Happy Local Comic Shop Day 2020!

Hey, comic fans! Today is Local Comic Shop Day. It’s an annual appreciation “conceived and implemented by ComicsPRO comic book specialty retailers to call attention to locally owned independent comic book specialty stores, celebrating their unique and vital role in being the primary fire-starters of pop culture.” In other words, it’s a way of encouraging comic fans to visit their LCS as the holiday season kicks into high gear and show some support. That’s especially true now, when the coronavirus pandemic is crippling a lot of businesses. 

For more information, including a list of participating stores and the special collectibles they’ll be offering for sale, visit the Local Comic Shop Day website.

But it’s not just the retail shops that have something of interest for comic fans—not when StarWarp Concepts has its own range of comics and graphic novels to offer!

The Saga of Pandora Zwieback #0: A free, downloadable comic that serves as an introduction to the adventures of Pandora Zwieback and her monster-hunting mentor, Sebastienne “Annie” Mazarin, with an 8-page story written by me and illustrated by Eliseu Gouveia, and a preview of Pan’s first novel, Blood Feud: The Saga of Pandora Zwieback, Book 1. Pan is a 16-year-old Goth girl who’s spent the last decade being treated for mental health problems because she can see monsters. It’s only after she meets Annie that Pan discovers she’s never been ill—her so-called “monstervision” is actually a supernatural gift that allows her to see into Gothopolis, the not-so-mythical shadow world that exists right alongside the human world.    

The Saga of Pandora Zwieback Annual #1: A spinoff from the novel series, this 56-page, full-color comic special finds the teenaged Goth adventuress battling vampires and a jealous, man-stealing siren. It features stories by me and Sholly Fisch (Scooby-Doo Team-Up), art by Eliseu Gouveia (The Saga of Pandora Zwieback #0), comic-art legend Ernie Colon (Amethyst, Princess of Gemworld), and Elizabeth Watasin (Charm School), and cover art by award-winning artist Henar Torinos (Mala Estrella).

Heroines & Heroes is a collection of comic stories and pinups all drawn by me, dating back to my days in the early 1990s small-press movement—that age of dinosaurs in which creators like me used to make our comics by printing them out on photocopiers and then stapling them by hand. In H&H you’ll find: “V-A-C-A-T-I-O-N (in the Summertime),” a three-page Wonder Woman vs. Harley Quinn story that I wrote and drew in the late ’90s as a sample for a DC Comics editor who thought I’d be a good fit for their Batman: The Animated Series comic (it didn’t work out); “Dirty Laundry,” an adventure of small-presser Jeff Wood’s rabbit-eared superspy, Snowbuni; three pages from the mid-‘90s indie comic Motorbike Puppies; and “I Was a Super-powered Vampire Slayer!,”an adventure of the indie superheroine The Blonde Avenger. Twenty-four pages of comicky goodness—and all for free!

Troubleshooters, Incorporated: Night Stalkings is a general readers’ graphic novel about a group of supernatural-superheroes-for-hire taking on their first case. The team consists of a wizard, a female ninja, a sorceress, a werewolf, and a rock ’n’ roll lighting designer wearing high-tech armor. Sure, they might not be on a power level with the Avengers or Justice League of America—they’re more like superpowered Ghostbusters—but they get the job done. The graphic novel is written by the husband-and-white team of Richard C. White (The Ultimate Hulk) and Joni M. White, and illustrated by Reggie Golden and Randy Zimmerman. Cover art is provided by Richard Dominguez, creator of the pulp-hero comic book El Gato Negro.

The Saga of Pandora Zwieback Annual and Troubleshooters Incorporated are available in print and digital formats. Pandora Zwieback #0 and Heroines and Heroes are digital exclusives. Visit their respective product pages at StarWarp Concepts for ordering information, as well as sample pages. 

Happy reading!

Horror Street: The Griffin

Welcome back to Horror Street, my ongoing journey in search of awesome yet spooky graffiti art on the streets and little-traveled corners of New York City!

Today we return to the Welling Court Mural Project for another episode of monster hunting. Welling Court is a street located in the Astoria neighborhood of Queens, New York, and for over a decade it’s hosted a streetside art gallery showcasing the graffiti-mural works of New York area artists. It’s here that in 2018 I found the rarely seen mythological beast known as…The Griffin!

Griffin-WellingCt-2018

Amazing work, don’t you think? And now that I know that there’s a 2020 version of the “show,” even in these Pandemic Times, I can’t wait to see what creatures are currently lurking in the nooks and crannies of Welling Court!

Stay tuned for further installments of Horror Street—there’s plenty of macabre graffiti art to be found on the streets of New York, if you look in the right creepy places! And be sure to check out my previous HS entries: the Brooklyn Vampire, the demonic D-RodWhere the Gene Wilder Things Are, the beast called Queens’thluhu, and the scarifying Ghoulmobile!

Happy Book Lovers Day 2020!

blood_feud_lg_cover_2013Hey, fans of reading! Today is Book Lovers Day, a worldwide event held every August 9th (although no one seems to know when it started, or who invented it) and if you’re looking for the right book on this special day, here are just a few titles from Pan’s publisher, StarWarp Concepts, that you might want to consider purchasing to help you celebrate the occasion:

Dark Urban Fantasy
Blood Feud: The Saga of Pandora Zwieback, Book 1 is my young adult novel that’s perfect for lovers of dark urban fantasy.It introduces readers to Pandora Zwieback, a 16-year-old Goth girl who’s spent the last decade being treated for mental health problems because she can see monsters. It’s only after she meets professional monster hunter Sebastienne “Annie” Mazarin that Pan discovers she’s never been ill—her so-called “monstervision” is actually a supernatural gift that allows her to see into Gothopolis, the not-so-mythical shadow world that exists right alongside the human world. In Blood Feud, Pan, her parents and friends, and Annie are drawn into a conflict among warring vampire clans searching for the key to an ultimate weapon (or so the legend goes)—a key that just so happens to have been delivered to the horror-themed museum owned by Pan’s father!

SWC-Chasing-Danger-cvrChasing Danger: The Case Files of Theron Chase, by bestselling fantasy author Richard C. White (Gauntlet: Dark Legacy: Paths of Evil, The Chronicles of the Sea Dragon Special), is a pulp-fiction-styled collection of noir-fantasy novellas starring a private eye working the supernatural beat in the city of Calasia. From a sexy chanteuse who literally turns into a beast when the moon is full to a string of pearls that kills its owners, and from the ghost of a dead woman seeking justice to the Grim Reaper’s little girl seeking her stolen chicken, Theron Chase certainly has his hands full—of danger, death, and dames!

 

Illustrated Classics
Carmilla_CoverCarmilla is J. Sheridan Le Fanu’s 19th-century classic vampiric tale of love gone wrong. Laura is so desperate for a friend that when a young woman named Carmilla practically turns up on the doorstep of the castle owned by Laura’s father, she thinks her prayers for companionship have been answered. But as she comes to realize, Carmilla isn’t as interested in making friends as she is in spilling blood. Regarded as the one of the earliest female vampire tales—if not the first—Carmilla was an influence on author Bram Stoker in the creation of the vampire brides in his seminal novel, Dracula, and remains a popular character in fiction to this day. The SWC edition contains six original illustrations done especially for StarWarp Concepts by the super-talented Eliseu Gouveia, artist of The Saga of Pandora Zwieback #0 and The Saga of Pandora Zwieback Annual #1.

King-Kong-Final-FrontCvrKing Kong is an e-book-exclusive Illustrated Classics edition of the 1932 novelization of the renowned motion picture. Written by Delos W. Lovelace, based on the story by Edgar Wallace and Merian C. Cooper and the screenplay by James A. Creelman and Ruth Rose, the SWC edition of King Kong features scenes that didn’t appear in the final cut of the film—including the notorious “spider pit” sequence in which Kong’s human pursuers are attacked by horrific arachnids and insects. What makes the SWC version special is that it contains six exclusive, original black-and-white illustrations by comics artist Paul Tuma, whose pulp-influenced style has appeared in the pages of The Twilight Avenger and Flare.

Nonfiction
SWC_From_the_Stars_cvrFrom the Stars…a Vampiress: An Unauthorized Guide to Vampirella’s Classic Horror Adventures is my nonfiction history of the queen of the comic book bad girls. In its pages you’ll find a breakdown of every Vampirella story that appeared during her Warren Publishing days from July 1969 to December 1982 (plus a list of the modern-day books that reprinted them); a checklist of every Warren Era appearance she made; a look at the six-book novelization series written by sci-fi and pulp-adventure author Ron Goulart and published by Warner Books in the 1970s; an examination of the awful 1996 movie that starred Talisa Soto of the Mortal Kombat movies as Vampi and featured a scenery-gulping performance from rock-god Roger Daltrey (lead singer of the legendary band The Who) as Dracula; and a pretty extensive look at the history of Hammer Films’ Vampirella movie, announced in 1975 with model/actress Barbara Leigh and Hammer legend Peter Cushing as its stars, but which was never produced. Plus little-seen photos and other material pulled straight from the vaults of the Ackermonster by the Official Vampirella Historian, Sean Fernald, who also wrote the foreword.

With the exception of King Kong (a digital exclusive), alll titles are available in print and digital formats, so visit their respective product pages at StarWarp Concepts for ordering information. And while you’re at it, be sure to check out all the other books, comics, and graphic novels they offer. Happy reading!

Happy Free Comic Book Summer!

Free-Comic-Summer-2020Free Comic Book Summer? Where’d that come from? Isn’t it supposed to be Free Comic Book Day?  That’s probably what ran through your mind when you saw the header for this post—and you’d be right to be confused. Free Comic Book Day—the brainchild of retailer Joe Field as a promotional tool to get people to visit their local comic shop—has been around since 2002, held the first Saturday in May and usually timed to coincide with the release of one of Marvel Films’ big summer blockbuster.

But then the novel coronavirus pandemic became all the rage during the first third of 2020, sweeping around the globe and throwing everything into chaos. Just about all businesses (the ones not considered “essential” by government officials) shut down, including movie theaters, comic book shops—and Diamond Distribution, the source of those shops’ retail products. Suddenly there was no summer blockbuster from Marvel—if you remember, it was supposed to be the long-awaited Black Widow, starring Scarlett Johanssen—no comics being shipped, and no Free Comic Book Day.

Which brings us to today, which Diamond has designated the start of Free Comic Book Summer, slated to run until September 9. During this period, the comics you should have been able to pick up all at once on a single day back in May will now be staggered throughout the summer. According to their press release:

“Comic shops will receive five to six Free Comic Book Day (FCBD) titles in their weekly shipments during each week of the promotional window. Release of these titles may vary from shop to shop, as retailers are encouraged to release the books as they see fit for their unique circumstances. Retailers may release one free title a day, may make all of that week’s free titles available at once, or any other plan that works for them. Free Comic Book Summer is designed to be flexible and customizable so retailers and fans can get the most out the event.”

As for free titles from Pan’s publisher, StarWarp Concepts, well, they’re always available for your reading pleasure, so if you missed them, then join us in celebrating Free Comic Book Summer 2020 by downloading them now!

heroinesandheroes-1Heroines & Heroes: A collection of comic stories and pinups all drawn by me, dating back to my days in the early 1990s small-press movement—that age of dinosaurs in which creators like me used to make our comics by printing them out on photocopiers and then stapling them by hand. In H&H you’ll find mainstream heroes and small-press heroines, and even a couple of anthropomorphic bikers. Leading off is “V-A-C-A-T-I-O-N (in the Summertime),” a three-page Wonder Woman vs. Harley Quinn story that I wrote and drew in the late ’90s as a sample for a DC Comics editor who thought I’d be a good fit for their Batman: The Animated Series comic (it didn’t work out). If you enjoyed Harley’s recent animated series or her latest movie, Birds of Prey (and the Fantabulous Emancipation of One Harley Quinn), you might get a kick out of her matching wits with the Amazon Princess (whose own movie, Wonder Woman 1984, comes out later this year). The WW/Harley matchup is followed by an adventure of small-presser Jeff Wood’s rabbit-eared superspy, Snowbuni; three pages from the long-canceled indie comic Motorbike Puppies; and an adventure of the indie superheroine The Blonde Avenger.

Pandora0_CoverThe Saga of Pandora Zwieback #0: A full-color introduction to the young adult novel series of the same name, hosted by Pan herself. Pan is a 16-year-old New York City Goth who’s not only a horror fangirl but someone with the rare ability to see the for-real monsters that regular humans can’t (she calls it her “monstervision”), and with the help of a 400-year-old, shape-shifting monster hunter named Sebastienne “Annie” Mazarin, she’s learning how to protect her family, her friends, and the world from the supernatural dangers out there—and maybe even have some fun while doing it. This 16-page comic features a seven-page story written by me, with art and color by Eliseu Gouveia (The Saga of Pandora Zwieback Annual#1, Carmilla, A Princess of Mars), and includes two sample chapters from Blood Feud, the first Pan novel.

Heartstopper_CoverHearstopper: The Legend of La Bella Tenebrosa#1–3: Before she became Pan’s monster-hunting mentor, Sebastienne Mazarin made her debut in this short-lived, 1990s Mature Readers series from Millennium Publications. A nefarious heavy metal band has arrived in New York City, and its lead singer is more than just a sex magnet for his female fans—he’s an incubus! Will Annie put an end to his plans for worldwide chaos, or fall prey to his supernatural charms? Written by me (of course), issue 1 is drawn by Pan and Annie co-creator Uriel Caton (JSA Annual) and inker Alan Larsen; issue 2 is penciled by Uriel, Holly Golightly (School Bites), and David C. Matthews (Satin Steele) and inked by Larsen; and issue 3 is penciled by Holly, with four pages of inks by “Chainsaw” Chuck Majewski (Harvey Kurtzman’s New Two-Fisted Tales). As a special bonus, issue 3 includes a brief look at the never-published Heartstopper/Trollords, a crossover special that would have had Annie meet Harry, Larry, and Jerry, the Three Stooges–inspired trolls created by Scott Beaderstadt and Paul Fricke, written by me with pencils by Holly and Scott and inks by Bill Lavin (Troubleshooters, Incorporated: Night Stalkings).

(Warning: Heartstopper is designated a “Mature Readers” comic for violent scenes and some sexual innuendo, so younger Panatics should avoid it.)

All these comics are available for download, so visit their respective product pages at StarWarp Concepts for more information as well as sample pages.

Horror Street: Ghoulmobile

Welcome back to Horror Street, an ongoing journey in search of awesome yet spooky graffiti art on the streets and little-traveled corners of New York City.

Today, we’re in the Queens, New York, neighborhood of Sunnyside, home to the offices of Pan’s publisher, StarWarp Concepts (and Marvel Comics hero Peter Parker, if you’ve seen the movies Spider-Man: Homecoming and Spider-Man: Far From Home).

Ghoulmobile-Sunnyside-2018

What you see here (click to embiggen, as they say) is what’s known as an Interceptor II, or GO-4 Parking Enforcement vehicle, manufactured by Canada’s Westward Industries and used in New York primarily by the traffic enforcement division and the Parks Department.

NYPD-InterceptorThe GO-4 is a three-wheeled, one-person scooter that you’ll find tooling around neighborhoods in search of cars to be ticketed for violations, or in parks that need to be patrolled but don’t have mounted police riding horseback. It’s not the kind of thing you’ll ever see involved in a high-speed car chase, since its top speed is around 50 mph, and what’s interesting is that in order to qualify as a “street legal” vehicle they’re registered as motorcycles.

But based on its unique, ghoulish paint job, this particular Interceptor isn’t used for patrolling parks; clearly it’s for cruising the streets of Gothopolis, that city of monsters that lives right alongside New York City but can only be seen by people with special sight—people like our own Pandora Zwieback. Now that she has her learner’s permit, Pan probably wouldn’t mind getting one for herself—if she could convince her parents to spring for one!

Stay tuned for further installments of Horror Street—there’s plenty of macabre graffiti art to be found on the streets of New York, if you look in the right creepy places! And be sure to check out my previous HS entries: the Brooklyn Vampire, the demonic D-RodWhere the Gene Wilder Things Are, and the beast called Queens’thluhu!

Horror Street: Queens’thulhu

Welcome back to Horror Street, an ongoing journey in search of awesome yet spooky graffiti art on the streets and little-traveled corners of New York City. Last time, I poked around the photo archive I’ve built up over the years and came up with a cool oddity from the streets of Astoria, Queens.

This one’s a more recent photo, taken as I was strolling through another Queens neighborhood, Maspeth, where I stumbled across the terror of…Queens’thulhu!

Queensthulhu

Okay, maybe it’s not an exact likeness of the great Cthulhu, the Elder God created by author H.P. Lovecraft in his many horror stories; the mammoth creature from beyond time and space who lies sleeping in the waters of the South Pacific, waiting for the moment to awaken and terrorize the world…but that was the first impression I got when I laid eyes on the thing. A bored-looking Elder God, to be sure. Or maybe he’s just sleepy.

What made the discovery really memorable happened while I was taking the picture. A black Trans Am rolled up behind me, and the driver leaned across the front seat to call out to me.

“That your writing?” the guy asked, pointing to the graffitied horror.

I guess with the black jeans and black Ghostbusters T-shirt I was wearing, maybe I looked something like a graffiti artist?

“Nope, just admiring it,” I said.

Seby-NametagHe nodded, got out of the car, walked over to the wall beside the art—and tagged it. Then he jumped back in his ride and took off.

So if I understand graffiti etiquette correctly, the guy asked if it was my work so as to not intrude on “my” canvas—at least not while I was around. Why get into a street brawl over a blank wall, right? But since it wasn’t mine, he made quick use of the space.

So, nice work…uh, Seby. (That is a Y at the end, right?)

Stay tuned for further installments of Horror Street—there’s plenty of macabre graffiti art to be found on the streets of New York, if you look in the right creepy places! And be sure to check out my previous HS entries: the Brooklyn Vampire, the demonic D-Rod, and Where the Gene Wilder Things Are!

Goodbye, Facebook?

pandoraz-townsvilleIt’s become commonplace these days for folks to deactivate their Facebook accounts—they’re tired of the rampant political divisiveness, the self-serving actions of the company’s owner, the randomness of how it treats its account subscribers. I’ve seen publishers and authors leave it behind, usually with a pinned note to visitors explaining that if they want to keep up-to-date with that person’s or that company’s activities, they should bookmark the blogs run by those individuals. I’d toyed with the idea myself but never acted on it.

And then last week, for some inexplicable reason, the decision was taken out of my hands when I found myself blocked from accessing the Facebook pages for both StarWarp Concepts and Pandora Zwieback.

I can login to Facebook, but then I’m immediately redirected to the “Your Pages” page—and that’s as far as I can go. Clicking on either link just brings me back to that page.

It doesn’t appear that my account was hacked—thankfully, there haven’t been any posts to the pages since the last ones I put up, and I can still sign in—but since this is Facebook we’re talking about, there’s no way to really find out because they make it impossible to contact anyone to resolve the problem. And, for some other inexplicable reason, clicking on the Support email icon at the Help Center just…brings me back to “Your Pages.”

I tried asking the question to the Help Community, where answers are provided by other subscribers, not anyone from Facebook itself (why be helpful to their customers, right?), but was blocked from posting it because doing so requires having a personal account; business pages are “gray accounts” that can’t access even the Help Community.

So unless this problem somehow resolves itself, I guess we’ve given up on Facebook—or rather Facebook has given up on us. Should access suddenly be restored one day, I’ll login long enough to pin a note directing readers to the SWC and Pan websites.

Bottom line, if you want to keep up-to-date with StarWarp Concepts’ or Pandora Zwieback’s activities, you should bookmark our blogs to follow along. I mean, 99% of my Facebook posts just point you to these blogs anyway. This way, it cuts out the middle man. 🙂

Thanks, as always, for your continued support.

Hmmm…maybe I should look into this Twitter thing all the kids talk about. How bad could that be…?

Getting a Head Start On Halloween…

SWC-Sleepy-Hollow-ad

Sure, it’s true that we’re not even into the official start of summer, which happens later this month (on June 21, to be precise), but when you’re a horror fan there’s never really a bad time to start thinking about October—the Spooky Season.

Bad post-title “head” puns aside, if you’re a lover of all things horror and Halloween, it should come as no surprise that what I’m talking about here is the latest addition to StarWarp Concepts’ SWC Horror Bites imprint: the classic spookfest The Legend of Sleepy Hollow, by Washington Irving!

First published in 1820, in the Irving short story collection The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon, Gent., the tale of schoolteacher Ichabod Crane, socialite Katrina Van Tassel, town bully Brom Bones, and the ghostly Hessian soldier who constantly rides in search of a replacement noggin is known around the world and is considered one of the quintessential stories to get you in the right mood for Halloween. It’s inspired countless movies, TV shows, cartoons, comic books, and novels—and this year it celebrates its 200th anniversary!

The Legend of Sleepy Hollow goes on sale October 13, 2020. Stay tuned for further news!

(Oh, and in case you’re wondering, the image up top is a photograph I took of a Headless Horseman sculpture at the October 2016 Great Jack-O-Lantern Blaze in upstate New York. Nice work they did, right?)