02:19:33 pm, by ComicList |
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Midwest Book Review
Anne Steelyard: The Garden of Emptiness
Barbara Hambly, et al.
Penny Farthing Press
2000 W. Sam Houston Pkwy. South, Suite 550, Houston, TX 77042
9780984214303, $14.95, www.amazon.com
04:36:18 pm, by TFAW |
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by Andrew@TFAW
New Video Post Live From San Diego Comic-Con!
We caught up with Ron Randall in Artist's Alley at SDCC'09 for another segment of choose-your-own-adventure interview! Enjoy.
10:28:27 am, by ComicList |
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Para, published by Penny Farthing Press, 178 pages, $19.95.
Having reviewed for the Suspended Animation column for about 9 years, there have been a few books which, for one reason or another, have been placed on the back burner and seen to later than they deserved. One or two have simply become misplaced for a time in my disorganized glut. That was the unfortunate case with Para, from Penny Farthing Press.
09:43:41 am, by ComicList |
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Suspended Animation Review
Anne Steelyard: The Garden of Emptiness, Act One: An Honorary Man, published by Penny Farthing Press, 96 pages, $14.95.
Most comics fans have somewhere within them that insecure enthusiast who desperately desires to prove the merit of comics as an art form. I manage to keep mine under control for the most part. I hope you do, as well. For those occasions when you are unable, however, I would like to suggest a very impressive work to utilize in proving your point.
Anne Steelyard: The Garden of Emptiness is a graphic novel written by Barbara Hambly. In it, she treats readers to a sweeping epic, the quality of which hardly ever makes it to the big screen, much less your local comics shop.
09:44:59 am, by ComicList |
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Suspended Animation Review
Captain Gravity and The Power of The Vril, published by Penny Farthing Press, 194 pages, $19.95.
Joshua Jones is a hero. He just doesn’t know it. And, as a young black man working in the movie industry of the ‘30's, not many people would give him the benefit of the doubt. Destiny took a hand, however, when Joshua was “infected” by what he knows as Element 115. Readers of this volume will come to know it as The Vril, and it’s tied-in to an epic adventure involving Nazi’s, Atlantis, and an objectionable symbol with which most everyone is familiar.

