This may be the most important scientific paper ever written:
Berry, M. V. & Geim, A. K. (1997). "Of flying frogs and levitrons." European Journal of Physics 18: 307-313.
Tuesday, 18 January 2005
Monday, 17 January 2005
Fame and Fortune are Mine!

Yes, tis I who managed to upload the 75,000th cover to the Grand Comic Book Database over the weekend. The cover in question was The Agents #6; not the most exciting cover in the world, but you take your fame where you can get it.
I've actually only been uploading covers to GCD for a couple of weeks. Near the end of the holiday break I hauled my old (8+ years) scanner out of the closet and set to work getting it running. It's a SCSI scanner, so I had to take a SCSI card out of my old Mac and put it in the new one, find all the proper cables, and it worked! The more difficult part was getting driver software, as the manufacturer (UMAX) no longer supports this model on the Mac. I tried a couple of free, open source solutions but nothing worked terribly well, and I wasn't willing to put in the time it would take to figure out how to get things working. So I ended up paying a chunk of money for a thrid-party scanning solution which has way more features than I need and is a bit pricy, but worked on the first go and cost less than getting a whole new scanner.
So after a period of trial and error I've finally got it down to a system for getting decent scans of covers. I've been going through my boxes of recent comics (and by recent I mean within in the past 5 years), filling in holes in the GCD cover galleries. I contributed about 500 covers so far--here are a few of the more interesting ones:
Amelia Rules #3
Aquaman #8
Blue Monday: Absolute Beginners #3
The Books of Magick #3
Box Office Poison #20
Buffy, the Vampire Slayer: Spike & Dru #3
Eightball #21
Ex Machina #3
Fallen Angel #4
Galaxion #11
Girl Genius #8
Hawkman #21
Iron Man #59
JSA: All-Stars #4
Kabuki Agents: Scarab #3
Legion Lost #4
Liberty Meadows #7
Palooka-Ville #14
Patty Cake & Friends #2
Strangers in Paradise #44
Starman #73
Superman Adventures #58
Superman: The Man of Steel #112
More to come, I'm sure!
2004 Reading Lists
Yes, I keep track of everything I read. Isn't that sad?
Here then are all of the prose and graphic novels I read in 2004:
Books Read, Winter 2004
Books Read, Summer 2004
Books Read, Fall 2004
Graphic Novels Read, Winter 2004 (part 1)
Graphic Novels Read, Winter 2004 (part 2)
Graphic Novels Read, Winter 2004 (part 3)
Graphic Novels Read, Winter 2004 (part 4)
Graphic Novels Read, Summer 2004 (part 1)
Graphic Novels Read, Summer 2004 (part 2)
Graphic Novels Read, Summer 2004 (part 3)
Graphic Novels Read, Summer 2004 (part 4)
Graphic Novels Read, Fall 2004 (part 1)
Graphic Novels Read, Fall 2004 (part 2)
Graphic Novels Read, Fall 2004 (part 3)
Graphic Novels Read, Fall 2004 (part 4)
Graphic Novels Read, Fall 2004 (part 5)
The best book I read in all of 2004 was probably The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time by Mark Haddon, which turns the detective novel on its ear and uses the structure of a mystery novel to explore life with autism.
Here then are all of the prose and graphic novels I read in 2004:
Books Read, Winter 2004
Books Read, Summer 2004
Books Read, Fall 2004
Graphic Novels Read, Winter 2004 (part 1)
Graphic Novels Read, Winter 2004 (part 2)
Graphic Novels Read, Winter 2004 (part 3)
Graphic Novels Read, Winter 2004 (part 4)
Graphic Novels Read, Summer 2004 (part 1)
Graphic Novels Read, Summer 2004 (part 2)
Graphic Novels Read, Summer 2004 (part 3)
Graphic Novels Read, Summer 2004 (part 4)
Graphic Novels Read, Fall 2004 (part 1)
Graphic Novels Read, Fall 2004 (part 2)
Graphic Novels Read, Fall 2004 (part 3)
Graphic Novels Read, Fall 2004 (part 4)
Graphic Novels Read, Fall 2004 (part 5)
The best book I read in all of 2004 was probably The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time by Mark Haddon, which turns the detective novel on its ear and uses the structure of a mystery novel to explore life with autism.
Sunday, 16 January 2005
Monkey Covers
Sunday is Monkey Covers day here at YACB. Because there's nothing better than a comic with a monkey on the cover.
Who is that on the shoulder of Bizarro Brainiac 5 on the cover of Legion of Super-Heroes #114? It's Bizarro Koko! This cover by Alan Davis & Mark Farmer is our second (of two) Bizarro Monkey covers, following Bizarro Titano from the week before last..
Image is courtesy of the GCD. Click on the image for a larger version.
Who is that on the shoulder of Bizarro Brainiac 5 on the cover of Legion of Super-Heroes #114? It's Bizarro Koko! This cover by Alan Davis & Mark Farmer is our second (of two) Bizarro Monkey covers, following Bizarro Titano from the week before last..
Image is courtesy of the GCD. Click on the image for a larger version.
Friday, 14 January 2005
Quick DC Comic Reviews

by Chuck Austen, Ivan Reis & Marc Campos
Part two of "Repo-Man" is better than most of the recent issues of Action, though that's not really saying much. The bulk of the issue is a fight scene between Superman & the titular bad guy (whose motivation is, um, being bad?) with the aid of Superboy. Fortunately Reis & Campos excel at fight scenes, so while the comic is slight, at least it looks good. The remainder of the issue is filled out by two pages of the Preus subplot, one page of Doomsday 'Thoom'ing around Metropolis (yet still undetected!) and Lois and Lana acting like bratty high schoolers. I do like the cover though, which seems a throwback to something that would've come from the title in the 60s or 70s.
Rating: 2 (of 5)

by Dan Abnett & Andy Lanning, Neil Googe & Trevor Scott
Speaking of slight, not much happens in the first issue of the ongoing Majestic series either. Superman & The Eradicator return with Majestic to the WildStorm universe, only to find itempty of all animal life (including humans) yet otherwise intact. The many one- and two-panel pages give us ample opportunity to gaze at Googe & Scott's rather good skill at drawing cityscapes and backgrounds, and the battle against the giant alien robots iw well-handled as well. But a $3 introductory issue needs to take more than 4 minutes to read, don't you think?
Rating: 2.5 (of 5)

by Bob Harras, Marcos Martin & Alvaro Lopez
Ex-Marvel E-i-C Bob Harras comes to DC to essentially re-tell Cary Bates's Captain Atom #1 from 1987. He's joined by artists Martin & Lopez, for whom I predict great things someday, but this probably won't be it. Still, there are several great scenes to gaze upon, incluing the opening sequence and the shot fo the supercolider that it's certainly worth a look-through. But the story, while mostly competent, does not present a compelling main character.
Rating: 2.5 (of 5)

by Judd Winick, Tom Fowler & Rodney Ramos
As the cover suggests, GA sponsors the new Speedy into the Teen Titans. It's a good change-of-pace issue, keeping the ongoing narrative going while taking a breather from the seriousness by lightening things up a bit. The new art team of Fowler & Ramos is a mixed bag; the opening scenes are quite nice, with animated character and great flow, while the later scenes with the Titans seem stiff and awkward. Chalk it up to growing pains, as I expect that we'll see the new guys settle in nicely within a couple of issues.
Rating: 3 (of 5)
Thursday, 13 January 2005
Prof. Gloeckner
I finally got the chance to meet Phoebe Gloeckner in person on Tuesday. We didn't have a chance to talk for long, but she was very personable and intelligent. One of the courses she's teaching here is Art & Design 419: "ILLUSTRATION: Comics & Other Visual Narratives":
Anyway, this also gives me a good excuse to link to Prof. Gloeckner's recent photo essay. (Link via The Comics Reporter, among others.)
This course focuses on how words and pictures are used together in narrative expression, examining various genres of art and literature. A historical survey of historical and contemporary examples from literature and the visual arts and everything in between, from The Bayeux Tapestry and William Hogarth through William Blake and Robert Crumb. Students will be asked to create their own narrative pieces incorporating words and pictures; for example, a multi-page comic story or a series of paintings.
Anyway, this also gives me a good excuse to link to Prof. Gloeckner's recent photo essay. (Link via The Comics Reporter, among others.)
Wednesday, 12 January 2005
Quick Comic Reviews

by Andy Hartnell, Leinil Yu & Gerry Alanguilan
This comic provides everything its title suggests, i.e. Abby Chase and the Danger Girl crew running around Gotham City for some MacGuffin-esque reason while running into Bruce Wayne, Batman, The Joker, Catwoman, etc. It's no deep-meaning work of art, but c-mon: it's Batman/Danger Girl for crying out loud! I've noticed over the past few years that Yu's art has become more and more stylized and that trend continues here, though he still maintains his excellent ability to present an action scene with aplomb. IT all makes for a fun, light-hearted read.
Rating: 3 (of 5)

by Robert Kirkman & Marat Mychaels
In this issue, poor Doc Rocket is suffering from severe back trauma which causes her to bend over unnatually as she races against time to find a chiropractor to fix her ailments before she is sidelined for good. Okay, that's not actually the plot, just what is suggested by that horrible pose on Rob Liefeld's cover. In fact, Doc Rocket barely appears in this comics at all, just showing up in the crowd shots on a couple of splash panels. The real plot of this book is, um, oh heck, I have no idea. It's all just seems to be pointless fight scenes and random posing. This comic is so poorly written and illustrated that I wonder if the creators are purposely parodying early 90s Image comics. Alas, probably not.
Rating: 1.5 (of 5)

by Mike Mignola, John Arcudi, & Guy Davis
While Abe Sapien confronts his mysterious past in an old New England house, the rest of the B.P.R.D. crew moves into their new headquarters and tries to adjust to their new boss and surroundings. Not a lot actually happens here, but what does occur is tension-filled and moody and so nicely drawn that the slow pace of the plot doesn't bother me much at all. I continue to be along for the ride.
Rating: 3 (of 5)
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