The webcomics blog about webcomics

Trifecta

You so don’t want to know about the week I just had at work.

But midway through the week, the comics scholars discussion list I’m on got to talking about women in webcomics. Someone posted a long, long list of webcomics that were totally new to me, which shouldn’t surprise me anymore given what webcomics are and do. One of the most compelling things about webcomics is that anyone with the know-how and the tools can make his or her own with minimal fuss. It’s one of the things I love about zines and minicomics. Still, it’s interesting to me to sift through this long list of new things, and I thought I’d point folks towards three which particularly stood out on first blush.

There’s Hero, with its lush intro page. Described as “a story about a perfectly ordinary boy with no memory of the past and no urgency for the future who one day accepts a most extraordinary offer to travel to distant places and invisible cities,” Hwei Lin Lim updates the site with 3 pages every Monday. The design here is a little different from other webcomics I’ve seen, in that the narrative appears as a pop-up box when you rollover the image. It sort of struck me that I don’t remember seeing a webcomic narrated this way, and I think it presents an interesting challenge to how we think about webcomics and comics more broadly, and how words and pictures intersect.

Otter Soldiers just struck me as very entertaining and distinctive in its use of the written word: I really enjoy it when folks use their “about” or “introduction” page to do something a little different or unusual. For example, “This is a comic that was drawn by…Elina Hopeasaari so she’d learn something about how to draw comics before she starts drawing real actual proper comics. I would say it contains swearwords, killing people, and creatures with no clothes on, but parents don’t care about what kind of sites their kids visit, and the kids themselves certainly won’t click exit if I say there’s material unsuitable for them in here, they’ll just get more interested instead. So I’m not going to say anything.” And right here, from the get-go, I get this great sense of playfulness from this webcomic’s creator. It’s also written for a Finnish audience, not an American one, and though the FYI (see below) covers some of those questions a non-Finnish reader could have, not all of them are answered…and I kind of love that.

There’s a huge archive and a well-done character page, plus the FYI page (different, interestingly, from an FAQ–which is there, but as a subpage of the FYI) contains a great deal of information. I also really enjoyed reading in the FAQ about the technical guts of it, how Hopeasaari actually produces the work and with which tools.

Finally, there’s Faith Erin Hicks’ ICE, updated “every other Sunday night” with between 2 and 4 full pages going up each time. Good character page, clean design that’s easy to navigate, interesting color work and characters and pacing. I’m still working through the archives, but there’s something about this one which particularly stood out for me.

I’m interested, of course, to hear what people think about this question of format and narrative. In looking at something like Hero, where the narrative looks different from what we’re used to, perhaps, and something like Ice, which is a little more traditional and a little more familiar, maybe, contrasted with Otter Soldiers, where there’s a deliberate choice to have elements in the narrative which may need explaining for reader who aren’t Finnish. All three are interesting, well-done, and worth reading, and also seem somewhat different from one another.

Your thoughts?

First Day Of Summer

Maybe late postings next week, depends on net access. In the meantime, please to enjoy the philantropic stylings of Haley Joel Osment.

And that’s just about everything happening; half of webcomicdom is at HeroesCon this weekend, and the other half is laying low right now. A few stragglers are gonna be drinking in San Francisco tonight, and everybody but me is out enjoying the sunshine right now.

Man I Can’t Wait For This Week To Be Over

Rhymes With Witch goes multimedia. I’m still giggling.

Rich Stevens and Meredith Gran have been sighted in the vicinity of Google’s main campus. Googlians that see the pair are urged not to attempt to apprehend them, but instead to lure them with energy drinks into a conference room and attend their lecture on being awesome on the internet tomorrow. Presumably, video will be available here sometime after the event.

Thursday is the new Friday: “Rick” Marshall Willenholly turns in his latest webcomic interview, this time with Jon Rosenberg.

Word has arrived that Hyena Comics has added Calamities of Nature to its lineup. Congratulations to all involved, and thanks to the parents who worked so hard making the costumes.

Confidential to Eric and Wednesday: Congratulations on your forbidden love becoming legit. To paraphrase Zoidberg, no one could be happier unless it was also Valentine’s Day. Hooray!

Hey Kate Beaton Is It True That You Should Totally Take Over That Strip Or What?

For all who wonder what the last two years of For Better or For Worse have been like, Our Friend From Canada has distilled them down to their barest essence. The only question is, who does a better crazy staring Ellie? Beaton or David Willis?

And oh man I totally hope this is for reals. It’s been established that Jess has mysterious powers over dessert, so there’s no reason for me to disbelieve it.

Okay, nearing a fix on Lappy McBluescreen. Hopefully more on the content tomorrow.

Speed Typing

Hooray, lappy problems, averaging 30 – 35 minutes between bluescreens, so this is gonna be fast.

Unshelved‘s new book, Frequently Asked Questions, arrived in the mail yesterday. Very amusing, although I can’t in good consicence give it a proper review since Gene & Bill got me to contribute some content to their reprinting of the famed Coffee Cup Lid Challenge of Aught Seven. It was a great deal of fun working with the guys, and I got to use the words “Proustian madeleine” in reference to this comic strip. Now you’ll just have to go buy the book to see what the fuss is about.

Speaking of fuss, Webcomics Iron Man Ryan Estrada made it to the top of Mount Kilimanjaro with a medium-high amount of it sometime last week. Altitude sickness is nothing to joke about, but I have to confess that reading Ryan’s account of barfing every 30 yards or so elicited equal amounts of sympathy and mild amusement (in a schadenfreudistic fit of God I’m glad that wasn’t me). On the other hand, isn’t Iron Man supposed to be rich? Apparently, Estrada’s bank didn’t get the memo:

Both the day before I left up Kilimanjaro, and the day I got back, I spent a whole day walking between ATMs trying to find one that worked. But each time, it would say “cannot contact your bank” or “timed out”.

Guess who just found out that every single time he tried an ATM, it withdrew a couple hundred bucks from his account, but didn’t give him cash???

Guess who just lost the last thousand bucks he had on faulty bank machines?

IT’S ME!

Faulty, or a massive conspiracy against the wide-ranging Ryan? You decide, and maybe PayPal him a few bucks?

Quiet Times

Maybe it’s just because I’m finishing up the copy of Set It To Awesome I picked up at MoCCA (short version: it rules; slightly longer version: although the smallish size makes some details hard to pick out, it rules; definitive version: although the smallish size makes some details hard to pick out, it rules and I can’t wait for the Reprographics2 volume and not just ’cause I’ll be in it), I’ve been poking around photocomics for a bit.

Lots of familiar ones out there (did you catch Rick Marshall’s interview last week with Emily Horne & Joey Comeau?) and at least one new one. Ben Heaton, one of the twisted geniuses behind Terror Island (two years old today, as it turns out) and The Ham Project is now running a second photo comic (or fumetto if you wanna be all art-school about it): Request Comics.

Pretty simple: you email the request, Heaton finds a way to photograph it, hilarity ensues. If nothing else, you’ll never look at a game of Rock-Paper-Scissors again. Just try your fancy kiddie-mind-control-tricks on an angry boar, Howard Tayler!

Clearing The Mailbag

We come to bury Hookie Dookie Panic and Lancaster: The Ghost Detective. After three and four years, respectively, and more than 800 comics between the two of them, the strips have come to an end. Insert something classy here about Princes and Flights of Angels.

Okay, how about various good newses?

  • Punch an’ Pie? 200 strips!
  • Red String at Dark Horse? Volume 3!
  • Wireheads? More than 2 years!
  • New collective? Dumm Comics, featuring a mess o’ TV animators! It’s a little different from other collectives, appearing to have only one site, with five strips, each updating a different day of the week.

And, in non-[web]comics news, this one’s for the ladies.

Catching Up After MoCCA

Thanks to everybody that’s been sending me story tips and suchlike — still going through the backlog that developed during the MoCCA aftermath. In the meantime, please enjoy the following:

  • Ramses Luther Smuckles + KitchenAid® stand mixer = pretty much all the awesome I need in my life, really.
  • Happy Birthday! Today marks 8 years of Schlock Mercenary without filler or missed updates, produced by the so-similar-to-me-it’s eerie Howard Tayler. I forget, Howard — which one of us is the evil twin?
  • Noted at PvP this morning:

    I just got an email from my friend Shena about an interview with Garfield creator Jim Davis. She said that Jim mentioned PvP. I checked out the interview at the Universal Press website.

    Q: What’s the last time you laughed out loud over a comic strip that another cartoonist did?

    A: “It was just a few weeks ago. The strip is PVP (Player vs. Player) by Scott Kurtz. His timing is flawless. PVP isn’t in newspapers, it’s online! Some of the sharpest stuff is being done online by some very talented, young artists. They keep me looking over my shoulder.”

  • Mike Russell always points me to good stuff — today it’s new updates at Serenity Tales and a new strip called Bad Mile that looks intriguing in a distinctly non-polite fashion.

& So Begins My MoCCA Roundup…

I also went to MoCCA this year (though not for day two and so missed the evacuation, fire trucks, and other such things), in part to table with the Trees and Hills folks and to hype our newest anthology, and in part to debut my new minicomic. (Weirdly, despite the 95+ degree heat, I also sold some monster hats.) But it’s also starting to be the only time of year when I see other comics folks; I haven’t been to SPX for quite a while and I have yet to brave anything comics-related on the West Coast. So it’s been tough for me to catch up with ongoing comics projects.

MoCCA is also usually fairly overwhelming for me; there’s a whole lot of stuff in a fairly little space, and I get distracted too easily. I also found myself this year ferrying home a small army of brightly painted wooden ghosts (okay, I work in a cubicle. These will help.), as well as some incredible mini posters by Rosemary Mosco, who’s got to be one of those folks everyone knows and loves and forgot to tell me about. (Of course, when I went to look at her site I thought, “Ah! Right! Birds for bulbs!“). Usually I end up with a fair amount of minis; this year I found that I had an awful lot of accessories.

And though I have a list of items I want to write about in coming weeks, ranging from L. Nichols’ Jumbly Junkery (in their print forms, the most recent issues of Jumbly Junkery have really extraordinary covers) to Colleen Frakes’ new Tragic Relief collection (Xeric powered!), I wanted to mention the Boston Comics Roundtable (which I know about mostly because of Matt Reidsma and Cathy Leamy, both of whom have comics available online and will be in the next issue) new anthology, Inbound. It’s this amazing-looking book, with catchy cover art and some compelling stories inside; many of the folks involved, like Dan Mazur, are webcomics artists in their own right, and it’s interesting to see them working in print. It’s a nice a little book, and a little different from what we usually see (or write about it) over here at Fleen, and I think it’s worth tracking down.

MoCCA ’08 In Pictures

Photos from MoCCA art fest 2008; see the last couple of days for details as to who is doing what.