Comics I own, and comic-related content that I think is rad.
Video game collection: amessofgames.tumblr.com
My art therapy:
onemoremess.tumblr.com
Everything else:
wayoutofstep.tumblr.com
Brandon!Can you link us or make a nice big post of your favorite manga or the essential manga people need to experience in their lifetime?
Sureee, maybe I’ve talked all of these into the ground but here:
My wheelhouse is mostly 1980′s boys manga
some good stuff to track down– Tezuka (astro-boy, Black Jack) Matsumoto (Yamoto, Harlock) Go Nagai,(Devilman) Lone Wolf and cub, Blade of the Immortal, Nana, Barefood Gen, Fist of the northstar, City hunter.
Dragon ball (the early stuff especially) and Doctor Slump– Toriyama’s work was a big gateway for me into manga and the stuff he was doing in the 80′s really clicked with me– Also his later Sandland is pretty great too.
Shirow’s Appleseed– What would a perfect society look like and what problems would it have? but also lots of cyborg cops. One of my favorite comics ever. it’s dense and sometimes confusing in really interesting ways. I think Shirow’s choices and page layouts and storytelling are fascinating.
a comic about some of his storytelling that I did in Image plus– that was reprinted in my Royalboiler artbook
Grey– a shortish manga (6 issues in the US 80′s release) about a guy who will do anything to realize the dream of his dead girlfriend. Drawn in a sparse style
I made a comic about Grey–
Lum and Ranma and Maison Ikkoku– Takahashi’s 80′s stuff has such a fun tone to it.
A comic lovers I did about her work–
Area 88– A commercial pilot tricked into joining a war.
Urasawa’s work (20th century boys, Pluto and Monster) really revived my interest in modern manga and taught me a lot about the value of plot and structure– as well as helping me see the value in the assistant system in modern manga.
Venus wars, Yoshikazu Yasuhiko’s drawing always looks so effortless– the same feeling I get from like an Alex Toth’s work.
Otomo (Akira, Domu) I have an especial fondness for his pre Domu work. but that stuff is rare in english.
nausicaa– I have a theory that Akira is best at the start – Its at it’s most Akira– the gangs, the mystery and the characters are at their strongest. but Nausicaa continues to build and build in quality and theme until the end. ( not to shit on Akira– even with that critique, no one else can Otomo like Otomo) Nausicaa is my favorite thing Miyazaki has done, it’s a shame he is so much more interested in animation than comics.
Berzerk– Kind of like if Conan had one running revenge plot that pulled you through the entire saga. Another book I started reading when I was disenchanted with modern manga– that got me excited about what is possible in comics. –
Uzumaki– Ito is the best horror comic artist I’ve encountered.
Children of the Sea by Daisuke Igarashi. The weather this artist draws ties his work to reality in a way I haven’t seen before.
jiro taniguchi walking man– I feel like this comic is like the pure element of something that I need in all comics. that slow relatable feeling of just being a person in the world.
There’s also some manga that I’ve never read in English that has influenced me a lot like You are not alone – the way the artist shows feet specifically
and To-Y that I talk about in this comic lovers about music.
Anyway, that is the list off the top of my head. I’m in a period removed from much going on in comics right now and certainly what’s going on in manga. I look forward to coming back to them in the future and finding more work that inspires me to make stuff.
October Yen issues 1 and 2 by Brandon Graham (@royalboiler ) of King City, Prophet and Multiple Warheads fame - as far as I know these were his first published works
SCUD the Disposable Assassin #21-24 by Rob Schrab. Published by Image Comics in 2008. This was a fantastic ending for the SCUD saga. It may have taken Rob Schrab 10 years to come back and wrap the series, but it was worth the wait. Cover Artists: Issue 21 - Ashley Wood Issue 22 - Jim Mahfood Issue 23 - David Hartman Issue 24 - Doug Tennapel Cowboys never quit.
The Sharknife/Hysteria flip-book from Oni Press. Free Comic Book Day 2004. Hysteria was created by Mike Hawthorne. Sharknife was created by Corey Lewis.
The Sharknife/Hysteria flip-book from Oni Press. Free Comic Book Day 2004. Hysteria was created by Mike Hawthorne. Sharknife was created by Corey Lewis.
Issues 1-4 of Toren Smith and Adam Warren's first Dirty Pair series: Biohazards from Studio Proteus and Eclipse comics, as well as the 10th anniversary trade paperback collection from Dark Horse Comics.