COMICS LINKS: Wired Pennies

Comics Links
Wired has a long article about the creators of Penny Arcade, Jerry Holkins and Mike Krahulik.
Rick Geary presents: The Comic Con Murder Case, a short online comic.
Comics Reporter interviews Nick Abadzis, cartoonist of Laika.
Greg Hatcher of Comics Should Be Good thinks about history and comics and ends up daring DC Comics to just reboot their entire line already.
Comics Reviews
The Toronto Star reviews Scott Chantler’s The Annotated Northwest Passage.
The LA Times reviews Adrian Tomine’s upcoming graphic novel Shortcomings.
Brad Curran of Comics Should Be Good reviews Countdown to Adventure #1.
From The Savage Critics:
- Graeme McMillan on Local #10
- McMillan on The Last Fantastic Four Story
- Diana Kingston-Gabai on World War Hulk: X-Men #3
- and Jog on Batman Annual #26
Cory Doctorow of Boing Boing reviews DMZ: Public Works.
Edward Champion reviews Warren Ellis’s novel Crooked Little Vein in the Philadelphia Inquirer.
SF/Fantasy Links
The 2009 World Science Fiction Convention will be held in Montreal, Canada. Neil Gaiman will be the author Guest of Honor.
SF Site has indexed the contents of the first twenty-four annual volumes of Gardner Dozois’s annual Year’s Best Science Fiction anthology, by author, title and volume.
Reports from Worldcon:
- Alma Alexander: Friday/Saturday, Sunday
- K.J. Bishop (note: contains no reference to the Worldcon or SF, but she is in Japan, which would be a huge coincidence)
- Jay Lake
And reports from Dragon*Con:
Neil Gaiman visits the Great Wall of China and learns that giraffes are forbidden to drive cars there.

You’ve been to three cook outs, there are no good movies left this season and Jerry Lewis looks just plain scary in HD. So grab the trackball, ‘cuz The Big ComicMix Broadcast has a few things to keep you occupied until Real Life kicks in on Tuesday morning:
I love action movies. So does Korean film director Ryoo Seung-wan, which is made abundantly clear in the ample extras for the Dragon Dynasty two-disc Ultimate Edition release of The City of Violence. Originally I wasn’t going to review another Dragon Dynasty DVD so soon after my praise of their Hard Boiled and Crime Story remasterings, but I was overwhelmed by the sheer mass of action movie analysis available for this South Korean labor of love.
I finally watched most of the third X-Men movie on HBO last night, and found I didn’t really miss the absence of Patrick Stewart for half the film. A major reason for that, of course, was another wonderful performance by Stewart’s fellow Shakespearean thesp, Sir Ian McKellan.
At Heroes Con in Charlotte this past June, one convention goer asked DC EIC Dan DiDio what was the point of
Back during the middle 1960s, my newsroom mentor George E. Turner and I became acquainted with the Texas-bred cartoonist Roy Crane (1901–1977), whose daily strip Buz Sawyer – a staple of the local newspaper’s funnies section – had recently landed a Reuben Award from the National Cartoonists Society. Like some Oscar-anointed filmmaker with a current box-office attraction, Crane was visiting his syndicate’s client-papers, one after another, to help promote this touch of newfound momentum for Sawyer as a circulation-builder.
He calls himself the "Super Adaptoid" of comics and we can easily say he’s done it all – from Sgt. Fury to the Justice Society and from Millie The Model to Conan. How did a school teacher from Missouri end up writing so much comics history for the last four decades? Roy Thomas tells The Big ComicMix Broadcast all about it in an exclusive interview!
