In doing a little research of the sales in our Boutiki store (where we stock all of our in-print books, as well as comics and graphic novels by other publishers), I made a discovery about just how much James "fails" in our little marketplace. I'll get into it in my Publishers Weekly column this week. Admittedly, the Boutiki isn't an accurate microcosm of the comics direct market as a whole, but that's kind of the point. As Spurgeon notes: "James Turner should be on-line and in comics shops, and the reason he's not going to be is because that's been decided for him. This decision was not solely made by market forces: he's able to make the comics and has someone willing to publish them. It was made in one leg of the capitalist stool by an interpretation of what those market forces should mean, not the forces themselves."
Warlord of Io, meanwhile, is going digital -- issue one is available to download now at our website -- and will be published as a graphic novel. To get an idea of what it's all about, check out Michael May's review at Robot 6* of The Warlord of Io and Other Stories, a kind of "issue #0" that was printed and distributed by Diamond. May calls James Turner "Rip-Your-Brain-Out-Of-Your-Head-Bec
- JdG
*disclaimer, as always: I do freelance work for Robot 6.


