Saturday, June 14, 2008

Separated at Birth: Take a shine of our laser beam/And we'll cleanse all the evil within you

Fantastic Four #269 panel
Fantastic Four #269 panel
Fantastic Four #269 panel

Terminus's weapon attacks Earth in panels from Fantastic Four #269 (August 1984), written and drawn by John Byrne, coloring by Glynis Wein, lettering by Diana Albers



The Xindi Superweapon attacks Florida and Cuba; from "The Expanse" (Enterprise episode, March 2003)



Saturday Morning Cartoon: Conrad Poohs and His Dancing Teeth


"Conrad Poohs and His Dancing Teeth" (1970), directed by Terry Gilliam, from Monty Python's Flying Circus (series 2, episode 10, "Scott of the Antarctic")


Friday, June 13, 2008

Thirteen of a Kind: I wasn’t born under no bad sign, but it was Friday the 13th

It’s that day again…watch out you walk down the street that you don’t cross the paths of black cats, stroll under a ladder, step on a crack, or accidentally buy a Jennifer Lopez CD…all of those are guaranteed to bring you double bad luck on the holiday so perilous major motion picture studios schedule their big releases around the date…yes, it’s Friday the Thirteenth.

Now, a very wise man once told me that when you believe in things that you don't understand then you suffer. “Superstition ain't the way,” he told me, looking in the other direction. He also alerted me to wash my face and hands, to rid me of the problem, do all that I could to keep him in a daydream, and keep him goin' strong.

Sure thing! sez I, so here to help you avoid the disasters this day usually spells, here’s 13 things you need to watch out for:



























Or, you could just spend the day inside listening to Joan Armatrading’s Walk Under Ladders. (Or listen to this excellent Discumentary on the album from WYEP.

Either way: let's be careful out there.

A tip o' the black cat to BitterAndrew, Dr. K., 'n' Chris Sims for suggestions.

(More Ten of a Kind here.)



Thursday, June 12, 2008

Bully's Sketchbook: Cathy Leamy

From the talented pen of Cathy Leamy, creator of Geraniums and Bacon and other fine minicomics, all available at her Metrokitty.com site, comes this wonderful portrait of yours truly!:

Bully, by Cathy Leamy


I got to meet Cathy at this past week's MoCCA Art Festival 2008. We've corresponded online but never in person, so it was grand fun to finally meet her!

Me and Cathy Leamy from Metrokitty


When she's ultrafamous I can say I knew her when! And I have that picture as proof! I was missing some of her minicomics so I bought the rest to complete the set. You can pick up her fine, fun minicomics at her website. Do it today!

Comics by Cathy Leamy


Said it before and I'll say it again: you meet the nicest people in the comics world. Thanks, Cathy!


Wednesday, June 11, 2008

Dumbass Things You Shouldn't Do in the Marvel Universe, Number 140

In between exclamations of "Goddess!" and "By the bright lady!" and "Wolverine, get out of my underwear drawer!" Ororo Munroe has been heard to gossip to her closest friends that she don't want no scrub. A scrub is a guy that can't get no love from her, hanging out the passenger side of his best friend's ride, trying to holler at her. So before asking Ms. Munroe out on a date, it helps to know her likes and dislikes. Her turn-ons include walking or flying in the rain, Japanese thrillseekers, Modesty Blaise novels, mentoring teenage girls and African kings. Turn-offs include telephone booths, elevators, storage lockers, small caves and hall cupboards. But a kind word, a friendly smile, and a knowledge of what cable station you can find the Weather Channel on can go a long way towards charming her. On the other hand, never, never try to pick up the future Mrs. Black Panther like this:

X-Men #140 panel
X-Men #140 panel
X-Men #140 panel
Panels from [Uncanny] X-Men #140, written by Chris Claremont, art by John Byrne and Terry Austin, colors by Glynis Wein, letters by Tom Orzechowski


That's right, Jimmie "J.J." Walker. I don't think you're ready for this jelly.


Tuesday, June 10, 2008

A Wodehouse a Week #51: Aunts Aren't Gentlemen

A Wodehouse a Week banner

Aunts Aren't Gentlemen (1974) is known as The Cat-Nappers in the US. Both are clever titles but I prefer the less descriptive, more elegiac UK title, which leads us handily to the final words of this Bertie and Jeeves novel:
'There are no aunts here. And in particular we are three thousand miles away from Mrs Dahlia Travers of Brinkley Manor, Market Snodsbury, Worcestershire. Don't get me wrong, Jeeves, I love the old flesh and blood. I fact I revere her. Nobody can say she isn't good company. But her moral code is lax. She cannot distinguish between what is according to Hoyle and what is not according to Hoyle. If she wants to do anything, she doesn't ask herself "Would Emily Post approve of this?", she goes ahead and does it, as she did in this matter of the cat. Do you know what is the trouble with aunts as a class?'

'No, sir.'

'They are not gentlemen,' I said gravely.
A fine, funny, wistful, altogether Wodehousean ending to a novel. And, as it turns out, to his long stretch of work: this is Wodehouse's final finished novel before his death in 1975 (although his unfinished novel posthumously titled Sunset at Blandings is published in 1977). Read with that knowledge, Aunts has some of the hallmarks of a book written in Wodehouse's last years of life: it's much shorter than most of his novels, liberally re-uses subplots and situations from previous books, and doesn't have the full sparkle of a Jeeves novel from Plum's prime. But there's still some lovely moments in this tale of...well, let's let Bertie classify it:
And so began what I suppose my biographers will refer to as The Maiden Eggesford Horror—or possibly The Curious Case Of The Cat Which Kept Popping Up When Least Expected.
Bertie's not quite in the pink as the book begins...as a matter of fact, he's a bit too much in the pink, breaking out in pink spots on his chest. Advised by Harley Street physician E. Jimson Murgatroyd (who appeared in an identical role in the Blandings novel Full Moon, advising a character how to get rid of his pink spots) to take it easy for a while and rest and relax in the country, Bertie and Jeeves scamper off to Maiden Eggesford at the suggestion of Bertie's Aunt Dahlia...
The aunt to whom I alluded was my good and deserving Aunt Dahlia, not to be confused with my Aunt Agatha who eats broken bottles and is strongly suspected of turning into a werewolf at the time of the full moon. Aunt Dahlia is a good a sort as ever said 'Tally Ho' to a fox, which she frequently did in her younger days when out with the Quorn or Pytchley. If she ever turned into a werewolf, it would be one of those jolly breezy werewolves whom it is a pleasure to know.
(Wodehousepedia: Quorn and Pytchley are two of Britain's most prestigious foxhunts, named after the English towns they were based on. Not connected to the story but a lovely bit of synchronicity: Quorn's railway station is shared with adjoining town Woodhouse.)

Aunt Dahlia has, of course, an ulterior motive: she's bet a bundle on a racehorse and like all dedicated punters this side of a Dick Francis mystery, seeks to hobble the main competition. Aunt Dahlia is not the sort to take a tie iron to a horse's knee (that would be an entirely different kind of Wodehouse book...probably ghost-written by Mickey Spillane), so it's lucky for her that leading competitor racehorse Potato Chip has become so fond of a stable cat that he'll pine away without the feline companionship. If you've been paying attention at all to the general plot devices of Bertie and Jeeves novels...in fact, even if you've only paid attention to the American title of this book...you'll know who Dahlia is going to coerced into stealing that cat for her. Naturally, this cat-napping plot backfires...again...and again... Every attempt of Bertie to have the cat restored to its legal owner results in the feline returning. Or, as Friz Freleng might put it: the cat came back:

It's virtual slapstick, but done with such a light touch it's forgivable, as the cat turns up again and again in Bertie's cottage. It's all the more nerve-wracking as Bertie's being stalked by Major Plank, an African explorer from an early Jeeves novel (and an Uncle Fred adventure) who is about to finger Bertie as escaped criminal Alpine Joe, the debonair cat-burglar. That's the least of Bertie's worries; he's also become inadvertently engaged to Vanessa Cook, daughter of Potato Chip's owner. That subplot is reminiscent of many Bertie Wooster scrapes, especially Joy in the Morning, where Bertie must avoid jealous jilted Stilton Cheesewright the same way he's in the soup with beefy Orlo Porter, insurance agent and Vanessa's ex-fiancé. Even this re-used plot device has a new twist: much as he wants to beat Bertie up, Orlo can't touch him because Bertie's taken out a hefty insurance policy through Orlo's firm.

Not that he wants to marry Vanessa. She's just the latest (and, sadly, the last) in a long line of wanna-be Mrs Woosters who see Bertie as a canvas to impress their own image upon:
'...I am quite content with you, Bertie. By the way, I do dislike that name Bertie. I think I shall call you Harold. Yes, I am perfectly satisfied with you. You have many faults, of course. I shall be pointing some of them out when I am at leisure. For one thing," she said, not waiting till she was at leisure, 'you smoke too much. You must give that up when we are married. Smoking is just a habit. Tolstoy,' she said, mentioning someone I had not met, 'says that just as much pleasure can be got from twirling the fingers.'
Poor Bertie! Well, that's what he gets for not speaking up and saying 'Well, I say now...' instead of vehement protests at crucial times. I object to the perception of Bertie as an addle-headed, doltish, gormless twit—his plans to get out of scrapes are as valid as anyone else's—it's just that fate—and Wodehouse—stacks the deck against him. Really, Bertie's cardinal sin is bad timing, not speaking up, and his well-intentioned but misguided sense of chivalry:
'What's wrong with you?'

'I'm engaged to be married to a girl I can't stand the sight of.'

'What, another? Who is it this time?'

'Vanessa Cook.'

'Any relation to old Cook?'

'His daughter.'

'How did it happen?'

'I proposed to her a year ago, and she turned me down, and just not she blew in and said she had changed her mind and would marry me. Came as a nasty shock.'

'You should have told her to go and boil her head.'

'I couldn't.'

'Why couldn't you?'

'Not preux.'

'Not what?'

'Preux. P for potted meat, r for rissole, e for egg nog, and so on. You've heard of a preux chevalier? It is my aim to be one.'

'Oh well, if you go about being preux, you must expect to get into trouble.'
(Wodehousepedia: preux is outdated but still useful French for 'valiant,' and the phrase 'preux chevalier' means 'valiant knight.' Who said Wodehouse isn't educational?)

Luckily, as always and ever, Jeeves is there to save the day, restore the cat, reunite the lovers, and save Bertie from a life inside a prison, or, worse yet, marriage. And in our last looks at them they're happily settled in Manhattan, far enough away from Aunt Dahlia and company, but close enough, as ever, to a cocktail and a cigarette.

For all its end-of-canon briefness and reiteration, Aunts Aren't Gentlemen still has some lovely light Wodehousean moments. Here's Bertie haggling with a shady gameskeeper over the price of returning the cat to its rightful owner:
'...I'd have to make it twenty pounds.'

I was relieved. I had been expecting something higher. He, too, seemed to feel; that he had erred on the side of moderation, for he immediately added:

'Or rather, thirty.'

'Thirty!'

'Thirty, sir.'

'Let's haggle,' I said.

But when I suggested twenty-five, a nicer-looking sort of number than thirty, he shook his grey head regretfully, so we went on haggling, and he haggled better than me, so that eventually he settled on thirty-five.

It wasn't one of my best haggling days.
Aunts Aren't Gentlemen also gives us this hint of the design of the official Drones Club tie:
'Have you a clean collar?'

'Several, with immaculate shirts attached.'

'Don't wear that Drones Club tie.'

'Certainly not,' I agreed. If the Drones Club tie has a fault, it is a little on the loud side and should not be spring suddenly on nervous people and invalids, and I had no means of knowing if Mrs Briscoe was one of those.
Drones Club tieInterestingly, one of the Wodehouse fan societies designed an "official" Drones club tie, consisting of yellow, black, and (appropriately) plum stripes. I don't know—it doesn't seem as frightening loud or outrageous as Bertie describes it above, but it isn't a bad-lookin' cravat, and after all, it's just fan fiction. Er, fan haberdashery. And how many other authors do you know who can inspire that?

A Wodehouse a Week #59: Aunts Aren't Gentlemen


I've got exactly one copy of Aunts Aren't Gentlemen/The Cat-Nappers in my Wodehouse collection, which I picked up on my very first visit to London (quite some time ago). It's a paperback Penguin with an Ionicus illustration of Jeeves patiently returning the recalcitrant cat, and I've read it so many time it's falling apart at the binding (the book, not the cat). I need to pick myself up a second copy—and you can get one too at the usual Amazon link to the right. Aunts is out of print in both the US and UK (shame! shame!), but there's plenty of used copies in good condition available for a decent price. Wodehouse's final finished book isn't one of his top classics, but it's breezy and fun, and it's lovely to see he went out the same way he came in: entertaining us and making us laugh.

A Wodehouse a Week Index.


Monday, June 09, 2008

On the Cutting Edge of Fashion

Project Runway


G'day, hosers! It's yer favorite ol' Canucklehead Logan here, with s'more fashion do's 'n' don't's straight from the design house of Wolverine. In fact, these fashions are so hot that even Johnny Storm can't wear 'em! Heh heh heh...Johnny Storm...y'see, it's a joke about how he can catch on fire and...oh, forget it, bub. Yer as dull as Chuck Xavier.

Anyway, in these hot hot hot days of summer, even a guy like me who hangs out in yellow spandex knows that less is more. Long sleeves out. Short sleeves: in. Trousers: out. Short shorts: in. Short tempers? Well, ol' Logan wouldn't get far without that. Ruby quartz sunglasses: stone cold. Adamantium claws? Never gone outta style, bub. What about that fashion standby fer millions o' men, the ol' necktie? Well, jus' like Scott Summer's marriage vows, long ties are definitely a thing o' the past. What's hot now, bub, is short ties. Short short short! Can't afford the new short tie fashion? Don't worry yer pretty li'l heads: I'm the best there is at what I do, and what I do is fashionable:

Giant Size X-Men #1 panels
Giant Size X-Men #1 panels


An' the ol' Canucklehead don't only give fashion advice to butch military types. Nope, even ex-fashion models sometimes need my help. Remember, Red: less is more:

X-Men #98 panel
X-Men #98 panels


Oh yeah. Now that's what the Wolverine is cookin'.

So remember, bubs, stay cool and look cool with Logan's advice: less is more.

Weapon X


Take my fashion advice an' ya won't be able to beat the redheads off'a ya with metal claws!

Uncanny X-Men #394



Saturday, June 07, 2008

Separated at Birth: Spotlight on Batman

Batman #9 & All Star Batman #9
L: Batman #9 (February-March 1942), art by Jack Burnley
R: All Star Batman and Robin, The Boy Wonder #9 (April 2008), art by Jim Lee, Scott Williams and Alex Sinclair
(Click picture to Bat-signal-size)



Saturday Morning Cartoon: Dr. Katz, Professional Therapist: "Bully"


Excerpt from Dr. Katz, Professional Therapist, episode #103, "Bully" (1995), starring Jonathan Katz and H. Jon Benjamin



Tuesday, June 03, 2008

Zzzzz.

Taking a post-BEA rest. A long one. How long? "See you this weekend" long.

Zzzzzzzzzz.

Time to sleep



Monday, June 02, 2008

Beef-cake.

I have the best friends. What brings that declaration on, you might ask? Well, A) the fact that I have the best friends, and B) being able to meet one today, the delightful and talented JustJenn, who has craft and cookery skills beyond most of us regular mortals, especially those of us who are only allowed to use the Easy-Bake oven.

Jenn and pal Jodi stopped by the Norton booth at BEA this morning, absolutely making my day with finally getting to meet folks I previously only knew over the internet. Real life: it's even better, because Jenn brought me cupcakes. And not just any cupcakes, but

Miss JustJenn made me BULLY CUPCAKES! I nearly plotzed.

BULLY CUPCAKES!


(Check out Jenn's blog here to see the making of the cupcakes, and don't miss her recipe links at the bottom to learn how to make the cupcakes, icing, and fondant Bullys! You'll be the hit at your next party!)

Jenn also brought me a couple of her wonderful, beautifully-designed and gorgeously-illustrated comics, based on the true adventures of her delightful kids and grandmother.

Cupcakes AND comics! These are a few of my favorite things.


You can buy these, plus Jenn's lovely stationery and gift items, at her online shop. Tell her that little stuffed bull sent ya!

They smell dee-licious!


Thanks for stopping by, Jenn and Jodi! Thank you so much for the cupcakes too! Folks, I shrieked in delight like a little girl when I saw them, and from a little stuffed bull, that's a pretty high compliment. Thanks for making this a sensational BEA, and I hope to see you again at San Diego Comic Con!

And now...nom nom nom nom nom.


BEA Day 3: Packin' up (yes, I'm packin' up)

BEA 2008 logoOw, my achin' hooes. My dogs are barking, and I don't even have dogs! That said, I wouldn't mind a dog of my very own. I would take him for walks every day and brush him and...oh, hello! Sorry, I went off on a little reverie there. (Sniff.) Anyway, that sigh of relief you hear from me (and echoed by a bajillion booksellers exiting the LA Convention Center) means that BEA is over for one more year. So pack up the boxes, give away the books, shove the ungiven-away posters in the trash and call it a day: it's la fin de BookExpo.

From my wanders this afternoon, let's take a quick look at what passes for typography at the show: yes, it's a publisher using the evil Comic Sans to promote a quiz book:

Evil Comic Sans test


Aw, don't panic. I'm sure we won't be seeing that font again today.

Sundays at BEA are a time for mopping up: last appointments of the show, a chance to socialize with friends in the industry, to grab, beg, borrow or steal those final galleys, and by noon prick up your ears and listen: rippppppp—it's the sound of the first tape gun revving, which means the pack-up has begun. I did a few afternoon wanders through the floor (not solely for the purpose of passing by the DC Comics booth to check out what their hourly giveaway was), and I noticed HarperCollins wins this year's prize for being packed up and ready to go well before 12:30 PM. We in the book industry salute your chutzpah and sheer go-gettedness, HarperCollins, and wish you a happy relaxing evening around your favorite bar.

And even though the show is about to close, you never know what treats you might find on the floor. For me, it was that Ian Rankin mystery novel I oohed and ahheh over the other day, stacked up as a free galley on the carpeted floor of the Little, Brown booth. Thanks, guys at Little, Brown! I'll be sure to read this on the plane, if I don't fall asleep or get too tied up watching the in-flight movie.

Hooray! I got a copy of the new Ian Rankin galley.


So, BEA is all over bar the shouting:

BEA: all over but the shouting. AIEEEEEEEEE! Okay, now it's over.


AIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE!

Okay, now it's over.

Back to the hotel for a relaxing hot soak in the tub (it does wonders for blistered tootsies), and then one last lovely dinner out, this time with my good friend, the delightful Miss Soo Jin, who I have missed a lot since she moved to San Francisco. (Good news: Soo Jin is moving back to New York. Hoorah!) He's me and Soo Jin:

Me and Soo Jin


I took her out to dinner at the fabulous Curry House in Little Tokyo (mere steps from the hotel), where I ate the other day (and loved it!). I had a steaming and savory bowl of miso soup for starters:

Miso soup


And for my entrée, a spicy beef curry:

Hamburger curry at Curry House


...while Soo Jin had some delicious spaghetti:

Soo Jin's dinner


After dinner we wandered for a wee bit through Little Tokyo, visiting a tea shop with a unique way to get rid of slow-moving store items:

Expired items, but are still fine!!


Soo Jin introduced me to the delicious treat known as mochi:

Musing over Mochi
Colorful mochis


I'd never had mochi before. It was delicious as it is beautiful!

We saw a shop with quite possibly the best name in the universe: "Nostalgic Galley of Fame and Beyond":

Nostalgic Galley of Fame and Beyond


Sadly it was closed and I was not be able to purchase any fame. Or beyond.

The perfect ending to a nice night is cold and sweet, so we hustled into Pinkberry...

Pinkberry!


...where I had some gob-smackingly delicious green tea ice cream topped with kiwi fruit. NOM NOM NOM, as the kids cats say.

Pinkberry green tea ice cream with kiwis


Even though there's several in Manhattan, I've never been in a Pinkberry before, but that's going to change when I head back to New York. Komapsumnida, Soo Jin, for introducing me to Pinkberry!

And so, as the day ends...

Comic Sans Shop

AIEEEEE! Comic Sans store!


See you next year at the 2009 BookExpo, folks. I'll be the little fuzzy one.