Tell your fans! Remind them that everything will be up to 35% off
Hey Matt!Could you add a link to SDOAR 2023 GFM at the bottom of your posts on AMOC?Thanks!Jen
Hey Matt!Could you add a link to SDOAR 2023 GFM at the bottom of your posts on AMOC?Thanks!Jen
Hello everyone! Sean here with a (tangentially-Cerebus-related) bit of news.
Living the Line has just announced a new book for release in October 2023, by Eisner-award-winning cartoonist Brandon Graham. It's currently available to preorder at your local comic store, book store, or now on Kickstarter!
We were very grateful to both Dave Sim and Gerhard for blurbing the book! I hope you'll check it out and consider picking it up. We've got bit plans for the series, and we'd love for you to be a part of it.
Solicitation text, sample pages and a press release below!
In a post-human world, the man of miium is born. Created to avenge a slain goddess, our nameless warrior travels an unrecognizable landscape, constantly evolving with new wonders and terrors: Zanikam pirates, deadly reflections, a living bridge, and a red tear in the sky. Written and drawn by Eisner-award-winning author and artist Brandon Graham (Prophet, King City, Rain Like Hammers) and featuring artist Xurxo G. Penalta, Moonray presents a mind-altering new dawn for a distant sci-fi future unlike any other. This bold graphic odyssey births the Moonray universe, from comic book to video game and beyond.
Living the Line, Diamond Comics, Diamond Book Distribution, and Moonray PBC are proud to present Moonray Book One, the first volume in a bold new science fantasy graphic novel series written and drawn by Eisner-award-winning author and artist Brandon Graham (PROPHET, KING CITY, RAIN LIKE HAMMERS), and featuring artist Xurxo G. Penalta.
Moonray Book One will be released in comic book stores and book stores worldwide in October 2023. The lavishly-produced oversize hardback volume will run 160 pages and will retail for $35 USD.
Since the release of King City in 2008, Brandon Graham has been known for making the most experimental and stylish action comics in the business, a true international cartoonist with a distinctive and compelling style. Moonray is the culmination of those fifteen years of development, and takes all of his stylistic influences to their pinnacle: graffiti culture, science fiction manga, clean-line European comics, ukiyo-e prints, and collage, all mashed together into one of the most distinctive visual signatures in comics.
Moonray is a daring experiment in world-building, a true graphic epic that began in a truly unusual way. Moonray the graphic novel series shares its name and characters with a surreal 3rd-person multiplayer battle arena game set in a fantastical sci-fi world. Featuring intense combat, stunning visuals, and a world-class soundtrack, Moonray the game has been in development by the independent game developers Moonray PBC since 2019, and will be available publicly in an arena-combat form this fall of 2023.
But Moonray was written and drawn almost entirely in reverse of the normal process of a video game “tie-in” book. Rather than fit his comic work into an existing story and set of rules, Graham was instead hired by Moonray PBC to draw out the ideas at the game's core, to in essence develop the sketched-in ideas that were present before his involvement. Rather than developing a book based on a game, the team is developing a game based on an their own book.
Writer/artist Graham takes up the origin story.
“The idea for Moonray started with Rodrigo Etcheto and his brother Diego's interest in far future surreal science fiction, which led them to my work.,” says Graham. “The world of It-Ao, the goddess Iltar, and most importantly the idea for miium, the living material that could be absolutely anything, was already in place. They hired me to explore it all.”
“At the same time I was newly living in the desert of Las Vegas, which felt like moving to Mars,” continues Graham. “At the start me and my old friend Farel Dalrymple were doing sketches of all the places and creatures and weapons that could exist in the Moonray universe. Eventually I enlisted Xurxo to draw another story set in the same world.”
“I approached my own pages often without a map of where exactly I'd go next,” continues Graham. “As much as the miium hero was figuring out himself and the world he's found himself in, I was figuring out each week's pages as I went, setting up questions for myself to figure out the following week.”
“We knew from the very beginning that we wanted to develop a style of sci-fi that would be different from anything else out there,” says Moonray PBC CEO Rodrigo Etcheto. “We wanted to explore ideas that touch on surrealism, consciousness and the struggle to know your true nature. But we wanted to set those ideas in a world which would draw gamers and readers in with magnetic visuals. Brandon was the obvious person to create something this ambitious.”
Brandon Graham was born in 1976, the grandson of pin-up artist Bill Randall. He grew up in Seattle around a lot of graffiti and comics from all over the word. His books include KING CITY, MULTIPLE WARHEADS, PROPHET, ROYALBOILER, and RAIN LIKE HAMMERS.
Xurxo G Penalta is a Galician artist who’s collaborated with Brandon on KIEM and PROPHET. He's been published by Image, Dark Horse, IDW, Marvel, and illustrated for multiple music labels and live events. He focuses on science fiction and fantasy artwork in the European clear line style, with late 70s and 80s influences from comics, animation and film.
The solicitation text is below.
"MOONRAY is gloriously epic, exploding scifi fantasy world daydreams in every wonderful way! I can't think of anything I've enjoyed more in recent memory!" -Michael Allred: Madman, Silver Surfer, Bowie: Stardust, Rayguns and Moonage Daydreams, Red Rocket 7, Superman: Space Age
"Moonray is a deeply personal work built on top of a licensed property, that provides a stunning meta-mythical framework for how to live happily in 21st century." — Carson Grubaugh, The Strange Death of Alex Raymond, The Abolition of Man
“Moonray is a heady rich stew of psychedelic science fiction, my favorite kind. And in the skillful hands of Brandon Graham and Xurxo Penalta, it’s served with an unsettling ease in every bite. The perplexing becomes the flavors. It’s joyful to get lost in it.”
— J H Williams III, Echolands, Batwoman, The Sandman Overture, Promethea
In a post-human world, the man of miium is born. Created to avenge a slain goddess, our nameless warrior travels an unrecognizable landscape, constantly evolving with new wonders and terrors: Zanikam pirates, deadly reflections, a living bridge, and a red tear in the sky. Written and drawn by Eisner-award-winning author and artist Brandon Graham (Prophet, King City, Rain Like Hammers) and featuring artist Xurxo G. Penalta, Moonray presents a mind-altering new dawn for a distant sci-fi future unlike any other. This bold graphic odyssey births the Moonray universe, from comic book to video game and beyond.
Living the Line Books is a publisher of dynamic, visually-striking comics and graphic novels, founded in 2020 by writer/illustrator Sean Michael Robinson. Living the Line's graphic novel debut, The Strange Death of Alex Raymond (Dave Sim and Carson Grubaugh) was recently nominated for an Eisner Award, for "Best Reality-Based Work."
Hey Matt!Could you add a link to SDOAR 2023 GFM at the bottom of your posts on AMOC?Thanks!Jen
Hey Matt!Could you add a link to SDOAR 2023 GFM at the bottom of your posts on AMOC?Thanks!Jen
MARGARET LISS:
A few years ago I scanned all of Dave Sim's notebooks. He had filled 36 notebooks during the years he created the monthly Cerebus series, covering issues #20 to 300, plus the other side items -- like the Epic stories, posters and prints, convention speeches etc. A total of 3,281 notebook pages detailing his creative process. I never really got the time to study the notebooks when I had them. Just did a quick look, scanned them in and sent them back to Dave as soon as possible. So this regular column is a chance for me to look through those scans and highlight some of the more interesting pages.
Last week in Cerebus #53 Wrap Around Cover Sketch we saw page 30 from Dave Sim’s sixth notebook used during the production of Cerebus. This notebook covers Cerebus #49 through 59 and page 30 had a thumbnail sketch of the cover of Cerebus #53.
On page 32 there is a thumbnail sketch of page one of Cerebus #53:
Notebook #6, page 32 |
It is pretty close to the finished page, little things are different, but the usage of lines to show us the heavy rain is there. Along with a person answering the door talking with someone using an umbrella while a horse drawn carriage is nearby.
Cerebus #53, page 1 |
Dave also tries out some different page numbering and design ideas, but just sticks with the one that is in the original thumbnail, but without the page number – the graphic running down the side of the page.
The next page of the notebook has a preliminary floor layout for the Countess’ place. The upper right corner of the floor layout shows what appears to be the room on the cover. The same area of the floor plan is enlarged at the bottom of the page.
Notebook #6, page 33 |
The dialogue is also for issue 53. The bit right beside the floor layout says:
Countess Michelle: It used to be my room. That doesn’t bother you does it. . .?
Cerebus: Depends on what you left behind.
Countess Michelle: You idiot.
The above dialogue shows up on page 3 of Cerebus #53 as this:
Countess Michelle: It used to be my room. That doesn’t bother you does it. . .?
Cerebus: Cerebus has slept in ladies’ bedrooms before.
Countess Michelle: I’m sure you have. . .
Next week. . .more on Cerebus #53
First off a BIG Thank You to everyone who stopped by my table at the Gem City Comic Con this past weekend. You made it a GREAT show for me! I hope you all enjoy your signed Kent Olsen trading cards.
Secondly, it's the last Wednesday of the month. Time to hurry on down to your LCS and pick up both the Signed AND Unsigned versions of War In Hell? #1!
"Strange Death is a grand book. Sit down; strap in; take the ride." - Bob Levin, "A Fig in Winter," The Comics Journal review
Summer doldrums, am I right? Fundraising has slowed down, Jen is about to embark on another trip (smeg!), and these weekly posts are getting lighter and lighter.
How light? Just the bare essentials.
How slow? No donations in the past week. In other words the same Tote Board as last week!
Help a sister out, won't you?
Just the Facts, Ma'am, aka GFM Tote Board
However, we do have a reward for past donations...
Just the FAQs, Ma'am
Let's check out the cool stuff Cory Foster got for unlocking page 316!
Just the FAQs, Ma'am
Love the old pictures. As you mentioned, the bottom picture looks to be later than ‘83. Is that a poster for Cerebus Bi-Weekly in the window?
It's gotta be March '89. Spidey 313 was published in March '89... |
Click for bigger. |
Hey Matt!Could you add a link to SDOAR 2023 GFM at the bottom of your posts on AMOC?Thanks!Jen
Pretty sure "unknown" is Arn Saba. As later photos will show. |
I'm gonna go out on a limp and say this ISN'T from the Grand Opening Party, since McFarlane wasn't on Amazing Spider-Man in 1983. |