"Comics erode the most fundamental habits
of humane, civilized living."

Bill Pearson

The American DreamSam Zabel and the Magic Pen
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Hicksville new edition: cover

May 18th, 2009

Hicksville new cover
Here’s the cover for the new edition of Hicksville, which is due in 2010 from Drawn & Quarterly.

The new edition has been redesigned (I’ve rescanned the artwork, given the pages a wider margin, and am redoing the ‘look’ of the whole package) and will also include a 12-page introduction (in comics form) by me.

Of course, I’ll keep you all informed as it gets closer to the publication date.

I’m in Hastings for Youth Week: ‘What’s the Story?’

May 18th, 2009

whatsthestoryposter

I’m going to be giving some talks and workshops in Hastings next week, as part of their Youth Week storytelling festival:

What’s the Story?
Oral, visual and written story-telling

Youth Week 25 – 29 May 2009

“Storytelling is a common form of communication that people engage in, using different channels, nearly every day. It is sharing a tale of experiences, either real or imaginary” – Marsh Cassidy

I’m doing three public sessions:

Writers Q & A
– An interactive writers and illustrators Talk with Anna Mackenzie and Dylan Horrocks

Wednesday 27 May
Flaxmere Library – 10.00am
Havelock North Library – 1.30pm

Thursday 28 May
Hastings Central Library – 10.00am

Award winning Young Adult novelist Anna Mackenzie talks about what led her to writing fiction. Currently writing for a young adult audience, Mackenzie says she remains fascinated by the intensity and challenges of the teenage years.

Comics, graphic novels and manga are increasingly popular all over the world. Cartoonist Dylan Horrocks, whose work has been published in books and magazines around the world, introduces this incredibly diverse and expanding medium, and invites you to give comics a try.

Contact: Carla Crosbie 8715180 carlac@hdc.govt.nz (Hastings Library)

Sue Pike suep@hdc.govt.nz (Flaxmere and Havelock North Libraries)

Other events include an interactive story blog, sessions on Ta Moko (tattooing) and oral storytelling, and a workshop and discussion about the rise and rise of TXT language. So if you’re in the area, come along!

NZ comics blog: From Earth’s End

May 10th, 2009


Adrian Kinnaird has started a new blog following comics and pop culture in New Zealand. He’s reporting on locally produced comics, as well as comics-related events (the Wolverine movie launch, Free Comics Day in Onehunga, etc). He’s also made a really beautiful banner for the site (see above)! Let’s hope Adrian also posts some of his own very fine comics

New page: The American Dream

May 8th, 2009
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New page (at last!): The American Dream

May 6th, 2009
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In the media…

April 18th, 2009


The comics exhibition at Bath Street Gallery is reviewed at eyeCONTACT.

And the New Zealand Herald recently interviewed me about my “fear of comics” (as documented in The Last Fox Story) for a story about phobias, which has now been published (the bit about me starts on page 3). It feels a little presumptious to be included with some other interviewees who suffer from some pretty debilitating phobias, but hopefully my story provides some light relief…

The Herald also has an article by Adam Gifford about the Bath Street show.

UPDATED to include links.

Sorry for the pause…

April 15th, 2009

A quick apology for not posting any new pages for a little while; I’ve been horribly busy, between kids’ school holidays, some freelance stuff, and working on the Hicksville new edition – among other things. I’ll try real hard to get some new stuff up soon!

The Elfish Gene

April 8th, 2009

The Elfish Gene
Mark Barrowcliffe’s The Elfish Gene: Dungeons, Dragons and Growing Up Strange is a fascinating memoir of being obsessed with Dungeons & Dragons in 1970s Britain. It does a good job both of capturing the time and place and also of dissecting various forms of cringeworthy D&D geekery. I first got into role-playing games a few years after Barrowcliffe (around 1980, at the age of 13), and my own experience was considerably more benign than his; but even so, many of his anecdotes had me squirming with queasy recognition, and he’s especially good on the strange combination of defensive arrogance and false machismo that many hardcore geeks display.

But for me, where Barrowcliffe strikes the most powerful chord is when he describes his painful yearning for a better, more magical world than the dreary, grey mundane reality that surrounds him. One of my favourite parts comes early in the book, when Barrowcliffe describes having to go on a seaside holiday in Wales with an old friend’s family (when he’d much rather be back at home playing D&D with his new gamer friends). One day, walking past a bustop, Mark and his old friend Dill are rudely proposititioned by two bored girls who abruptly demand a snog. Later that evening, Mark is in bed:

I lay in bed trying to think of lying with a dryad in a boat of reeds, floating down a river of leaves and stroking her tits. Another fantasy kept butting in, though, a dream of a beefy Liverpudlian girl with blotchy legs and the smell of bubblegum on her breath and me with my hands up her sweater.

This seedy intrusion is too awful to contemplate.

In future I’d have to practise harder at having the right fantasies. In all things, I thought, I should strive towards the perfect ideals of the fantasy world where there was no bubble gum, definitely no blotchy legs…. I didn’t want real girls, I didn’t want real anything. I hadn’t since I’d started D&D, and I wouldn’t again, for years.

On the final day of the holiday, Mark is desperate to get back to home and the D&D world. But his friend’s mother can’t understand his impatience: “Don’t you want one last look at the sea?” she asks…

Of course I didn’t want to look at the sea. I wanted to gaze upon the sparkling oceans of the Grey Havens or see dragon smoke rising above a stricken galleon off the Isle of Pendor. All that would be visible from Llandudno seafront was the pier and the crazy golf course, things, it seemed, that had been put in place to spite my fantasy.

I noted this passage down, because it describes pretty well how I felt at the same age. Immersed as I was in dreams of Middle Earth, even apparently “scenic” landscapes in the real world seemed horribly disappointing. Where was the grandeur? The majesty? The enchantment? That sweet, painful yearning seems close to what C. S. Lewis called Sehnsucht, and I’ve been thinking a lot about how it lies behind much of my own relationship to fantasy, fiction and art, with their promise to “re-enchant the world.”

Barrowcliffe’s writing style isn’t entirely my bag; he seems to have honed his skills working as a stand-up comedian and writing satirical novels, and sometimes he comes across like the class clown, trying a little too hard to make us laugh at his own expense. I’m also put off when a memoir tries to read like a novel, complete with long passages of (re-imagined) dialogue. But after a while, even these quirks ceased to grate on me; it all seemed part and parcel of the book’s tone of defensively self-mocking embarrassment. It’s as though Barrowcliffe is still trying to impress us with his superior smarts and wit, even as he excruciatingly dissects those very impulses in his geeky teenage self. “I’m better than that now,” he seems to be saying – in precisely the voice he once used to put down some worthless ignoramus at the gaming table.

Anyway – it’s well worth a read if, like me, you’re an old gaming nerd. Especially if you follow it with American Nerd: the Story of My People, by Benjamin Nugent, another painfully personal, very insightful exploration of the geek as type, as community, and as a presence in the broader history and culture.

Exhibition in Auckland

April 6th, 2009

Comic Art at Bath Street GalleryThe Bath Street Gallery in Parnell, Auckland, is holding an exhibition of comics art from 8-25 April. I’ve got a few pages in there, as have Tim Bollinger, Darren and Kelly Sheehan and the great Barry Linton. There is also work by comics-influenced artists Mark Braunias, Dick Frizzell, Robert McLeod and Denys Watkins.

I’ll be at the opening on Wednesday 8 April, 5.30-7.30pm, so come along and say hello.

Calling all Auckland comics people!

April 2nd, 2009

Public speaking...
On the first Friday of every month, Auckland cartoonists and fellow travellers are invited to a gathering at the Auckland Public Library (upstairs at the Central branch, on Lorne Street), at 6-8pm. It’s mostly pretty informal and sociable, but this month I’m going to give a little talk (probably about my recent work, webcomics, and general interweb-related matters).

All welcome!