Content Topic: Webcomics
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Best Webcomics of 2008
I realized that I neglected to mention webcomics (with the exception of BodyWorld and Jason Overby’s work) on my best of list or its accompanying reading list. Most of the non-web comics I read are single works. I read very few serials at this point (and those I do read are generally a long way [...]
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Bluesy Face
I’ve been enjoying Jed McGowan’s periodically appearing Bluesy Face. The third chapter was published this week on his website. I’m not sure where the story is going, but I love McGowan’s style which uses sparse line work and blocky colors (bright blue and a grey screen-like tone or two). He also creates a number of [...]
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Freedom within Boundaries – Presentation
I spoke in Second Life at Met@Morph, the first annual Web Comics Comic-Con and Conference, on Friday October 3rd (today). My presentation was called “Freedom within Boundaries: the Theory and Practice of Constraint in Comics.” I only had 20 minutes so it’s a fairly shallow look at the topic. You can see the slides here [...]
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Top Shelf 2.0
I’m finding the Top Shelf 2.0 reading experience quite frustrating. It’s like there’s a new story/strip every day, but continuations of those strips are almost non-existent. I can’t keep up with 20 comics at once! I have enjoyed Michael DeForge’s Cave Adventure, which is like a cross between Skibber Bee Bye and one of Mat [...]
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Nabiel Kanan’s new webcomic
Nabiel Kanan (read my review of his excellent early work, Exit, soon to be rereleased in a collected edition from Desperado) has started up a webcomic called About Charlotte. There’s only a couple panels up so far, but you can subscribe to his feed to get updates. I’m a big fan of Kanan’s work (I [...]
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Comixtalk 2007 Roundtable
I was asked to participate in the Comixtalk End of Year Roundtable with a group of other comics folks (mostly bloggers), and it’s now up. (You’ll probably notice I didn’t have all that much to say. I just don’t follow the news and industry as much as others, as I’m more concerned with the creative [...]
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Guest Blogging at ComixTalk
I’m guest blogging this week at ComixTalk (formerly Comixpedia). I’ll be posting about some of my favorite webcomics, so make sure to check in over the course of the week. That will probably destroy the chances of any other posts here (and I thought I’d get more posting done over vacation). P.S. Still looking for [...]
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More on Gag and Serious
Joey Manley mentioned my post in reply to Joel Fagin’s post: For what it’s worth: my thinking, on a subjective level, tends more toward Derik Badman’s position — he seems like he should be right — but there’s no denying that, objectively, gag strips tend to do better on the web than others, and there [...]
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What’s Wrong With This Post
Sometimes I read someone else’s post about a topic I’m interested in, and I see a different post that could have been. I’m not always sure my criticism of the post is a product of the content or my reading of it (I’ll often get stuck on one thing and not see past it). But [...]
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Dinosaur Comics by Ryan North
The Best of Dinosaur Comics 2003-2005 A.D.: Your whole family is made of meat by Ryan North. Quack!Media, 2006. $14.99, 250p. If there’s any webcomic that fits into a Oubapo mold, it is Ryan North’s Dinosaur Comics. North decided to do a webcomic, but he couldn’t draw. Instead of following the Trondheim path of learning [...]
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