divided vertically for trays and platters. We’re so fancy! Flickr photos of progress to date here. (We’re going to do a PB Teen tile thing next to the door as an organizer. I should probably order that soon.)
  • Claude had an “accident” in the kitchen last night after dinner. Since there’s no evidence he’s feeling ill anymore, we decided he’s confused by the upheaval and thinks the kitchen is now “outside.” So we put the baby gate up before bed last night, blocking his access and that seemed to work. Hallelujah. Everything with that dog is two steps forward, one step back.
  • Jason Aaron posted a few pictures from Tony Moore’s Bachelor Party: Day Two.
  • Have you ever heard of Monkey Pants? Apparently it’s a Japanese thing. Holy crap they do excel at cute, don’t they? I lost about half an hour last night scouring the internets (and ebay in particular) for variations on monkey pants. These might be my favorites. Hard to say. If you turn up any cute ones, post links, will you?
  • Baby news: the kid is cRaZy active these days — doing gymnastics in my belly, I think. It’s pretty fun, except for the poking at my pelvic floor. Ow, my aching vagina.
  • We have our gestational diabetes test and 3d ultrasound on Thursday and apparently I’m nervous about it as I dreamed last night that we saw the baby’s face and it looked like some kind of hideous Simpsons baby monster — imagine Cletus the Slack-Jawed Yokel as an infant, in utero. Snaggletooth, unibrow, mustache camp, Christian Bale chin — I was horrified. I freaked, trying to figure out how it must be some kind of mistake… (“Is it time to start drinking again?” asks Fraction.) Eep. Does the fact that I’m apparently worried about having an ugly baby make me shallow? Or was I just shallow to begin with?
  • ETA: Repro Depot appears to be out of the Amy Butler Nappy Bag pattern. Does anyone know of another source? SECOND EDIT: Terry found it!  Thanks, T2.  (Other Nappy bags on Flickr.  I figure I’m going to be sewing curtains as soon as I have a diningroom table again anyway…)

Mish-Mash

08.06.2007
09:51


pomegranates

Originally uploaded by MatthewA.

I love list-making as a warm up. The trick is not letting it go on too long… I’m not so good at that part.

Casey passed along this link from the Wall Street Journal this morning with the caveat that he hadn’t had a chance to read it himself yet. I confess I only skimmed it. Doesn’t look like there’s anything new there, though. No mention of the “controversy” surrounding the Minx line, which is probably responsible journalism, though I do tire of “COMICS AREN’T JUST FOR BOYS!” and “CHECK OUT THIS NEW THING CALLED MANGA!” headlines. Seriously, is this still news? (See also the ubiquitous “THEY MAKE COMICS FOR GROWN UPS NOW!” newspaper article.)

Amy discovered these sweet and potentially-offensive blouses. Love.

25 weeks pregnant. Woo hoo! 62% of the way to the finish line… (Had a check up yesterday and apparently the baby’s measuring a little bit big, which is unsettling… though, it occurs to me that I was having my check up about a week late — I wonder if that was taken into account? Anyway. Nothing to be done about it. Thanks to the ovulation predictor kit and travel schedules, there’s no chance we’ve got the date of conception wrong, so… baby’s just big, I guess. I’m going back to writing my food down and hoping things even themselves out at our next visit. Oh! And we’re doing the 3D sono next time. That should be fun.)

Rebecca asked me to make a food specific food list. I didn’t repeat anything from the first list, so even though cioppino is one of my favorite things ever, it doesn’t appear below:

1. Aunt Polly’s low calorie crab salad;
2. BLTs;
3. Braised collard greens and pork chops;
4. BUFFALO WINGS! (How did I forget?? Of course, I’m not allowed blue cheese during pregnancy, which puts a bit of a damper on things);
5. Cappuccino muffins from the cart in front of 388 Greenwich in NYC (Scooter’s on the Plaza makes a reasonable facsimile);
6. Cheese toast made under the broiler with Colby and yellow mustard;
7. Chicken livers, or specifically, the pan-fried liver and gizzards plate from Stroud’s;
8. Chocolate-covered strawberries;
9. European butter on dense grainy bread;
10. French toast served with something spicy or salty;
11. Fresh hot everything bagel with cream cheese, tomato slices, Tabasco sauce, salt and pepper;
12. Fresh, homemade whipped cream;
13. Gooey hot panini sandwiches (the only thing close to a craving I’ve had during pregnancy has been a generic desire to eat sandwiches);
14. Grainy mustards;
15. Lemonade cake (family recipe);
16. Onigiri and pretty much anything in a bento box;
17. Pomegranates;
18. Salt and vinegar kettle chips;
19. Savory rosemary cake from some coffee shop on the upper west side. What was the name of that place? I can’t remember;
20. Sharp cheddar cheese;
21. Steak au Poivre with crispy French fries;
22. Sturgeon;
23. Sweet grape tomatoes;
24. Tuna salad from Captain Quackenbush’s on the drag in Austin, served on a small whole-wheat bagel. I don’t know what they put in that tuna salad, but it was awesome. Someone once told me it was celery salt, but I don’t think that’s right. Is that place still open, I wonder;
25. Vietnamese soft spring rolls (Though, strictly speaking I’m not allowed sprouts or cold cuts during my pregnancy).

Sexy Voice and Robo TV

18.04.2007
14:38

Rich Amtower just got back from Japan and was kind enough to bring back this ad for the new Sexy Voice and Robo TV show. Apparently the ads are everywhere.

Eric Searleman writes to point out that Anime News Network has seen fit to revisit the book in light of the new show. Eric Carlo Santos calls Sexy Voice and Robo “The Best Manga I’ve Ever Read.”

Sweet.

If you missed Carlos’ original review for ANN back in December 2005, you can find it right here.

This is my favorite part:

The final touch to the terrific storytelling and artwork is a translated script that’s direct, colorful, and always aware of what the characters mean to say. It even squeezes in some wordplay without seeming forced—a challenging feat in any Japanese-to-English translation. You can almost hear how the characters talk, from Robo’s fanboyish wheeze to Nico’s arsenal of sexy voices.

Ahem.

Taiyo Matsumoto

05.04.2007
11:34

Chris Butcher has posted a fantastic introductory piece on one of my favorite creators (of any nationality), Taiyo Matsumoto.  Check it out here.

Shop Updated… Sort of.

18.01.2007
11:05

I did a quick and dirty update of the amazon store this morning. There are now category pages for my work, books and music produced by my friends and family and a catchall page for miscellaneous goodies I hold dear, media I’m currently consuming, products I’ve mentioned on this blog and/or whatever shiny baubles I happen to fancy.

I still need to go through and make notes on, well, most of the titles, but as usual I’m on a deadline crunch and I can’t squeeze it in right now.

Bethany’s Questions

18.01.2007
09:59

Creighton student Bethany Padron took me up on an offer I made in the back of Sensual Phrase Vol. 9 (read: Bethany called my bluff) and sent me the following questions (in bold). I did my best, but I bet there are a few of you out there who could do better.

Want to take a shot? Post your thoughts in the comments box.

1) What do you think of Japanese popular fashion in general?

I love it. Everything from the chic Prada-clad OL to the day-glo FRUiTs of Harajuku. Loooooooove it.

2) Why do you think Japanese youth are so fashion concious? How does manga and anime relate to that conciousness?

The first question I couldn’t begin to answer. I work in manga, but I’m not an expert on Japanese culture.

The second, though… I suspect the level of emphasis on fashion in manga as opposed to the level of emphasis in American comics has something to do with the number of women working in each industry and their target audiences. I remember reading a few years ago — and, let’s be clear: my memory is not to be depended upon for term papers! Check your facts — anyway, I remember reading that the American comic book industry is about 10% female and mainstream comics (read: Marvel and DC) have about a 10% female readership. Now, I don’t know how those percentages work out in Japan, but I believe there are more women involved across the board — both as industry professionals and as readers. Again, check me on this before you use it. I’m speaking from my understanding and my experience, not any kind of quantifiable research.

Now, I don’t know about you, but my closet exists at about a 6:1 piece-to-piece ration to that of my husband’s. I have 3 fashion mag subscriptions that I pour over as soon as they arrive and I read two or three fashion blogs a day. My husband buys clothes once — maaaaaybe twice a year (excepting t-shirts). He has three pair of the exact same shoes. Are we anomalies? I think not. Chicks dig fashion. More women, more emphasis on clothes. [Sweeping generalizations. Yes, I know. Do not bite me. I'm not suggesting women have no interests outside clothes, crafts and child-rearing or that dapper men are somehow less masculine. If you think I am, you're a twit. Yes: a twit.]

The Japanese market also supports a wider range of genre than the American market. So, more non-superhero comics means more chances for books to feature the latest looks. That sort of thing doesn’t get much play in THE ADVENTURES OF BULKY BOMBASTO AND HIS TAUGHT-TITTIED TEENAGERS. (That said, there was a cone-head updo on Lois Lane in an issue of a Superman book earlier this year that boggled my mind. First, I couldn’t figure out the physics of it — was there an armature in there somewhere? And then I couldn’t understand what possessed poor Lois. She seemed such a sensible gal at first.)

3) Specifically, what influence do visual bands have on fashion? Why?

I can’t speak to visual bands in particular, but music fashion has always influenced fashion — look at teen idols from Elvis to Madonna.

4) Why do you think the Japanese are so influenced by/enamored of androgyny and cross dressing? How do anime and manga support this? Visual bands?

You’ve got me here. Beyond the basics, Japanese gender issues perplex me. Why does rape come up so often in Japanese comics? How can rape threats exist in a context of humor? Is that as fucked up as my gut says it is, or am I bringing my own cultural biases to the table? I mean, we can all universally agree that rape is bad. (I think… God, I hope.) Rapists are criminals. But rape fantasies persist, and for a woman to fantasize about rape is neither unhealthy nor uncommon. So can rape (or the threat of rape) be funny…? I don’t know. That’s a big leap for me. I can’t really find the humor in it, which makes it difficult to address in an adaptation. [Attention pugilistic twits: "difficult to address" does not mean "I don't think it's funny so I go about blithely cutting whatever doesn't appeal to me." If you've read any of the books I've done, you know that's not true.]

I’ve strayed off your point here. Sorry. Where were we? Androgyny: I haven’t a clue. Visual bands to look to the incredibly androgynous Glam Rock icons for influence, so maybe there’s something there?

The answer could also be something as simple as “adolescence.” Older men, men displaying more secondary sex characteristics, are on some level frightening at that age. You know the Simpsons’ bit about Lisa’s subscription to “Non-Threatening Boys” magazine? This is why that bit works. It’s an age-appropriate reaction; it’s cultural anthropology at work. (I remember my mother having a poster of Tom Jones that I did not get. You’re not old enough she said matter-of-factly when I turned up my nose. I toddled off to pay tribute to the Scott Baios and Rick Springfields of the world. Years later I look at which idols and celebrities stir me to swoon and I see that she was right.)

Perhaps if we posit that shojo manga and Visual bands are both meant to appeal to young women, we have our answer…?

Or possibly I am pulling this out of my ass. It might be worth investigating, though.

5) What do you think of cosplay? What are possible motivations for Japanese cosplay?

I think it’s cute. Halloween ten times a year, huzzah!

As far as motivations… you’re asking me about the Japanese in particular and, again, I don’t even feel qualified to guess. I mean, why would anyone play dress up? Because it’s fun. It’s fantasy. Why would the Japanese seize on this in particular? I don’t know. Is there something about Japanese culture that fosters acting out fantasies more than, say, American culture? I don’t know. I sort of doubt it, but what do I know?

6) Which do you think came first; the dress or the drawing?

The dress.

Publisher’s Weekly Comics Weekly

07.11.2006
14:43

Interview by Johanna Draper Carlson:

Kelly Sue DeConnick has achieved a following in an unexpected area: manga adaptation. Though she only began studying Japanese this year, she’s worked with professional translators over the past four years to craft English dialogue for such series as Sensual Phrase, Fruits Basket and Sexy Voice and Robo, among many other titles.

PW Comics Week: How did you get started in this field?

Kelly Sue DeConnick: Almost accidentally, as odd as that sounds…

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