Category: Blog

  • Quick update

    Hiya folks!

    As we slowly ascend to whatever hell the Guild of Space-Pirates have in store for us, I thought it pertinent to give a quick update before all internet connection is lost.

    We finished plotting out Season 2! Now we just need to block in the action and dialogue, draw it, ink it, color it, and then letter it (whew!). But needless to say things are progressing!

    We are almost finished with the first asset for Season 2, so you will see a new banner coming soon and get a preview of the updated designs and what to expect! I think Franka outdid herself.

    As you can see there has been a slight color theme change to the website itself and also all comics have been added and are now up to date from Season One on the Solicitations page.

    Now I must go, as Curt is hyperventilating and I think Franka and/or Quiver are about to kill him.

    Cheerio.

    -Marv

  • Forgotten All-Star

    This week’s recommendation is not a comic book but rather a good ole fashioned REAL book. I recently finished Forgotten All-Star: A Biography of Gardner Fox by Jennifer DeRoss, and I can highly recommend it.

    With all the interest on creators these days you would think there would be more biographies or at least autobiographies out there. There are if you know where to look. But many usually have small print runs and are hard to find. Not so with this book and a good thing too.

    When we think of comic books today, especially when we look at many of the super-heroes from DC comics, we are basically looking at Gardner Fox. Fox had such an influence on the genre and many of the heroes that we know today came from his pen and typewriter and still are active today. Just to name a few:

    The Flash (Jay Garrick)

    Hawkman (Katar Hol)

    Justice League of America

    Adam Strange

    You get the idea. And it wasn’t just the characters that he helped develop but also the plotting styles, the idea to split teams up and to try to have a moral in the story. Fox started in the Golden Age and then helped usher in the Silver Age. He was a big deal and what’s important is that it does look like he took comic books seriously.

    DeRoss does a wonderful job of not only exploring his life but also analyzing his contribution to the medium. She takes a very academic approach, which is quite appropriate, and she handles some of the themes such as gender and the treatment of females characters during the period very well. Plus, you get a big more insight into the comic book industry and some of the tragedies that ensued that upended Fox’s career, such as when Fox took a stand for more pay and better work conditions that resulted in a massive firing of creators. DeRoss covers it all.

    And as mentioned above, the book is very accessible and you can order it from your country’s Amazon, no problem. I find this period of comics particularly fascinating because it really was the period that started it all and all that came after had a very rich foundation to build off of. And the creators couldn’t have done it without Gardner Fox.

    I do know Jennifer DeRoss has been toying with the idea to do more biographies on Golden Age and Silver Age creators. And I do hope she does because these legends should not be forgotten and need to be kept alive not only in our memories but also in the conversations we have with each other, as lovers of the comic book medium.

    -Franka