
Richard Sala
| Title | Creator | Publisher | Series | Price | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Hidden | Richard Sala | Fantagraphics |
$17.77 ($19.99 list) |
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Sala's latest graphic novel takes its readers to a post-apolcalyptic USA, wherein the story of what happened to bring the world to this pass is gradually revealed in a narrative that opens with a dream-within-a-dream-within-a-dream sequence that, in its disorienting qualities, provides a good preview of the flat-out craziness of the tale to come, which is, in addition to being deeply creepy, a politically-tinged fable with a message for our times. | |||||
| Cat Burglar Black | Richard Sala | (:01) First Second |
$15.25 ($16.95 list) |
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An all new 128 page full color graphic novel full of trademark Sala tropes. K. is a cute teenage orphan raised by a crazed matron to be a master thief and pickpocket. She has now been invited to attend Bellsong Academy, a (need we say it?) mysterious boarding school where something is not as it seems... The works of Richard Sala provide formal pleasures akin to those of amusement park haunted house rides; their pages filled with twists that present thrills at every turn. From (:01) First Second Books. | |||||
| Delphine #3 | Richard Sala | Fantagraphics | Ignatz |
$6.75 ($7.95 list) |
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One of the two latest installments (the 29th, for those who like to keep track of these things) of the Ignatz series of comics provides it's own brand of frisson. | |||||
| Anthology of Graphic Fiction, Cartoons, and True Stories: Volume Two | David Mazzuchelli, Leif Goldberg, Brian Chippendale, Elinore Norflus and more ... | Yale University Press |
$20.00 ($28.00 list) |
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edited by Ivan Brunetti It's too early to say for certain, but this follow-up to Brunetti's already classic 2006 anthology, also published by Yale University Press, might just be even better than its precursor. One thing's for certain: Brunetti has held onto -- and further refined -- his editorial vision of arranging the work contained in this volume in an organic sequence, deftly managing to map out the similarities between artists so that each piece flows smoothly into into the other, creating an amazing sense of an innate connectivity between all areas of comics here on display. This book is a powerful ally in the struggle to bring the light of comics to those poor souls still dwelling in the darkness. It's the perfect choice to turn on a friend or relative to the joy, beauty and pleasures of our favorite medium. Hold onto your hats, here's the contributor list: Daniel Clowes, Saul Steinberg, Sammy Harkham, Chris Ware, R. Sikoryak, Michael Kupperman, Drew Friedman, Mark Beyer, Mack White, Jayr Pulga, Renee French, Kim Deitch, Richard Sala, J. Bradley Johnson, Archer Prewit, Anonymous (utility sketchbook), HJ Tuthill, Milt Gross, Bill Holman, Harvey Kurtzman, R.Crumb, Basil Wolverton, Art Spiegelman, Jess, John Hankiewicz, Tim Hensley, Bill Griffith, Richard McGuire, Gilbert Hernandez, Jim Woodring, David Collier, Eugene Teal, Charles Burns, Karl Wirsum, Gary Panter, Paper Rad, Fletcher Hanks, CF, Charles Forbell, Ron Rege, Jr., Winsor McCay, Matthew Thurber, Souther Salazar, Kevin Scalzo, Megan Kelso, James McShane, Laura Park, Vanessa Davis, Onsmith, Joe Matt, Jeffrey Brown, Martin Cendreda, Dave Kiersh, John Porcellino, Carrie Golus/Patrick Welch, Jessica Abel, Cole Johnson, Lynda Barry, Debbie Drechsler, Diane Noomin, Aline Kominsky-Crum, Ariel Bordeaux, Chester Brown, Anders Nilsen, Joe Sacco, Phoebe Gloeckner, Elinore Norflus, Brian Chippendale, Leif Goldberg, David Mazzuchelli, Jerry Moriarty, Ben Katchor, Frank Santoro, Dan Zettwoch, Kevin Huizenga, Harvey Pekar/R.Crumb, Carol Tyler, Maurice Vellekoop, Seth, Adrian Tomine, Jaime Hernandez & David Heatley. It's simply amazing. Comics Power! PLEASE NOTE: We feel compelled to mention that this volume includes several pieces that contain quite explicit sexual content; and while this content represents only a miniscule fraction of the total, it nevertheless renders this volume fit for ADULTS ONLY. | |||||
| McSweeney's #13 | Mark Beyer, Ivan Brunetti, Kaz, Art Spiegelman and more ... | McSweeney's | McSweeney's |
$20.00 ($24.00 list) |
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Finally, it's here: the most anticipated release of 2004 (so far). Striving for objet d'art status, McSweeney's 13 comes as close as any comics release to attaining it. Starting with a dust jacket that folds out into a two sided comics poster: the outer side featuring a dense full color, 360º narrative by editor and comics fiend, Chris Ware; the inner side featuring a vaguely ceremonial (think Mayan) worshipping of the idols of comics by Gary Panter. But there's more: tucked into the folds of this dust-jacket-cum-suitable-for-framing-wall-art are two mini-comics commissioned especially for this issue; one -- in full color -- by Ron Rege, Jr., and the other in B & W (as it should be) by long time mini-master, John Porcellino. And that's just the dust jacket! Moving on to the front and back binding plates (the hard covers beneath the dust jacket), we have a hundred or so images culled from a 1936 guide to cartooning separated by a lavishly embossed spine. The end papers are by Ivan Brunetti, and feature a wallpaper of minimalistic renditions of his personal comics and cartoon hall of fame. And, finally, there is the contents of the book itself. The subject of much speculation as to whether it would be reprints or newly commissioned work, the answer is... Both! About half and half, depending on how you look at it. Here's how it breaks down: Some of the work has appeared in non-comics periodicals, but is collected herein for the first time. Under this category are Mark Beyer, Ivan Brunetti, Kaz, Art Spiegelman (although his pieces are being reprinted everywhere at this point) and some of the pieces by Chris Ware. Straight out reprints are the inclusions by Charles Burns (although the frontispiece is new), Chester Brown, Debbie Drechsler, Jaime and Gilberto Hernandez, Mark Newgarden, Archer Prewitt, Joe Sacco, Richard Sala (newly colored, however), Seth, and Adrian Tomine. New to us -- and therefore, we imagine, new to you as well -- are the works by Lynda Barry, Jeffrey Brown, Dan Clowes, David Collier, R. Crumb, Kim Deitch, Julie Doucet, David Heatley, Ben Katchor, Joe Matt, Richard McGuire, Gary Panter, some of the Chris Ware, and of course the aforementioned dust-jacket and minis. In addition to all this contemporary work, there are selections of classic and archival work sprinkled throughout: First and foremost among these is a 15-page spread on "the inventor of comics," Rodolphe Töpfler, and his first appearance in America, introduced by Chris Ware; an 80% reproduction of an original 1922 Mutt and Jeff daily strip by Bud Fisher that takes four pages to display (which gives you an idea of how big they drew comics back then!); and a nine page spread on George Herriman, introduced by Tim Samuelson and featuring Herriman's last Krazy Kat dailies, also reproduced from the originals. And, as if this weren't enough, there are two appreciations by Chris Ware, one of the abstract-expressionist-turned-representational-painter-with-a-personal-affinity-for-comics-iconography, Philip Guston, and the other of Peanuts creator, Charles Schulz. In addition there is a critical appreciation of comics from John Updike, and nostalgiac/elegiac remembrances of comics related experiences by Glen David Gold, Malachi Cohen, and Chip Kidd. The volume opens with a preface from Ira Glass, followed by an introduction by Chris Ware, who, when all is said and done, is clearly more than simply the editor of this work. This is a great piece, especially when you consider it's primary purpose: preaching to the unconverted, those countless, teeming millions out there in America and beyond who don't locate the foundation of their identity in comics. With this volume, McSweeney's begins a new ambitious distribution arrangement with Publisher's Group West in the USA and Penguin Books in the UK; thereby bringing their publications before a great many more potential readers. They couldn't have chosen a better volume to initiate this venture. Let's wish them luck. | |||||
| Private Stash: A Pin-Up Girl Portfolio by 20 Cartoonists | Adrian Tomine, Charles Burns, Daniel Clowes, Gilbert Hernandez and more ... | Buenaventura Press |
$22.00 ($24.95 list) |
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This one is an attempt to be the last word in fetish object. Playing on the trope of arrested adolescent sexuality stereotypically identified with the bagging-and-boarding fanboy set of which more than a few of these participants are graduates, Private Stash starts out with a squarebound translucent case that contains -- once you've struggled to remove it from this secure enclosure without damaging it -- a clever two-layer illustrated wraparound slipcase portrait of all twenty contributors by Rick Altergott (displaying his Mort Drucker and Wally Wood chops to full effect) which opens to reveal a 20 panel accordian-print that opens (to over ten feet!) to reveal the wet-dream girls of a fairly astounding array of talent: R. Crumb, Dan Clowes, Gilbert and Jaime Hernandez, Charles Burns, Gary Panter, Peter Bagge, Adrian Tomine, Kim Deitch, Tony Millionaire, Richard Sala, Ivan Brunetti, Ron Regé,Jr., Dan Zettwoch, Rick Altergott, Jonathan Bennett, Sammy Harkham, Tim Hensley, Mitch O'Connell and Archer Prewitt (It's too bad they couldn't get Chris Ware on board with this one, but then again, his fantasy might be too much for the rest of us to handle...). | |||||
| Delphina #1 | Richard Sala | Fantagraphics | Ignatz |
$6.75 ($7.95 list) |
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The two latest issues in the wonderful Ignatz series of Euro-American hybrid comics also happen to be two of the best -- and are only the second and third by Americans (the first being Ganges by Kevin Huizenga). This series of high quality comic books/graphic albums features some of the finest regularly published comics work currently available and, by virtue of its periodical status, is both constantly giving us something to look forward to and bringing back the fun of collecting. Delphina presents the first installment of one of another of Richard Sala's trademarked tales of eerie mystery rendered in his unmistakable, angular pen and ink style. This one concerns a clean-cut boy who, in search of his apple-cheeked girl, finds himself in a small town whose inhabitants... well, we don't want to give too much away. Suffice it to say these are folk who put the strange in strangers, and you wouldn't want to have to depend on them. | |||||
| The Grave Robber's Daughter | Richard Sala | Fantagraphics |
$9.95 ($9.95 list) OUT OF STOCK! |
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This time around, Sala gives readers of Evil Eye a self contained grahic novella instead of a new installment of an ongoing saga. This is a welcome change, we say. This issue has Sala doing what he does best, namely delineating the tale of a cute girl stuck in a strange town trying to figure out what's going on while surrounded by a bunch of weirdos. The perfect read on a dark and windy night, listening to the rafters creaking and groaning and wondering if you heard something outside your door... | |||||
| Delphine #2 | Richard Sala | Fantagraphics |
$6.75 ($7.95 list) |
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Also on offer is the second chapter of Delphine, Richard Sala's ode to small town creepiness. | |||||