Emily the Strange Goes GREEN with a New Line of Organic Cotton Emily Wear

from Emily the Strange:

Introducing… Black is the New Green!
The new line of organic cotton Emily wear…

Zombies Recycle: Everybody should recycle and this tee shows that even the undead do it. Be it bottles, paper or brains — donations are always welcome!

Give Strange a Chance: Inspired by the 60’s, this graphic features Emily and a strange pal promoting Strange as well as peace.

Mean and Green: This empowering image shows Emily and a gang of strange creatures taking a stand for what they believe in.

Find Emily on: Facebook | MySpace | YouTube

The Latest Scoop on the “Milky Way and the Galaxy Girls” Dolls

from Milky Way and the Galaxy Girls:

November 11 is only a parsec away, and there have been lots and lots of questions about how, where and when you all can get a gGirl rag doll. So here’s the scoop:

On November 11, the famous FAO Schwarz catalog will be arriving in mailboxes. Anyone who receives this catalog will be able to order any of the 5 gGirl dolls on that very day!! They’ll be in the warehouse and read to ship!

At that time, the dolls MIGHT be available for purchase at FAO.com [UPDATE: the pre-order page is now up!], but I don’t know for sure. If not, they’ll be in there very soon after.

Then, right after Thanksgiving, the dolls will be in 3 STORES ONLY: FAO Schwarz in New York City, the Toys R Us in Times Square (also in NYC) and the FAO Schwarz in Las Vegas.

There has been some confusion because of the announcement that Toys R Us will be featuring FAO Schwarz boutiques in all their stores beginning this month. Unfortunately, GALAXY GIRL DOLLS WILL NOT BE IN THESE BOUTIQUES. At least not this season. There is a lot of talk about gGirls in Toys R Us, so it’s just a matter of time before you can find them at your local Toys R Us. So please just be patient!!

Over and out,

Mother Earth (Lauren Faust)

VIZ Signature Presents Motoro Mase’s “Ikigami: The Ultimate Limit, Volume 3”

Ikigami: The Ultimate Limit, Volume 3

What would it take for you to find inspiration in the little things in life, to appreciate the world and its people for its beauty?

Volume 3 of Ikigami: The Ultimate Limit by Motoro Mase (artist for Heads) follows two totally unrelated characters in two different stories. One is a high school dropout, the other a con artist, and the thing the two have in common are papers they receive from “The Ministry of Health and Welfare” notifying them of their deaths in 24 hours.

Why would the Ministry of Health and Welfare do that? To promote how precious life is and how important it is to be a productive, active member of society. Ironically, some of those served dead papers are productive members of society: “All citizens undergo national welfare immunization in the first grade. Because of a nanocapsule in some of the syringes, 1 in 1,000 young people will die sometime between the ages of 18 and 24.” This method of “improving society” would never be accepted in our world and, as exemplified in the first story of Volume 3, things could go very wrong.

Takimoto Naoki is a depressed, anti-social, self-harming young man. His mother, Kazuko, is a workaholic politician with a one-track mind: to win the election, no matter what it takes. His father, Nobuhiko, is a soft spoken gentleman who helps out with Kazuko’s campaign, though it’s questionable whether he truly supports her. Through flashbacks, the reader learns that Naoki was neglected by Kazuko throughout his childhood, resulting in his suicidal behaviour. The delivery of his death papers come as a shock, but not as much as Kazuko’s reaction to her son’s impending fatality. As the book warns, youths who receive death papers execute their “despair in unpredictable ways.”

The other story follows Iizuka Satoshi and his sister, Sakura, and is much sweeter. This is shown by the familial relationship of the Iizuka siblings, who were orphaned when they were children because of a car accident. Sakura also lost her vision, which led to a reliance on her brother. Satoshi doted on her and continues to dote on her; the story picks up with Satoshi announcing his purchase of an apartment so that he could be a full-time caregiver for Sakura. The joyful occasion comes to a bittersweet ending after Satoshi is served death papers. Unlike Naoki, Satoshi makes the best of his last 24 hours on Earth in order to make sure Sakura is cared for.

Furthermore, the light/dark difference in the storylines is reflected in the amount of black ink used on the pages. Naoki’s story is much darker both in nature and colour, and the artistic style is much more frantic, the panels much more crowded, especially when the reader sees Naoki in his room. Satoshi’s story is littered with full panels of cherry blossoms and other wonderful scenic views.

Other than the death papers, the only shared element of both stories is the letter carrier, Fujimoto, an employee of the Ministry of Health and Welfare whose job is to physically deliver death papers to the chosen few. The brilliance of the Fujimoto character is allowing the reader to see both sides of the coin: he struggles with his own morals about the national welfare system. It would be interesting to see how much he has changed between Volume 1 and Volume 3: did it affect him more at the beginning? When we meet him in Volume 3, he is more seasoned and his boss seems to think so too. But as the stories unfold, especially in the second one, Fujimoto still questions his own actions.

Ikigami: The Ultimate Limit, Volume 3 (224 pages) is written and drawn by Motoro Mase, and is published by VIZ Signature. It will be available for purchase at your favourite book stores and online retailers on November 10, 2009. It can also be purchased directly through the publisher here:

Ikigami: The Ultimate Limit, Volume 3

Previous volumes are also available direct from the publisher or at your local book store.

“The Box” Weekend Event from Premiere Props

The Box

from Premiere Props:

From Warner Brothers and Media Rights Capital comes the ultra suspense thriller The Box starring Cameron Diaz and James Marsden. Norma and Arthur Lewis, a suburban couple with a young child, receive a simple wooden box as a gift, which bears fatal and irrevocable consequences. A mysterious stranger delivers the message that the box promises to bestow upon its owner $1 million with the press of a button. But, pressing this button will simultaneously cause the death of another human being somewhere in the world; someone they don’t know. With just 24 hours to have the box in their possession, Norma and Arthur find themselves in the cross-hairs of a startling moral dilemma and must face the true nature of their humanity.

Premiere Props invites you to own all the incredible complete hero costumes and props! From Arthur’s (James Marsden) screen worn NASA red and white “All Heart” lab coat, his hero tuxedo jacket and pants, his brown leather slip on “Frye” boots to his hero rejection letter from NASA and more! Plus Norma’s (Cameron Diaz) most complete costume including her cream knit turtle neck sweater, dark blue denim front pocket jeans, side zip “Frye” boots, brown and gray leather gloves, gold hoop earrings, gold hoop bracelet, key NASA props and costumes and much more! Be sure to see The Box opening today in theaters everywhere!

Plus mark your calendars now for Premiere Props Live And Exclusive Holiday Auction on December 12 with over 500 movie props and costumes! Own major props and costumes from Bruno, Whip ItThe Box, Armored, The Blind Side, Bad Santa, The Flintstones, Bowfinger27 DressesP.S. I Love YouBoston Legal, Lords of DogtownThe Ugly Truth and much more! This auction will be broadcast live for everyone to participate worldwide and is in conjunction with the Entertainment Industry Foundation.

The Live And Exclusive Holiday Auction starts at 11am PST with the preview from 9am to 11am PST. This live event will be held at Premiere Props (128 Sierra Street, El Segundo, CA 90245) and will be broadcast live on television to over 4 million homes on Time Warner, Direct TV and Dish Network in Southern California and streamed worldwide online for everyone to watch and bid live! Make sure to pre-register now!

Authentic props and costumes from some of the hottest new theatrical releases are coming soon to Premiere Props! Visit Premiere Props for the chance to bring home one-of-a-kind, screen-used movie memorabilia from The Blind Side, Armored, Legion, Piranha 3D, Nine, Bruno, The Book Of EliLeap Year, The Back Up Plan, Beastly and many more!

RiffTrax Live Christmas Tickets

from RiffTrax:

You demanded it! You got it! RiffTrax is back on the big screen with RiffTrax Live Christmas Shorts-Stravaganza! Join Mike, Kevin and Bill for an evening of riffing on a wonderfully warped collection of Christmas shorts! Our Special Guest is “Weird Al” Yankovic!

The Live show is on Wednesday December 16th, and the Encore is on Thursday December 17th. So come along and bring a friend! Bring ALL your friends! Get your tickets now before they sell out!

All event-attendees will receive 5 FREE digital goodies including a holiday song by the RiffTones, two downloadable shorts, an autographed digital photo of the guys, and a Christmas desktop wallpaper!

Get your advance tickets to the live show here.

Get your advance tickets to the ENCORE show here.

Arcana Launches Comics & Pop Culture Magazine

Arcana Banner

from Arcana Studios:

Arcana Studios, an award-winning comic book publisher and transmedia producer, is proud to announce the launch of Arcana Magazine. Debuting on January 27th 2010, and solicited in the current November Previews (Diamond Code: NOV09 0599) is the new quarterly magazine simply entitled Arcana, the re-designed print version of the on-line comics based magazine Extra Sequential.

Extra Sequential was the brainchild of Kris Bather and Dave Lapsley in Perth, Western Australia — two men who were looking for creative opportunities outside of their day jobs at a large architectural design firm. From January to June of this year, three issues of Extra Sequential were published, containing interviews with an array of creative professionals, such as Joe Jusko, Zeb Wells, Tom DeFalco, and Brian Cronin. Topics covered included Street Fighter, Flash Gordon, the new Hulk and so much more, with an eye on both mainstream and rising indie stars.

After reaching over 16,000 subscribers on Scribd.com and becoming a Featured Magazine on Issuu.com, Extra Sequential was picked up by Arcana Comics for the transition to print, with Bather and Lapsley continuing their unique comics focus in the new print format.

Bather is the former Comics Department Head of now defunct website Infuze and current contributor to popular website Broken Frontier. Lapsley is new to the world of comics but brings a keen sense of design and shares Bather’s desire to let the world know how cool comics truly are.

“The thing that has always seemed odd to me is that comics continually reveal diverse art from some of the world’s greatest artists, but few people outside of the local comic book shop will ever know that,” says Bather. “Sure, a multitude of people are more familiar with Spider-Man and Batman thanks to Hollywood, but that seems to rarely translate to an increase in regular readership of comics. We hope Arcana can be somewhat of a bridge for those readers as well as show something new to longtime lovers of sequential art.”

Inspired more by the surf and skate magazines than the usual pop culture assortment on the shelves, Arcana aims to let the art speak for itself while also making sure every page is an artistic display. With bold layouts incorporating unique design and photography Arcana aims to be more than a throwaway item, but an attractive glimpse into the cutting edge of comic books and the people behind them.

Bather states, “We chose the landscape format straight out of the gate because we want people to know that we’re different upon first glance. We realise it’s perhaps a risky choice, but that’s exactly what comics are too. We want to conjure curiousity in comics newbies, but there’s enough content in Arcana for the veteran reader too.”

The first issue of Arcana features interviews with Star Wars: Invasion writer Tom Taylor, artist Josh Medors, Singaporean writer Edmund Shern, Surrogates creator Robert Venditti, and ground breaking artist David Mack. Also included are previews from upcoming comics and features such as a look back at The Death of Superman event, a talk with pro cyclist/comics fan Dave Zabriskie, a brief chat with the legendary Marv Wolfman, and an article on the current love affair between musicians and comics, including an interview with Coheed and Cambria’s Claudio Sanchez. There’s also a look at just how to market comics today, a breakdown of popular comic book terms and more.

Arcana #1, a 96 page full color magazine goes on sale January 27th, 2010.

About Arcana Studios:

Arcana Comics has published over 150 original comics and books and is a division of Arcana, an award winning transmedia company founded by CEO Sean O’Reilly. Arcana establishes new brands and intellectual properties with engaging storytelling and compelling visuals through comic books, graphic novels, animation, short-form live-action, video games, toys and now, feature length films. Arcana has created original brands they control such as The Clockwork Girl and Kade, and have further developed existing brands for Disney, Sony, Capcom, HBO and more. In addition, several of Arcana’ s other properties are in development or pre-production such as GEARHEAD with Valhalla Motion Pictures and a mixed martial arts movie through Grindstone Entertainment.

For interview requests about Arcana Magazine, please e-mail Kris Bather at kris@arcanaquarterly.com.

arcanaquarterly.com

Weta News: November 2009

from Weta:

Éowyn and the Nazgûl
John Howe’s incredibly dynamic and exquisitely detailed sculpture by Daniel Cockersell is now available for pre-order in faux bronze. The edition size for this fine art collectible is a mere 300, just like the first sculpture in the range, Smaug the Golden which opened for pre-order in August. You can ask John Howe questions about his new range of sculptural art from Middle-earth on the Weta Forum at the Shadow and Flame. Leave your questions there, and John will join us for a Q&A session soon.

The Red Eye of Sauron Pin
Designed by John Howe for Weta Workshop’s crew clothing, the Red Eye of Sauron became an unofficial emblem for Weta during the filming of the trilogy. When in need of a Weta technician, the film crew and cast would look for the symbol of the Red Eye. Our first batch sold out on the first day, but we now have fresh new stock, so please get your orders in!

VICTORY! Bigger, Bolder, Better, Brighter! By Broadmore!
The year’s foremost journal of progressive armaments and weaponry! Behold the latest line of defense captured in action! The second book to emerge from the printshop at Grordbort Industries, Victory follows in the footsteps of the trans-galactically successful Dr. Grordbort’s Contrapulatronic Dingus Directory that was released last year. Victory will be available at the end of this month! Get your pre-order in so you get the art card signed by Greg Broadmore as well! This art card only comes with pre-orders placed on the Weta website!

Home, Sweet Hobbit Hole!
We have received many requests from fans, friends, customers and staff to create a collectible sculpture of Bag End, from the Lord of the Rings Trilogy. Today we are pleased to confirm this project has started. Read More!

Silent Night, Halo Night?
Master Chief Sterling Silver Ring — the ultimate collectible for the hardcore Halo fan. The weightiest piece of bling you’ll ever own. And of course the perfect gift for the Halo fan in your family. The first production run sold out in a couple of months. And over half of them went to the glorious state of Texas! We’re curious — is Texas a Halo stronghold? Or a state fascinated by chunky jewellery? Drop us a line and tell us!

Strider’s Sword, Glamdring, Sting? What Next?
The next sword in our Lord of the Rings collection will be made available for order before Christmas. But which one will it be? We haven’t actually made the final decision yet, so why not hop onto The Shadow and Flame and discuss in the Weta Forum. We’ll be listening as usual! Andúril sold out within the first few weeks, so whichever blade is next in line, it’s likely to be very sought-after.

This is how you find us online!
http://fans.wetaNZ.com/Magnus/ | Twitter: @wetaworkshop | Facebook: Weta Workshop

The Righteous Bison: Affordable Raygun Technology

Righteous Bison

Weta has released a new raygun from the steam- and atom-powered laboratories of Dr. Grordbort, the Righteous Bison Indivisible Particle Smasher.

This honorable bovine could be the horn in the side of your most bothersome foe! It’s true! The Righteous Bison can bore a fist-sized hole through 17 yards of cheese, on tight beam, or put a zeppelin-girthed aperture in your uncle’s munitions factory (should he choose not to drop those charges). And all this without permanently damaging the family trust!

This latest collector’s model is a first for Weta in that it’s made of plastic rather than the metal normally used in its high-end line of rayguns. When Weta was asked why they chose to make this raygun model out of plastic instead of the usual material, they answered:

It wasn’t an easy decision to make a gun out of plastic, but we did it with one very specific purpose — to give cosplayers and other fans a gun they wouldn’t be too terrified to stick in a holster and take to conventions or Halloween parties or… you name it. We will definitely continue our range of high-end, limited edition guns — this is in parallel to the high-end guns and the miniatures.

ÜberSciFiGeek recently received an e-mail from Weta that proclaimed, “Guess what? Our first ever Righteous Bison review sample goes to you!” Huzzah, what luck! Practice targets were immediately picked for “review purposes”, then given a sporting head start before the zapping commenced.

Packaging:
The Righteous Bison doesn’t come in collectible packaging, like the miniature and full-size edition rayguns cast in metal. Since it’s meant to be handled, not left on a shelf, fancy packaging isn’t really necessary. The packaging still does its job admirably, though, with typical Dr. Grordbort style and humour: the cardboard box is covered in glossy, full-colour artwork, and a seal on the box’s cover reads “Kicking Protons in the Groin Since 1887”. For collectors obsessed with keeping things in mint condition, the top of the box, a flap held in place by velcro tabs, opens up to reveal a Righteous Bison-shaped, clear acetate window that allows the raygun to be displayed without removing it from its packaging. The inside of the flip-up lid features a poster-style catalogue of the entire Dr. Grordbort’s Infallible Aether Oscillators collection to date. For raygun enthusiasts more interested in playing than displaying, the box opens at either end to allow the liner tray to slide out. The cardboard liner has a second, moulded plastic tray on it that the raygun rests in, the whole lot secured together with wire twist ties which are wrapped in a thin foam to ensure that they don’t leave any unwanted marks on the raygun’s plastic surface.

Sculpting:
Despite a massive bulk that would give the more compact Star Trek phasers “size envy”, the Righteous Bison weighs only 2.6 pounds — less than half of the comparably sized metal rayguns’ weight — light enough to comfortably tote around on lengthy convention days. A tactile work of art, it’s just as intricately designed as the metal rayguns, save for the lack of wire-thin protrusions which malleable metal makes possible but would likely snap off a hard plastic casting. Like any plastic model, the Righteous Bison has seams running its length, but they’re so cleverly incorporated into the design of the raygun that they’re barely noticable. Scratches and dents, which at first appear to be manufacturing flaws, are actually subtle additions that enhance the raygun’s “distressed” look. Given Weta’s history of creating props for films such as The Lord of the Rings and The Chronicles of Narnia, it’s no wonder that the Righteous Bison looks like it comes straight from a movie set. Safety Note: Prey… er, friends and family… tend to startle violently when they find themselves at the convincing business end of the Righteous Bison, so proceed with caution. “Firing” from a distance greater than arm’s reach is highly recommended for your protection and, more importantly, the preservation of your precious raygun.

Paint:
It’s the paint job that really makes this piece shine. The raygun’s gunmetal grey, copper, and black painted finish is exceptionally clean and looks very much like real metal, so much so that it wasn’t at all evident from the pictures on the Weta website that the Righteous Bison was plastic until that info was revealed in the product description. Not only has the expertly applied paint captured the look of metal, it has managed to recreate the weathered, slightly rusted look that the metal rayguns are known for. Even the red and white pressure gauges on the sides of the barrel look aged. No self-respecting steampunker would want to be seen brandishing a spotless, fresh-from-the-factory weapon (or anything else that looked like it was under fifty years old, for that matter), so kudos to Weta for retaining the antique aesthetic for its new style of raygun!

Articulation:
The Righteous Bison’s one moving part is the trigger, a delightfully unexpected detail that gives the raygun an added touch of realism and functionality.

Accessories:
Being a one-piece design and play piece, the Righteous Bison comes with no attachments or accessories, and doesn’t include a stand or case like the metal rayguns. If you really want to display it out of the box, though, Weta offers an attractive Universal Gun Stand for pre-order which ships at the beginning of next year. There’s a small, square hole at the bottom of the Righteous Bison’s handle that fits a matching rod on the metal stand, and the stand’s circular base is stamped with the Grordbort Industries logo, the same design that the Righteous Bison is based on. Another Weta item that complements the Righteous Bison is the Dr. Grordbort’s Satchel. This roomy, hand-made canvas bag with multiple pockets holds an impressive amount of gear and swag at conventions and cosplay events.

Dr. Grordbort's Satchel

An open-ended edition priced at $99.00 US, the Righteous Bison is a steal, especially considering that the full-size metal rayguns run several hundred dollars each. If you have any steampunkers and retro sci-fi fans on your holiday shopping list, this unique gift will light up their brass goggles.

Order directly through the Weta website.

The Righteous Bison and the Dr. Grordbort’s Infallible Aether Oscillators collection are distributed by Weta, in partnership with Dark Horse Comics. For more information, please visit the official Dr. Grordbort’s website.

Halloween Fun asplodes at ThinkGeek

from ThinkGeek:

Dear Candy Hordes:

Earlier this month, we asked you for geeky pumpkin templates. Now that All Hallow’s Eve is upon us, we thought you’d like to see the scores of entries along with all the winners.

We also spent a little time filling up your treat bag with some more Halloween fun.

We hope you’ll excuse our indulgence. We get a little excited about Halloween. Maybe you do too? After all, how often do you get to take off your mask and parade about?

YOUR GENIUS TEMPLATES. Let us show you them.

Our pumpkins openly mocked us with their faceless faces. We didn’t know what to do with them. So we asked the intarwebz for pumpkin template designs and sweetened the deal with a Tauntaun sleeping bag prize.

Then we were buried alive — er, undead — in a pile of awesome.

Timmy’s currently clawing his way out from under your collective genius and he’s promised to hand over the encrypted golden envelope this afternoon.

We’re dance-in-our-pants excited to announce the winners — and show off our handiwork, some of which required power tools — during our 4pm EDT live Justin.tv show today!

HALLOWEEN SHOW O’ DOOM!!

At 4pm EDT this afternoon we’re beaming a live Halloween Show o’ Doom straight into your brain via the very conductive Justin.tv. It won’t hurt a bit, but you may be traumatized by:

  • How to make icky curdled brain drinks
  • The fiendish template contest winners
  • Our slaughtered pumpkin specimens
  • G-23 Paxilon Hydrochlorate (just kidding)
  • Our costume* contest with audience judging & prizes, oh no!

* You might be surprised to learn that we wear costumes — human costumes, ew — 364 days of the year. We’ve fooled senior management and the UPS guy for years, but today we appear as our real selves.

Not sure you’ll remember to fire up your browser of webs at 4pm to watch? Follow @thinkgeek and you’ll get a friendly pre-show elbow in your side.

Sense and Sensibility and Sea Monsters

From the depths of the sea (or the shelves of the bookstore, as the case may be) comes Quirk Classics’ newest addition to the Jane Austen bookshelf: Sense and Sensibility and Sea Monsters. Following in the blood-strewn footsteps of Seth Grahame-Smith’s Pride and Prejudice and Zombies, author Ben H. Winters joins forces with Jane Austen to produce a “tale of romance, heartbreak, and tentacled mayhem,” as the back cover informs us. As the narratives of these two authors join together readers find themselves immersed in a world in which the mysterious Alteration has caused all manner of sea critters to fight against man, the ocean one big steaming soup pot of ill-tempered bouillabaisse.

Significantly more extended from the original Austen text than Zombies, Sea Monsters achieves a type of Gilligan’s Island-meets-the-English-countryside, as Norton Park, estate of Sir John Middleton, is transformed into a windswept archipelago off the Devonshire coast, with Norton Cottage situated on the charmingly named Pestilent Isle. The rolling English hills, woody forests, and pastoral views of the original text are replaced with a smoldering steam-venting mountain, hostile plantlife, mysterious chanting Island natives, and tiki torches. Oh, and let’s not forget the chowder of sea life waiting in the softly lapping waves to sting, maim, and eat their corseted enemies.

Sir John Middleton gets a boost of interest as a middle-aged adventurer, a daring world traveller with a collection of sea treasures, which includes his wife Lady Middleton, her coldness and aloofness quite logically explained by the fact that John Middleton stole her away from her native island in a sack. Likewise her mother, Mrs. Jennings, and sister, Mrs. Palmer, were taken back to England like so many souvenirs. One could, if one were inclined to analyze Sea Monsters in a literary way, interpret this as a dig against the English way of colonizing. Just saying.

At the invitation of John Middleton comes the family Dashwood — mother and three sisters — to live at Barton Cottage, where they are soon swept up in a sea of social activities, games, pirate-themed parties, and romantic confusion. Staid Elinor hides her feelings from the proper Edward Ferrars when the news of his engagement to Lucy Steele hits her like a rogue wave, while passionate Marianne finds herself between the gold-digging Willoughby (his insignia in Sea Monsters is comprised of shovels in the formation of a “W”) and the fish-faced Colonel Brandon, who, by a sea witch curse, seems to have found himself sporting a full beard of tentacles. Which only plays up that “judging by appearances” thing. And Margaret? Well, she’s gone a bit cocoloco in the jungle of Pestilent Isle.

Sense and Sensibility and Sea Monsters employs a similar formula to Pride and Prejudice and Zombies. But instead of zombies, ninjas, and katana swords, Sea Monsters is liberally watered with sea monsters, pirates, and driftwood sculptures. And all those social dinners and good eating of the original text become an all-you-can-eat seafood buffet, as the Dashwoods and their friends attempt to eat their enemies whole, filleted, and with a dab of butter.

But why sea monsters? Well, why not? There’s a fair bit of gloomy English rain in the original novel anyways, so it’s not that much of stretch to have Marianne saved by the dashing Willoughby from a malevolent octopus instead of saved from the rain and a bit of a turned ankle. And it’s all in good fun when a jellyfish of ogre proportions suddenly launches itself out of the ocean and puts a bit of a damper on the beach party by swallowing and dissolving one of the party guests.

Furthermore, the cantankerous sea serves as one big aquatic metaphor for the delicate social fabric of Jane Austen’s England. When Elinor and Marianne go to town, they go not to some mundane English city, but to an Atlantis-type world known as Sub-Marine Station Beta. Here, as the action of the novel heats up, our heroines are literally trapped by social convention; not just surrounded by gaping mouths as on Pestilent Isle, but fully and completely submersed into the stew of social stings and bites in a glass-domed underwater city. Floundering to keep the gossips and the vengeful circus lobsters at bay, Elinor and Marianne are nevertheless swept into a tidal pool of deceit and misunderstandings.

The army of ire-filled water beasts are also a perfect foil for the unmentionable aspects of English society. It is no accident that aquatic attacks occur at the most socially awkward moments. While Lucy Steele blethers on in her typical ignorantly blissful fashion of her secret engagement to Edward Ferrars, the lovesick and mortified Elinor fights off the two-headed Devonshire Fang-Beast. And when Elinor, Lucy, and Edward are later trapped together in the same room, forced to make pleasantries in a most awkward way, their writhing emotions are mirrored by the death thrashes of a servant outside the glass dome who is eaten by a particularly toothsome anglerfish while trying to fix a filtration unit. While Lucy prattles and Edward and Elinor blush, the servant’s pleas for help become “a rather embarrassing violation of decorum; Elinor and her guests studiously ignored him, and his increasingly insistent thrashing became the background to the ensuing uncomfortable exchange.”

As the visit to Sub-Marine Station Beta lengthens into weeks, the flurry of intricately hidden truths slowly comes undone, just as the dome itself is undone by the persistent tappings of a posse of swordfish. The spiderweb of cracks spreads throughout the dome like the whispery echoes of repeated gossip, the dome glass finally shattering in one spectacular explosion of truth by a particularly mythic narwhal and a gruesome bull walrus.

But the adventure isn’t over yet! Escaping from the dome, our heroines and their party must sail across the dangerous seas, outrunning the Pirate Dreadbeard and his cronies. And then there is the big catalyst of the story: the part where Marianne sits in wet grass, gets sick, and finally has a change of heart towards Colonel Brandon. Only it’s so much better when she goes to a swamp to ruminate, gets eaten alive by malarial mosquitoes, and is left in a delirium of pecking parakeets… oh, and finally has a change of heart towards Colonel Brandon.

In fact, everyone’s happiness is much grander with sea monsters. Elinor’s standoff with Willoughby is at gun point when she mistakes him for the Pirate Dreadbeard, Colonel Brandon retrieves Mrs. Dashwood for the ailing Marianne and slays the pirate, Edward is released from his engagement to Lucy, who is actually a sea witch, and Pestilent Isle is actually one giant, cranky sea monster!

Like Pride and Prejudice and Zombies, Sense and Sensibility and Sea Monsters concludes with a Reader’s Discussion Guide, meant to make one ponder the deeper meaning of Sea Monsters as well as snort with laughter. In fact, these questions really emphasize what this literary marriage of Austen and crotchety tunas is all about. One can take the novel to a new level, as outlined in question 2, and ponder the metaphorical link between monster attacks and painful personal setbacks, or one can, as outlined in question 10, try to name other works of Western literature that feature orangutan valets who are slain by pirates. Really, it’s all in how you read the book.

Order now at Amazon.com:
Pride and Prejudice and Zombies
Sense and Sensibility and Sea Monsters

Pride and Prejudice and Zombies and Sense and Sensibility and Sea Monsters are distributed by Quirk Books (International/US) and Raincoast Books (Canada).

Enter the Lost World of the Warlord — Mike Grell Returns with New Tales from Skartaris

warlord2009_cover1_final-h800

For many comic book fanatics it was Stan Lee or Jack Kirby who stole their hearts and made them life-long fans. For artists, the likes of Georgia O’Keeffe or Salvidor Dali influenced their love of art. For me, my comic book and artistic muse was one and the same: Mike Grell.

Like any other kid, I read any comic I could get my hands on but my favorites were always the high fantasy stories like Turok, Son of Stone and Conan the Barbarian. When Mike Grell introduced The Warlord, it brought about a resurgence of fantasy when the rest of the comic world was being over-run by mutants. Arion, Lord of Atlantis, Arak, Son of Thunder and other fantasy titles became mainstream finally, rather than relegated to independent publishers like Richard and Wendy Pini’s ElfQuest.

Mike wasn’t just drawing loincloth clad men wielding swords though. He was drawing incredibly detailed human figures at a time when other characters were becoming more loosely drawn. When other comics began relying on flashy ink, his comics would still look great in black and white. He wasn’t just drawing comics, he was creating art. As well as being a wonderful artist, Mike Grell was a great storyteller. The Warlord didn’t rely on just his fantastic art but compelling stories set in an Edgar Rice Burroughs or H. Rider Haggard-like other world. A blend of classic science fiction and fantasy, The Warlord followed the adventures of Lt. Col. Travis Morgan, an Air Force pilot shot down while on recon over icebound Russia. As he brings down his aircraft, he crashes in a land of eternal sunlight where magic and monsters still exist.

Based on the Hollow Earth theory (and Grell did his homework on it), Skartaris exists at the center of the Earth. The theory is that most planets are actually donut shaped with holes at the poles and a molten sun-like core at the center. The opening at the poles is gradual, spanning some 500 miles and thus is undetectable as one enters the center of the earth. This theory explains freshwater flows that should have been salty and grassy plains that should have been icebound that were found by Admiral Bird on one of his journeys to the poles. It also explains the phenomenon of Water Sky where the sky at the poles seems to mirror the surface of water and broken ice. It also explains why so many planets that are devoid of water appear to have polar ice caps: It’s the glow of the inner sun showing through the polar openings. Whether you think the theory is hogwash or potentially true, when you enter the lost world of Skartaris, it is a fact that Morgan deals with every day.

Introduced in a D.C.’s 1st Issue Special #8 in 1975, The Warlord premiered in its own series by DC Comics in 1976 and ran through 1989 with 133 issues. Grell prolifically worked on other titles such as Green Arrow: Longbow Hunters, Aquaman and his original series Shaman’s Tears and Jon Sable (which was published as a novel, was a short lived TV series and is still in development for a film adaptation). 1992 saw the brief return of The Warlord in a 6 issue mini-series. Continuing to be popular, a new series began in 2006 sans Grell. This new story was “reinvisioned” and upon opening the first issue, I literally cried, I was so horrified. Everything I loved about Grell’s Warlord was sorely absent. I guess I’m not the only one who felt that way as the new series was short-lived. It ended after only 10 issues and is largely regarded by fans as a bad dream that never really happened.

At 2008’s San Diego Comic-Con, while talking to Glenn Hauman over at the ComicMix booth (whose SABLE poster caught my eye), I was informed that Grell was coming back to the series as writer and cover artist. I was so thrilled, I ended up talking about how Grell had influenced my drawing style growing up, that his artwork inspired me and taught me how to draw, etc. For as long as I can remember, Mike Grell has been influencing me artistically, especially when trying to learn to draw again after a car accident robbed me of the ability. After hearing my story, Grell’s assistant (who had been sitting at the table listening to the discussion) sent me straight over to meet Mike, whom I had been unable to see all week due to other obligations. I had my first truly fan-girl moments as I stood teary-eyed and silent, looking through his portfolio (original hand-drawn art!) while listening to him tell the story of how The Warlord came to be published. After meeting him and his wife (and getting my First Issue Special #8 signed), I think my head was spinning. It was the perfect ending to my Comic-Con experience. Not only had I gotten to meet my hero, but I had learned that The Warlord was coming back.

Finally, it’s here. Issue #1 of the new The Warlord premiered in April with Mike Grell writing and doing the covers. Artists Joe Prado, Walden Wong, Chad Hardin and Wayne Faucher did a fine job with the artwork in issues 1 through 6. While not as beautiful as the work done by Grell himself, it did a much better job of capturing the essence of his work than previous artists did with the original series after Grell’s departure or in the 10-issue nightmare from 2006. With Issue #7, which is currently at your local newsstand or comic book shop, Grell returns as writer and illustrator. You can see some fabulous samples of his un-inked pages at his website to get a taste of what I mean about how amazing his art looks in black and white.

Unlike the 2006 relaunch of the series, this story doesn’t try to reinvent the character but rather picks up today and revisits the world we left behind in 1992. While some long-time fans will still have questions lingering about secrets and events from the past, new readers will not feel like they are on the outside looking in. The story picks up from the point of view of Alysha, a paleontologist who discovers a frozen dinosaur in a cave at The Roof of the World in Tibet. After bringing a special team in to secretly study the specimen, they discover something else in the cave: a portal to the lost world of Skartaris. Through the events that unfold after this discovery, Alysha gets a brief recap of the original storyline and Grell very craftily eases the reader into the history and events that shaped the success of the original run of the series.

The introductory storyline wraps up neatly at the end of the first 6 issues and a new storyline begins in issue 7 with Grell completely at the helm. The storyline is, as always, well told and intriguing. Grell has a knack for exploring moral ambiguities and flaws in his creations and his characters are not the polished and perfect heroes you see in many other publications. As a result, his stories are more interesting, his characters more compelling and real. While the wonderful storytelling makes me read through the story quickly to devour every moment, the artwork and layout gives me pause and sends me back through the issue to study each panel for details and imagery that tell the story even more completely.

I’m absolutely thrilled by the new The Warlord and hope this new series has the longevity of the original run. You don’t have to have read the original series to be able to get into this, but for those of you who missed The Warlord first time around, you can check out Showcase Presents: Warlord Vol. 1. This new, quality paperback includes reprints of the 1st Issue Special #8 and issues 1-28 of the original series.