Comic Books & Graphic Novels

Stuck on Pogo

January 10, 2012
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Stuck on Pogo

Stefan Kanfer has warmed my heart with an affectionate article on the cartoonist Walt Kelly, and his comic strip, Pogo, over at City Journal. I share Mr. Kanfer’s enthusiasm. Although Kelly was generally known as a lefty (though not an admirer of the Soviet Union, as Kanfer points out), the charm and sheer achievement of Pogo transcended politics. When I was a kid, vaguely hoping to grow up to be a cartoonist, I pored over his daily strips, and despaired of ever achieving anything like that masterful inking and character modeling, to say nothing of the preposterous, nonsensical humor. Imagine Bill Watterson (Calvin and Hobbes) collaborating with Robin Williams—while being possessed by the spirit of Lewis Carroll. This furry, scaled, quilled, feathered, and shelled quintet was backed by a supporting cast of Dickensian proportions—more than 600 players, all told. They included Beauregard Bugleboy, a doggerel-loving canine; Miz Mam’selle Hepzibah, a flirtatious skunk; and Deacon Mushrat, a hypocritical mammal of the cloth who spoke in elaborately lettered Gothic script. (When an editor complained that such effusions were hard to read, Kelly replied, “Mighty hard to letter, too.”) There were also Molester Mole, a paranoid sneak; Seminole Sam, a fox who specialized

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Escape from Supervillainy

November 28, 2011
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Sometimes you need fantasy that's more than leather and lead.

My daughter and I were talking about comics last night, as we tend to do. The particular occasion this time was a nasty, nihilistic bit of business called Wanted, by Mark Millar and J.G. Jones, which she and I had read over the break. Yes, we understood that it was supposed to be a reductio ad absurdum version of the "dark/gritty" trend in the last couple of decades in comics -- note that the supervillains wipe out the heroes in 1986, the year of Dark Knight Returns and Watchmen. However, this was another case of "What's that stuff above the subtext? Oh yeah... the text." And honestly, I didn't see any pleasure in the book -- it wasn't as vile as the Saw movies, but that's not exactly high praise, and even that's mainly because Wanted was shorter. . . .

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Robert E. Howard’s Puritan Pulp Hero

July 25, 2011
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Robert E. Howard’s Puritan Pulp Hero

I grew up reading both comic books and stories about various pulp fiction heroes.  My favorite in the pulp genre as a kid was Doc Savage, the Man of Bronze.  He traveled with his group of highly capable friends and resolved various terrible threats to humanity.  I recently picked one of the Doc Savage stories up in a thrift store and found that, despite the sentimental value, it didn’t hold up all that well.  Other notable entries in that publishing space include The Shadow, The Spider, Sherlock Holmes (a contender for the greatest), John Carter of Mars, Tarzan, and Zorro. Despite my disappointing return to Doc Savage (maybe I just got one that was subpar), I have enthusiastically continued to read in the genre.  The Amazon Kindle has facilitated the habit marvelously as I now download the stories very inexpensively. First, I downloaded Sherlock Holmes (to discover a character somewhat more interesting than the one I’d seen on television as a child).  Next, I stumbled upon Robert E. Howard’s Solomon Kane.  Jackpot. Howard is much better known for creating his most popular character, Conan the Barbarian (and his Atlantean predecessor Kull the Conqueror), but his first big success was Kane.

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Quote of the Day — The Decline of the Cowboy and the Rise of the Superhero

July 21, 2011
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Quote of the Day — The Decline of the Cowboy and the Rise of the Superhero

That the cowboy has given way to the superhero in the American myth is painfully revealing. It is the siren song of the last frontier, giving way to an overcrowded and dangerous society where the law fails, and only a gift from the storytelling gods can give a man his freedom and let him do what’s right. The Western promised a kind of universal freedom available to anyone who could go out west. The comic book superhero turns freedom into something that is only magically available to a small elite. . . . . The tension between freedom and order is at the heart of all these narratives. The freedom to be an individual, to be left alone and still lead a moral life. The vigilante is a private figure. Mysterious. He may have a secret identity, or he may just show up when needed. His public self is not his real self. Yet it is his best known self. He participates in the group only on his own terms. He comes and goes when he pleases, rather than being compelled to by any authority. The superhero takes the ordinary urban battles of cops and robbers and makes them extraordinary,

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As the Twig Is Bent: European Union Kiddieprop

June 14, 2011
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As the Twig Is Bent: European Union Kiddieprop

By Mike Gray One of the unexpected pleasures of parenthood is reading Brussels propaganda to your children. The material is unintentionally hilarious, and will soon have your progeny shrieking with laughter. Little ones enjoy The Raspberry Ice Cream War, which tells the tale of a group of intrepid youngsters who travel back in time to a barbarous age where there are still sovereign states, and teach the inhabitants to scrap their borders. — Daniel Hannan Just how much of an effect does propaganda have on children? The EU hopes it will have a big impact on small and naive minds. Daniel Hannan explains: What is the EU’s agenda ? Well, a few years ago, I stumbled across an internal Commission report that concluded as follows: “Children can perform a messenger function in conveying the message to the home environment. Young people will often in practice act as go-betweens with the older generations, helping them embrace the euro.” The notion that the government should get at parents through their children is a characteristic of authoritarian states, not liberal democracies. One thinks of Orwell’s fictional youth organisation, the Spies . . . . Indeed,

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A Gentle Slice of Sequential Art from Columbus

June 7, 2011
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A Gentle Slice of Sequential Art from Columbus

by Warren Moore One of the neat things about having attended HeroesCon in Charlotte, NC, last weekend was the chance to discover comics I hadn’t read before, placed somewhere outside the mainstream. One that I liked quite a bit is Blink, by a guy who calls himself Max Ink, and both the cartoonist and his creation are based in Columbus, Ohio. His artistic influences include Eisner and Watterson, his musical influences include progressive rock (especially Yes — one story is entitled “Time an a Few Words“, and a local hippie is called Olias. Meanwhile, another character has Rush’s 2112 “Starman” on his computer) and his work (collected in Blink: So Far, which you should consider buying) is a gentle account of the titular heroine, a cartoonist; her friend Samantha (“Sam”), the guitar-playing Hank and their friends as they make their ways through life in Columbus. It isn’t a gag strip, but it makes me smile. The characters’ voices seem authentic, and I like two of the three leads. It reminds me of some of my own twentysomething days, and I like it a lot. Check it out. Warren Moore is a regular contributor to The American Culture, and Associate Professor

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Will San Francisco Vote For Antisemitism?

June 4, 2011
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Will San Francisco Vote For Antisemitism?

“Intactivists” – the term Left-wing radicals who want to ban circumcision in San Francisco call themselves – exposed their antisemitc heart in the latest round of their campaign material. Come November, San Francisco voters will decide whether or not circumcision will remain a legal medical practice when they vote on the “MGM Bill,” promoted by homosexual activist Lloyd Schofield. While the legality of such a measure, were it to pass, is highly questionable, one thing that isn’t is how this bill exposes the radical Left’s antisemitic nature. Schofield’s organization has produced a campaign comic book promoting the anti-circumcision cause. The comic, titled “Foreskin Man,” is just chock full of antisemitic imagery and characters. The comic’s villain is “Monster Mohel,” about whom readers are told that “othing excites Monster Mohel more than cutting into the penile flesh of an eight-day-old infant boy.” This garbage could have been pulled right out of the Protocols of the Elders of Zion: And maybe it’s just me, but the comic’s “hero” bears a striking resemblance to that “Master Race” promoted by a certain European government back in the 1930s and 40s: But this anti-circumcision bill, according to its promoters, has nothing to do with the

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“Thor”: Norse Mythology Mediated by Christianity

May 16, 2011
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“Thor”: Norse Mythology Mediated by Christianity

By Lars Walker I think it’s generally agreed that I’m the conservative blogsphere’s go-to guy for all matters Norse, so I felt a sort of civic duty to see the movie Thor this weekend, and to let you know what I thought of it. Briefly put, it’s pretty good. Considered on its own terms, as a fantasy/comic book/special effects actioner, it succeeds extremely well. It doesn’t scale the heights of Batman Begins or The Dark Knight, but I’d rank it somewhere near the top. Kenneth Branagh’s direction elevates the script (not a bad one at all), and the cast is uniformly excellent. Chris Hemsworth, in the title role, will doubtless break many female hearts, and he ought to become a big star if there’s any justice in Midgard. Thor is the son and heir of Odin (Anthony Hopkins), the high god of Asgard. Asgard, in this version (more or less based on the Marvel comic books) is explained in S.M.D. (Standard Movie Doubletalk) as one of nine dimensions, or alternate universes, or something. The “gods” are able to travel to the other “worlds” by means of the bridge Bifrost, explained as a sort of organized wormhole (Bifrost, the rainbow in

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Science Fiction Authors Pick (What They Regard As) The Best SF

May 16, 2011
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Science Fiction Authors Pick (What They Regard As) The Best SF

By Mike Gray You have to wonder how much these writers’ opinions were shaped by their politics, religion, and/or philosophical beliefs: It requires little sophistry to consider Daniel Defoe’s immortal Robinson Crusoe as a metaphor for a man stranded on an alien planet. Crusoe is an exile, and exile has proved a perennial theme within the genre of science fiction. Of all its great themes, lingering on the fringes of comprehension is Star Maker, by Olaf Stapledon (1882-1950). Stapledon was an exile, his childhood spent between Egypt and England. Star Maker is both illuminated and darkened by a feeling of not belonging, the essence of exile. It was published in 1937, when it received a rather chilly reception; the public did not know what to make of it. If it was influenced by Milton’s Paradise Lost, it was doubtless also formed by the terror of the war against Nazi Germany, which was about to descend upon us. — Brian Aldiss on Stapledon’s Star Maker Fahrenheit 451 predated Marshall McLuhan and his theories about how media shape people, not just the reverse. We interact with our creations, and they themselves act upon us. Now that we’re in the midst of a

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Prose & Poetry Update

May 1, 2011
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Prose & Poetry Update

Did you ever wonder if you’re on the right path, if your career reflects your true self? While you sip your morning coffee and gaze at that stack of paperwork on your desk, here’s a few literary quotes concerning the “true self” on which to meditate. “No man, for any considerable period, can wear one face to himself and another to the multitude, without finally getting bewildered as to which may be the true.” - Nathanial Hawthorne, The Scarlet Letter “He remembered that she was pretty, and, more, that she had a special grace in the intimacy of life. She had the secret of individuality which excites–and escapes.” - Joseph Conrad, Victory “Sometimes people carry to such perfection the mask they have assumed that in due course they actually become the person they seem.” - W. Somerset Maugham, The Moon and Sixpence “This above all,–to thine own self be true; and it must follow, as the night the day, thou canst not then be false to any man.” - William Shakespeare, Hamlet, Prince of Denmark. Short Fiction The Things by Peter Watts, a Hugo Award Nominee for Best Short Story from Clarkesworld Magazine “I am being Blair. I escape out

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Fun and Games a Goofy, Violent Romp — And That’s OK.

April 18, 2011
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Fun and Games a Goofy, Violent Romp — And That’s OK.

Fun and Games, by Duane Swierczynski. Mulholland Books, available in June 2011. by Warren Moore Duane Swierczynski is known both for his work in crime fiction and writing for comic books. In his new novel, Fun and Games, he seems to combine elements of both, giving us a loud, pulpy textual equivalent to a summer action movie, with elements of both Quentin Tarantino and Richard S. Prather. It’s a book destined to be a guilty pleasure, but the pleasure is definitely there, and that’s a writer’s first job. The premise is interesting: Los Angeles — and particularly Hollywood — is the base of a clandestine group of “fixers”, rather like “Mr. Wolf” from Tarantino’s Pulp Fiction writ large. They construct and produce narratives that cover up various things the Powers That Be want covered up, from negligent homicide to assassination — in fact, it’s implied a couple of times that the group may have been responsible for the JFK shooting. They are efficient and lethal, with resources including untraceable poisons, seemingly limitless budgets, access to vast databases, and an array of weaponry that would make James Bond’s Q envious. They’re known as The Accident People, and the novel is the

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H. G. Wells’s “The Chronic Argonauts” to See Publication

March 24, 2011
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H. G. Wells’s “The Chronic Argonauts” to See Publication

By Mike Gray . . . . as a graphic novel, we hasten to add. The short story “The Chronic Argonauts” (1888) was Wells’s first foray into time travel fiction and is very different from his famous The Time Machine (1895): This brief story begins with a third-person account of the arrival of a mysterious inventor to the peaceful Welsh town of Llyddwdd. Dr. Moses Nebogipfel takes up residence in a house sorely neglected after the deaths of its former inhabitants. The main bulk of the story concerns the apprehension of the simple rural folk who eventually storm the inventor’s “devilish” workshop in an effort to repay supposed witchery. Nebogipfel escapes with one other person—the sympathetic Reverend Elijah Ulysses Cook—in what is later revealed to be a time machine. The next part picks up with an unnamed “Author” character discovering the dazed Reverend Cook returned from unbelievable exploits after having been missing for three weeks. The remainder of the story is the Reverend’s short retelling (again in the third-person) of the events that took place that night and the revelation that Nebogipfel is an “Anachronic Man” whose genius drives him to seek out a time more suited to his abilities.

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