Great pic Darby! Congratulations on selling two stories too! That's great to hear. Your success is great inspiration, speaking of inspiration, I'm working on a comic for your zine right now. Cheers to a good year!
Credit - Tessie Girl I recently finished A Visit From The Goon Squad by Jennifer Egan and it's one of the best books I've read in a while. It flows from one character to another in a kind of narrative relay. At first it's disorienting and honestly I lost track of who the focus was or was supposed to be - the point, I think - and it required me to stop and start again once or twice. The book also caroms from one era to another. This narrative river just flows along and then washes ashore deep in the future, providing a brief, sober glimpse of the fate of the character we follow, before retreating back to the sea of the present. At some point you almost long for a chart mapping out all these people, these places and times, and then as if on queue, Egan actually depicts an entire sequence of the book in a succession of flow charts. I wa struck at how effective, and affecting, this was; the PowerPoint slides gradually became thought bubbles...
Jean Giraud, better known as Moebius to comic book and cinema fans, has died. Sad news on the heels of Ralph McQuarrie just last week. The two of them had an incalcuable impact on the look of genre filmmaking and the minds of impressionable young artists over the last generation or two. I knew of him mainly through Heavy Metal and the magazine-size Epic comics in the early 80's. I remember seeing reprints of The Airtight Garage and being a little unsure of what to make of the grandiosity of it all - at that point I was very much still planted in the grungy feel of Star Wars. Actually it wasn't too long ago that Giraud did a piece based on Episode I that recalls Airtight Garage so much that you tend to look at the prequels as closer to him than McQuarrie: That's actually Jerry Cornelious (sorry, Lewis Carnellian ) up there in the corner. Giraud's influence is most heavy in Tron and Alien, as well as The Fifth Element, which came later. ...
Writing for me has always been an act of discovery. At various times you will feel like Magellan, or Columbus. Others you will feel like the Donner Party. You will feel these at varying times throughout the process of writing the same novel, if you're anything like me. And at some point, you will experience another feeling - the sheer elation of knowing you are the first person to ever lay eyes on this undiscovered country of a novel. That's the way it feels to me when a novel reaches that tipping point, when the mass is so great that the collapse from dust into light becomes to powerful to deny. I've felt this feeling before, a couple times. It's a great feeling. I feel it now, as I'm 211 pages into the novel that I've documented here recently on the blog (otherwise known as the #scifijohnhughesbook ). A lot of the disparate threads - fits and starts really - that I've experimented with over the last few years are finally bearin...
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