Graphic Novel Friday: Slow Storm
by Omnivoracious.com at 9:15 PM PDT, August 29, 2008
Every Friday, Omnivoracious will turn the spotlight on one or more graphic novels, with future installments also including news and special features. You can let me know who or what you'd like to see featured by commenting on this post. (In October, Graphic Novel Friday will return to its normal weekly schedule.) In the few gestures these characters exchange as they pass on their way through different journeys, Novgoroff has captured as much or more as any novel or movie. Clearly a contender for best graphic novel of the year. PAX
by Omnivoracious.com at 10:38 PM PDT, August 25, 2008
This weekend, Seattle is Mecca for gamers. The metaphor might not extend to people actually praying in the direction of Seattle (although I wouldn't rule that out) but it is true that gamers of every kind--from casual console players to hard-core boardgame geeks--are traveling from around the world to attend the Penny Arcade Expo, a.k.a. PAX. PAX is the largest gamer festival in the U.S., the spiritual successor to the now-more-corporatized E3, and it's just a mad-crazy three-day lineup of "freeplay" games, huge LAN combats, exhibitor demos, a variety of tournaments and competitions, panels, movies, and even concerts--from H.P. Lovecraft tribute band Darkest of the Hillside Thickets to nerdcore godfather MC Frontalot. So what does all this have to do with books and writing? Well, there's actually some reading going on amidst all the gamer craziness. The latest edition of D&D and many of the creative minds behind it will be well-represented, but here are a few even better (and more traditionally narrative) examples:
(Cross-posted to Guys Lit Wire.) --Paul YA Wednesday: Reviews by Kids, Librarian Love, and the Requisite Weekly Twilight Miscellany
by Omnivoracious.com at 6:54 PM PDT, August 20, 2008
In this edition of YA Wednesday, Heidi is taking a break while I root around for noteworthy YA news (but watch for her this weekend, when she compiles the End-o'-the-Week Kid-Lit Roundup).
"Young Adult" classification possibly good; also, possibly bad. Science-fiction site io9 has a couple of essays up on YA SF, pro and con. ("Young Adult Books Will Save Science Fiction" and "Stop Writing Young Adult Science Fiction", respectively.) Kid-lit cognoscente Colleen Mondor calls them "two of the silliest pieces I have read on YA literature in ages." Take that! You've got to love her advice: "Here's an idea - why doesn't everyone just grow up and stop talking about this and let teens read what they want; whether a publisher designates it YA or not. (And really, that is what they are quite happily doing anyway.)"
Some obligatory Twilight. I now believe Heidi that when you're reading about YA on the Web, you can't help but read about the Twilight Saga, whether it's funny Robert Pattinson interviews or commentary in the Washington Post from the author of Why Gender Matters. My favorite (sorry, I'm sure I'm getting to this late) was the cute Twilight trailer spoof:
Show your librarian some love! Okay, this isn't specific to YA, but everyone should know that nominations just opened last Friday for the "I Love My Librarian!" awards.... --Paul Graphic Novel Friday: The Amazing Remarkable Monsieur Leotard
by Omnivoracious.com at 2:04 PM PDT, August 15, 2008
Every other Friday, Omnivoracious will turn the spotlight on one or more graphic novels, with future installments also including news and special features. You can let me know who or what you'd like to see featured by commenting on this post. (In October, Graphic Novel Friday will return to its normal weekly schedule.) YA Wednesday: A Hand-Holding Librarian, a Grown-up Bella, and Olympic Triumphs
by Omnivoracious.com at 1:48 AM PDT, August 14, 2008
In this edition of YA Wednesday, we walk the blurry lines between kids and YA, and YA and grown-ups. The Kids want YA: What's a librarian to do?
Roger Sutton questions her tactics, and wonders if they even work:
The bright lights of Beijing Letters to a Young Gymnast by Nadia Comaneci. (Was there any girl in the 70s who didn't want to be Nadia Comaneci, the first perfect 10?) Venus to the Hoop: A Gold Medal Year in Women’s Basketball by Sara Corbett, which follows the 1996 U.S. Women's Basketball Team all the way to Atlanta. Gold in the Water: The True Story of Ordinary Men and Their Extraordinary Dream of Olympic Glory by P.H. Mullen, Jr., an "adrenaline-charged account" of the Santa Clara Swim Club in 2000. All American: The Rise and Fall of Jim Thorpe by Bill Crawford Triumph: The Untold Story of Jesse Owens and Hitler’s Olympics by Jeremy Schaap (The video here is Beijing Welcomes You, a music-video-style promotion with welcoming messages: "Flowing charms are filled with vigor and enthusiasm." I also highly recommend Stand up, a history of China's Olympic teams, sung primarily by Jackie Chan.) Still weighing in on Breaking Dawn
And a few quick links...
Is Colleen Mondor the busiest blogger in YA-dom? I think so. Her August 2008 Bookslut column, Bookslut in Training, features a wide coming-of-age variety. She particularly recommends Barbara Shoup's Wish You Were Here. She also moderates Guy's Litwire, which reminds me that I totally forgot to plug Paul's post there two weeks ago, with three guys from Fantagraphics Books talking about their early comics influences. Speaking of Seattle-based comics folks, David Lasky signed with Abrams to publish his graphic novel about the Carter Family. It's not YA, but Lasky's earned serious teen cred by teaching at the nonprofit kids' writing center 826 Seattle, where he helped budding teen comic artists create and publish three 826 Seattle Comic Books: All Systems Go!, Family Portraits, and Happiness?. Oh yeah, and it's all volunteer. --Heidi Graphic Novel Friday: Alex Robinson's Too Cool to be Forgotten
by Omnivoracious.com at 5:55 AM PDT, August 1, 2008
Every other Friday, Omnivoracious will turn the spotlight on one or more graphic novels, with future installments also including news and special features. You can let me know who or what you'd like to see featured by commenting on this post. (In October, Graphic Novel Friday will return to its normal weekly schedule.) Alex Robinson's Box Office Poison is one of my all-time favorite graphic novels. Since then, he's published Tricked and now Too Cool to be Forgotten. The noir-ish Tricked suffered from a plot twist that undermined most of the great set-up, but was still definitely worth reading. Too Cool to be Forgotten suffers from a similar flaw, in that Robinson flirts with the "it was all a dream" cliche. It's almost as if since Box Office Poison he doesn't trust himself to tell a great story with great characterization sans structural cleverness. If you can overlook that, however, Too Cool to be Forgotten is a potent mix of nostalgia and longing, with universal high school experiences thrown in as a bonus. The concept is simple: Andy Wicks has been trying to quit smoking, but can't. This inability to quit is symptomatic of a larger problem: he's leading an unhappy life. When he's transported back to his high school years circa 1985, he gets to relive his past, including the moment he had his first cigarette. During this sojourn, he faces several key turning points in which he has to decide if he's going to follow the desires of his younger self, or rein that younger self in. Despite making Wicks a little whiny throughout, Robinson has, in the core story, created a fascinating snapshot of a lost time that's tantalizingly almost but not quite within reach. YA Wednesday: Reading, Alexie, Comic-Con, and Bella Live On
by Omnivoracious.com at 1:44 AM PDT, July 31, 2008
(image from someecards... thanks, shelftalker!) Are you really reading right now? The article profiles one teen in particular who regularly chooses fanfiction.net over books. Liz B. over at Tea Cozy took issue with the fanfiction vs. "real books" slant of the article:
Overall, the article, along with the thoughtful comments it sparked from readers, presents a very comprehensive view of the whole topic. Pro: people who say that online reading is beneficial because A) it's reading (engaging with text, although there are also arguments that create-a-quiz sites and Facebook updates don't add up to much actual reading) and B) it provides community; and C) it will help prepare kids for a their future jobs of staring at computers. And con: people who feel sad that their kids may never have the joy of losing themselves in a book. Did the wrong book win?
It happened at Comic-Con
(found thanks to Fuse #8) The buzz continues... Capone at Ain't it Cool News reports on the screaming Twilight panel at Comic-Con last week and interviews Catherine Hardwicke and Bella (I mean, Kristen Stewart). Laura Miller at Salon on Bella, who is no Buffy Summers: "Even the most timorous teenage girl couldn't conceive of Bella as intimidating; it's hard to imagine a person more insecure, or a situation better set up to magnify her insecurities." Comments ensue here and here (and that's just from day one). Joseph Wilk over at YALSA created this magic-8-ball-type widget using quotes from the first three Twilight Saga books. He also has a link to download the full code and instructions so you can make a similar widget from any favorite book. Very cool. --Heidi Stephen King at His Most Graphic
by Omnivoracious.com at 2:55 PM PDT, July 25, 2008
Today at Comic-Con it was announced that the always experimental Stephen King is offering an original 25-episode graphic video adaptation (running approximately two minutes each) of his previously unpublished short story, "N." Continue reading to watch a preview of "N" or visit the NisHere website for more details. The entire series will be collected on a DVD available in a limited-edition collector's set of Just After Sunset. "N" will also be adapted as a comic book series in 2009. Viewers will be able to purchase "N" online, and in five-episode blocks on Amazon Unbox. The first episode will be available on Monday, July 28, with a new episode shown each weekday through August 29. King says: "I'm always interested in new delivery systems for stories and always curious about how those systems work with the old storytelling verities. This one, it seems to me, works extraordinarily well." --BTP
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