Hall, Justin – True Travel Tales #3

April 23, 2010

Website

True Travel Tales #3 Now Available! $3.95

There’s only one true travel tale this time around, and it ends up possibly being the best of the bunch. A young woman named Sarah goes off on a two week tour in Mexico right around the holidays, as she wants to avoid the whole family affair and is at the lowest point in her life. She meets another woman on the bus, Helena, who has recently had her children taken from her (we’re never given the exact reason for this). They make an immediate and profound friendship, but things get complicated when Sarah discovers that Helena isn’t sleeping, and hasn’t slept for at least three days. Things get progressively crazier from there, as Helena slowly breaks down completey, falling into three distinct personalities, going so far as to act like a whore and speak Spanish fluently at times, something she had never been able to do. The struggle to keep Helena from hurting herself and/or out of a Mexican mental institution (a place, they are told, where crazy people sometimes never make it out of) is what makes this book such a beautiful thing, as these strangers give up large chunks of their vacation and sleep just to try and keep this woman going. Justin’s art has never looked better, and he explains in the afterward some of the artistic liberties he took (like telling the story from Sarah’s perspective). It’s odd to say that you should start at #3 and work your way back if you’re interested in this sort of thing, but this really is the best of the bunch. $3.95


Hall, Justin – True Travel Tales #2

April 23, 2010

Website

True Travel Tales #2 Now Available! $2.95

These issues of True Travel Tales (#2 and 3) seem to have been forgotten about in the “online store” box for years, due mostly to the confusion of all the other comics coming in, and it’s a damned shame. One of my biggest complaints about autobio books, when I have anything to complain about, is that some people can manage to make a comic about nothing at all, having never been anywhere interesting or done much of anything worth noting. That is not an issue in this series, as these tales take place over various parts of the globe. The first story here involves some silent snorting of coke, followed quickly by a near-brawl as said coke ends up missing (they were silent because the walls were thin, it’s not a silent story). Next up is a shortie told in the rain dealing with reactions to the start of the Iraq War (this came out in 2003), and the shame which the author was already feeling back then. A familiar piece is next, or at least it’s familiar if you read the 2003 SPX anthology, dealing with masturbation and a Bible reading. Next up is A Final Goodbye, dealing with seeing a friend on what ends up being their death bed but, assuming they’d get better, never saying a proper goodbye. Finally there’s a text piece about the Fiesta de la Cruz in Bolivia, and how it can be dangerous to be a foreigner in a private, sacred event. These were all drawn by Justin but told by other people, usually with pseudonyms, unless perhaps we’re supposed to know Agustin “Tin Tin” or Sam “Le Pelona”. I can see why they remain basically anonymous (especially the woman masturbating in the dark church), and it all looks gorgeous, so what does it matter? I realize that this issue is basically an antique in comic years at this point, but fascinating stories like these never really get old. $2.95


Hall, Justin – True Travel Tales #1

April 23, 2010

Website

True Travel Tales #1 Now Available! $2.95

My love of good autobio stuff is probably common knowledge to anybody who reads the site on a regular basis. So when I tell you that this is a collection of stories from various authors, all drawn by Justin Hall, well, it’s probably a safe bet to say that I liked it. About the only thing that could hurt a book like this is if these were all “you had to be there” type of stories. You know, the ones that are good to the people who lived them, a few close friends and not many other people. Happy to say that almost all of these are fascinating and riveting. You have someone almost falling off a cliff, a sexy grandma story, a sexy random encounter story, a lead singer on fire, a creepy masturbator, a possible alien and a visit from the Lizard God. All good stuff, which makes this well worth picking up. Great art too, it really made these stories come alive. Check out the website, I’m sure there’s contact info and samples up there…


Hahn, Richard – Lumakick #2

April 23, 2010

Website

Lumakick #2

Just in case anybody thought the first book was a fluke somehow, this second issue proves otherwise. The best thing about Richard is that, two issues in, it’s already almost impossible to compare him to anybody else. Sure, there are brief moments when the art looks like that one guy, or a phrase will sound like that other guy, but they were so brief and so tiny that I have to wonder now if I was just trying to find somebody, anybody, to compare him to for the sake of the review. Can’t be done, I’m afraid. In here you have longing, love, wandering, representations and then, like last time, the comic relief of Clemenza and Tessio. They were all clumped together this time instead of being spread out after each story in the last book, which I think frankly was a better setup. One man’s opinion, that’s all that is. If you somehow missed #1, even with everybody talking about it, well, you have no excuses this time. If you ever sit by yourself just to think, or wonder about the universe and everything in it, read this comic. The price is a bit hefty at $5.95, but it’s also a pretty hefty book, and you won’t spend that money on a better comic this year. Contact info is up there!


Hahn, Richard – Lumakick #1

April 23, 2010

Website

Lumakick #1

I’m suspicious of this book. I don’t mean that in a negative way, but supposedly this is the first comic by Richard. The thing is that it’s one of the best things I’ve seen all year, and I’m writing this on the last day of 2002. Precise, meticulous artwork combined with stories that just sing, whether or not they have words… It’s an incredible accomplishment. Three cheers to the good people at the Xeric Foundation for giving this man as much money as he needed to do this. What’s the comic about? Well, there are several stories in it. Some silent, some not. There are stories about insomnia, loneliness, love, poetry… Mostly everything worth writing about. And then there are the one page strips with Clemensa and Tessio, perfectly timed comedic breaks for when things get too serious. Go to his website, see just about the best art I’ve seen all year and buy this book.


Hachigan, Jennifer – Pocket Editor #3

April 23, 2010

Website

Pocket Editor #3

Here’s a great concept for a comic, and one that’s sadly needed with the number of typos I see in mini comics: put definitions of words at the bottom of the page. “You’re”? Contraction of you are. “Your”? Possessive pronoun, used as an adjective that precedes a noun. Naturally, it doesn’t matter how informative the book is if the story sucks, and it’s hard to tell on this one because it’s too short. It’s a little tale about some people at a beach losing their car keys when it starts to rain, in case I never mention that sort of thing any more. A fun story and a fun concept, plus it’s only $.50, so check out the contact info above and send her some money!


Hachigan, Jennifer – Lore #7

April 23, 2010

Website

Lore #7

Upon further review (i.e. I’ve read one more issue), it looks like this series is a lot of fun. Put out a graphic novel, that’s what I say. The reviews at the start of the book of past issues are nice, but this is definitely the kind of thing that would be much better if it was read in chunks. I’ve read it small bits and it’s still a lot of fun. This one is mostly about a mysterious man who’s hunting vampires (I think) and Lore, the telekinetic werewolf finally meeting. Actually, that happens at the end, but the rest of it is about them going about their business. Great dialogue, a lot more of the story is making sense to me now, which brings me back to my whole “graphic novel” point. If you’re going to check this out you should get a few in a row just to get a feel for what’s going on, but I definitely think (after reading a couple) that it’s worth checking out. In a world where comics were published regularly I think this would be picked up in a heartbeat. Contact info is up there, check it out…


Hachigan, Jennifer – Lore #6

April 23, 2010

Website

Lore #6

The problem with continuing series is that I have real basis to review except on its own, and often it doesn’t make much sense on its own. Let’s see here, there’s a robot, a telekinetic werewolf (maybe), a woman who’s also a cat… and most of them spend the day chatting around a lunch table. The dialogue seemed natural and funny at times, which is starting to become rare in some of these random SPACE comics I’ve been reading. The art is good, if simple and a bit lazy (hardly any backgrounds anywhere, for one thing). I didn’t see much happen but this seems like it would be a nice, fun little comic about everyday things with extraordinary people and creatures wandering around. Maybe the big story is stupid, but if it isn’t this would at the very least be a fun thing to check out. Go to her website to see what she has available (ten issues of this as of 5/1/02) or just send her an e-mail and chat with her. Here, look at this and see what you think.


Gumprich, Chris – Evening Shift (with Dwight Williams)

April 23, 2010

Website

Evening Shift (with Dwight Williams)

Oh random comic, why must you be so inconsistent? There was a decent, simple story in this one. Relatively simple, anyway. A man who gets to set his own hours ends up at a bar late at night and has a chance meeting with a lonely stranger. Sounds simple enough, right? Things get a bit more complicated from there, and it ends up being a pretty good comic in that regard. The problem is with the art. At times it’s pretty good, certain panels and pages here and there. Then at other times it’s awful, and I can’t figure out why that is. Maybe Dwight was rushed, or maybe he’s still learning his trade, in which case he has a ton of potential. It’s just hard for me to understand things like the last panel, where Jack’s (the main character) eyes are almost touching each other and two stocky midgets are outside by the ambulance. This leads to my bit of preaching to all young comic creators out there: every panel on every page is important. I understand if you have a deadline or something and you have to crank it out, but remember that everything you do could end up at the bottom of somebody’s closet and, when they pull the issue out randomly ten years from now, all they’re going to think is that you didn’t give a shit about something that is (for almost everyone who’s doing there own comic) a labor of love. Rant over, this is $2.95, here’s an e-mail address and the website is up there.


Gumprich, Chris – Recriminations

April 23, 2010

Website

Recriminations Now Available! $1

This is a short one involving two best friends talking about a girl. The problem is that the girl is now dating one of the best friends, directly after dating the other, and the one who was dating her first, naturally, feels betrayed. Like I said, it’s tiny, but it’s a good little story, worth checking out. As it’s so tiny, I guess that means I have to remark on some of the little things. The pages are very dark, which is the choice of any artist, but it makes it a bit hard to tell what’s going on in certain panels. The lettering is also scrunched a bit. It would be helped maybe with a few less giant black spaces and a few more larger panels. Again, these are all my personal aesthetic concerns, but that’s why they pay me the big bucks, right?


Guldemond, Marcel – Dot Dot Dot

April 23, 2010

Website

Dot Dot Dot

Man, I sound almost eloquent in that other review. Luckily, the years of substance abuse have taken their toll, and now I’m left with a tiny, tiny brain. Sorry about the psychedelic effect on the cover, my scanner strikes again. Oh, and before I forget, this book was serialized on a website that I should mention a lot more, Serializer.net. Good stuff from lots of good people, but I never seem to find time to mention it. What about this book? Well, as a bunch or random, unconnected stories and ideas, it obviously doesn’t come together all that well. That doesn’t mean, however, that you can’t find some serious value in its parts. Explored in here are concepts of time, drunkenness, quiet, cows, working, commitment, and power. Some of the strongest pages of the book are the ones that are silent, exploring the quiet of certain stories, giving the reader time to sit back and just look. It’s a bit hefty at $8.95, but it’s a gorgeous book, inside and out. Granted, you can probably see most of the pages on the aforementioned website, but I’m a much bigger fan of the actual paper. One more website to give, and then you’ll have all three that are in the back of his book (along with the one you’ll get if you scroll up). Check this out if you’re in a quiet, thoughtful mood.


Guldemond, Marcel – Aporiatica

April 23, 2010

Website

Aporiatica

I usually don’t have to come up with a reaction to a book I just read, it’s already there. I liked it, I didn’t like it, or I was indifferent to at least some degree, those are the usual options. When I was done with this one I had a different reaction completely. Have you ever been at a play, or a spoken word show, or a comedy club of some kind, and had the performer or performance end before you were ready for it? The show was over, the curtain came down or whatever, and you were left feeling… incomplete, I guess? That was the feeling I had after most of the stories in this one. Everybody else was clapping and I was just left there wondering about what I’d just read. That’s not to say that I didn’t enjoy it, but this definitely falls under the category of a book that I would enjoy immensely under an ideal set of circumstances. A certain clarity of thought is needed to really get this book, and that’s something I’ve been sadly lacking in the past few weeks, or some would say forever. Here’s the website before I continue, because I’m completely aware that nobody is going to know what I’m talking about until they read some of his stuff. The critics are right, he does have a unique approach to graphic art. He has a lyrical, poetic quality to his writing and art that almost everybody is lacking, or at least they communicate it in a different way. There’s a story in here about himself as an old man (maybe), another man having a normal start to the day, poems and drawings in the end, an essay on Borges’ work with all kinds of other stuff going one, and one that has a little to do with Orpheus. Maybe I should hire somebody to write for this site who has some communication skills… Anyway, this really is a unique experience. I recommend reading it on a day when everything seems to come into focus.

My main man Mike Bradecich has posted a rebuttal to my review of this book. Maybe he’s right, maybe I gave the guy too much credit. Maybe I’ll read it again at some point and tear it a new one, or maybe I’ll read it again and tear Mike’s review a new one, or maybe I’ll never read it again� I do remember that the poems in the end kind of bugged me though, I don’t think I mentioned that before. Anyway, without further ado:

AN open letter to Whitey: I don't think you should be so eager to place the blame on your own clarity of mind for feeling unfulfilled by APORIATICA. I found what samples I read of the book to be, more than likely, cryptic for the sake of sounding vaguely important. Like the movie musicals of the middle portion of the century, a string of random (but pleasing to the artist) images (as opposed to songs) were tied together in an all but haphazard manner. Then a concerted, but still forced-seeming, "plot" was created to act as a weak adhesive between the separate pieces as little more than an afterthought.

However, in the role of self-imposed devil's advocate, there are three reasons I would urge the reader to accept my comments with a grain of salt: first; I credit the original reviewer of this book with the necessary intellect to realize that this half-hearted attempt at plot and structure was just that, were it the case. and, had he found it to be so, he would have so stated. I will even go so far as to disregard the insecure modesty with which he assumes the fault lies with his interpretation, rather than placing the blame on the material itself for its vagaries.
Second, I have seen only a portion of the piece, and a very small one, so I have no fair concept of what the context of that limited material might be.
Thirdly, I am quite intoxicated and incapable of even undoing my own trousers before defecating. And my grandma told never to trust a drunk with poop in his pants, so there you go.


Grimbol, Justin – Desperate #15

April 23, 2010

Website

Desperate #15

See? This is why I’ve been waiting for a longer story from this guy. This is the biggest issue yet and, while it’s not an obviously continuing story, everything comes together wonderfully by the end. Or maybe it is obviously connected and I’m just slow, I don’t know. What you have here are a few main people. There’s a slut, a stupid man who’s just trying to have fun, and a few other people who have no interest in staying faithful to their significant others. Lots of stuff left unsaid here, which is the best way to deal with something like this. Justin’s not afraid to have a fair amount in his book either, so kudos to him. Well, there is now officially a “if you want to check out one issue, check this one out” issue for this guy. This is probably a couple of bucks and I can unreservedly recommend this to anybody. Lots of layers to go through here, a fully rewarding reading experience. My only complaint is that I wish he’d work on his spelling, but it’s not so hard to take when characters who are remarkably stupid are having a lot of trouble with grammar. Buy this book!


Grimbol, Justin – Desperate #14

April 23, 2010

Website

Desperate #14

I missed a few issues of this, mostly because I stopped getting them in the mail and haven’t seen them in comic stores (sorry, there are just way too many books that I’m trying to keep up with). Good to see that it’s still getting better, and it was pretty good a couple of issues ago. This one has two main stories. The first is about some bunnies in and out of love, with a few of the side-effects. The second is about a man on a beach who meets a strange woman. That’s all you get from me on that one, as it’s too short to say much more about without ruining it. The art’s better, the writing is better and the book is a little bigger than before. All that means you should check it out, and it looks like there’s finally a website to go with that old e-mail address. $1


Grimbol, Justin – Desperate #11

April 23, 2010

Website

Desperate #11

This one is absolutely my favorite of the bunch so far. It’s the story of a woman who’s occasionally a prostitute and the one man and one alien who watch her door to make sure that nobody tries to hurt her. It’s a funny issue, sure, but it’s also thoughtful. Add that to the fact that his art just keeps getting better and you have the best issue yet. This issue also has 16 pages instead of 12, so either I’m making an impact (ego alert) here or Justin just decided to give the stories a little more room to grow. Whatever the case, buy it. Contact info keeps getting further and further up the page, but it’s still there…


Grimbol, Justin – Desperate #10

April 23, 2010

Website

Desperate #10

You know, if I put the whole stack of comics together that I’ve gotten from this guy and read them all in a row, I don’t think it would take me longer than 5 minutes to finish them. This one, for example. probably took me about 30 seconds to read. Maybe he should think about putting out longer comics, but what do I know? If the point he’s trying to make only needs 12 pages per issue or so, who am I to tell him how to do his job? This one is about sex, mostly. A strange comparison between his mother and his girlfriend, and Mr. Bunny getting lucky, as they say. Solid art, it made me think (which says a lot in a tiny book), what more can you ask for? Contact info is still above, and his body of work just keeps getting bigger.


Grimbol, Justin – Desperate #9

April 23, 2010

Website

Desperate #9

Could it be? Is this issue really that much worse than his other ones, or am I just exhausted from moving boxes all day? Well, I liked his other stuff, I know that much. Didn’t get much at all out of this one. A pet peeve of mine is when artists address themselves in their comics, whether it’s about story ideas, their drawing style, or even just making fun of themselves. It’s hard to pull it off to make it look like something other than a self-indulgent page filler, and that’s the impression that I got with this. Again, I’m exhausted, but he makes such tiny issues that they really have to grab you right away or it’s over before you know it, and this one didn’t grab me. the two page story at the end with the bunnies was ridiculous, but at least it made me smile. Ah, one bad issue out of four isn’t bad at all. At least he’s still trying new stuff. Contact info is still above and I still think that you should check out some of his other stuff…


Grimbol, Justin – Desperate #8

April 23, 2010

Website

Desperate #8

Note to all comic people who send me their stuff randomly: chances are that I haven’t seen the other issues of your comic unless they’re already up here, so it’s not the best idea in the world to send me Part 2 of a dream issue. Unless the previous dream issue had nothing to do with this dream issue, in which case I apologize, but I kind of have to base my review on what’s here and not on what might or might not be in the other issue. Another short mini, this one is about a man who has to kill his girlfriend (?) if he can’t convince her to stop going insane. In his dream. The way to do this is apparently by yelling at her a lot. Not a bad issue. It’s kind of creepy at times, actually, and it works better than a 10 page mini probably should. Hell, I don’t know, send him a couple of bucks and find out for yourself. You have to at least give him credit for getting to #8 of a series, that’s hard enough on its own these days… Check the other issue for contact info because I’m the laziest man alive.


Grimbol, Justin – Desperate #7

April 23, 2010

Website

Desperate #7

Man, are these things tiny. Honestly, I’d have to say that your best bet would either be to wait until he has a collection available to read his work or buy a bunch of issues at once, as they literally take less than a minute to read. This one is the best of the bunch though, at least out of the three I’ve seen. Various short stories on sex and relationships. Definitely worth a look. Add that to the fact that he appears to be prolific (at least in the small press world; he already has two comics out this year) and this is a name you should try to remember. Contact info is above…


Grimbol, Justin – Desperate #6

April 23, 2010

Website

Desperate #6

I’d bet money that I’ve seen this art before. Probably some anthology somewhere along the line. Ah yes, I remember when I had a memory. Those were the days… Anyway, this was another one that was sent to me randomly in the mail. I try desperately to love these, I really do. This one is far from bad, it’s just not all that great either. There are two stories here. The Temptation, about Jesus being tempted by Satan while fasting in the desert, goes nowhere fast and doesn’t seem to serve much purpose except to have Jesus say “fuck”. Don’t get me wrong, I’m just about the least religious person you’re likely to meet, it’s just that nothing happened in this story. Not to give anything away here, in ended in a jumbled mess. Or I missed something, I don’t know.

The other story, Dr. Mento’s Gruesome Revenge, is much better. The tale of a man who builds a robot body for his brain once he realizes that he has a disease that is eating away his body. His wife has a hard time finding satisfaction with his new robot body no matter what, um, improvements he adds on, and the story is basically about him trying to win her love back. Creepy at times, funny at others, there was nothing wrong with this one. Take away those four pages for the Jesus story and you have a great mini. Actually, the only part I had a problem with was the last panel, so I guess you could say I liked it up until then. And I had no problems at all with the art. It’s going to bug the hell out me trying to figure out where I saw it before, though. It’s worth a couple of bucks anyway, so why not e-mail the guy and see what else he has around.