“Black Magic Sanction” by Kim Harrison

Black Magic Sanction

I read a lot of fantasy and urban mythology novels but not a large amount of vampire or supernatural fiction, mainly because most of the ones I’ve started to read turned out to be romance novels, something I’m not a fan of. Yes, I read the Twilight books at the request of my teenagers, and the one-off vampire and other supernatural books I heard good things about here and there, but in general I’m not a supernatural junkie. That being said, I think I’ve finally found a supernatural series that doesn’t fall into the romance or tween categories.

EOS Books (a division of HarperCollins) just released Black Magic Sanction, the newest book in The Hollows series from best-selling author Kim Harrison. The series is kind of a mixed-genre fantasy with a healthy balance of urban mythology (think Neil Gaiman and Charles de Lint), supernatural adventure (vampires, witches, demons and a host of otherwordly fairy folk) and revisionist history wrapped up in a classic detective/mystery novel style.

Rachel is a bit of a jack of all trades: a detective, a bounty hunter and a witch (who’s recently discovered some unsettling information about her heritage). Her business is to track down vampires, werewolves, banshees, demons and other supernatural creatures who’ve found themselves on the wrong side of the law. In her world, so very close to our own, these creatures are not only real but are part of mainstream society. During an event called “The Turn”, a virus devastated the human population and the supernaturals (or Inderlanders as they call themselves) decided to reveal themselves because they were no longer outnumbered by the humans. The government system collapsed and was replaced by two organizations: the Inderlander Security service (run by non-humans) and the Federal Inderlander Bureau (run by humans).

Rachel lives in the Hollows (the Inderlander side of Cincinnati) in an old Gothic Church with a living vampire named Ivy (there are two kinds of living vampires: the low blood — humans who’ve been infected by the traditional undead vampires, inheriting some of the qualities of a vampire but not the benefit of immortality at death; and high blood — those who were born infected with the virus and will thus rise again as an undead vampire when their mortal body dies. Ivy is the latter, a high blood vampire and last of her family to still be living) and a pixy named Jenks. They are her associates and surrogate family, assisting her in her cases and sharing her life.

Due to events in a previous book, which aren’t completely explained in Black Magic Sanction, Rachel has now been shunned by the Coven (the governing body of witches) for using black magic (something she detests), and turned from the hunter into the hunted. She finds herself kidnapped and imprisoned, facing a pretty grim fate. Fortunately, her friends are there for her and she escapes, setting off a chain of chaotic events where you can’t help but feel sorry for her as she gets battered and bruised, used and abused, while trying to free herself once and for all from the grip of the Coven and various adversaries from her past. As the story unfolds, you learn more about the history of the Inderlanders and how Rachel has now found herself on the wrong side of their law.

There is a huge cast of characters and creatures in the books, far too many to examine them all, but a few in particular play a large role in Rachel’s life:

Ivy embodies the familiar vampyric struggle between dark desires and trying to live a “normal” life. She has a deep affection and close relationship with Rachel, a tender and sweet friendship that anyone would be lucky to have. There is some reference to Ivy biting Rachel at some point in the past, the end result of which is a supernatural bond, a lasting longing and sensual tension between them that has remained unacted upon. I say sensual not sexual because the relationship is a very close friendship where the love they feel for each other is so strong that it seems the lines sometimes get blurred, rather then the typical overtly sexual flirtation often seen in close same-sex friendships in popular media.

The pixy Jenks is the comic relief of the story. He, his wife and a multitude of their children live beneath a tree stump in the churchyard where Rachel lives. Just reading his dialog makes me think of Darby O’Gill and other “drunken Irishmen” from various books and film. He’s a sly fox, smart-mouthed and spunky. He loves defiling the famous Disney pixie Tinkerbell by using her name as his favorite curse word (he randomly peppers his conversations with exclamations such as “Tink’s Titties” and other filthier variations). He and the other pixies shed multi-colored dust, the color changing along with their mood, and are all feisty creatures breaking away from pixie tradition not only by closely associating with a human but by staying together as a family rather than separating much the same way birds and other creatures do after leaving the nest.

Algaliarept (Al) is kind of the Leo Getz of the Ever-After, the magical plane that exists between and beyond normal existence. Typically, it’s where demons reside (the witches fled to our plane of existence some 5,000 years ago and a war between the demons and elves resulted in the elves being ousted approximately 2,000 years ago) and can only be reached by tapping into lines of energy that are threaded throughout all levels of reality. Al is a wheeler and dealer, taking every opportunity to acquire “familiars” that he quickly sells or trades off in exchange for regaining his status and belongings, both lost when he hides a very important fact about Rachel from the rest of the demon community. Sometimes her enemy, sometimes her mentor, Al and Rachel have a very dangerous and volatile relationship. He’s almost as much her captor as she is his at times.

Gordian Pierce was a ghost for nearly 200 years. He encountered Rachel when she was a teen and became infatuated with her. After years of haunting her and trying to get her attention, by Black Magic Sanction he has gained a body and life again. While he actively pursues a romantic relationship with her, she is highly distrustful of him and his motivations, which she suspects are less than sincere. She’s had a string of bad relationships and has a habit of making bad choices, something she doesn’t intend to do again with Pierce. Having become a virtual slave to Al, Pierce has been placed as a guardian over Rachel to help protect her from the Coven as they seek to capture and neutralize her, one way or the other. He speaks with a dialect of the 1800’s and often says things wrong when trying to use modern vernacular. He feels far too comfortable with casually using black magic when he sees the need, something that disturbs Rachel to no end as she struggles to prove to herself and everyone else that she is NOT a bad witch.

Trenton Kalamack is kind of like the Godfather of Elves. Masquerading as a human, he lives a dual life as a politician on City Council while running illegal operations in the human and Hollows criminal undergrounds. An ongoing protagonist, he’s known Rachel since they were children and they are enemies, due in large part to the fact that while she was trying to expose his crimes and bring him to justice, she managed to lay claim on him as her familiar, though she has not yet enforced that claim.

I haven’t read the other books in the series so wasn’t sure what to expect. I usually find it hard to follow or get emotionally invested in the characters when I start a book in the middle of the series, but was pleasantly surprised that this wasn’t the case with Black Magic Sanction. While there are many references to events and characters in the earlier books in the series, with little explanation, I didn’t feel completely lost. Instead of feeling like a confused outsider, I found myself just carried along with Rachel as her life careens out of control. Black Magic Sanction is a fast-paced, action-packed supernatural adventure with unexpected twists and turns. I can usually figure out the general plot of a book and what direction it is going in, but, with this one, I really didn’t have a clue how things were going to turn out.

If you are a fan of supernatural books, you’ll love Black Magic Sanction. The characters are interesting and each has their own quirky characteristics providing some real depth to them, fleshing them out from the stereotyped, two-dimensional cast of characters that overpopulate popular fiction. It’s these characters and well-developed relationships that make me want to track down the rest of the books in this series and start over from the beginning.

Order now at Amazon.com:
Black Magic Sanction (Canada)
Black Magic Sanction (US)

You can also get Black Magic Sanction at your local book store.

Hold your corpses!

from Raincoast Books:

Dear readers,

The dreadfuls (mind your manners, now, and don’t call them zombies) have returned in Quirk Classics’ latest creation, a fresh novel (i.e., not a mash-up) starring some of Jane Austen’s characters.

On March 3, bloggers across the continent reviewed Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: Dawn of the Dreadfuls (prequel to the über successful PPZ) and said it’s “hilarious and witty,” “snappy and superbly sarcastic” and “very entertaining!” How do you like them brains?

Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: Dawn of the Dreadfuls
by Steve Hockensmith
Quirk Books
ISBN 978-1-59474-454-9
$17.95 paperback

With more than one million copies in print, Pride and Prejudice and Zombies was the surprise publishing phenomenon of 2009. A best seller on three continents, PPZ has been translated into 21 languages and optioned to become a major motion picture. In this terrifying and hilarious prequel, we witness the genesis of the zombie plague in early-nineteenth-century England. We watch Elizabeth Bennet evolve from a naive young teenager into a savage slayer of the undead. We laugh as she begins her first clumsy training with nunchuks and katana swords and cry when her first blush with romance goes tragically awry.

Written by acclaimed novelist (and Edgar Award nominee) Steve Hockensmith, Dawn of the Dreadfuls invites Austen fans to step back into Regency England, Land of the Undead!

Also available:

Pride and Prejudice and Zombies
The Classic Regency Romance, now with Ultraviolent Zombie Mayhem
by Jane Austen and Seth Grahame-Smith
Quirk Books
ISBN 978-1-59474-334-4
$17.95 paperback

Sense and Sensibility and Sea Monsters
by Jane Austen and Ben H. Winters
Quirk Books
ISBN 978-1-59474-442-6
$16.95 paperback

Thanks for reading the Raincoast newsletter!

Sarah Taggart

Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: Dawn of the Dreadfuls

Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: Dawn of the Dreadfuls

Turning back the clock to several years before the zombie-strewn action of Pride and Prejudice and Zombies, author Steve Hockensmith introduces readers to the young family of Bennet sisters as they stand on the cusp of the resurgence of the undead army, and meet their kismet as lady warriors in Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: Dawn of the Dreadfuls. With a cast of characters both old and new, Hockensmith attempts to address the most complex questions regarding zombies, as posed by the zombie savant Dr. Keckilpenny: “What could reanimate the flesh of the dead? What drives the resurrected to feed on the living? Why only people? Why only in Britain? Why are you taking out your sword?”

The answer to this last question, at least, is quite apparent. Following The Troubles, the decorous English reference to the original zombie plague, the genteel folk of Meryton are horrified when fresh (or at least freshly rotted) zombies begin bursting out of the ground after an unusually warm spring, like so many grisly piñata surprises. Since no one wants to acknowledge the impending horror, Mr. Bennet, surviving warrior of the original zombie menace, calls upon his daughters to lift up their katana swords and slay the dreadfuls. In doing so, Mr. Bennet’s long-repressed warrior is also reawakened, as he expels the false-front of potting shed respectability in the garden to finally get back his mojo… er, dojo, that is.

Dawn of the Dreadfuls is a hilarious prequel to Pride and Prejudice and Zombies that follows young Elizabeth Bennet from her first clumsy attempts at slaying a dreadful to her even more disastrous coming-out ball. In fact, Hockensmith does a fine job of presenting the coming out of each Bennet sister into the world of zombie slaying, in keeping with their Austen personalities. Lydia and Kitty tandem-slay a dreadful, chattering the entire time, Jane nobly dashes in to finish off a zombie to save her sister, Mary over-thinks her way through her zombie kill, and Elizabeth rushes in headlong like the fine warrior lady we later see in Pride and Prejudice and Zombies.

In this prequel, we also get a bit of background on the Bennet parents and their seemingly irreconcilable differences, with the armless and legless Captain Cannon providing some comically romantic tension as an early suitor of the garrulous Mrs. Bennet. There are also some early romantic adventures for the young ladies, as Jane and Elizabeth find themselves wooed by men both dashing and dreadful (though not dreadful in the zombie sense, of course).

The style of Dawn of the Dreadfuls is quite a departure from previous Quirk Classics we’ve seen. Because it doesn’t rely on addended text and modifications to an actual Austen text, it reads more like a cohesive novel rather than a quirkily interrupted one. In addition, Hockensmith, while retaining some of the Austenite language, has refrained from direct imitation of Austen, the result being a very readable and funny novel with more emphasis on fresh plot and less reliance on fetid zombie appendages. However, while the style is simple and a quick read, there are loads of clever puns and jokes. Elizabeth, for example, stays true to her nature by falling for her deadly arts Master, whose primary downfall is his overwhelming pride. And, later, when she realizes his many faults, she reprimands herself that “far, far too late, she’d recognized the fault within the man — perhaps because all that was outward about him was so pleasing. It was a mistake she would never make again.” Not many years later, of course, she makes the exact same mistake with Wickham.

Naturally (or unnaturally, as the case may be), the show-stoppers in the novel are the hordes of brain-thirsty zombies who converge on Netherfield and eventually turn Elizabeth’s coming-out ball into a frenzy of first kisses, scandalous secrets, jealous rivals, and airborne zombie limbs.

And if this prequel doesn’t have enough slavering braniac action to satisfy the zombiephile, readers will have a chance to win one of 50 Quirk Classics Prize Packs by heading on over to the Quirk Classics message board. Each Prize Pack, with a retail value of more than $100, will include:

  • An advance copy of Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: Dawn of the Dreadfuls
  • Audio Books of Pride and Prejudice and Zombies and Sense and Sensibility and Sea Monsters
  • A password redeemable online for sample audio chapters of Dawn of the Dreadfuls
  • An awesome Dawn of the Dreadfuls poster
  • A Pride and Prejudice and Zombies journal
  • A box set of Pride and Prejudice and Zombies postcards

Order now at Amazon.com:
Pride and Prejudice and Zombies (Canada)
Pride and Prejudice and Zombies (US)

Pre-order at Amazon.com:
Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: Dawn of the Dreadfuls (Canada)
Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: Dawn of the Dreadfuls (US)

Pride and Prejudice and Zombies and Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: Dawn of the Dreadfuls are distributed by Quirk Books (International/US) and Raincoast Books (Canada).

VIZ Media to Release New Fantasy Adventure Series “Arata: The Legend” from Renowned Manga Creator Yuu Watase

from VIZ Media:

VIZ Media, LLC (VIZ Media), one of the entertainment industry’s most innovative and comprehensive publishing, animation and licensing companies, brings famed manga creator Yuu Watase’s potent blend of mythical fantasy adventure and lavish artwork for the North American debut of Arata: The Legend on March 9th. The new series is published under the Shonen Sunday imprint, rated “T” for Teens, and will carry an MSRP of $9.99 U.S. / $12.99 CAN.

In a world where humans and gods coexist, Arata is the unfortunate successor to the matriarchal Hime Clan — unfortunate because if he’s not cross-dressing to hide his gender one minute, he’s fleeing for his life the next! When Arata winds up in the modern world and switches places with a boy named Arata Hinohara, it’s a wonder which Arata is actually better off…

In Volume 1, Hinohara is the spitting image of Arata, so he suddenly finds himself fighting people after his life! As he navigates through this foreign world filled with power-hungry warriors, who will come to his aid? One thing’s for sure — it’s not easy being Arata!

“I’m really excited to see Arata: The Legend joining the Shonen Sunday imprint. The art is gorgeous, the series is action-packed and no one can create a lush fantasy world the way Yuu Watase can!” says Amy Yu, Editor, VIZ Media. “Fans who know her work in the shojo genre will experience a whole new side to this creative mastermind.”

Born March 5 in Osaka, Yuu Watase debuted in the Shôjo Comic manga anthology in 1989. She won the 43rd Shogakukan Manga Award with Ceres: Celestial Legend. One of her most famous works is Fushigi Yûgi, a series that has inspired the prequel Fushigi Yûgi: Genbu Kaiden. In 2008, Arata: The Legend started serialization in Weekly Shonen Sunday.

Arata: The Legend is one of the newest titles under VIZ Media’s Shonen Sunday imprint, the new standard for riveting stories and creative excellence. Titles under this imprint are more than shonen stories with struggling heroes and endless battles. Shonen Sunday characters are tested both mentally and physically, asked to prove their worth alongside loyal allies and encounter legends that have outlasted time itself. Each manga series under the Shonen Sunday imprint will enchant the reader with tales from Japan’s top manga creators featuring complex, intriguing characters in richly imagined worlds.

For more information on this title or other Shonen Sunday series, please visit shonensunday.com.

ElfQuest at WonderCon: San Francisco, April 2-4

from ElfQuest:

Hello!

If you’re in (or able to get to) the San Francisco area April 2-4, Wendy and Richard Pini will be attending WonderCon (http://comic-con.org/wc/) for the entire show. We’ll also have a table in Artist’s Alley promoting both ElfQuest and Masque of the Red Death, so stop on by to chat or get a book (or ten) autographed. We’ll look forward to seeing you there!

Shade and sweet cable cars,
Richard Pini

Irreference Report: March 2010

from Quirk Books:

March 3: The Feeding Frenzy Is Imminent
On Wednesday, March 3, our all-out blog explosion begins! Over 200 bloggers will be participating in our Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: Dawn of the Dreadfuls review event and contest. Go to Quirk Classics to see who’s talking about Dawn of the Dreadfuls. We’ll be featuring links to our favorite blogger reviews starting March 5!

March 7: Director’s Cut
The Academy Awards are rapidly approaching. To celebrate, we give you Secret Lives of Great Filmmakers by Robert Schnakenberg. From tales of missing belly buttons and appalling personal hygiene to irrational fears and outlandish fetishes, this collection has all the dirty little secrets you really want to know about the world’s most renowned filmmakers. For instance, what do Bea Arthur and George Lucas have in common?

George Lucas: Burn After Watching
The harsh critical response to the last three Star Wars movies may not have fazed Lucas, but there’s one project he’s still too mortified to even discuss: the catastrophic two-hour Star Wars Holiday Special that aired on CBS television stations on November 17, 1978. Larded with misbegotten musical numbers, badly animated cartoons, and guest appearances by Z-list seventies “stars” such as Jefferson Starship, Harvey Korman, and Bea Arthur, the variety extravaganza has been disowned by Star Wars fans and repeatedly ridiculed in popular culture. When prodded by interviews, Lucas will only say it “does not represent my vision for Star Wars.” He once confessed, “If I had time and a hammer, I’d track down every bootleg copy and smash it.”

Beauty and the Geek
In the mid-1980s, Lucas embarked on a long and stormy relationship with pop singer Linda Ronstadt. The seventies hit-maker was in the midst of a protracted career slump and had just come off a nasty break-up with up-and-coming comic Jim Carrey when the recently separated Lucas swept her off her feet. To most observers, it was an unlikely match — especially given Ronstadt’s rock-star looks and Lucas’ nebbishy demeanor. According to People magazine, when the lovebirds walked into a San Anselmo, California, drug store one day, the owner didn’t even know who Ronstadt’s companion was. “I just thought he was her houseboy,” she said. Friends tried to warn Lucas the relationship was doomed: Ronstadt was notorious for cycling through lovers like chewed-up wads of bubble gum. But the smitten director remained ever hopeful. He took guitar lessons, exchanged his nerdy glasses for contact lenses, and even talked of building a honeymoon cottage on his Skywalker Ranch. Sadly, it was not to be. After about five years of on-and-off dating, the odd couple broke up for good.

Check out The Vault on Irreference.com for more fascinating trivia about our filmmakers. It may even earn you some extra credit with your Oscar picks this year.

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20% off Harry Potter Merchandise, Happy Birthday Ron Weasley!

from WBShop.com:

Happy Birthday Ron!

Save 20% Off all Harry Potter Official merchandise and select Blu-ray and DVD!*

March 1st is Ron Weasley’s Birthday and we’re celebrating with a week-long sale. Hurry, this offer ends March 5th at midnight!

FREE SHIPPING on orders of $60 or more!*

Shop Now

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*20% off Harry Potter Official merchandise and select Blu-ray and DVDs. This offer is limited to items in stock and expires March 5th at midnight. Shipping Offer applies to $60 or more merchandise, not including shipping, tax, or gift boxing. Shipping offer applies to US Domestic Ground service only. Offer valid for the contiguous 48 states, not including Alaska, Hawaii, or other US territories. Only one offer per order; offers and coupons may not be combined. Upon checkout the highest discount available will be applied. All offers can be removed at any time.

Dark Horse Announces the Publication of “The Oddly Compelling Art of Denis Kitchen”

from Dark Horse Comics:

A well-known personality in the comics world, Denis Kitchen has worn many hats. While he is best known as a longtime publisher, founder of the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund, author, and literary and art agent, his career as a pioneering underground comix artist has been overdue for rediscovery.

First announced for publication from his own Kitchen Sink Press over twenty years ago, but never produced, The Oddly Compelling Art of Denis Kitchen is the first collection of work by the underground cartoonist and acclaimed publishing pioneer. In addition to his comix, this book features a wealth of unpublished material: paintings, covers for underground newspapers and comix, rare strips and illustrations, and historic photos of Kitchen and many of his contemporaries.

Acclaimed writer Neil Gaiman provides a funny and insightful introduction, and an essay by Charles Brownstein (Eisner/Miller) provides context and a career overview.

The Oddly Compelling Art of Denis Kitchen finally brings Kitchen the artist to the stage. This compendium includes approximately two hundred illustrations, most of which have remained unseen since their original publication in the late ’60s and ’70s, and is guaranteed to serve as an essential piece of history for modern comics fans.

“I think Oddly Compelling is a very good title for a book of Denis Kitchen’s work, and describes it very well,” said legendary artist R. Crumb. “I always thought it was rather a shame that Kitchen became a publisher and businessman to the neglect of his artistic talent… He was a gifted and exceptional artist… I think his downfall was women… The big sap!”

Designed by John Lind, winner of a 2009 American Graphic Design Award for his work on Underground Classics, The Oddly Compelling Art of Denis Kitchen will appeal to underground comix fans and comics historians alike.

The Oddly Compelling Art of Denis Kitchen is a full-color, 200-page, nine-by-twelve-inch hardcover priced at $34.99.

Currently offered in this month’s Previews catalog with a Diamond code of FEB100040, the book arrives on shelves on June 23, 2010.

News Update and a Fan Creation Contest for “Riese the Series”

from Riese:

Hope everyone’s February has been a good one. We’ve had the pleasure of seeing the world come together here in Vancouver for the 2010 Olympic Games. It’s absolute craziness, but in a good way. I mean, really, how often can you say the Olympics are happening right outside your window. (Literally, in our case. The Olympic Village is right outside our office windows).

First off, the news. We’ve been making a lot of headway with finding some new homes for Riese, and it’s looking more and more likely that we’ll be able to put the episodes online again soon. It’s still too early to announce anything specific yet, but we wanted to let you know that big things are definitely in the works and we’ll keep you posted. Again, you guys have been so awesome, and the support you’ve shown has only helped people looking at the show to be more excited to take it on. We have some awesome fans.

To help keep us all busy during the hiatus, we’ve decided to do a contest! The lovely folks at Simon & Schuster were kind enough to provide a number of copies of Scott Westerfeld’s steampunk novel Leviathan. Here’s the synopsis for those of you unfamiliar with it:

Leviathan

It is the cusp of World War I, and all the European powers are arming up. The Austro-Hungarians and Germans have their Clankers, steam-driven iron machines loaded with guns and ammunition. The British Darwinists employ fabricated animals as their weaponry. Their Leviathan is a whale airship, and the most masterful beast in the British fleet.

Aleksandar Ferdinand, prince of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, is on the run. His own people have turned on him. His title is worthless. All he has is a battle-torn Stormwalker and a loyal crew of men.

Deryn Sharp is a commoner, a girl disguised as a boy in the British Air Service. She’s a brilliant airman. But her secret is in constant danger of being discovered.

With the Great War brewing, Alek’s and Deryn’s paths cross in the most unexpected way… taking them both aboard the Leviathan on a fantastical, around-the-world adventure. One that will change both their lives forever.

It’s a fun and epic piece, and a must if you’re a steampunk enthusiast. So, here’s the big question: how can you win it, and some other great prizes?

We’re inviting people to create fan pieces for Riese. Art, photo collage, wallpaper design, avatar collection, music, poems, invent a character in the Riese world, fanfiction — whatever inspires you. We thought it’d be a fun activity for you all to demonstrate how creative and artistic you are, and reward it! You have until March 5th, 2010 to get your submission in. Once we’ve received them, Kaleena and myself will select the winners. Additionally, we’ll be showcasing the winners here on our blog for all other Riese fans to see! So this could be an opportunity to get your work viewed by people all over the world.

So, to summarize the rules:

Entrants have until March 5th, 12:00AM PST to submit their entries at ryan(at)riesetheseries.com. Entries include any fan creation, including, but not limited to, drawings, paintings, music, fanfiction, wallpapers and avatars. We encourage entries to be creative and original, as we’re always drawn to unique ideas.

Winners’ works will be shown throughout the month of March on riesetheseries.com. Works will remain property of their respective artists.

Prizes Include:

Hardcover copy of Scott Westerfeld’s Leviathan
Exclusive Riese & The Sect buttons
Riese Apparel

We’re excited to see what you come up with, and as I said, we’ll keep you posted on any developments as soon as we hear them! Now get creating! And if you have any questions or concerns, feel free to contact us for more details. Cheers!

-Ryan

Green Hornet Returns!

from Things from Another World:

The Green Hornet is back in a big way! The folks at Dynamite are bringing us three new Green Hornet comic book series over the next couple of months.

First up is Green Hornet, written by Kevin Smith with art by Jonathan (Black Terror) Lau. The duo presents the one and only origin of the Green Hornet and Kato. This is the comic book version of Kevin Smith’s unproduced Green Hornet film.

The five-issue Kato miniseries fills in the blanks on the new Kato, the old Kato and the mystery of the Black Hornet! The miniseries features elements direct from Kevin Smith’s original screenplay and promises to deliver even more action.

Then Matt Wagner joins the Hornet train with Green Hornet: Year One. Rooted in the pulp tradition, the series tells original tales of Britt Reid and Kato, and features series artist Aaron Campbell, whose stunning recreation of the industrial world of 1930s Chicago is sure to wow fans across the globe!

Finally, we’ve got Moonstone throwing their hat in the ring with their Green Hornet Chronicles. Available in both softcover and limited-edition hardcover versions, this book features all-new, original crime-fiction tales.

Check Out These Green Hornet Books

See All Green Hornet Products

Save 25% Off the Deluxe Kato Bruce Lee 1/6 Scale Figure

Emily the Strange in “Stranger and Stranger”

Everything is getting Stranger in the original animated book trailer for Emily the Strange: Stranger and Stranger! The second novel in a series of four books. 272 pages of story and illustrations, hardbound and published by HarperCollins Publishers. emilystrange.com

Dark Horse Announces All-New “Star Wars” Series, “Knight Errant”!

from Dark Horse Comics:

Coming off the heels of penning the breakout hit Mass Effect: Redemption and the gripping finale of Knights of the Old Republic, writer John Jackson Miller introduces us to Kerra Holt, a young Jedi who’s about to realize that her role in the galaxy is far more important, and vastly different, than she could have ever imagined.

Set one thousand years before Episode I, in a time referred to as the “Dark Age of the Republic,” this story takes place in an era when the Sith were legion and the Republic was strained to the breaking point, leaving large swaths of the galaxy with no one to turn to. This pivotal time in the history of Star Wars has been largely unexplored, until now.

Additionally, for the first time ever, the writer of this new comics series will also be authoring a novel for Del Rey Books, set in the same era and involving the same cast of characters in an all-new adventure. It’s going to be a unique event for Star Wars, and one that will give fans a whole new perspective on the galaxy.

“There’s such wonderful chaos going on in the galaxy in this period,” said writer John Jackson Miller. “More than a generation before Darth Bane introduced the Rule of Two, Sith Lords are colliding not just with the Republic, but with each other. Kerra’s going to find that good intentions just may not be enough in a galaxy gone mad! This is a wide-open area to explore, and I’m thrilled that Dark Horse and Del Rey have given me this opportunity to do so.”

“With John writing both the comics and the novel, Knight Errant will be a Star Wars story on a scale we’ve never undertaken before,” said comic-series editor Dave Marshall. “This will be a first-of-its-kind opportunity to introduce the Expanded Universe of the Dark Horse comics to the fans of the Del Rey novels and vice versa!”

With more news in the coming months, look for Star Wars: Knight Errant to arrive on shelves later this fall!