Tuesday, December 1, 2015

Hector Germán Oesterheld's and Francisco Solano Lopéz's The Eternaut


Hector Germán Oesterheld (w), Francisco Solano Lopéz (a), The Eternaut, Fantagraphics Books, November 23, 2015 [Hora Cero Suplemento Semanal # 1, Editorial Frontera, September 4, 1957 - Hora Cero Suplemento Semanal # 106, September 9, 1959.] 

Fantagraphics will [...] reprint the series for the first time in English  (translated as The EterNOnaut because as Eternaut it sounds like "Eat her not"). 
Diego Cordoba on this Blog, December 5, 2014.
Oesterheld's work will never be published in any English speaking country.
Yours truly on this very blog on August 31, 2014.
Both quotes above are wrong, as you can see above. Kudos to Fanta! Now, if they only published Oesterheld's and Solano's masterpiece Amapola Negra - "Black Poppy"! That would be truly amazing...

Saturday, November 7, 2015

Ed Brubaker


Ed Brubaker (w), Stefano Gaudiano (a), "Here and Now," Dark Horse Presents # 96, April 1995.

Digging through my comics collection I stumbled upon the above anthology with the first installment of a story I remember loving twenty years ago... ...and then it hit me: there's no Ed Brubaker in my comics canon! How is that even possible? What a blunder!...

Well, that's corrected now. I don't remember a thing, really, but I'm confident enough to include "Here and Now" and An Accidental Death in my first post (the latter was also serialized in Dark Horse Presents, # 65 - 67 - August - November 1992, to be exact, being compiled later by Fantagraphics Books - see below). 

I followed Ed Brubaker's career since his Lowlife days until his noirish, mainstreamy collections Criminal 1 - 5 and 6 - 10, 2007. It's true that he was a mediocre draftsman, but he was (is?) a brilliant writer.

If you can tell me what's Ed been doing since then, please don't hesitate and do.


Ed Brubaker (w), Eric Shanower (a), An Accidental Death, Fantagraphics Books, December 1993.

Saturday, October 3, 2015

Nosotros somos los muertos # 1


Francesc  Capdevila (Max), Nosotros somos los muertos # 1, May 1995.

It was twenty years ago already. Max's Nosotros somos los muertos anthology started a fifteen issue run after a number 0 two years before. The issue included some of the best Spanish comics (Arnal Ballester, Max, Pere Joan, Micharmut, Gallardo) joined by a couple of great authors from Germany (Hendrik Dorgathen and Anke Feuchtenberger) and Italy's Lorenzo Mattotti. 

As you can see below Max was also part of the great Drawn & Quarterly adventure. Read about it here.


Francesc Capdevila (Max), Drawn & Quarterly Vol. 2 # 6, June 1997.

By the way: Matthias agrees with me: the nineties were special. I even idealized a book titled 1996 (the greatest year in comics history).

Saturday, September 26, 2015

Chris Oliveros - Coda

The Pompidou Centre in Paris published online (and accessible to everyone) a sociological study about comics readers. (As an aside, the cover reminds the old Actes de la recherche en sciences sociales whose managing editor was Pierre Bourdieu. Powerful icons can't be escaped, I guess...)

This data is not about North America, but to prove my pessimistic views on these matters I'll post below some charts extracted from said study.


Christophe Evans, La bande dessinée: quelle lecture, quelle culture? [comics: which reading, which culture?], Éditions de la Bibliotèque publique d'information, January 2015, 19.

As you can see above comics readers are decreasing. Not surprisingly the chart also confirms the stereotype that women don't read comics.


Christophe Evans, La bande dessinée: quelle lecture, quelle culture? [comics: which reading, which culture?], Éditions de la Bibliotèque publique d'information, January 2015, 29.

As for women's comics reading habits the chart above shows that there are only four genres that women read more than men. Two of said genres, autobio and reportage, are almost the only ones that interest The Crib. (This means that, ideally, I would be blogging at least for 50% women and 50% men. The reason I think this doesn't happen is because women tend to be less involved in the comics community, whatever that is...) Anyway, in view of the reading habits indicated above Christophe Evans titled one of his chapters thus: "Le roman graphique: une catégorie féminine?" [graphic novels: a women's genre?]

The data would be different in North America because super-heroes would most certainly be over represented.



Christophe Evans, La bande dessinée: quelle lecture, quelle culture? [comics: which reading, which culture?], Éditions de la Bibliotèque publique d'information, January 2015, 40.

The above chart shows how few comics readers read graphic novels in comparison with the number of comics readers who read trash.


Christophe Evans, La bande dessinée: quelle lecture, quelle culture? [comics: which reading, which culture?], Éditions de la Bibliotèque publique d'information, January 2015, 41.

How many, you ask? Well exactly 93 % read trash and 7% read graphic novels. If we subtract the number of readers who read trashy graphic novels (even if the enquirers were careful enough to avoid mixing graphic novels with formulaic genre; see also note 4) we know for certain that comics continues to be mostly trash culture.

Quelle culture? Well, now you know.

Note 1: thanks to Jean-Paul Gabilliet for calling my attention to this publication.

Note 2: as Christophe Evans says himself Jiro Taniguchi's books should be under "Graphic Novels" instead of being under "Manga."

Note 3: speaking of which I continue to be baffled by the use of the Japanese word. I can't imagine a academic essay in English about Munch talking about "maleri" instead of "painting."

Note 4: here's what Chistophe Evans says on page 29 of La bande dessinée: quelle lecture, quelle culture? (my translation):
En effet, il y a fort à parier – malheureusement, cette enquête ne permet pas de le vérifier – que les reportages dessinés autobiographiques d’un auteur tel que Guy Delisle plaisent aux femmes. [In fact, I bet - unfortunately, this inquiry doesn't allow a confirmation - that women like drawn autobiographical reportages like Guy Delisle's.]
If Christophe is right that's exactly what I mean by mediocre graphic novels.

Friday, September 25, 2015

Chris Oliveros

Here's what Chris Oliveros had to say 25 years ago. Unfortunately things didn't improve much a quarter of a century later.


Chris Oliveros, Drawn & Quarterly # 1, Spring 1990.

Thursday, September 10, 2015

Harvey Pekar

I'm revisiting a few of Harvey Pekar's short stories (forget his so-called graphic novels). In my next post I intend to think about comics using one of his stories as a pretext. For now enjoy this interview of the author in his later years (you can watch Pekar's appearances in David Letterman's Late Show online, but don't bother...).



Friday, September 4, 2015

Feliz Día de la Historieta!



Carlos Trillo (g), Alberto Breccia (d), "El hombre de azul", Skorpio Gran Color # 58, diciembre de 1979.

Hoy se celebra el Día de la Historieta en la Ciudad Autónoma de Buenos Aires (Capital Federal) y en toda Argentina.