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Below are the most recent 10 friends' journal entries.

    Wednesday, December 23rd, 2009
    calamityjon
    10:57a
    ...And for the record, Josie > Archie & His Pals > Josie & The Pussycats
    I've recently been reading some of the late Sixties' Archie Publications comics, specifically the early Josie series. I'm not particularly a fan of ... well, just about any teen comic, really, and the Archie family is no real exception. There's a period which begins in fits and starts around 1958, peaks around 1968, and which is gone, gone, gone by 1971 where Archie - if just for the quality of the art - was really notable, and those are what I've been lately perusing.

    Dan DeCarlo (and, eventually, the trio of Dan and his twin sons) was the artistic core of these books, the elder DeCarlo specifically being known for his energetic good girl art. Josie's the best of the endless teen comedies DeCarlo and the rest of the Archie Publications crew turned out during this period (for other publishers, even), and the one which received the best flourishes from DeCarlo ...

    So, flipping through 1968's Josie #38, I was delighted to come across this charming cameo in a story featuring the (unfortunately typical for the era) stereotypically ditzy blonde bombshell Melody and her anonymous cadre of dumbfounded admirers ...


    jos38 028 jos38 029 jos38 030 jos38 031 jos38 032


    Did I mention that DeCarlo based the character Josie on his longtime wife? Thus I declare that this is adorable...
    calamityjon
    8:22a
    Hey Jerks1! Still stuck at work with little or nothing to do? Here's some more time-killers from the best of the latter half of the year's worth of my Livejournal!



    Hey, you know what I did on the way to work? Picking up breakfast at the supermarket, I also got a wheel of President brand "Wee Brie", tiny wedges of processed brie. I did this because I thought it was funny. Then I ate some. It's not funny anymore.

    MURRAY CRISSMUSS!

    1I'm sorry, that was rude, I meant to say "Hey Jerk-ASSES"...
    calamityjon
    7:56a
    Tuesday, December 22nd, 2009
    calamityjon
    8:52a
    Best of Me, 2009 ...
    Hey folks! Stuck at work for the holiday week? Me too! Want something to pass the mortal hours until the bell rings and you can get out of there? Well, you're in luck, it's time again for one of those damn summaries of the highlights of my Livejournal 2009! So, why not while away the hours with ...



    And that'll take us through the end of June, enjoy yourself and there'll be more tomorrow, true believers!
    Monday, December 21st, 2009
    calamityjon
    10:37a
    calamityjon
    8:01a
    Doodles 12/20 ...
    Doodles 12/20


    Loosening up before a marathon drawing session with pencil and colored marker on colored cardstock ...
    masterninja66
    3:01p
    What is the saddest thing? When it's too cold for a dog to go for a walk.
    Friday, December 18th, 2009
    calamityjon
    9:46a
    Thursday, December 17th, 2009
    calamityjon
    8:40a
    #20-21, Best Comics of the Decade...
    Chicken with Plums
    Pantheon Books (Marjane Satrapi) 2006
    Wikipedia Article

    I know, you’re probably asking “If you're going to pick a Marjane Satrapi book, why not pick Persepolis?” Well, I enjoyed Persepolis, and I think it’s a very important work, but I frankly found this relatively unacknowledged work (although it has a film version in the works, evidently) of artistry, love, loss and depression to be the tighter narrative and the more emotionally evocative. Mind you, I don't want to take anything away from Persepolis - or really any of Satrapi's work, which may vary in affect and quality but which is uniformly worth reading - but I also felt that it was very dependent on lessons learned from David B, where Chicken with Plums possesses much more of the independent voice of the author.

    Chicken With Plums

    Isaac The Pirate
    Comics Lit (Christophe Blain) 2003-present
    The very little-known French import has collected the first four chapters of Blain's piracy picaresque, a darkly funny and tumultuous story where the menace both to the deceptively eponymous Isaac is both ominously real in terms physical and moral. It's the illustrations which are the primary strength of the series, expressive chiaroscuro expanses where buildings seem to loom heavy with cat-scratch shadows and figures come up drenched from pools of darkness. The conclusion is still forthcoming, but so far it's one of the most impressive books I've come across this decade.

    Isaac the Pirate: To Exotic Lands
    Isaac the Pirate: The Capital

    So, my list was, in no particular order:

    1. All-Star Superman

    2. Asterios Polyp

    3. American Virgin

    4. The Book of Genesis

    5. The Complete Peanuts

    6. Daredevil Vol 2

    7. Lone Wolf and Cub

    8. The Will Eisner Omnibus

    9. Homunculus

    10. Hellboy

    11. Epileptic

    12. The Golem's Mighty Swing

    13. Blankets

    14. David Boring

    15. Army@Love

    16. Plastic Man

    17. Popeye

    18. Scott Pilgrim

    19. Black Hole

    20. Chicken With Plums

    21. Isaac the Pirate


    I had to leave out at least a half-dozen books I'd have loved to included, but nonetheless, there's my list. You may now proceed to yell at me for having dumb choices...
    Tuesday, December 15th, 2009
    calamityjon
    8:20a
    #17 - #19
    Popeye
    Fantagraphics (E.C.Segar) 2006
    Wikipedia Article

    Of the classic comic strip reprint editions which were spurred by Fantagraphics’ lovely Complete Peanuts set, there’s probably none so welcome nor needed as much as the titanic Popeye volumes (of which four of the planned six have so far been released, meaning that lining them up allows the spines to spell “POPE” across your bookshelf). Picking up in the thick of Elzie Segar’s Thimble Theater strip, the series starts with Popeye’s debut and subsequent explosive popularity.

    Popeye – who’s only enjoyed a handful of increasingly scarce and incomplete reprints in the past – represents a kind of comic strip which doesn’t really exist in America any more, but which still enjoys popularity around the world; the comic adventure. Absurd and cartoonish, the threats were still dire and the villains still ominous, and the action was brutal even if the outcome was all but predecided – while European comics and manga still produce copious volumes in the genre, America has really been without any highly visible, mainstream character of this type since Richie Rich ceased regular publication, and since Donald Duck went into permanent reprint. Having the Popeye volumes available are more than just great comics, it’s tangible American pop history.

    Popeye Vol.1
    Popeye Vol.2
    Popeye Vol.3
    Popeye Vol.4


    Scott Pilgrim
    Oni Press (Bryan Lee O'Malley) 2004-ongoing
    Wikipedia Article

    Bryan Lee O’Malley’s action-adventure romance benefits greatly from its manga influences, but melds them seamlessly with a contemporary, regional wit in a fast-paced and heart-filled story. Picking this as one of the best books of the last ten years is a tricky thing to defend, since – on the face of it, with video game style battles capping each issue – it’s a fairly frivolous story. O’Malley has his bonafides, though, and there’s no arguing that his characters suffer, cheer, laugh, love and weep with great conviction.
    He has his fans, but more than that he earned his fans, and while that may sound like an argument along the lines that, owing to its popularity, Harry Potter ought to be considered one of the best books of the last decade, it is reasonable to suggest that something which so rapidly approaches the iconic is at least given due consideration. The highest acclaim you can give Scott Pilgrim is that it’s fun, touching and strikes chords immediately with its audience, and that’s very high praise.

    Scott Pilgrim's Precious Little Life
    Scott Pilgrim vs The World
    Scott Pilgrim and the Infinite Sadness
    Scott Pilgrim Gets It Together
    Scott Pilgrim vs The Universe


    Black Hole
    Pantheon (Charles Burns) 2005
    Wikipedia Article

    Charles Burns’ ominous and oppressively dark tale of isolation and longing took ten years to finish, and the conclusion was well worth the wait. The tale of disassociated teens striving to stake their own claims to encroaching adulthood, love and lust, masked under a body-bending STD colloquially called “The Bug”, is captivating on every level. Possibly moreso than the story, in fact, the lush, thickly inked artwork is engrossing, and practically hypnotic, and exercises an inexorable pull on the reader. Incredibly satisfying and serious story which pushes comics further into the realm of serious literature.

    Black Hole
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