Porcellino, John – King Cat #67

April 26, 2010

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King Cat #67 Now Available! $3

How on earth did I miss a King Cat?  For those of you who read these reviews sequentially (i.e. every person who clicks on John’s name, I imagine), I somehow didn’t read this one, even though it was actually sitting in a box, in my room with all the other comics available for sale, for a couple of years.   Seeing as how I almost certainly wouldn’t have this website and/or still be reading comics if it wasn’t for John, that’s baffling.  But enough about me, how about the comic?  Go ahead and scroll around the page if you want, there will probably be no shock here: I loved it.  It’s odd reading these things out of order, as by #69 John seems to be in a much happier place, but things were much different in the dark days of #67.  A few of the stories are just John lying in bed, obviously unable to sleep, worrying about various aspects of his life or life in general.  He’s also clearly in some pain from what appears to be stomach surgery of some kind, but is unwilling to really complain about it.  Ah, that good old “heartland” stoicism.  Stories in here include sleeping in the car in L.A. with his cat (after the hotel wouldn’t allow pets), getting advice from teaboxes, Maisie’s eyes, a tale of courting his wife from back in the old days, and, as he couldn’t leave it on such a depressing note, the story of a walk that left him with a strong sense of hope.  There’s also a fantastic text piece about Square-Head John, and you can guess what stories would come from such a name but I’m not going to spoil a thing.  Highly recommended, as always, and only crazy people aren’t already reading this book religiously.  Are you a crazy person?  $3


Porcellino, John – King Cat #66

April 26, 2010

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King Cat #66 Now Available! $3

The machine that is King Cat just keeps rolling along, as this one deals mostly with John’s time in Elgin a few years back. John spends a quiet afternoon raking the yard (or a quiet few minutes raking the yard, after that all the neighborhood kids come over to help out), then follows that up with a game of touch football, minus the Hollywood ending. The other big story in here is a mostly silent piece with John taking a long drive out to a mound of gravel, with the trademark King Cat appreciation of all the silent moments in life. Other than that, this seemed like an unusually quick read, and I figured out why that is: no top 40 list. It just feels wrong. There’s a heartbreaking letter about a neighborhood friend getting sick, but other than that it’s a remarkably quick read. It’s still King Cat so you’ll still love it though, so don’t fret too much… $3


Porcellino, John – King Cat #65

April 26, 2010

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King Cat #65 Now Available! $3

Having a crappy day/week/life? Pick up an issue of this and just try and stay depressed. Not that it’s ever a collection of “rah rah” type life affirmation, but it’s impossible to stay sad with John’s quiet stories about wandering and searching for something in this world. This issue is a collection of places. Elgin (where John still feels at home), a band trip years ago to Iowa, DeKalb in the early 90’s, a trip to a state park in Kansas, and country roads in Denver. Also included, of course, is his “Top 40” list (it’s been a while since I’ve seen it actually at 40) and his text pieces, if possible, are even more beautiful than his drawn stories. Hey, if you read any other part of this page it shouldn’t come as a shock that I love his stuff. This is just another exceptionally great issue from the series that makes it impossible for me to give up hope in the potential of this medium. Not that I’m trying to put any pressure on the guy or anything…


Porcellino, John – King Cat #64

April 26, 2010

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King Cat #64 Now Available! $3

This issue came out soon after John’s Dad died, so this is filled with memories of his father and comics about the days immediately after he died. Naturally, it’s somber as can be and it makes you realize that if you have any relatives at all that you like you should probably give them a call every now and then. John was incredibly close to his father and this whole thing reads like his heart has been crushed, which I guess it has. It’s not possible to do much of a review on something like this, so all I can say is that it’s still King Cat, and if you love the other issues you’ll love this one too, but it’ll also break your heart to read it. $3


Porcellino, John – King Cat #63

April 26, 2010

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King Cat #63

I’m still not sure how I manage to miss new issues when they come out, but at least that way I have more than one to read when I finally do hear about them, right? I can’t tell if this is my favorite issue in years or if it’s just the fact that I haven’t read a new one in years, but I loved this. Stories in here are about his history of alcohol, haircuts, a freakish fly, another “top 40” list and plenty of his one or two page “zen poetry” style comics. If you’ve read them you know what I mean. Fantastic, damned near flawless, not like you’re going to get anything close to an objective review out of me on a King Cat, but that’s my opinion. $2.50


Porcellino, John – King Cat #61

April 26, 2010

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King Cat #61

This comic sucks! Nah, not really, I just realized that there’s very little chance for there ever being a negative review on this page, so I thought I’d start off mean. King Cat #61 is brilliant, as always.It’s kind of like the Dan Clowes Eightball effect, where you get so used to reading really incredible books every time one comes out that you start to take it for granted. It’s good to see that John has found love and has his personal life in order. His comics, if possible, might get even more peaceful. This also comes with a collection of sketchbook drawings of his cat Maisie Kukoc, and anybody who is even remotely interested in cats is going to find this adorable. I honestly don’t know how anybody could come out of reading one of his comics in a bad mood. It would just take so much effort to stay grumpy that most people wouldn’t even bother. The actual comic has the usual assortment of walks, observances and anecdotes. My favorite part was the bit where he went shopping for a CD with his Mom, but it’s my policy to not give anything away from a King Cat issue. Either you know it and love it or you just somehow haven’t heard of it yet, meaning you have such an incredible discovery ahead of you that I don’t want to spoil even the tiniest thing. I’m mostly posting this review at all to let people know that there’s a new issue out, in case they missed it…


Porcellino, John – King Cat #60

April 26, 2010

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King Cat #60

I mostly wanted to review this so I could tell the story of my meeting John at SPACE a month ago. He’s been a hero of mine (and one of my comic favorites) for about nine years now and I’d never been able to get to anything he was at, but we did write each other back and forth a few times 5 or 6 years ago after I ordered some comics. Anyway, I was at his table for awhile before I introduced myself as the guy from Optical Sloth (hey, a lot of people knew what it was so I thought I’d give it a shot), Whitey. His reaction? “My Whitey?” Hee hee, “my Whitey”. He must get a fair amount of mail and I was impressed that he would remember a few letters from that long ago. Anyway, the actual comic. Do I really need to tell you to buy all of these that you can afford? There’s not a comic out there that puts me at peace after reading it like this one does. If that’s not a recommendation, I don’t know what is. Stories in here include him wandering around a disused trail and traveling with his former wife and her parents. Throw in a bunch of text pages about various things and you have another great issue. Hey, he has a new website. Now getting King Cat is easier than ever! It’s just a catalog listing (I was hoping to see rambling), but his descriptions of his comics are worth the time to check out.


Porcellino, John – King Cat #38

April 26, 2010

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King Cat #38

John Porcellino is the best person currently doing mini comics. As far as I know, he’s the best person who’s ever done mini comics. I could have picked any issue of King Cat to review and it would have been positive. He’s on #57 (as I write this) and has been doing this for something like 15 years. He just recently got a book published by Highwater books which collects #49 and 50 (and a few other things) of his comic and, while I didn’t get the collected version yet, that two issue story remains one of the best things I’ve ever seen. Other people try to capture high school and the moods that you go through during it. Some do a good job, some do a really good job, and I just can’t relate to some of them. John hit just about everything during this two issue story and he deserves a fucking medal for it. In a perfect world, he would be rich and able to do his quietly beautiful comic whenever he wanted. As it is now, he has to maintain a job and is usually only able to get 2 or 3 of these out a year. I picked #38 to review because it is widely seen as the best issue of King Cat and, while I wouldn’t necessarily agree with that (how do you pick the best single issue when so many of them are incredible?), it is at least one of the best.

This remains one of the few issues of any mini comic that can make me cry every time I read it. It’s the story of John’s dog Sam. How he got her, what part she played in his life, how he became distant from her when he went through his high school years and was distant from everybody… but she was always there for him. I went through pretty much the exact same thing with my dog, almost every step of the way. I’m lucky that I read this before my dog died too because I was able to spend more time with and appreciate her. I’ll always be grateful to him for reminding me of what my dog meant to me when I was growing up. Anyway, what I’d recommend is that you give him any money that you have sitting around. Start with the Classix volumes. There are 4 of them with each of them reprinting the best from a ten issue span. #1 has #1-10, #2 has #11-20, etc. If you send $8.50 you can get all of them, but it looks like stock is limited on the #1 so ask him to send you another issue if that isn’t in. I don’t know, #50-57 are all $2 and they’re all good. If you have somehow gotten to this point in your life where you haven’t read him, seriously, at least send him a few dollars. I guarantee that you won’t regret it. Hey, I finally got an e-mail address for the man too.


Porcellino, John – King Cat Classix #2

April 26, 2010

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King Cat Classix #2

If the quality of the first collection of King Cat comics was a bit spotty at times (the guy was, after all, just starting out), that problem is taken care of in this second volume.  It collects the best bits of #11-20 (in case you can’t read that on the cover) and even has a few stories taken from anthologies or previously unpublished, so even if you were awesome enough to collect these when they first came out you’re likely to run into something you haven’t seen.  Stories in this issue include whether or not mice turn into money over time, a dream of dancing with the Throwing Muses, a jam comic involving penises pulled too hard, a silent shortie about a family picnic (barely), attending an art school party that ends with John going to the bathroom and being drunk enough to see two penises (definitely the first time I’ve used “penises” twice in one run-on sentence), a fantastic center spread, a dream involving John as a detective that is impossible to describe, teaching a cat to jump from car to car, rescuing a cat from a roof, his job that he could only take for 2 1/27 days, The Mouse getting in trouble, a giant dream cat and a bloody nose.  That’s the bare bones of it.  If it’s true that I have even the tiniest voice in the land of mini comics, somebody make this so: put these old minis back in print!  If Fantagraphics can put out a huge collection of comics from the 80’s, why not put all of these comics into one huge volume?  It’s not like you’d be hurting for material.  Oh well, most likely wishful thinking.  If you can find this for the love of Jehovah buy it, but you probably know that already…


Porcellino, John – King Cat Classix #1

April 26, 2010

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King Cat Classix #1

The trip down memory lane continues, as today I’m reviewing another out-of-print comic.  Or at least it looks like it’s out of print,  judging by his website.  Of course, judging from his website it looks like most things are sold out, which is just a shame.  So anyway, this one collects the best of King Cat #1-10, and raise your hand if you were awesome enough to buy any of those when they were available.  Unless you really had your artistic act together in 1989, I doubt it.  For anybody who has ever complained that John’s style was too simplistic (those people who have missed the point entirely), it’s very clear that his art has improved from these issues.  Everything is a lot more raw, he’s clearly experimenting with thicker lines, and he eventually ended up where he is now.  So what’s in this?  Dream comics, stories of his time as a mosquito abatement guy (are these in the eventual collection?  If so did he clean them up when they were collected?  I should probably know these things), a simple story that is almost too perfect called 3 balls, John running into a guy trying to get to Chicago by walking along the railroad tracks, his new discovery of the reality of ticks, a drunk comic, a short piece about his dad, and his detailed (and hilarious) description of a sleepless night.  I’m way too biased to offer any kind of objective criticism of this series, which should be painfully obvious by now to any regular readers of the site.  Still, somebody should at least put these Classix volumes back in print (even though there are only 3 that I know of, so maybe add on a couple more), or maybe they should get in touch with Top Shelf or somebody and put the whole series out as a phone book type graphic novel.  Hey, a guy can dream…


Polderman, Linc – I Belong to Jonas #10

April 26, 2010

Know of any contact info for Linc?  Please e-mail me!

I Belong to Jonas #10

Well, if this comic proved one thing, it’s this: cancer can be funny, at least when it’s only infected a mouse. Of course, Linc goes to so much trouble to make these characters seem likable that it’s a bit of cop-out to imply that it wouldn’t have been as funny with human characters, but I am nothing if not a walking contradiction. Anyway, this is the end of the latest batch of stories, although I suppose more could easily come from here. I hope they do, as these little stories are a blast, and it’s not like you could run out of mice to tell stories about in the world, and you just can’t beat the $.25 price tag on these things. One more time with the address, and I’ll get any e-mail or website up here as soon as I see it: 5638 Cranston St., Portage, MI 49002


Polderman, Linc – I Belong to Jonas #9

April 26, 2010

Know of any contact info for Linc?  Please e-mail me!

I Belong to Jonas #9

Here it is, the penultimate issue! Granted, it’s not as big a deal when they’re all tiny issues and I know the whole story is already sitting here in front of me, but it’s still fun to say “penultimate”. Go ahead, try working that into a conversation naturally, it can’t be done. Anyway, that tumor has gotten completely out of control of this one, one of the mice has built a castle of shit and things seem to be building towards a dramatic conclusion. And might I just add, I don’t think anybody has ever drawn a more gross tumor than this one, so kudos to Linc for that…


Polderman, Linc – I Belong to Jonas #8

April 26, 2010

Know of any contact info for Linc?  Please e-mail me!

I Belong to Jonas #8

“It was like an epiphany. God had crashed my ass party, and it felt good.” MAN, is it tempting to just leave that as the review, but I’ll ramble on for a bit instead. That’s my favorite quote from this one, or possibly any of them, or possibly any comic ever. In this one you have some cancer progression, a new, fancy mouse on the scene, and that nasty tumor. Still funny (obviously), still worth checking out, still incredibly cheap…


Polderman, Linc – I Belong to Jonas #7

April 26, 2010

Know of any contact info for Linc?  Please e-mail me!

I Belong to Jonas #7

This time around we have mice sex and what the mice think is happening to them when they get taken out of the cage to get discarded. Oh, and how’s that cancer coming along anyway? Ew. Funny stuff again, even if I can’t shake the impression that I’m reading a book one page at a time. I guess that’s tempered a bit by the fact that mice have such short lives (especially THESE mice), so it’s not like this is going to turn into a great modern epic or anything…


Polderman, Linc – I Belong to Jonas #6

April 26, 2010

Know of any contact info for Linc?  Please e-mail me!

I Belong to Jonas #6

OK, this time around, I’m going to review each of these issues, mostly because I crammed it all into one review last time. Chances are they’re going to be short reviews, as they’re short minis (funny how that works), but I’ll ramble about each of them all the same. This one starts off with a mouse named Keith introducing himself to his fellow captive mice. They’ve all been picked up by a hippie, who we don’t see, and given new hippie names. Oh, and one of them has cancer. Slow build-up again, I’m guessing, but if it’s anything like the last bunch it’ll be worth it. No website or e-mail that I can see, just the address that’s referenced above, but these are an extremely cheap $.25 each…


Pointeau, Christine – When Are You Coming Home?

April 26, 2010

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When Are You Coming Home?

Thanks computer! The last time I checked, the backspace key was for going back a space, not going back a page, thereby killing my review dead just after I finished it. Obviously it was a great review, probably the best ever in the history of the page, but it’s out of my head now. Sorry. And it’s possible I wasn’t being entirely serious there, for any incredibly dense readers. So how about this comic? Christine deals with a few fascinating philisophical questions, including trying to understand the true nature of the universe, asking about the value of fear (and whether it’s a good or a bad thing to lose one’s fear), making a landscape from pure thought, and trying to remember the things that her old soul is trying to tell her. Her genuine earnestness kills any desire I might have for a smart-ass comment or two, much as I would like to try based on my conflicting views of some of her theories. Still, it seems like very few books are asking these sorts of questions anymore, and anybody who likes a good, thoughtful comic would love these two books. $8.95


Pointeau, Christine – A Capella Volume 2: Open Heart

April 26, 2010

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A Capella Volume 2: Open Heart

Poetry, to me, can either be beautiful or profoundly annoying, based purely on whatever mood I’m in at the time, which isn’t the slightest bit fair to the book that I happen to be talking about. In this case though, this was the perfect book for the perfect mood. There are three stories in here, all generally about trying to work through things through chatting or in your head. First up is What Price Love, with Christine (I’m going to assume these are all meant to be her, although I’m obviously just guessing) sitting in a field, wandering around nature, and trying to decide if the price for love (and dreams) is worth it. Next up is Open Heart, which takes up the bulk of the book. Christine has her heart stolen, literally, by a passing monk.� It blows away, but she has to chase it, and eventually ends up, in dream-like fashion, entering her heart and talking to a turtle who tells her to trust in herself. Lastly is Do You Believe?, a story about related souls reconnecting throughout the ages. As I most definitely do not believe I’ll resist the urge to say something smarmy, to each his or her own, I suppose. The painted, smudgy artwork is a pleasure to look at, it really leads you through these stories wonderfully. Worth checking out, if you don’t mind the peaceful things in life. $10.95


Piskor, Ed – The W.Y.S.I.W.Y.G Technical Pamphlet #1

April 26, 2010

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The W.Y.S.I.W.Y.G Technical Pamphlet #1

I’m all for comics people getting into something a bit meatier. One shots about how crappy life/relationships/everything is are fun for awhile, but give me a decent series or mini series any day. Lucky for me, Ed has started an 8 part story detailing the life and eventual incarceration of an infamous computer hacker. Things start off slow in this one, as it mostly deals with the very early years of Kevin “Boingthump” Phenicle (yes, the nickname is explained here). The inside cover wraps around with comments from people who knew the man throughout his life, something that’ll make a bit more sense as the story moves along, and the whole thing is told as part of a radio broadcast detailing his life, although it’s mostly there to set things up and it transitions into a normal comic story smoothly. In here Kevin learns the basics of getting things without paying for them, scamming his way into a free pizza, as much Pac-man as he wants to play with one quarter and an unlimited bus pass with a simple paper hole puncher. Oh, and he gets beat up a lot because he’s much smarter than everybody else and a quiet kid. It’s an interesting start, maybe not the greatest comic in the world as a stand-alone mini, but that’s not what it is, after all. It has all the makings of a great graphic novel if everything keeps up and Ed keeps putting these out on a consistent basis. $3


Piskor, Ed – Isolation Chamber #2

April 26, 2010

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Isolation Chamber #2

More diary strips, this time from 12/23/04 to 1/28/05, again with days getting skipped here and there, again with him only chiming in when he actually has something to say instead of just doing a strip for the sake of doing one that day. At least that’s the impression I got. This one is more of the same from #1, but Ed is also dealing with a tiny degree of fame from the American Splendor book and keeping his comics group tiny and elitist after a newspaper article comes out about said group. He also deals with drugged out friends, lending money to his parents, mentoring his baby sister, creeping baldness (at 22), and snowmen on car hoods. It looks like he decided to abandon the diary strip idea after this, which, while slightly disappointing, is OK by me if it means he has more time to do things like Deviant Funnies. In the meantime there are some good insights in here on artistic integrity and the technicalities involved in getting anything sold and/or published. $1.50


Piskor, Ed – Isolation Chamber #1

April 26, 2010

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Isolation Chamber #1

After reading the two comics listed above, just about the last thing I expected to see from Ed was a diary comic. Yet here it is, and it’s as good or better than his other stuff. This is a history of his days from 11/19/04 to 12/21/04. Days can take anywhere from a couple of panels to a full page, and this is how diary comics should be done. He has the space to talk about anything that pops into his head and tells all sorts of embarrassing details that he’s probably regretted ever since, especially the stuff about his parents being secret online swingers. Oof, that’s a tough one to live with. The problem I have with stuff like the Kochalka diaries (which I’m aware I’ve praised in the past) is that it’s the same thing every day, four panels and that’s it, often done obviously just for the sake of doing a strip that day. Ed has the space here to dig into his relationship with his father, deal with his book with Harvey Pekar (Our Movie Year) coming out, talk honestly about the seeming futility of the local comics collective, and daily life at 22 while still living with his parents. The lettering is a bit sloppy at times, and that’s just about the only thing to bitch about. If you’re a fan of the diary strip idea, this is what the worst of them could be in a perfect world. $2.50