Yesterday morning I finished reading my friend Mike Dobb's new book Escape! How Animation Went Mainstream in the 1990s -- this morning, I finished reading my friend Tim Lucas's truly massive, moving Mario Bava: All the Colors of the Dark. Today, I'll be continuing work on a book project as a writer, The Neil Gaiman Companion, which coauthors Chris Golden and Henry Wagner brought me into in the eleventh hour. Mike and Tim's books are an inspiration, to say the least, and I'll blog about both books later this week -- but today, I've got to keep the clock ticking on the Gaiman book.
More of Lorraine a' Malena's music is spinning in my head this morning, and now on my player as I work on the book project. One tune in particular strangely fits the process Chris, Hank and I currently are steeped in -- reading, re-reading, and autopsying Neil's body of work:
"I've been dissecting all the letters that you sent me,
Slicing through them looking for the real you,
Cutting through the fat and gristle
Of each tortuous epistle
Trying to work out what to do..."
- from Postmortem on Our Love (lyrics by Neil Gaiman, music by Lorraine Garland)
That said, though, it's a tune that I still associate with Van Morrison that I hit 'replay' on a couple few too many times:
"I'll tell me ma
When I get home,
The boys won't leave
The girls alone
They pull my hair,
They steal my comb,
But that's all right,
Till I get home..."
Thanks again, Lorraine, for gracing the week with the copy you gave me!
Today and tomorrow I'll be working through Hank's weekend torrent of chapters, amid transcribing the five hours of interview tapes I came home with; we'll be at this till it's done in the next couple of weeks. Wish us luck!
At last, a photo of the CCS/Bissette booth in the Antique Mall in Quechee, VT; photo by Mark & Kathy Masztal
A few things I didn't get to this week, as yet:
* My old cartooning amigo Mark Masztal and his wife Kathy were in the area this past weekend, and Marge and I managed to join them for breakfast on Tuesday morning at our favorite Windsor eatery Stub & Laura's.
* I'll use this opportunity to shamelessly plug once again The Center for Cartoon Studies/Bissette booth -- Dealer #653 -- in
The booth is literally jam-packed with one-of-a-kind signed CCS and Bissette collectibles, including signed copies of Sarah Stewart Taylor's mystery novels (sold two more of them yesterday!), James Sturm's graphic novels, Peter Money's poetry tomes, Cayetano 'Cat' Garza original art, Bissette-illustrated ceramics (see Mark's blog, linked above, for a shot of him with his Bissette Quechee Coffee Zombee mug!), lots of CCS student comics/mini-comics/comics packs, and tons of outstanding and curious vintage comics, factory-sealed DVDs, outsider LPs, and much, much more.
* While I don't play favorites at CCS, I do want to note among my readings this past week was a most enjoyable re-reading of the first two issues out thus far of Sean Ford's excellent Only Skin: New Tales of the Slow Apocalypse, which is likewise on sale at the booth.
Labels: Chris Golden, Colleen Frakes, Escape, Fabulous Lorraine Garland, G. Michael Dobbs, Henry Wagner, Mark Masztal, Mirror Mirror, Neil Gaiman Companion, Quechee Gorge Village, Sean Ford, Tim Lucas
2 Comments:
Hi there!
Got in through LaM's and of course I agree that Mirror Mirror is a MUST HAVE.
What got me when looking through the CD booklet is that not only did Neil Gaiman write some of the lyrics, but he is also credited for some of the music!
All we need now is for him to come through with his promise of publishing his recipe for rice pudding on his blog and I do believe we'll have a very complete perfect artist.
I was happy to read that Sharon was seduced by your drawings. She wanted to translate some of her birding knowledge into comics format, so I hope you guys can work out something together.
Greetings from Rome.
Nathalie
Cleavage!
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