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Schulz is revisiting some old scenarios and branching out in new directions. Linus's snowmen are back, Marcie is desperately attempting to understand football, and the guys touch up John Lennon's “Imagine.” Plus: Sweet Smug Snoopy In this episode Michael praises The River at Night by Kevin Huizenga. Transcript available at UnpackingPeanuts.com Unpacking Peanuts is copyright Jimmy Gownley, Michael Cohen, Harold Buchholz, and Liz Sumner. Produced and edited by Liz Sumner. Music by Michael Cohen. Additional voiceover by Aziza Shukralla Clark. For more from the show follow @unpackpeanuts on Instagram and Threads, and @unpackingpeanuts on Facebook, Blue Sky, and YouTube. For more about Jimmy, Michael, and Harold, visit unpackingpeanuts.com. Thanks for listening.
Full episode at patreon.com/thicklinespod. Sally talks to indie comics stalwart Kevin Huizenga about his new book Curses (Drawn and Quarterly, 2024), recorded live at Partners & Son in Philadelphia, PA on March 14, 2024. Thanks to our Patreon subscribers for making this episode possible! Follow us on Instagram @thicklinespod.
Amir and Jason talk about their latest pickups, including Pee Pee Poo Poo by Caroline Cash, Time Under Tension and Desperate Pleasures by M.S. Harkness, Yummy Fur by Chester Brown, Fielder by Kevin Huizenga; the zines Mineshaft, 1986 and Bubbles, along with some amazing original art by the legendary Trevor Von Eeden. Also a discussion of the most important years of comic book history! --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/classiccomics/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/classiccomics/support
Sarah Firth is a cartoonist, artist, writer, speaker, and graphic recorder who has been published extensively in Australia and overseas. Her work has appeared in the Eisner Award winning anthology, Drawing Power, and the Ledger Award winning anthology, Neither Here Nor Hair. She is also a founding member of Graphic Recorders Australia, a not-for-profit professional association that supports the Graphic Recording community in Australia. Her debut graphic novel “Eventually Everything Connects” is available now. James Baker sits down with Sarah Firth and they talk: how she first got interested in comicsher relationship with librarieswhat aphantasia is and how she works around itmaking a graphic novel for adults and her desire to have it published by a traditional publisherreceiving a grant for the book and are funding bodies becoming more receptive to comics related projectsher involvement in different anthologies and her thoughts on receiving recognition and awardswhat graphic recording is and her work doing graphic recordingsof course, her journey to creating and publishing Eventually Everything Connectsthe October 18 book launch in Melbourne andSarah's reading recommendations: Top recommendations: Still Alive by Safdar Ahmed, Our Members Be Unlimited by Sam Wallman, The Grot by Pat Grant, Stone Fruit by Lee Lai. Boundless by Jillian Tamaki, Unflattening by Nick Sousanis and Glenn Gadges: The River at Night by Kevin Huizenga.For more on Sarah Firth check out her website: http://www.sarahthefirth.comTo find out more about Graphic Recorders Australia check out their website: https://www.graphicrecorders.org.au For more news and the complete roundup of resources and podcasts visit our main blog: https://aliagraphic.blogspot.com/ You can also follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/ALIAGraphicHit the subscribe button for our podcast and blog and please leave us a glowing review, it will make you feel warm and fuzzy and every little bit helps. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Cette semaine c'est Club de lecture à «La vie en BD». Émilie Roy-Brière, Marco Duchesne, Raymond Poirier et Édouard Tremblay échange autour de quatre titre qui développent leur récit visuel autour d'une palette de couleurs limitée : «Conan le Cimmérien T13 - Xuthal la Crépusculaire», de Christophe Bec (scénario) et Stevan Subic (dessin) chez Glénat; «Glenn Ganges dans Le Flot des souvenirs», de Kevin Huizenga, chez Delcourt; «Bouées» et «Voler par-dessus les trous», de Catherine Lepage aux Éditions de la Pastèque; et «Voyage au centre de la Terre», de Matteo Berton, d'après l'oeuvre de Jules Vernes, aux Éditions de la Pastèque.
This week we're back with a delightful little book about life, death, and not being able to fall asleep. Really enjoyed this and we hope you do too. Our next episode will also be free as we cover the first 2 volumes of No. 5 by Taiyō Matsumoto. Other books mentioned in this episode are: The Nao of Brown by Glyn Dillon, Matchmaker by Cam Marshall, and Gloriana by Kevin Huizenga. Follow Autumn on Twitter and Cohost! Follow Rick on Twitter and Patreon! Our art was done by Cam! You should follow their excellent webcomic, Matchmaker! To support the show and get access to an extra episode each month, go to exportaud.io! "Bass Vibes" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
FIVE-HUNDRED EPISODES of The Virtual Memories Show?! Let's celebrate this milestone episode with tributes, remembrances, jokes, congrats, non-sequiturs, and a couple of songs (!) from nearly 100 of my past guests, including Maria Alexander, Jonathan Ames, Glen Baxter, Jonathan Baylis, Zoe Beloff, Walter Bernard, Sven Birkerts, Charles Blackstone, RO Blechman, Phlip Boehm, MK Brown, Dan Cafaro, David Carr, Kyle Cassidy, Howard Chaykin, Joe Ciardiello, Gary Clark, John Crowley, Ellen Datlow, Paul Di Filippo, Joan Marans Dim, Liza Donnelly, Bob Eckstein, Scott Edelman, Barbara Epler, Glynnis Fawkes, Aaron Finkelstein, Mary Fleener, Shary Flenniken, Josh Alan Friedman, Kipp Friedman, Michael Gerber, Mort Gerberg, ES Glenn, Sophia Glock, Paul Gravett, Tom Hart, Dean Haspiel, Jennifer Hayden, Glenn Head, Ron Hogan, Kevin Huizenga, Jonathan Hyman, Andrew Jamieson, Ian Kelley, Jonah Kinigstein, Kathe Koja, Ken Krimstein, Anita Kunz, Peter Kuper, Glenn Kurtz, Kate Lacour, Roger Langridge, Elisabeth Lasch-Quinn, John Leland, David Leopold, Sara Lippmann, David Lloyd, Whitney Matheson, Patrick McDonnell, Dave McKean, Scott Meslow, Barbara Nessim, Jeff Nunokawa, Jim Ottaviani, Celia Paul, Woodrow Phoenix, Darryl Pinckney, Weng Pixin, Eddy Portnoy, Virginia Postrel, Bram Presser, AL Price, Dawn Raffel, Boaz Roth, Hugh Ryan, Dmitry Samarov, Frank Santoro, JJ Sedelmaier, Nadine Sergejeff, Michael Shaw, R Sikoryak, Jen Silverman, Posy Simmonds, Vanessa Sinclair, David Small, Sebastian Smee, Ed Sorel, James Sturm, Mike Tisserand, Tom Tomorrow, Wallis Wilde-Menozzi, Kriota Willberg, Warren Woodfin, Jim Woodring, and Claudia Young. Plus, we look at back with segments from the guests we've lost over the years: Anthea Bell, Harold Bloom, Bruce Jay Friedman, Milton Glaser, Clive James, JD McClatchy, DG Myers, Tom Spurgeon, and Ed Ward. Here's to the next 500 shows! • More info at our site • Support The Virtual Memories Show via Patreon or Paypal
On today's episode, I talk to comics creator Kevin Huizenga. Originally from South Holland, a small town of Dutch immigrants in the suburbs of Chicago, he attended Calvin College in Grand Rapids, Michigan, which is where he started drawing the influential mini-comic Supermonster. After moving to St. Louis, Kevin started the comic book series Or Else, the strip Leon Beyond with Dan Zettwoch, as well as his acclaimed series Ganges. Much of Kevin's work has been published by Drawn & Quarterly; he's won five Ignatz awards and been nominated for Harvey and Eisner awards; and he's constantly creating mini-comics which you can get on his website - one of my most recent favorites is his Rumbling series, but you'll never go wrong with anything he makes! This is the website for Beginnings, subscribe on Apple Podcasts, follow me on Twitter.
With The River at Night, Kevin Huizenga found his perfect hook. Casting his go-to surrogate Glenn Ganges as an insomniac, the cartoonist discovered an ideal frame for storytelling that that runs the gamut from the beginning of earth to the dot com bubble burst. It’s peak Huizenga, really. The work belies the cartoonist’s love of learning, visualizing a stream of information that leans heavily on a love of science drawing and history. The book taps into the same sense of delight in discover that permeates much of his work, with regular detours that are served well by the mental restless that can make sleep so elusive for so many. Set to the chaotic sounds of downtown Brooklyn early on a rainy Saturday morning, Huizenga discusses teaching, the business of comics and the possibility of embracing scientific drawing in a fuller form.
Cartoonist Kevin Huizenga joins the show to talk about his new graphic novel, Glenn Ganges in The River At Night (Drawn & Quarterly)! We get into late-night reveries and using a character's sleepless night as a base camp for a 200-page book, the ways repetition leads to time travel, making an artistic breakthrough partway through his new work, his modular approach to storytelling and how it jibes with his midwestern comics style, and the risk of identifying too much with his stand-in, Glenn Ganges. We also talk about video-game sobriety, whether his favorite creators are spending too much time on Twitter, learning about indy comics before the internet, and our shared cyberpunk upbringing. And we do the math on how many books in our libraries we'll actually get around to reading! • More info at our site • Support The Virtual Memories Show via Patreon or Paypal
Book of the Month: Glenn Ganges in The River at Night by Kevin Huizenga from Drawn & Quarterly, Basket Full of Heads #1 by Joe Hill and Leomacs from DC/Hill House Comics, Scenes from an Impending Marriage by Adrian Tomine from Drawn & Quarterly, 2000AD prog 2155 from Rebellion and Judge Dredd's Crime Files, Spider-Verse, Genndy Tartakovsky's Primal, Marauders #1 and Excalibur #1, plus a whole mess more!
This week’s Comics Syllabus podcast features a discussion of Kevin Huizenga’s “The River at Night” (Drawn + Quarterly) ( 35:20 ) with good friend of the podcast Johnny Hall. Johnny and Comics Syllabus host Paul met up at Cartoon Crossroads (CXC) Columbus, had a chance to meet Mr. Huizenga, and talk about this collection of […]
Tucker, Matt, Joe & Chris got together to check in about the top of their Just Read stack, including a new comic from Kevin Huizenga, Mickey Zacchilli's Space Academy 123, and the unjustly (justly?) ignored Batman: Master of the Future. And at the end, Joe provides a deep analysis that may or may not be necessary of a recent Todd McFarlane article posted at Vice.
On this episode of Comic Books Are Burning In Hell, Tucker Stone, Matt Seneca, Joe McCulloch and Chris Mautner gather round to discuss the Ganges series by Kevin Huizenga, one of the most important comic book releases of the last decade. Check out The Factual Opinion for links to articles that we've written about Kevin's work!
My Summer Lair host Sammy Younan talks comics books with Kramer's Ergot and Crickets creator Sammy Harkham. My Summer Lair Chapter #44: What Comic Books Do Your Immigrant Parents Read? Recorded: May 13, 2017 6:00pm
Harley Quinn! Kevin Huizenga! Dragon Ball Z! What do these disparate elements have in common? IDK, but we talk about them this month.
Joshua and Joe talk about Through the Habitrails by Jeff Nicholson and Ganges #5 by Kevin Huizenga.
Mr. Ganges has a lot going on.Recorded on June 2nd, 2015.Featuring:David Hopkins & Austin WilsonRunning Time: 1:15:01Topics • Intro – Check out FanOff.com for all of your podcast needs, and DCBService.com for all of your comics needs!• You Should Read This – We recommend FOUR books we think you’ll love: Curses by Kevin Huizenga, The
Kevin Huizenga and Dan Berry talk about rituals, creativity and process. Check out the Patreon campaign and help support the show!
On this episode of The Comics Alternative Interviews, Derek and Andy talk with Chris Duffy about his new edited collection, Above the Dreamless Dead: World War I in Poetry and Comics (First Second). This is a unique project, gathering a variety of poems surrounding the First World War — both canonical as well as more obscure — and translating them into comics form. The guys talk with Chris about the genesis of this project and his efforts to bring together an eclectic group of artists, including Eddie Campbell, George Pratt, Hunt Emerson, Simon Gane, Sarah Glidden, Stephen Bissette, Peter Kuper, Isabel Greenberg, Carol Tyler, and Kevin Huizenga. Andy, in particular, is excited about this exchange, because it brings together two of his scholarly interests: World War I literature and comics. The guys also ask Chris about his more general work in comics, his experiences in working with a variety of different artists, the resonance between poetry and comics, and his philosophies in adapting texts from other media. While the subject matter in Above the Dreamless Dead may be sobering, the conversation in this episode is lively and engaging, a great mix of history, literary analysis, and comics-related insights.
Graeme McMillan and Jeff Lester are back for the first part of Episode 63 to talk comics. More specifically, some very offbeat comics from around the world, including The Spy vs. Spy Omnibus by Antonio Prohias; Nemesis The Warlock by Pat Mills, Kevin O'Neill, and Bryan Talbot; Strontium Dog by John Wagner, Alan Grant and Carlos Ezquerra; Crying Freeman by Kazuo Koike and Ryoichi Ikegami, and more praise for the astounding Ganges #4 by Kevin Huizenga. Thanks for listening and we hope you enjoy!
We didn't quite finish the job we started last week, so Graeme McMillan and Jeff Lester are back with a brief, somewhat addled episode 62 to continue answering questions posed to us on the Savage Critic website. The plan was to do a strong ninety minutes but recording woes mean it's more like a slightly sketchy hour. So join us on an abbreviated trip through listeners' questions, with topics including Kid friendly books in the New52, Matt Fraction and Dave Eggers, Uncanny X-Force, Spaceman #1 and the future of Vertigo, Kevin Huizenga's Ganges, Alphas and Misfits, and as much as we can work into our unfortunately-truncated time schedule. Thanks for listening and we hope you enjoy!
Howdy, True Believers! Frankie Santoro here with a guest spot over on Inkstuds. I wanted to have some crossover blog action and asked Robin if he would be kind enough to host the audio of an interview I did with … Continue reading →
In the conclusion to episode 15, Graeme McMillan and I talk recent comics, including the latest volume of Mome and the second issue of Alan Moore's Neonomicon. Yes, it's another extensive and conflicted analysis of Mr. Moore, this time focusing on how his handling of female characters. Fortunately, we somehow emerge from that potential conversational quagmire intact to also examine Kevin Huizenga's The Wild Kingdom from Drawn & Quarterly, and Benjamin Marra's Gangsta Rap Posse. We hope you enjoy it, and thanks for listening!
Épisode 58 : Une entrevue avec Kevin Huizenga
Épisode 58 : Une entrevue avec Kevin Huizenga
Nous parlons de GANGES de Kevin Huizenga, de Daddy's Girl de Debbie Drechsler et de Le jour où, un collectif qui célèbre les 20 ans de France Info.
Nous parlons de GANGES de Kevin Huizenga, de Daddy's Girl de Debbie Drechsler et de Le jour où, un collectif qui célèbre les 20 ans de France Info.
Luchadoras (Peggy Adam), Le blog de Frantico et Ganges de Kevin Huizenga.
Luchadoras (Peggy Adam), Le blog de Frantico et Ganges de Kevin Huizenga.