A Holiday Cartoon Book Roundup

Posted on 21st November 2012 in News

With the holidays approaching, this seems a good time to mention some of The New Yorker cartoon-related books that have appeared on Ink Spill this year.

 

 

 

Cartoon Monarch: Otto Soglow & The Little King (IDW Publishing) Introduction by Ivan Brunetti, Foreward by Jared Gardner

From the Ink Spill review in March of this year: What’s not to like about this handsome volume? If I had my way every cartoonist of note would celebrated thusly: beautifully reproduced work (both black & white and color), with a thorough and informed foreward.

 

 

 

The Receptionist: An Education at The New Yorker by Janet Groth (Algonquin Books)

Comings and goings on at The New Yorker in the latter part of William Shawn’s reign as editor, with mentions of cartoonists and famous contributors such as Charles Addams, J.D. Salinger, Joe Mitchell and Woody Allen.

 

 

 

The Big New Yorker Book of Dogs (Random House)

This is a beautiful book, chock full of art  (covers & cartoons) as well as hefty contributions by many of the magazine’s writers.  A bonus: the book is Thurber heavy — and that’s never a bad thing.

 

 

 

 

I Really Should Be Drawing: The Blook by Mick Stevens (an e-book)

From one of the funniest cartoonists in modern times, this e-book, available through Lulu.com

 

 

The Resistance: A Thriller  by Peter Steiner (Minotaur Books)

Steiner’s fourth book in the Louis Morgon series.

  “Brilliant, evocative, elegiac, and suffused with sadness. . . . The Resistance is a powerful and beautiful reminder of Faulkner’s dictum that the only thing truly worth writing about is ‘the human heart in conflict with itself’.” –Booklist, starred review.

 

 

 

After the Fall: A Novel by Victoria Roberts (W.W. Norton & Co.)

From the ever-wonderful Victoria Roberts, this illustrated novel.

 After the Fall is one of a kind. With her distinctive, intelligent drawings and tongue-in-cheek humor, legendary cartoonist Victoria Roberts has crafted a delightfully quirky coming-of-age fantasy for adults. I couldn’t put it down.” (Patricia Bosworth, Vanity Fair Contributing Editor and author of Jane Fonda: The Private Life of a Public Woman )

 

 

 

Steinberg: A Biography by Deirdre Bair (Doubleday/Nan A. Talese)

An excerpt from the Publishers Weekly review:

“The pre-eminent New Yorker cartoonist leads a life worthy of his own ironic art in this scintillating biography … Steinberg emerges as a tangle of neurotic contradictions … Bair’s long and amply researched biography unfolds in a graceful prose that’s stocked with absurdist scenes and colorful characters…”

 

 

No Man Is a Desert Island by Felipe Galindo Feggo (Jorge Pinto Books) A classic collection of cartoons by the multi-talented artist and cartoonist. 

 

 

Marco Goes to School by Roz Chast (Atheneum Books for Young Readers) 

An excerpt from The New York Times review:

“It’s never too early to expose your child to the joys of Chast’s wobbly-inked humor, and winning converts will be easy with this latest tale (after “Too Busy Marco”) about the dimwitted parrot…”

 

 

 

 

Blown Covers: New Yorker Covers you Were Never Meant to See by Francoise Mouly (Abrams)

The New Yorker’s Art editor gives us a behind-the-scenes look at art that didn’t make the cut.

 

 

 

Last but not least, The New Yorker’s Cartoons of the Year 2012 — a bookazine. Hundreds of cartoons culled from the past year.  With an Introduction by the magazine’s Cartoon Editor, Bob Mankoff.


 

 

Bliss home on tour; Recapping the Chicago Comics event

Posted on 5th June 2012 in News

From the Burlington Free Press, June 4, 2012, “Minimalist Burlington home featured on tour” – this piece on the Vermont home of Harry Bliss

 

From The Comics Journal, June 4, 2012, “Chicago: Comics on the Make” - a look back at the recent once-in-a-lifetime comics event

Two reports: University of Chicago Comics Conference & Maine Comics Arts Festival

Posted on 21st May 2012 in News

From The Beat, May 21, 2012 “Comics G-17 summit report from Chicago” (content includes references to: Robert Crumb, Chris Ware, Francoise Mouly, Daniel Clowes, Seth, Art Spiegelman, Aline Kominsky-Crumb and Ivan Brunetti, among others)

 

From mikelynchcartoons.blogspot, May 21, 2012, “Report: Maine Comics Arts Festival May 20, 2012″ (content includes references to John Klossner, Kate Beaton, and Bill Woodman)


 

Andrzej Czeczot: 1933 -2012; Blown Covers, live

Posted on 9th May 2012 in News

 

 

The News (news from Poland), May 9, 2012, “Satirical cartoonist Andrzej Czeczot dies” (Czeczot’s “Manhattan” a four page spread of drawings, appeared in The New Yorker, June 9, 1986).

 

From The Gothamist, May 9, 2012, “More Rejected New Yorker Covers Revealed, Explained”

Brief Q & A with Bob Mankoff; Working for The Man @ MoCCA; More Blown Covers

Posted on 1st May 2012 in News

From Creative Week New York, “Creative Week Session Spotlight: A Session with Bob Mankoff of The New Yorker”

Link  here for more info on Mr. Mankoff’s appearance.

 

From The Beat, May 1, 2012, “Working for The Man: MoCCa 2012″ ( with Shannon Wheeler and Liza Donnelly content).

 

From NPR’s All Things Considered, May 1, 2012, audio: “‘Blown Covers’: Not Ready For the Newstand”

Exhibit: Felipe Galindo (Feggo); Feiffer’s first original graphic novel; More Mouly & Blown Covers; Video: S.J. Perelman interview; Mick Stevens’ fav NYer rejects; Liza Donnelly on the Art of Cartooning

Posted on 11th April 2012 in News

From artcat, this notice of a group exhibit including Felipe Galindo (Feggo), “Political Neighbors: Ruis, Feggo, El Fisgon — Three Master Cartoonists of Mexico”

 

From Mediabistro, April 10, 2012,Jules Feiffer Lands Deal for his First Original Graphic Novel”

 

From wksu.org (Kent State & Ohio Public Media), April 10, 2012, “Blown Covers from The New Yorker” — with plenty of text and audio, including an interview with The New Yorker’s Art Editor, Francoise Mouly

 

From Youtube, this April 2, 1974 interview with S.J. Perelman from the PBS show, Day At Night

 

Over on Facebook (sorry, no link), Mick Stevens has started posting his favorite cartoons rejected by The New Yorker — see his post “My Favorite Rejects”

 

From Liza Donnelly’s blog, When Do They Serve the Wine, “Word and Image: The Art of Cartooning” — a transcript of the talk Donnelly delivered at a Creativity Symposium held at the Haystack Mountain School in Maine in the Fall of 2011.

 

Cartoonists to gather at The University of Chicago

Posted on 6th April 2012 in News

From The University of Chicago website, April 6, 2012, “Conference to bring together influential cartoonists” — of the 17 cartoonists  attending a number are associated with The New Yorker, including Chris Ware, Art Spiegelman, Robert Crumb, Ivan Brunetti, Aline Kominsky-Crumb, and Ben Katchor. The magazine’s art editor, Francoise Mouly, will be on hand to discuss the new book, Blown Covers.

Link to the Conference site “Comics: Philosophy & Practice”

Blown Covers — the website; Clowes retrospective; Brunetti speaks

Posted on 30th March 2012 in News

Here’s something I missed until this morning:  a website devoted to the upcoming collection, Blown Covers: New Yorker Covers You Were Never Meant to See, edited by Francoise Mouly.   Due April 30, 2012 from Abrams.  Full details can be found on your favorite online bookstore site/s.

 

Look for this online: today’s New York Times, March 30, 2012:  “Humanity’s Discomfort, Punctured With a Pen” — a piece (with video) on a Daniel Clowes’s restrospective at the Oakland Museum. No link…you’ll find it on the Times homepage.

 

And from Hyperallergic.com, March 30, 2012, “Poets, Painters, Cartoonists and Moonlighters” — this post (with Ivan Brunetti content).

Paul Karasik on Angouleme 2012

Posted on 3rd February 2012 in News

From his blog, Paul Karisik reports on Angouleme 2012.  Lots to read/look at/enjoy.

Two New Books of Interest; George Booth on his latest NYer cover; Drew Friedman on Harvey Kurtzman

Posted on 23rd January 2012 in News

 

 

 

 

 

Two books of interest coming this year: The Receptionist: An Education at The New Yorker by Janet Groth (Algonquin Books, June 26, 2012) and Francoise Mouly’s Blown Covers: New Yorker Covers You Were Never Meant to See (Abrams, April 30, 2012).  For more details go to your favorite online book dealer’s site.

 

 

 

From newyorker.com, January 23, 2012, “Cover Story: George Booth Remembers Mawmaw”

 

From The Comics Journal, January 23, 2012, “Seriously Funny” which includes a must read appreciation of Harvey Kurtzman by Drew Friedman.