The Comics Journal #82-83 (July/August 1983) Art by Dave Sim (Click Image To Enlarge) |
(from The Comics Reporter, 28 June 2013)
...One memorable piece he contributed to the Journal in those early
years was the magazine's first full-length interview with the cartoonist
Dave Sim. Thompson championed Sim's comic book Cerebus almost
from its conception, and would remain convinced of the cartoonist's
skill -- if not various, specific beliefs Sim held -- for the remainder
of his days, even offering to publish certain works of Sim in recent
years (Sim debated and then declined the offer). The Sim interview ran
over two issues, and featured a cut-in-half cover. It was likely not the first interview in the magazine anticipated as "The Comics Journal
doing what they do with this specific cartoonist" given the
publication's impressive run with a variety of mainstream comic book
figures ranging from the fully invested executive to the strictly
iconoclastic creator, but the Sim piece was early as the magazine began
to secure a reputation for longer, more serious talks with an emerging
generation of cartoonists looking to the comics medium for its
opportunities for personal expression. The choices made by the
publication were not automatic, even though they look inevitable in the
rearview mirror. Thompson and the rest of Fantagraphics ran the risk of
routinely alienating the professional community on which the magazine
depended for advertising revenue, a significant chunk of its readership
and access to interview subjects...
DANIEL CLOWES:
(from Tributes To Kim Thompson at TCJ.com, 24 June 2013)
...Kim had, from my vantage, what appeared to be an enviable life: a happy home, and an unending pride in his calling. He was truly a gentle, kind soul, though he always thought of himself as a bit of a punk, I think. I don’t remember ever seeing him angry, and he treated even the lowliest of adversaries with good-natured acceptance. Dave Sim has probably lost his only sane defender. Kim knew he and Gary had done something beyond what anyone could have ever imagined and he seemed continually giddy over what turned out to be an astounding and indelible achievement...
Kim Thompson (1956-2013) was an American comic book editor, translator, and publisher, best known as vice president and co-publisher of Seattle-based Fantagraphics Books. Kim wrote and published the first major review of Cerebus in The Comics Journal #52 (December 1979).
DANIEL CLOWES:
(from Tributes To Kim Thompson at TCJ.com, 24 June 2013)
...Kim had, from my vantage, what appeared to be an enviable life: a happy home, and an unending pride in his calling. He was truly a gentle, kind soul, though he always thought of himself as a bit of a punk, I think. I don’t remember ever seeing him angry, and he treated even the lowliest of adversaries with good-natured acceptance. Dave Sim has probably lost his only sane defender. Kim knew he and Gary had done something beyond what anyone could have ever imagined and he seemed continually giddy over what turned out to be an astounding and indelible achievement...
Kim Thompson (1956-2013) was an American comic book editor, translator, and publisher, best known as vice president and co-publisher of Seattle-based Fantagraphics Books. Kim wrote and published the first major review of Cerebus in The Comics Journal #52 (December 1979).
3 comments:
"Dave Sim has probably lost his only sane defender."
Wait a minute. I think I've just been insulted by Dan Clowes!
"Wait a minute. I think I've just been insulted by Dan Clowes!"
HA HA good one!
And... I think DC insulted me too ;-)
Oh my, how sad. I hadn't heard. He was much too young and the comics world will be less for his absence.
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