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AN ALL-STAR PULP SNEAK PEEK

Calling Secret Agent X!

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Cover: Will Meugniot

Airship 27 Productions publisher, Ron Fortier shared a sneak peek (above) at a page from the New Pulp Publisher’s upcoming second volume of All-Star Pulp Comics in his weekly Flight Log at www.airship27.com.

All Pulp will post more news about All-Star Pulp Comics #2 when it becomes available.

Artist Will Meugniot provides the cover (at left) to All-Star Pulp Comics #2 featuring Ki-Gor’s lady love, Helene teaming up with Derrick Ferguson’s pulp adventurer, Dillon.

DOMINO LADY AND THE SPIDER TEAM UP

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Moonstone BooksPhases of the Moon #1 Domino Lady/The Spider trade paperback will ship to comic shops on January 11, 2013. Written by Steven L. Frank, Phases of the Moon #1 Domino Lady/The Spider features art by Remy Mokhtar and Bill McKay.

About Phases of the Moon #1 Domino Lady/The Spider:
A story arc so encompassing, it spans three flip comics, six Moonstone titles and several decades! A serial killer is terrorizing the city, but while The Spider investigates, all clues lead to his involvement and Domino Lady plans to stop him in his tracks. All is not as it seems, as the killer operates with equipment not of this time!

Learn more about Domino Lady here.
Learn more about The Spider here.
Learn more about Phases of the Moon here.

THE THUGS ARE BACK IN TOWN

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The third issue of THUGLIT is now available at Amazon.

PRESS RELEASE:

Like a shotgun blast of harsh words and mean intentions right to the eyeballs, THUGLIT is back once again to fill your face with white-hot pellets of today’s best crime fiction.

IN THIS ISSUE OF THUGLIT:

THE FIRST DAY OF HELL WEEK by J.D. Hibbetts
REDEMPTION by Terrence McCauley
RED EYED RICHARD by Paul Heatley
DOING THE JOB by Hector Acosta
IN THE NEIGHBORHOOD by Ed Kurtz
PEEK-A-BOO by John Hodgkins
LUCKY FOR ME by Rob Brunet
WAKEY WAKE by Nathan Pettigrew

PLUS: Part III of Thuglit’s exclusive first look at the upcoming novel by Todd Robinson, THE HARD BOUNCE from TYRUS BOOKS

Learn more about Thuglit here.

HONEY WEST AND KOLCHAK: THE NIGHT STALKER TEAM UP

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Moonstone Books‘ Kolchak: The Night Stalker and Honey West One Shot will ship to comic shops on January 11, 2013. Written by Janet L. Hetherington, the Kolchak/Honey West One Shot features art by Ronn Sutton with cover art by Malcolm Mclinton & Various.

About Kolchak/Honey West:
Two top-tier investigators in one titanic team up! High heels and Hedonism! Young cub reporter Carl Kolchak falls into an ongoing investigation with Honey West, who is undercover at a gentlemen’s club! Disappearing women are the main course, and as the violence escalates and the case gets out of control, both our heroes must fight to stay alive!

Learn more about Kolchak: The Night Stalker here.
Learn more about Honey West here.

PARTY LIKE IT’S 19XX!

Created by Paul Roman Martinez, The Adventures of the 19XX is a comic series about a secret group trying to prevent WWII from happening in the 1930’s.

Martinez is raising money to reprint the first book in hardcover format via the crowd-sourcing site Kickstarter.

If you’re interested in learning more about The Adventures of the 19XX, please visit Kickstarter here and The 19XX comic book Facebook page here.

AIRBOY TAKES TO THE SKIES!

Cover Art: Tom Grindberg

The Airboy & Airfighters trade paperback collection, “Dangerous Liaisons” will be shipping to comic shops on January 11, 2013 from Moonstone Books. The $19.95 cover-priced trade is written by Chuck Dixon and Tom DeFalco, with art by Lito Fernandez, Oscar Celestini, and a cover by Tom Grindberg.

The first-ever Airboy collection! This volume collects the Airboy 1942 Special, the two issues of the Airfighters, plus a re-mastered “Air Vixens”, and an all-new team-up of all the Airfighters! Airboy’s first meeting with Valkyrie! The female Airfighters on their own! World War II action and adventure mixed with aerial derring-do!

Learn more about Airboy and the Airfighters here.

Saturday Morning Cartoons: The Science Of Spider-Man

Spider-Man definitely has some unique tricks and abilities— super strength, wall-crawling, and a mysterious Spider-Sense— but do any of them stand up to scientific realities? The guys at ASAPScience take a look at how some of Spider-Man’s main attributes could legitimately happen, while others… not so much.

And we’re not even going to discuss how his brain can be taken over by an octopus.

Marc Alan Fishman’s Resolutions, Revolutions, and Retcons

fishman-art-130105-2312817I’m nothing if not a slave to predictability and tropes. Sure, I wax poetic weekly on how I loathe authors and artists who fire off the same crap week in and week out,but I’m nothing if not a glorious hypocrite. So, after my “best and worst” article, what better to follow it up with a “New Year’s Resolution” article! Lest I be completely worthless to you, I promise to keep this punchy.

I resolve to wean myself from the teat of Marvel and DC. When I looked over my buy pile of books littered throughout my basement from the last few years, I’ve grown sick at the sight of so much mainstream chum. Not that I ever considered myself anything less than a mainstream whore before… it’s now with half a decade under my belt as an outsider indie guy, that I’ve decided to grow up, if only a little bit.

My rule of thumb has been pretty clear: every week that I have less than four books to buy, I will add one indie title to my list. Thus far, I’ve added Revival, Clone, and Nowhere Men. Two of which landed on Mike Gold’s list of awesome things. This obviously means I’m on the right track. Image, Valiant, Dark Horse, IDW, and the litany of unknowns are making me realize there’s so much more out there. More creativity. More unpredictability. More leaping from the cliff, and hoping to fly. It’s time to read what I sow; it’s time to tell Bob Wayne and Mickey Mouse I’m quitting (just a little bit, cause you know… I’m really liking Batman, Batgirl, and some Marvel Now titles).

I resolve to draw and write everyday. I’m not going to be a fool and say I’m “doing it for myself” because it’d be a lie. I’m going to write and draw more to do it for my company and my family. Not that I don’t love my day job, but let’s be real. Unshaven Comics gets where its going because we work at it. So, by proxy should I vow to write or draw everyday, I will presumably see Unshaven Comics be more lucrative. More than that though, the ideology is clear. The more you work at something, the better you’ll understand it. And while I presently work nearly every day as it stands? Making a concerted effort to spare time every day to do something for Unshaven Comics means there’s more chances at eventually becoming one step closer to semi-obscurity.

I resolve to make better connections with those in the industry – both here with my ComicMix mates and abroad. Unshaven Comics is traveling to 15-16 conventions this year. Simply put? There’s no excuse I shouldn’t be exercising my networking abilities. They’re what landed me here in the first place. As I stated last week, no better memory convention-wise comes to mind more than Baltimore, where I was in contact with Glenn Hauman, Mike Gold, and Emily Whitten, all of ComicMix fame. My hypothesis that possibly making ways to meet my other fellow contributors in the coming year could only benefit my growing rolodex of people I admire also knowing my name. Egotistical? Sure. But I’ve had breakfast with John Ostrander, so suck it.

I resolve to turn off the TV more. I realized over this “holiday break” of sorts how much worthless drivel I surround myself with when I’m home. I only actively watch TV in the last hour of consciousness. But the TV is on in my home basically from the time I get home to the time I go to bed. I tend to lazily leave the set on, with a cooking show, or rerun of The Cosby Show for background noise as I go about my business. Suffice to say, it’s silly of me to do so. Shutting off the set will give me an appreciation for when I turn it on. And maybe in a year’s time, I might just see the heavens part and drop my expensive cable bill in lieu of a Roku system. But that’s a long-game I plan on playing.

Lastly, I resolve to be a better columnist to you, my readers. I look over my body of work here at ComicMix, in 2012, and I certainly see some high points. But like many an artist, I also saw bouts of frustration on my part. Weeks where I had no real points to make outside the handful I’ve relied on: DC sucks. Marvel Sucks. Being an Indie Guy is hard. And so forth. So, in 2013, I vow to return to those tropes only when there is new meat on the bone. I’ll seek out bold and new directions to tantalize you from. I’ll strive to make you angrier, sadder, happier, or flameier. I’ll do everything in my power to remain relevant, and entertaining to you. And I’ll do it all with a smile.

Thanks for sticking with me for another year. The only place to go from here? Up, up, and away.

SUNDAY: John Ostrander