Tag Archive for 'Books'

The Top 9 Reasons Why Comics Don’t Need to Be Saved - Part Two

Yeah, so last week I ran The Top 9 Reasons Why Comics Don’t Need to Be Saved - Part One, which consisted solely of reasons nine thru six. Why? Because I’m a dick.

And now, for your consideration, are the decidedly more irreverent Top 9 Reasons Why Comics Don’t Need to Be Saved reasons five thru one:

5. Newspaper comic strips are dying because fewer and fewer people want to read newspapers, not because they don’t want to read comics. Now they go and read this stuff on the Internet. They’re called “webcomics” and those are doing just fine.

4. Seriously, Hollywood wants to give comic books fellatio right now. In fact, they may have already finished the fellatio and moved onto the hardcore doggiestyle section of “Filmstriptease presents Cramming Comics vol 1.” Soon they’re going to be finishing off vol 1 with a spectacular facial (which could be as soon as Watchmen or as far away as the Avengers movie). It all depends on how long Hollywood can keep it up.

3. Single issues are really a niche product at this point and I don’t think there’s anything that’s going to change that. I’m part of that niche audience and I love the singles, but most people want a bigger chunk of story. If that’s the case, let the singles slowly fade away and bring on the graphic novels because…

2. Graphic novel sales continue to look hopeful. Bookstores are carrying graphic novels by the hoard and putting them up in huge floor displays all the time. I don’t think that would happen if there wasn’t some serious coin to be made. Guys whose names have been on the tip of my tongue for the majority of my natural life are slowly becoming adored literary idols for a new generation of readers. Fuck, I just saw Watchmen sitting on a shelf in Borders in their “Bestsellers” section when I went to buy the Iron Man DVD.

1. Comic book storytelling continues to improve. I see it every week when I read my Wednesday haul of new comics. And at the end of the day, it’s all about good content.

Next: The Top 9 Things That May Have Gone Wrong with Last Defenders - Part One

Why the Top 9? Because 10 is too many and 9 is better. 3 X 3 = Awesome. Now that’s what I call math.

Podcast Episode 043

Chop Shop, Step Brothers, Will Ferrell’s nutsack, True Romance, over-hyped Judd Apatow movies, Seth Rogen as the new Lil Jon, Alanis Morissette and Dave Coulie, ProTools and the L1 Ultramaximizer, Dave Cockrum (not Cockring), Superpowers: A Novel by David J Schwartz, Final Crisis #2, She-Hulk #30 and #31, GG Studio, Green Arrow / Black Canary #11, Last Defenders #6, Marvel Adventures Hulk #14, Charlie Barlett, and too much more to remember.

 
 AudioShocker #43 [69:47m]: Play Now | Download

New Contributors and Remastered Podcast Interviews

Over the weekend, Neal updated our version of WordPress for the AudioShocker blog, and everything went to hell. Neal got it fixed within a few hours. The only thing we lost was 1 gig worth of podcasts that we’ve recorded since October of 2007 (well, more like “deleted from our webspace” than “lost”).

It took me from Saturday to Monday to get the old podcasts back up, but I was glad. Why? Along with making some minor file naming changes, I was able to remaster two of our favorite comic book creator interviews in the process:

  • Our 2-plus-hour talk with Ross Campbell, creator of Wet Moon and Water Baby, has been remastered. Ross is finishing up Wet Moon 4 as we speak, and we should have him back on our show very soon.
  • I also remastered our chat with Brandon Thomas, creator of Miranda Mercury and writer of Ambidextrous. This episode was originally a bit rough in terms of levels, but that’s all been fixed.

But I’m not just writing this post about tech issues and old episodes. I’m also here to let you know about two new regular contributors who have joined the AudioShocker:

  • First up is Shannon, our new books expert, who has already written two fantastic posts for the blog.
  • Next up is Conrad, who is currently podcasting with me about the AFI’s 100 Years… 100 Movies list. The next episode of this series will be up on Friday, July 18, 2008.

Finally, I’m going to be rolling out a new feature on the AudioShocker starting this Sunday, July 20, 2008. It’s basically going to be the “AudioShocker Song of the Week.” Everything we post will be originally music by artists like Nik Furious, the Unlicensed Attorneys at Law (UAL), Dirty Weekend, Nutsack Supernova, and more. This Sunday will debut a new Nik Furious beat for the upcoming UAL album.

Podcast Episode 039

Double interview action kicks off as Neal and Nick talk with author Marc Tyler Nobleman about his new Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster illustrated biography, Boys of Steel: The Creators of Superman, and his proposed biography on Bill Finger, the uncredited co-creator of Batman. Next up, Nick talks with Josh Blair about his latest minicomics anthology, Candy or Medicine Volume Three. And then Justique, Neal, and Nick take it home after the end theme as they share their feelings about Hellboy II: The Golden Army.

 
 AudioShocker #39 [37:15m]: Play Now | Download

I Have Fallen in Love With: The Host by Stephanie Meyer

Lately it’s been hard for me to find books that I love. I’ve read plenty that are pretty good, that I might recommend if someone asked me for a reading suggestion, but there hasn’t been anything recently that has made me want to go around telling people, “You HAVE to read this.” This past weekend, I think I found the book that has broken that dry spell: The Host by Stephanie Meyer.

Meyer found fame five years ago, with the first installment of her vampire saga, Twilight. I remember hearing about her books, which were becoming immensely popular, several years ago, but I never picked one up, since they were targeted to a teen audience. Then last summer she published Eclipse, the third book in the Twilight series, and it knocked Harry Potter out of the number one best-seller spot.

This week, Entertainment Weekly’s cover featured the actors who will star in the movie adaptation of the Twilight series, and I decided to read the article. There were a few sentences about The Host, saying it was her first adult novel and is a blend of science fiction and romance. Oh, yeah, it also sold for $600,000 at auction and debuted at No. 1. Which means that Meyer is a rockstar in the literary world.

I haven’t read science fiction in a very long time, not since I fell in love with The Giver and A Wrinkle in Time when I was young, and I am happy that Meyer renewed my interest. The Host is interesting, thoughtful, and wildly imaginative. Unlike a lot of what I read, where my facination with the characters generates my interest in the novel’s plot, the plot of this novel is making me interested in the characters. Which is so refreshing. Reading something where the plot is so crazily inventive is a great change of pace from character study (though that is defintely not to say that Meyer doesn’t have an equally insightful take on what, literally, makes up the human soul. In this book, alien “souls” take possession of human, plant, and animal “host” bodies. The “soul” that is the focus of the book can’t subdue the mind of the human body it has possessed).

I’m only about 100 pages in, and I’m happy there are 500 more to go. If Meyer can create a dynamic, crisp, intricate world in the first sliver of her book, I can’t wait to see where she goes from here.

Public Reading vs. Private Reading

Now that I ride the bus to work, it has become necessary for me to read two books at one time. I need “public” reading for the bus and “private” reading for at home. I doubt that anyone actually notices what I’m reading on the bus, but I know that 90% of the time, if I’m sitting next to someone who’s reading, I semi-blatantly check out their book. And sometimes there’s something so strange I look at them for a while and think, “I wonder what they do when they’re alone, since they’ll actuallly read that in front of people on the bus.” So yes, sometimes I literally and metaphorically judge a book by its cover.

So, what’s my #1 choice for “public” reading? Jodi Picoult, hands-down. Interesting, timely, page-turners with discreet titles and covers. She must write at least one book a year, and she’s been writing for a while, so she keeps me in non-embarrassing material for the 500. You can see how PC she is by looking on her web site. A cute pic of her, in front of a field of tulips is the first thing you see. Some titles of her books: “My Sister’s Keeper”, “The Pact”, “Mercy”, “The Tenth Circle”. Totally bus-safe.

And the “private” reading? Right now, that honor goes to Eric Jerome Dickey. Scadalous, drama-filled, soap operas that mainly take place in L.A. They’re filled with sex, cheating, lying, and lines like, “Quick, somebody give Grandma Cellulite a fun house mirror.” Seriously, you have to love it.

Don’t get me wrong, Dickey is a really good writer - detailed, with a definite voice, and he has carved out a style in fiction in much the same way that Tyler Perry has done with film. But not even his book titles are ok for the bus. “Milk in My Coffee”, “Pleasure”, “Naughty or Nice”. And his web site? It’s a black background, his music video-type book covers scrolling across the screen, a slow, bluesy song playing. It would make Jodi and her tulips blush. Every time I get on an Eric Jerome kick, my boyfriend shakes his head at me, points to one of the X-rated passages, and says, “I can’t believe what my girlfriend is reading. Eric Jerome Cocky.”

I was brave enough to cross the line last week, though. I gave it a shot. I took “The Other Woman” by Mr. Dickey on the bus. I made sure to hold it far enough down so that the cover didn’t show, but the problem was that in doing this, the woman sitting next to me and the man standing over me could easily read the words on the page. I just knew that one of them was reading the part about the “white French girl and her African-American boyfriend” who “put on a show for about thirty voyeurs.” And I also knew that they wouldn’t understand that actually, the book is very smart. It gets into the heart of relationships, peoples’ weaknesses, their faults, the way that they negotiate creating a life with someone else. So, with twenty minutes left to go on the bus, I abandoned my bravery, put it away, and finished it at home that night. And picked up “Liar’s Game” as soon as I was done.