Thursday, 28 September 2006

YAFL2: Week 3

Here are the results from Week 3 of Yet Another Fantasy League 2:


The Defenders 62
Kickers Inc. 68

Star City Archers 62
www.rickgebhardt.net 44

Superteam 71
Power Pack 47

Delphi Oracles 45
Flex Mentallo 60



Current Standings:

Team Record Pct Points Streak
-------------------- ------ ----- ------ ------
1. Kickers Inc. 3-0-0 1.000 224.00 W-3
2. Flex Mentallo 3-0-0 1.000 206.00 W-3
3. Star City Archers 2-1-0 .667 206.00 W-1
4. Delphi Oracles 2-1-0 .667 138.00 L-1
5. The Defenders 1-2-0 .333 195.00 L-1
6. Superteam 1-2-0 .333 150.00 W-1
7. www.rickgebhardt.net 0-3-0 .000 144.00 L-3
8. Power Pack 0-3-0 .000 143.00 L-3



Week 4 Games:

Power Pack
vs.
Kickers Inc.

The Defenders
vs.
www.rickgebhardt.net

Delphi Oracles
vs.
Star City Archers

Superteam
vs.
Flex Mentallo


Good Luck to All!


In my other leagues: I won 57-30 in my friends and family league, but dropped down to 2nd place due to points; I lost 61-48 in my public league and dropped to 3rd place; and scored a pathetic 189.05 points in my pass & kick league, dropping to 4th place.

Wednesday, 27 September 2006

Dave's (Half) Dozen: Indy Comics

Continuing my look through the September Previews (for comics supposedly shipping in November), here are a half dozen indy comics that I feel are worth your attention:


Rex Libris #6Rex Libris #6
(Amaze Ink/Slave Labor, $2.95, p. 232)
Rex has to save a library patron who is sucked into a refernce book of monsters. Why is Rex Libris so fun? Because James Turner knows to use terms like 'patron' when refering to libary users. More library-related jokes per page than any other comic shipping this month!



Tigers of Terra SpecialTigers of Terra Special
(Antarctic, $3.95, p. 237)
Ted Nomura celebrates the twentieth anniversary of his futuristic military comic will an all-new installment in the Families of Altered Wars saga.



Youngblood: Bloodsport #2
Youngblood: Bloodsport #2
(Arcade, $3.99, p. 237)
Issue #1 came out over two years ago, and was so bad that it took Rob Liefeld this long to draw the second issue. Buy it for the train wreck it is bound to be!



Ninja Tales #1Ninja Tales #1
(Boom!, $6.99, p. 255)
Ninjas get the Boom! anthology treatment. Now if they ever do a Ninjas vs. Zombies Tales comic, we'll have reached nerd nirvana!



Castle Waiting vol. 2 #2Castle Waiting vol. 2 #3
(Fantagraphics, $3.95, p. 283)
I hear tell that, although Linda Medley's hardcover collection is selling quite well thank you, the comic-sized bites of all-new Castle Waiting stories ins't doing so well. Come on people, I know you're waiting for the trade, but good quality indy comics need your support in comics form as well.



The Lost Books of Eve #1The Lost Books of Eve #1
(Viper, $3.25, p. 349)
Josh Howard goes all apocrypha on us with an off-book tale of Adam, the first man, going missing and Eve, his wife, battling monsters, wizards, demons and what-not to find him. Probably won't be a hit with the Southern Baptist crowd.



I covered mainstream comics last week. Hopefully maybe I'll get GNs and collections done before orders are due...

New This Week: September 27, 2006

Superman: Up, Up and Away!Based on the NCRL list for this week's comics shipping from Diamond, here are a few things to look for at the local comic shop today:


The Pick of the Week is Superman: Up, Up and Away!, the collection of the one-year later story from Action Comics & Superman. It's eight issues worth of quality super-heroics from Kurt Busiek, Geoff Johns and Pete Woods for the reasonable price of $15.


In other comics:

Amaze Ink have the second issue of Sonny Liew's Wonderland.

Antarctic have the latest Ninja High School (#142).

Bongo have this year's Bart Simpson's Treehouse of Horror (#12), with Kyle Baker, Tony Moore, & Eric Powell.

Dark Horse have a new issue of Usago Yojimbo (#97).

DC have the final Losers collection (vol. 5: Endgame); a first collection of Phil Jimenez's Otherworld; and new issues of 52 (week 21), Action Comics (#843), American Way (#8--final issue), Batman (#657), Bite Club VCU (#5--final issue), Blue Beetle (#7), Hawkgirl (#56), Jack of Fables (#3), Justice League of America (#2), Secret Six (#4), Supergirl and the Legion (#22), and Uncle Sam and the Freedom Fighters (#3).

Fantagraphics have a new issue of The Comics Journal (#278).

IDW have the first issue of Spike: Asylum.

Image have the fifth Walking Dead collection; the Image debut of True Story, Swear to God; and new issues of Invincible (#35) and Lions, Tigers & Bears (vol. 2 #3).

Marvel have a hardcover collection of Richard Corben's Haunt of Horror: Edgar Allan Poe; the 100th issue of Ultimate Spider-Man; and new issues of Captain America (#22), Civil War Front Line (#6), Daredevil (#89), Eternals (#4), Punisher (#38), She Hulk 2 (#12), Spider-Man Loves Mary Jane (#10), and Ultimates 2 (#12).

Oni have the third issue of Northwest Passage.

WW Norton have a hardcover Will Eisner's New York: Life in the Big City, which includes New York, The Building, City People Notebook, and Invisible People. Well worth your time and money if you haven't read these yet.


That wraps up another week of new comics. Enjoy!

Monday, 25 September 2006

New Library Comics: Week of September 18, 2006

Here are the comics we added to our library collection last week:


Anderson, David. Bastard Bunny in "Don't you know who I am?!" : the collected works /London : Virgin, 1998.

Art out of time : unknown comics visionaries, 1900-1969 /New York : Abrams, 2006.

Chadwick, Paul (Paul H.) Think like a mountain /Milwaukie, Or. : Dark Horse, 2006.

Denson, Abby. Tough love : high school confidential /San Francisco, Calif. : Manic D, c2006.

Dupuy, 1960- Get a life /Montreal : Drawn & Quarterly, c2006.

Forney, Ellen. I love Led Zeppelin : panty-dropping comics /Seattle, Wash. : Fantagraphics, c2006.

Hernandez, Gilbert. Sloth /New York : DC Comics, c2006.

Legg, Barnaby. Eminem : in my skin /London : Omnibus, c2004.

Rege, Ron. Skibber bee bye : a book /Montreal : Drawn & Quarterly, 2006.

Sienkiewicz, Bill. Stray toasters /Anaheim, CA : Graphitti Designs, c2003.

Weissman, Steven. Chewing gum in church /Seattle, Wash. : Fantagraphics, c2006.

Minicomics Monday

Today I have two minicomics from Marek Bennett:

Mimi's Doughnuts #5Mimi's Doughnuts #5 is a lot of fun. There are several short stories in this 12-page mini, all about awkward teenager Shayna during the summer she turns fifteen. Divorced parents, odd birthday gifts from relativeness, hanging out with your friend, eco-sabatage, and writing fantasy stories--it's all here. Bennett has an engaging cartoony style and knows how to pack a page without it looking too cramped.


Dog Bless AmericaDog Bless America is a 24-hour comic, and is the perfect illustration about what frustrates me about 24-hour comics. There's a germ of a clever story about a secret-agent dog sent on an assignment to the Middle East, but the story wanders and never gels and the art is kind of sloppy, especially compared to the more polished art that appears in Bennett's minis and Webcomics. Had he taken the time to develop this story properly it could have been better.

Sunday, 24 September 2006

Monkey Covers

Space Family Robinson #59Sunday is Monkey Covers day here at YACB. Because there's nothing better than a comic with a monkey on the cover.

We're Lost in Space with the Robinson family as they take on a giant four-armed cycloptic gorilla on the cover of Space Family Robinson #59.

(Standard disclaimer about giant four-armed cycloptic gorillas not really being monkeys applies.)

Image courtesy of the GCD. Click on the image for a larger version.

Friday, 22 September 2006

Review: Siberia

SiberiaSiberia
by Nikolai Maslov
Soft Skull Press, $19.95

Like I suspect most Americans who grew up and the end of the cold war, I really only knew two things about Siberia: 1) It was cold; and 2) it's where the Soviets sent their dissidents to live out their lives in misery. In the back of my mind I must have assumed that there were 'regualr folks' who lived in Siberia, but up front was the idea that everything there was like One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich.

Siberia is a graphical memoir by Nikolai Maslov, one of the 'regular folks' from a small farming village in Siberia. An aspiring artist and Francophile, Nikolai has dreams that, due to the circumstances of his life, may never be realized. He grows up; gets drafted and serves in Mongola; and returns to Siberia, where life revolves around labor during the day and swimming in vodka in the evening. Nikolai seems destined to live a life a quiet desperation, until a fortuitous trip to the big city leads him to art school, a wife, and eventually to Moscow. But Nikolai's dreams are halted as his prefered western art style does not agree with the Party's idea of what Soviet art should be.

As a story, Maslov's memoir is alas somewhat lacking in a narrative drive. It mostly seems to be a series of events in a life (which, let's face it, most of our lives would seem like if put to paper!) Where Siberia succeeds quite admirably is in painting a picture of that life. Done entirely in soft pencil, both the desperations and the small pleasures come through. Over the course of nearly 100 pages, Maslov's art pulls you into his world.

In the afterword, Emmanuel Carrère, the original French publisher of Siberia, tells the story of how he visited Russia and came upon Maslov and his memoir. It is quite remarkable to learn that, outside of a few Corto Maltese volumes, Maslov had little exposure to western comics. It is also said that Maslov has no future plans to do any more comics; which I think would be a shame.

Rating: 3.5 (of 5).

(a review copy of Siberia was provided by the publisher)