Tag Archives: jeff smith

Jeff Smith’s TUKI: Fight for Family is Available on Kickstarter Now

Tuki

Jeff Smith’s third creator owned and self-published graphic novel series, TUKI, has returned for a second Kickstarter!

For anyone who  missed out last time, you can still order copies of Book One Tuki: Fight for Fire (including on  Kickstarter only, a few extremely limited copies of 1st printings), as well as an advance copy of Book Two Tuki: Fight for Family

Like BONE and RASL before it, TUKI is a mix of Jeff’s personal passions, in this case, his love of the  fantastic heroes of pulp fiction, mythical lost realms and human evolution. 

This campaign includes two original graphic novels: 

Book One TUKI: Fight for Fire by Jeff Smith 

160 pages, 11.375 x 8.875 trade paperback, full color cover, b&w interiors 

This book is in print! It shipped to comic shops and bookstores December 2021, but available again through this campaign. 

Book Two TUKI: Fight for Family by Jeff Smith 

160 pages, 11.375 x 8.875 trade paperback, full color cover, b&w interiors 

This book will ship to backers of this campaign in June 2022 and to mass market in July 2022.

Around the Tubes

It was new comic book day yesterday. What did you all get? What’d you like? What’d you dislike? Sound off in the comments below. While you think about that, here’s some comic news and reviews from around the web.

The Beat – TUKI returns as Jeff Smith announces two graphic novels and a Kickstarter this May – We’ll be backing this one!

Reviews

Collected Editions – Harley Quinn Vol. 5: Hollywood or Die
The Beat – Locke & Key/Sandman: Hell & Gone #1
But Why Tho Podcast – Superman: Red and Blue #2

Superman: Red and Blue #2

Preview: Folklords #5

Folklords #5

Publisher: BOOM! Studios
Writer: Matt Kindt
Artist: Matt Smith
Colorist: Chris O’Halloran
Letterer: Jim Campbell
Cover Artists:
    Main Cover: Matt Smith
    Unlocked Retailer Variant: Jeff Smith
Price: $3.99

Ansel and his motley crew converge on the Library of Banned Books, and finally come face to face with a Folklord—but are any of them ready for this encounter, and what it will mean for their entire world?

Folklords #5

Your First Look at Matt Kindt and Matt Smith’s Folklords #5

BOOM! Studios has revealed a first look at Folklords #5, the final issue of an all-new original five-issue series from Eisner Award-nominated writer Matt Kindt, acclaimed artist Matt Smith, colorist Chris O’Halloran, and letterer Jim Campbell, about a young man whose forbidden quest reveals the shocking truth about his world and turns everything he ever knew upside down, available on March 25, 2020.

Ansel and his motley crew converge on the Library of Banned Books, and finally come face to face with a Folklord—but are any of them ready for this encounter, and what it will mean for the future of their entire world?

Folklords #5 features main cover art by series artist Smith as well as variant cover art by Jeff Smith, creator of the bestselling worldwide phenomenon, Bone.

Folklords #5

Netlfix is Working on a Bone Animated Series

Bone

It looks like Jeff Smith‘s critically hailed and best-selling Bone comic series is coming to television. Netflix has acquired the rights the award-winning series. It’ll be developed into an animated series and is part of the streaming platform’s focus on kids programming.

In 2016 it was announced that Mark Osborne with a script co-written with Adam Kline was adapting the series as an animated film for Warner Bros. The movie studio acquired the rights around 2008. That failed attempt opened the door for Netflix.

Bone was first published in 1991 by Smith who began creating the series when he was 10 in 1970. He also has said early versions of the characters were drawn by him when he was 5 years old. The series ran for 55 issues and ended its run in 2004. It was originally published by Smith’s Cartoon Books, then Image Comics, and finished its run with Cartoon Books. It’s earned 10 Eisner Awards and 11 Harvey Awards. It’s one of the trailblazing kids series and a lynchpin for Scholastic’s graphic novel imprint Graphix Books.

The series has sold over 8 million copies in North America and has been released in 30 countries. It has earned 40 national and international publishing awards.

The series follows the Bone cousins on adventures through their fantasy world filled with wonderful and terrifying creatures.

Around the Tubes

It’s a new week and boy was this past weekend was full of fireworks. Will this upcoming week also? We’ll see! While you get settled for the week, here’s some comic news and reviews from around the web in our morning roundup.

Around the Tubes

Comichron – Some improvement in March 2017 comics orders; $9.99 Amazing Spider-Man #25 tops charts – If you want THE take on March’s numbers.

NPR – Beyond The Pale (Male): Marvel, Diversity And A Changing Comics Readership – NPR takes a look at the state of comics.

Deseret News – How English students are discovering classics through comics – Any way is a good way.

The Beat – A Year of Free Comics: Rasl #1 by Jeff Smith – A free comic. Go read it.

The Beat – A year of free comics – The Adventurers by Kelly Tindall – More free comics. Go read it.

 

Around the Tubes Reviews

Comic Attack – Baltimore: The Red Kingdom #3

Talking Comics – The Circle #4

Talking Comics – Green Arrow #20

Talking Comics – Royals #1

Herts Advertiser – Spider-Gwen: Weapon of Choice

Herts Advertiser – The Unbelievable Gwenpool: Head of MODOK

SDCC 2016: Fone Bone 4” Vinyl Figure Pre-Release

Cryptozoic Entertainment has announced the pre-release of the Fone Bone 4″ Vinyl Figure at San Diego Comic Con at both the Cryptozoic Booth #115 and Cartoon Books Booth #2106. The Fone Bone Vinyl Figure will have a full release in September.

The original protagonist of Jeff Smith’s classic Bone graphic novels is now a collectible vinyl figure! One of the three Bone cousins, Fone Bone may be the shortest but he is also the smartest and most courageous of the bunch, often putting others before himself. This vinyl figure brings Fone Bone straight off the cover of the original Out from Boneville graphic novel, complete with his trusty knapsack and map, and right into your collection.

The release of the 4” Vinyl Fone Bone figure will be the first in a lineup of collectibles being released by Cryptozoic later this year and you can pre-order it now.

Fone Bone 4” Vinyl Figure 1 Fone Bone 4” Vinyl Figure 2

 

 

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Sunday Roundtable: What run or comic series do you love and feel like nobody else read?

JLA Roundtable comics to readSundays are known for folks gathering around tables on television and pontificating about some of the hottest topics out there, offering their expertise. We bring that tradition to Graphic Policy as the team gathers to debate in our Sunday Roundtable.

On tap this week?

What run or comic series do you love and that you feel like nobody else read? What made you enjoy it?

Logan: I always felt like the only one reading the Bravest Warriors comics even though the cartoon is super popular, and Catbug is literally everywhere!

I loved the book b/c it featured a queer character in an all ages book, really expanded on the cartoon’s mythology (especially with Catbug’s backstory), had nice pop culture riffs on stuff like The Great Gatsby and Pacific Rim, and Ian McGinty‘s art is animation translated to the comics page.

Daphne: I loved Bravest Warriors! I’ve been catching up on the comics by buying the collections Comixology sells whenever they go on sale. I am a few volumes behind I think but it’s such a fun series.

Daphne: Bone, by Jeff Smith. I know it’s actually critically acclaimed and it did get Jeff a decent amount of press and attention, but it feels criminally underrated and forgotten to me. It’s this amazing mixture of high fantasy and Peanuts-style character interaction, with these really believable and real-feeling characters caught up in a fantasy war with rat creatures, dragons, a sentient locust swarm, undead, and ghosts. But it never loses sight of the heart of the story, which is the eight or nine characters we follow all through the plot. It was how I discovered comic books as a little girl and it is a really important and special series to me. I hate that so few people seem to have read it.

Javier: This is the kind of stuff I used to buy for my kids, but secretly was really for me. Scholastic reprinted these a few years back, and I bought my son the entire set.

Alex: Ha, most of the superhero stuff I love is, I feel underrated, but ‘ll start with C.O.W.L. It’s a series written by Kyle Higgins, set in the 60s (or so) where the city of Chicago’s unionized superhero outfit is about to go on strike as they try to negotiate a new contract with the mayor’s office. The problem? They’re so good at what they do that they’re not needed anymore…

This 11 issue series ignited my interest in exploring the concept of superheroing as a paid occupation, corruption, and the nature of power. It’s fantastic, and needs some love.

Brett: I started reading that one and stopped. I should definitely go back and see what I missed.

Paul: The New Warriors, the original run. I loved the original line up, and the new additions that came and went. It was so 90s and it was great. Young teen heroes, turned away by the established teams so they form up and show them how it’s done. And they had some great villains; Psionex, Mad Thinker (who actually helped these kids learn about themselves), Folding Circle, The Sphinx, Force of Nature…so many great stories. I think this is the only title were I bought every single issue, #1-#75 and annuals. I still pull the box out and read through the run. It really stuck with me and still is one of my favourite books (not including the unfortunate relaunches).

Alex: I enjoyed the most recent relaunch with Scarlet Spider, to be honest.

Paul: It started out pretty good..but I couldn’t stick with it after the talking dog and cat beings from Wundagore. There was potential though…I did enjoy Scarlet Spider and Hummingbird

Alex: Heh, I actually enjoyed those quite a bit. I’d read them all on Marvel Unlimited after plowing through some Moon Knight from the 2006 run, and they were a nicely pleasant change.

Paul: I’m glad someone enjoyed it smile emoticon

Alex: If you liked the way Scarlet Spider was written, you should check out the 25 odd issue run by the same writer. It’s fantastic

Paul: I would love to see the originals in a new run…older, wiser..like 3 ex Avengers (Justice, Firestar, Speedball), bring back Turbo, rescue Alex Power from the Future Foundation…boom, you got a book tongue emoticon

Alex: I’d be interested in that, and I never read the originals

Elana: I like the idea of villains helping young heroes understand themselves. Any idea roughly which issues that was?

Ryan: How about Alan Moore‘s totally under-appreciated run on WildC.A.T.S.? Even with all the quality creator-owned stuff coming out of Image these days, I still maintain that this is the best-written run of any Image title. It sold well, but like a lot of the stuff that came out at that time, people bought it, but never actually bothered to read it. That’s a real shame because while this won’t leap-frog V For Vendetta or From Hell or Watchmen (or Providence, his best series in decades) on anyone’s list of favorite Moore comics, it’s a thoroughly engaging, imaginative, stylish, and dare I say even modestly ambitious run of issues that are richly deserving of critical re-appraisal and a far more considered examination by anyone so inclined.

Brett: I think Joe Casey and Dustin Nguyen’s run in Wildcats 3.0 was even better. That’s a run that’s woefully overlooked and so ahead of its times. It had the team more as a corporation dealing with not just powered villains but the oil lobby.

Elana: Need to read both of those! There was a lot of creative work by top writers in the Wildstorm universe.

One of the comics I would include here as an overlooked great would be the Wildstorm summer special of 2001.

There’s Hawksmoore parkour, Zealot in a beautiful silent piece stealing apples, a hilarious bit with The Engineer’s dating woes that includes what HAD been the iconic Midnighter moment until his solo series.

I referenced it in my review of Midnighter. Apparently he wears his mask even when he’s hanging around their headquarters in an undershirt and underwear. And ironing clothes.

Elana: Grant Morrison and Jae Lee‘s “Fantastic Four” 1,2,3,4. I’ve only met one other person who’s read it. I LOVED his take on the characters. He seems to be the only person to ever care about Sue’s psychology. The art is really sexy when it needs to be (ie when Namor shows up to seduce Sue). His Alicia Masters is smart. Ben Grimm’s dialog about becoming the Thing makes me cry. The art is beautiful and moody and the book is a tightly put together package of “Oh, so this is how the fantastic four works” written for modern readers.

Alex: That sounds like it might be interesting. When did they come out?

Paul: Sounds very interesting

Elana: 2001-2002. It was in the Marvel Knights imprint. There was one issue dedicated to each member.

Alex: Interesting. I may try and find those issues if it’s only the four

Elana: Alex they are in a tiny trade paperback.

Alex: Awesome! I’m heading to the comic shop anyway later today so I’ll check for them

Ryan: I read it, but don’t remember it striking much of a cord. Guess I’ll have to dig out my back issues and give it another look —

Javier: Kirby‘s Kamandi: The Last Boy on Earth. I’m on a bender trying to get every issue. I’m short an odd 17 issues. I don’t really remember how I got into this character. I was 8 years old when this series ended, and I didn’t start collecting til I was 14; but I had a few beat up issues in my collection. Much later I looked to buy the collected TPB, but much too late; and it is now out of print and sells at a premium. I did the math; and looking for the originals will cost about the same as buying the collected trades. I know it’s suppose to be a rip-off of the Planet of the Apes, but Kirby’s art and writing still holds. The idea of a “Great Disaster” that not even Superman was able to prevent is classic. I can’t figure out why it was cancelled so early, since everything I read on it said sales were good; and to this day, back issues sell cheaply (when you can find them).

Ryan: One of Kirby’s very best series — shoot, we could do a whole roundtable discussion on under-appreciated Kirby titles, from OMAC to Captain Victory to Silver Star to Devil Dinosaur to Black Panther to 2001 to Machine Man to his 1970s Captain America run — all are crackling with more ideas per page than any ten entire comics are today.

Elana: Ryan: let’s do it! Also the success of Adventure Time is def a reflection of Kamandi’s brilliance as a story

Christopher: I would have to say the lesser known Neil Gaiman works, that the now defunct Tekno Comix published; Mr Hero: The Pneumatic Man, Teknophage, and Lady Justice. The story is good, albeit a bit strange but, it is Neil Gaiman after all. I have found a few issues of each, but finding them in sequential order is a frustrating challenge. In addition to that I would have to say, Alan Moore‘s Fashion Beads run. Another weird, strange yet, detailed and wonderful story. I would say Grant Morrision’s six issue, Batman RIP run. Great story, and art.

Brett: I didn’t know any of those Gaiman comics. I’ll need to check them out.

Elana: Do Peter David‘s decades on X-Factor count as overlooked? It’s an incredibly long run that doesn’t seem well examined. I grew up on it.

Brett: I grew up on that run, a favorite of mine too!

Well, that’s a lot of good suggestions folks. What do you readers think? Sound off in the comments below!

The 2015 American Library Association Conference Discusses Courage in Comics

The American Library Association is currently taking place in Chicago and going through February 3. The conference has some some comics related things going on including this panel called “Courage in Comics” featuring Gene Luen Yang, Francois Mouly, and Jeff Smith.

While it’s not the full video, you can check out this clip highlight below where the three discuss challenges of representation in comics and creating comics even when it might anger some.

And more video of Cece Bell, Jeff Smith, Francois Mouly, and Gene Luen Yang discussing the first comic they read, and two books every library should carry.

Preview: All-New Miracleman Annual #1 Unites Morrison, Quesada, Milligan & Allred!

New Year’s Eve is about to get even more miraculous as four of the biggest names in comic book history bring you new Miracleman stories for a new generation. Today, Marvel is pleased to present your new look at All-New Miracleman Annual #1, uniting celebrated comic creators Grant Morrison, Joe Quesada, Peter Milligan and Mike Allred for one, star-studded issue that should not be missed!

First, a story over 20 years in the making – Grant Morrison’s long-lost Miracleman tale will finally see print for the first time! Famously unpublished, this much talked about Morrison script will finally be brought to life by legendary artist & Marvel Chief Creative Officer Joe Quesada! A much talked about piece of Miracleman history, experience the foreboding tale of the one Kid Miracleman on the eve of the Battle of London!

Then, comic superstars and fan-favorite X-Statix creators Peter Milligan and Mike Allred take you back to the glory days for an all-new Miracleman classic! Miracleman, Kid Miracleman and Young Miracleman do battle against the awesome and terrifying might of Dr. Gargunza! Yet something is not right. A sense of unease. Something in MIracleman’s own mind! What is Project Zarathustra?

If that wasn’t enough to make All-New Miracleman Annual #1 the can’t miss comic of the year, this issue also comes jam-packed with extras including Grant Morrison’s original script, sketches, original art and more!

Launching alongside S.H.I.E.L.D. #1 as one of only two Marvel comics on-sale New Year’s Eve, these two must read issues will help you close out 2014 with a bang! Be there when Morrison, Quesada, Millgan and Allred unite for the most star-studded comic you’ll read all year! Don’t miss All-New Miracleman Annual #1 – hitting comic shops and digital devices on 12/31!

ALL-NEW MIRACLEMAN ANNUAL #1 (OCT140868)
Written by GRANT MORRISON & PETER MILLIGAN
Art by JOE QUESADA & MIKE ALLRED
Cover by GABRIELE DELL’OTTO
Variant Covers by JOE QUESADA (OCT140869) & JEFF SMITH (OCT140871)
Sketch Variant by JOE QUESADA (OCT140870)
FOC – 12/01/14, On Sale 12/31/14

All_New_Miracleman_Annual_Cover

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