Ugh, I forgot to do these the last couple of weeks. I mentioned Eating Steve, which y'all should read, but I forgot some others. Sorry. I've been busy rearranging my brainstuff with repeated head trauma and spilling tomato bisque soup on my dress. You know how it is.
We'll start with the most recent and work our way back, 'kay?

Jellyfist by J. Vasquez and J. Goldberg
48-page color thingy, $8.95
Yes, after the shock of crappy printing, the razing of forests, and a long-ass wait, it's finally in stores. The price is higher than it was originally, as the necessary materials to make it look uncrappy cost a pretty penny, let me tell you. I'd like to say that I've seen it, but despite my pleas, the printer has deigned not to send us preview copies. I can only hope all is well with this printing--the sample pages and proofs looked fine.
Jellyfist features a series of strange short stories with commentary by the creators about the creative process that reveals their inevitable slide into insanity. Wieners. Pigs. Blobby stuff. You'll love it.

Igor: Fixed by Frankensteins by Chris Reilly and Chris Grine
72-page graphic novel, $5.95
What can one say but "Salieri"? Actually, no, that has nothing to do with this book. Here's this book: a hunchback, cringe-inducing scenes with broken glass, vomit, rats, old war movies set in the trenches. It's a truly rousing and at times baffling adventure that is somehow charming. Igor is drawn by Eisner nominee Chris Grine and has an introduction by Batton Lash.

Wonderland #5 by Tommy Kovac and Sonny Liew
24-page full-color comic, $3.95
Wonderland remains delightful as the prim-and-proper (except for the occasional sailor-worthy spate of swearing) Mary Ann meets some extraordinarily cute animals who have started an Alice cult. They want to give the royals what's what, they do, and they think Mary Ann is just the girl to help them!
We'll start with the most recent and work our way back, 'kay?

Jellyfist by J. Vasquez and J. Goldberg
48-page color thingy, $8.95
Yes, after the shock of crappy printing, the razing of forests, and a long-ass wait, it's finally in stores. The price is higher than it was originally, as the necessary materials to make it look uncrappy cost a pretty penny, let me tell you. I'd like to say that I've seen it, but despite my pleas, the printer has deigned not to send us preview copies. I can only hope all is well with this printing--the sample pages and proofs looked fine.
Jellyfist features a series of strange short stories with commentary by the creators about the creative process that reveals their inevitable slide into insanity. Wieners. Pigs. Blobby stuff. You'll love it.
Igor: Fixed by Frankensteins by Chris Reilly and Chris Grine
72-page graphic novel, $5.95
What can one say but "Salieri"? Actually, no, that has nothing to do with this book. Here's this book: a hunchback, cringe-inducing scenes with broken glass, vomit, rats, old war movies set in the trenches. It's a truly rousing and at times baffling adventure that is somehow charming. Igor is drawn by Eisner nominee Chris Grine and has an introduction by Batton Lash.

Wonderland #5 by Tommy Kovac and Sonny Liew
24-page full-color comic, $3.95
Wonderland remains delightful as the prim-and-proper (except for the occasional sailor-worthy spate of swearing) Mary Ann meets some extraordinarily cute animals who have started an Alice cult. They want to give the royals what's what, they do, and they think Mary Ann is just the girl to help them!
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I'm pretty sure no naked girls were harmed in the making of this interview, but you never know.
On the subject of Jellyfist: Yeah, it's still chugging along in the printing process. Pretty sure we've hit upon the right materials and going to get this thing to press. Pretty sure. Yep. However, the book needs to be order-adjusted with Diamond Comics, so it's going to be a bit longer than we first thought. We're looking at October now.
So sorry, everyone. But do be assure that when the book is printed, the production values will be very fine indeed.
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He's like a chameleon with that tongue.--
Yeah, I was going for a frog-like, sticky tongue thing.
I would've liked to see the pig go in the other way round, with that same cute smile slowly vanishing in a series of frames.
You were the one that wanted a SLOW suck to occur.
I know! That's what I'm saying! Agonizingly slow, with the cute face. Like Wes Studi in Deep Rising.
Yes, but pig fannies are adorable.
Oh, and look at what I found with my seriously serious Google Blogsearch searching skills (nice thing about a word like "jellyfist" -- you're pretty much guaranteed to get returns that are actually about what you're looking for). Suicide Girls is hosting a Jhonen Vaquez Interrogation Special. SG contributor Zoetica Ebb will be accepting questions from the public for an interview... err, interrogation taking place "in the coming weeks."
Find out all the info here. You have to be 18 to click on that link, OK? Don't come crying to me when your young eyes see things you are not psychologically prepared for, thus sexualizing you at too young an age and leading you down a path of indiscriminate screwing, prostitution and horrible and foul diseases. Remember the part about "alarming nudity" in the Jellyfist press release? You see, I've warned you.
Collaborative Nonsense in Jellyfist
New Work by Vasquez and Goldberg in July
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SLG announced the impending July 2007 release of Jellyfist, a new work of collaborative nonsense by Jhonen Vasquez (Johnny the Homicidal Maniac) and J.R. Goldberg, a comic that is quite possibly like nothing that heretofore has been seen in the universe. Produced in a climate of tension, aggression, meandering conversations and ego-clashing arguments, Jellyfist is the work of two artists who battle with interpretation and pull down the curtain between audience and creators, revealing artistic collaboration in all its alarming nudity.
Jellyfist is a 48-page, full-color book of strange, disconnected stories written by Vasquez and drawn by Goldberg, a newcomer to comics. Begun as a simple, spontaneous collaboration when Vasquez wrote "a tiny, incredibly vague surreal script" and gave it to Goldberg to draw, Jellyfist soon grew into a side-show-freak embodiment of the issues that arise when one artist tries to draw what another has envisioned. After the initial story, Goldberg began to take more time and care to draw the scripts Vasquez gave to her. "So I started getting a lot more bossy in my writing direction," Vasquez said, "and then the battles begin."
"So far, it has been a very bizarre, and crazy-making-hair-pully-outy-type experience," Goldberg said of working with Vasquez.
Jellyfist, the work resulting from these battles, is a series of short comics featuring elements that the two artists could agree on, which Goldberg described as "anything shaped like a wiener, or characters with dim-witted expressions and nub arms." These comics are, if you will allow another metaphor, the Wienermobile-like vehicle for an examination of the frustrating, ridiculous and sometimes fulfilling collaborative process. Conversations between Vasquez and Goldberg run at the edge of each of the comics, reproducing interactions that usually remain behind the panels.
"Our arguments with each other were just as bizarre as the comics themselves ended up being," said Vasquez. "Each time she submitted a comic, the topic always turned into an argument/discussion on the subjects of interpretation of the surreal and visual storytelling in general."
Goldberg elaborated on their discussions. "We are both terribly opinionated, which makes for a fair amount of clashing," she said. "A lot of the arguments would end with him telling me that I'm not funny and me kicking him in the shins. However, there are those occasional moments of glory where he'd really dig something, and I would heave a huge sigh of relief, knowing that I wasn't going to have to redraw stuff."
Added Vasquez, "RARRGH!"
Jellyfist will be in a special 48-page, 7.5 x 6" format, perfect bound and printed in full color, with production values that would cause its wiener-shaped, nub-armed characters to drop their jaws in dim-witted awe. It will be published in July 2007 and retail for $5.95. It is available now for preorder from Diamond Comics, and will soon also be available at SLG Publishing's website www.slgcomic.com and Amazon.com.
Jellyfist is a 48-page, full-color book of strange, disconnected stories written by Vasquez and drawn by Goldberg, a newcomer to comics. Begun as a simple, spontaneous collaboration when Vasquez wrote "a tiny, incredibly vague surreal script" and gave it to Goldberg to draw, Jellyfist soon grew into a side-show-freak embodiment of the issues that arise when one artist tries to draw what another has envisioned. After the initial story, Goldberg began to take more time and care to draw the scripts Vasquez gave to her. "So I started getting a lot more bossy in my writing direction," Vasquez said, "and then the battles begin."
"So far, it has been a very bizarre, and crazy-making-hair-pully-outy-type experience," Goldberg said of working with Vasquez.
Jellyfist, the work resulting from these battles, is a series of short comics featuring elements that the two artists could agree on, which Goldberg described as "anything shaped like a wiener, or characters with dim-witted expressions and nub arms." These comics are, if you will allow another metaphor, the Wienermobile-like vehicle for an examination of the frustrating, ridiculous and sometimes fulfilling collaborative process. Conversations between Vasquez and Goldberg run at the edge of each of the comics, reproducing interactions that usually remain behind the panels.
"Our arguments with each other were just as bizarre as the comics themselves ended up being," said Vasquez. "Each time she submitted a comic, the topic always turned into an argument/discussion on the subjects of interpretation of the surreal and visual storytelling in general."
Goldberg elaborated on their discussions. "We are both terribly opinionated, which makes for a fair amount of clashing," she said. "A lot of the arguments would end with him telling me that I'm not funny and me kicking him in the shins. However, there are those occasional moments of glory where he'd really dig something, and I would heave a huge sigh of relief, knowing that I wasn't going to have to redraw stuff."
Added Vasquez, "RARRGH!"
Jellyfist will be in a special 48-page, 7.5 x 6" format, perfect bound and printed in full color, with production values that would cause its wiener-shaped, nub-armed characters to drop their jaws in dim-witted awe. It will be published in July 2007 and retail for $5.95. It is available now for preorder from Diamond Comics, and will soon also be available at SLG Publishing's website www.slgcomic.com and Amazon.com.

