Posts Tagged ‘PShaw’
by Dan Nadel
Wednesday, February 13, 2008
Post Comment
Your Pshaw! for the day.
Labels: cartoons, Mark Twain, PShaw, soup
by Dan Nadel
Wednesday, January 30, 2008
Read Comments (3)
Your Pshaw! for the day!
Labels: cartoons, mac os9, PShaw
Your Pshaw! for the Day
by Dan Nadel
Wednesday, January 23, 2008
Read Comments (3)
Your Pshaw! for the day.
Labels: Beatles, cartoons, jesus, PShaw
Your Pshaw! for the Day
by Dan Nadel
Thursday, January 17, 2008
Post Comment
By Pshaw!
Labels: cartoons, PShaw, red sonja
More From PShaw
by T. Hodler
Tuesday, May 22, 2007
Labels: cartoons, clueless critics, PShaw
PShaw Speaks Out
by T. Hodler
Tuesday, May 15, 2007
Read Comment (1)
He‘s also sent a nice recent strip to New Bodega.
Labels: cartoons, Disney, PShaw, superheroes
Second Issue Now Available for Download
by T. Hodler
Thursday, April 26, 2007
Read Comment (1)
Because the print run of the second issue of Comics Comics has sold out, we are now making it available for free downloading over at the sidebar.
So if you missed out on getting your own copy (and unfortunately, this one really does work best in its oversize paper form), you can now finally enjoy:
Peter Bagge on Spider-Man!
An interview with PShaw! (He has posted a nice color variation of this issue’s cover on his own site, by the way.)
Part one of a far-too-long essay on Steve Gerber‘s cult ’70s Marvel comics (Howard the Duck, Omega the Unknown, etc.)! (By the way, don’t forget to read the article’s accidentally excised footnotes.)
Kevin Nowlan on color separations!
Dan on Dave Sim‘s Collected Letters 2004!
Mark Newgarden on Michael Kupperman!
A beautiful “perpetual calendar” by the legendary Justin Green!
Comics and cartoons by PShaw, Matthew Thurber, and Lauren R. Weinstein!
And more!
P.S. When you’re done, drop us a line. There’s still time to make the letters page for issue three.
Labels: Comics Comics, Dave Sim, Justin Green, Kevin Nowlan, Lauren R. Weinstein, Mark Newgarden, Matthew Thurber, Michael Kupperman, Peter Bagge, PShaw, Steve Gerber
The New Comics Comics (Reprise)
by T. Hodler
Friday, December 29, 2006
Read Comments (3)
NOTE: As the second issue of Comics Comics is just now being distributed to many comics stores for the first time, this is a special encore presentation of an earlier post.
Well, it’s finally here in all its glory. The second issue of Comics Comics debuted at SPX, and it’s a pretty terrific bargain.
We’ve switched to a much larger size—the second issue is a broadsheet—and though we’ll probably have it available for downloading fairly soon, this is one you’re going to want to own and hold in your hands, if only for the beautiful, giant Justin Green “Perpetual Calendar” on the back cover.
Incidentally, I was surprised at how many people at SPX (ostensibly big fans of “alternative” comics) didn’t recognize Justin Green‘s name. All I can say to that is that he basically invented the modern conception of autobiographical comics, and he is easily one of the dozen or so most important comic book creators of the last fifty years. If you haven’t read his Binky Brown stories, you should buy them and read them immediately. Seriously. Don’t buy a single other comic until you’ve found the Binky Brown Sampler. It is better than anything else you could possibly be considering.
Of course, Green’s not the only contributor in this issue. Did you ever wonder how Peter “Hate” Bagge really feels about Spider-Man, and about the single issue of that superhero’s adventures he created for Marvel? You can find out in Comics Comics #2!
Do you like the strange and wonderful work of Matthew Thurber, recently named minicomics artist of the year by the Comics Journal? You’ll read more here, in Comics Comics #2!
Also, Frank “Storeyville” Santoro discusses the lost art of color separation with mainstream legend Kevin Nowlan!
Comics and a very rare interview from our cover artist, the enigmatic PShaw!
Dan on Dave Sim, Mark Newgarden on Michael Kupperman, gag cartoons by Lauren R. Weinstein, and the first installment in an epic, New Yorker-style (ha) exploration of the 1970s Marvel stories of Steve Gerber!
Does YOUR favorite store carry Comics Comics?