Interviews on the links!

Comic Book Resources interviews Mike Carey, comics writer and author of the novel The Devil You Know.
Publishers Weekly talked to Icarus Publishing’s Simon Jones about the joys and problems of publishing pornographic manga.
Publishers Weekly also has the second half of an interview with Eddie Campbell about The Black Diamond Detective Agency.
Reason Online profiles Grand Master Robert A. Heinlein, who would have been 100 this past Saturday.
SF Scope prints excerpts from a publicity interview with David Bilsborough, author of The Wanderer’s Tale.
The UK SF Book News Network has a video interview with Fiona McIntosh, about her new novel Odalisque, from her UK publisher, Orbit.
Speaking of Orbit, on their own blog they have an interview (in the old-fashioned "text" form) with Trudi Canavan.

In keeping with the upcoming movie The Dark Knight, the next Superman movie will be titled Man of Steel. The villain…? Aww, you guessed it.
It’s said that there are only a few established art and entertainment forms that America can truly call its own — baseball, jazz music and comic books. It’s a bit of a hubristic statement, not surprising coming from a country as relatively young yet as vast as our own. It almost sounds as if we’re trying to convince ourselves of our own cultural relevance — even more so because we realize that each of these things has its roots elsewhere. But hey, so do most of us. And just as this “nation of immigrants” has brought disparate peoples into a “melting pot” atmosphere wherein their contributions have mixed to form a melange all its own, so have jazz, comics and baseball taken previously existing elements and turned them into something new and unique.

Pulitzer Prize-winning editorial cartoonist Doug Marlette, creator of the newspaper strip Kudzu, was killed in a car accident this morning in Mississippi.
Last week, we were discussing the cons of continued stories, specifically what’s wrong with them, and we posited that they have a major problem in the difficulty new readers (or audiences) have in understanding the plot and characters. I said that there were remedies for this problem and now I’ll suggest, a bit timidly, that though remedies exist, nothing is foolproof.
