Friday, January 04, 2008

Fave Books of 2007: Part One

I'll be getting into my fave DVDs and movies of 2007 in the next few days, but reckoned it best to kick off with my favorite books of the year. After all, we're all readers in this tribe, yes?

It's been a great year for reading and books, and this off-the-top-of-my-head list of my fave book experiences of the year shouldn't be taken as a 'best of' list -- I've not stayed abreast of the new fiction out this year, and though I'm omnivorous as a non-fiction reader, my interests are too peculiar and personal to even pretend I could possibly generate a "best of" reading list most readers would recognize.

But having read two-to-three books per week this past year, I can say with certainty that these were among my favorite reads, revisits and discoveries of the year!


New Works

Book of the Year! Mario Bava: All the Colors of the Dark

Book of the Year? It sure is to this diehard fan! Mario Bava: All the Colors of the Dark is Tim Lucas's valentine to cinema, and among the most stunning movie books of this or any year.

As Mark Martin commented on this blog after my umpteenth enthusiastic post about its pending arrival and revelatory publication, "You're gonna make that book pregnant." Knock it up, baby! I couldn't have been more excited about a book than I was about Tim Lucas's long-awaited Mario Bava: All the Colors of the Dark, and I couldn't have been more satisfied with the book itself, which somehow exceeded all expectations -- and that's saying a lot, since I've been waiting for a book like this for at least 40 of my 52 years of life.

It's literally a dream book -- I mean, one of those books I had dreamed all my life might, should, someday had to exist -- and that's just what it was for Tim, too. Thankfully, Tim and Donna (who designed this masterpiece) Lucas made Tim's dream come true, and by doing so created the book of the year!

As I've discussed here ad infinitum, Bava's films had a potent, indelible impact on my own life, and definitely impacted my creative life in more ways that I can count. It's somehow appropriate that Tim's expansive biography has arrived at a time when almost the whole of Bava's directorial work is available on DVD, and for the first time as it was intended to be seen: uncut, widescreen, and in their original language(s) rather than cut, dubbed and pan-and-scanned. I Vampiri/The Devil's Commandment, Caltiki The Immortal Monster, Black Sunday, Gli Invasori/Erik the Conqueror, Black Sabbath, The Whip and the Body/What!, Blood and Black Lace, Planet of the Vampires, Operazione Paura/Kill, Baby.... Kill!, Knives of the Avenger, Diabolik/Danger: Diabolik, Bay of Blood/Twitch of the Death Nerve, Baron Blood, Lisa and the Devil/House of Exorcism -- these and others have been central cinematic experiences for those of us who scoured TV Guide, Castle of Frankenstein, drive-ins, nabes, grindhouses, 16mm catalogues, conventions and video stores for decades, seeking any nugget of Bava gold that might surface, under any number of titles, languages or versions.

Mario Bava's life and times covers the whole of Italian cinema from its inception (via the pioneer work of his father Eugenio Bava) to the present (via the work of Mario's son Lamberto and grandson Roberto), and is so much more than the scope of Mario's films as a director, marvelous as many of those films were and are when screened today. As Tim points out (and chronicles in loving detail), Mario was a cinematographer and special effects magician for as many years before he began his directorial career as he was involved in film after his 'official' directorial debut with Black Sunday (1960) -- and it's the rich illumination of Mario's family and personal life, as well as the cinema achievements and the films themselves, that makes All the Colors of the Dark such a powerful, moving read. And the illustrations, the eye-candy -- astounding! Astonishing! Intoxicating! From the rare family and behind-the-scenes photos to the abundance of fotobustas, lobby cards, inserts and one-sheets from around the world, this tome is a feast for the eyes on every single turn of the page. A more delicious, delirium-inducing treat for lovers of Bava's work, of Italian horror (and all genre) films, cannot be imagined; Bravo, Tim and Donna!

Like Ulrich Merkl's Winsor McCay Rarebit Fiend tome (see below), Mario Bava: All the Colors of the Dark is simply stunning as an art object and book -- it could not be more comprehensive, beautiful, or worthy of revisiting endlessly. Also like Merkl's comparable masterwork, Tim and Donna have elevated the realm of self-publishing, of following one's most heartfelt interests and obsessions to ultimate fruition, to a new level. Like Merkl's book, Tim's Mario Bava book simply would not exist had it been left to the vagaries of traditional author/agent/publisher economy: no publisher would have gone for this ride. They would have had a million reasons not to, if an agent managed to find a home for this book in the first place (highly unlikely, if not impossible). Publishers who do produce similar labors of love (FAB Press) weren't an option; Tim really had to do this himself, and Donna (his beloved wife) was the ideal partner in every imaginable support in the venture.

Hands down, book of the year -- perhaps the decade.

"R-A-G-G-M-O-P-P -- Ragmop!"

Rob Walton's Ragmop: A sadly overlooked graphic novel classic, revised, expanded, completed and the funniest comic of the year!

There were lots of stellar graphic novels out this year, but one of my personal favorites barely earned a nod from the wasteland that passes for the comics marketplace these days. Rob Walton's Ragmop -- another self-published magnum opus of 2007 -- was launched as a comic series back in the 1990s, and suffered a premature termination in the wake of the direct market distribution implosion, just shy of Rob's planned finish line. But now it's complete, in print, and highly recommended to one and all.

Taking up the challenge anew in 2005, Rob got back to work on his sf political/theological comedic epic, and thank God he did! In its final published form, Ragmop stands as the most hilarious graphic novel of 2007 in a sea of predominantly somber works, as well as a crazyquilt guerrilla attack on the whole of Western Civilization. The scope, breadth, heart and gutbuster audaciousness of Rob's antic epic bowls me over. That he sustains this giddy highwire (and absolutely savage) social satire over almost 500 pages is truly a feat of brilliance, and it's as current to 2007 -- more relevant, in fact -- as it was when Rob launched this Bob Clampett-like space-and-time voyage in the 1990s.

What else can I say? Hell, I love Ragmop!

Get Bit While You Can: Dream of the Rarebit Fiend

Get your copy while you can -- soon to be sold out forever! Ulrich Merkl's phenomenal, definitive Winsor McCayRarebit Fiend collection, another knockout example of the power of self-publishing in the 21st Century.

Ulrich Merkl's ravishing, absolutely definitive Dream of the Rarebit Fiend collection is jam-packed with much, much more than "just" the most complete collection of Winsor McCay's seminal comic strip available anywhere on Earth. It's also a comprehensive overview of McCay's life, career and the context of the times in which one of our greatest cartoonists created this still-amazing strip, which essentially poured the foundation for the whole of 20th Century comics (and, as Merkl demonstrates, much of its art, cinema and visionary works).

  • I covered this marvelous book in-depth -- including an exclusive interview with Dr. Merkl! -- back in July of this year; revisit that post, please, for more info and a peek at the art.

  • If you've the time and inclination, here's the link to a lively audio slideshow, based on the book, demonstrating the influence of McCay's work on many famous films (covered in further detail in the book, folks)!

  • But -- the book is almost gone! Quick, get yourself a copy while you can -- exclusively available from this link -- you won't want to miss this, if you can afford this once-in-a-lifetime book.

  • The book was announced as 'sold out' around Christmas, but I wrote Dr. Merkl and he replied:
    "My U.S. stock will last until March, and when it is sold out, I'll still have 100 books here in Europe, if someone needs it badly, but the shipping cost is terrible, about $80.00 per copy (rather than $19.00 now from the U.S. stock).... The regular price to the U.S. is $114.00 + $19.00 packaging, handling, shipping = $133.00... Many thanks!" You've been alerted -- a Myrant service to those who care -- good luck!

    Don't Flinch: Interrogation Dues

  • If you've the chops, here's a book excerpt and a powerful interview with Fear Up Harsh's author/soldier -- recommended listening.

  • Fear Up Harsh by Tony Lagouranis and Allen Mikaelian was the most human, disturbing, confrontational US military Iraq War account of the year, and that's a sobering thought given the clusterfuck of books on the subject that hit the shelves (and my reading table) in the past 12 months. "Something really bad happened here" -- understatement of the decade -- is what baby-faced U.S. Army interrogator Lagouranis was first told in his initial briefing at Abu Ghraib, and so begins this snapshot of the ordeal: for Lagouranis and his notion of self and God and country, for the 'detainees' and prisoners in his grasp (and worse still for those others 'worked on'). So begins this harrowing insider's account of perhaps the grossest "miscalculation" of the Bush/Cheney/Rumsfeld/Wolfowitz/Rice new foreign policy paradigms, post 9/11.

    Forced by circumstance, duty and the call of his commanders (and Commander in Chief) to think and act in ways once unthinkable, Lagouranis was soon under direct orders to join forces with his fellow soldiers to terrorize detainees and prisoners with increasingly abusive psychological tactics -- "fear up harsh," indeed. "If I'd gone ahead and cut Khalid's fingers off, where would that have led? What else would I have been capable of?" -- this is one of our new veterans of an unprovoked, preemptive war confronting the worst instincts of himself, of our tactics, our country's use of terror to wage a "war on terror." Under constant mortar fire themselves and trapped in the hellish hotbox complex that had once been Saddam's most infamous torture complex, Lagouranis and his countrymen used all means at their disposal to extract "information" from their brutalized, disoriented (and, Lagouranis acknowledges throughout, often innocent) Iraqis, settling into a methodical daily ruthlessness he ultimately found intolerable. It's the banality, the utter wrong-headed stupidity of these tactics ("...The result was that we were just inept. It was so typical of the army that is was laughable...") that rings loud and clear, alongside the wrenching depravity and desperation of our new national policy. It seeps deep, deep under the skin, into the marrow; what more don't we even suspect about what's being done in our name?

    Hence, this book: essential reading for every American citizen, particularly those most likely to refuse to do so and most likely to support such policies, sans an ounce of Lagouranis's courage and patriotism.

    Get Flocked!

    Fave new sf and prehistoric novel of the year: James Robert Smith's The Flock, the high-octane killer novel from our own 'Hemlock Man'!

    Technically, The Flock surfaced in the summer of 2006, but I didn't sink my teeth into it until after Marge and I moved into our new digs in Windsor (in fact, the hubbub of the major life change that culminated in the move kept this book off my reading table for months), so it's on my 2007 list, and long overdue some attention on the Myrant forum.

    It's Blackwater vs. tribal prehistoric birds -- the carnivorous Pleistocenian phorusrhacid Titanis walleri -- in the wilds of Florida, and it's a hoot. I've been a fan of James Robert Smith's writing longer than almost anyone on Earth outside of his immediate circle, having read much of his short fiction since the late 1980s (and back in the Taboo years, as an editor scouring Bob's submissions; I think I paid Bob for his first pro sale, for that matter, which I can also say about novelist Tom Sniegoski and a few cartoonists). This, his first published novel, is superficially in the Jaws and Carnosaur mold; if it's ever adapted to film, that's how it'll be taken, no doubt. But that misses the point, really.

    But what Bob accomplishes here (and the aspect that will be toughest of all to capture in any other media, save perhaps comics if it's ever adapted to that medium) is persuasively steeping the reader in the mindset of a pack animal's culture, ecology and literal pecking order amid life-altering conflict and crisis, and he does so with straightforward, yet always imaginative, efficiency. To my tastes, Bob's accomplishment ranks up there with my favorite Robert F. Jones adventure novels (Bloodsport, Slade's Glacier, The Diamond Bogo, etc.), but with (yum, yum) monsters. It's the unwavering intelligence, insight and empathy for the feral intelligence and ferocity of his predatory creatures that places The Flock amid my fave reads of 2007. I read a lot of fiction, little of it sticking to the mental ribs, but The Flock delivered and will be one of those I revisit down the road, for sure. Give it a read, you won't be sorry!

    [Note: Bob did his homework! Florida indeed was the home of the Pleistocene giant flightless raptor Titanus walleri, which paleontologist Pierce Brodkarb described as "larger than the African ostrich and more than twice the size of the South American rhea", and which Alan Feduccia speculated "probably arrived in North America from South America during or slightly before the Ice Age, crossing over the Central American land bridge" (both quotes from Feduccia, The Age of Birds, 1980, Harvard University Press, pp. 105-106).]

    Next installment: Zdenak Burian, Joe Hill, G. Michael Dobbs's Escape, Alan Moore and Melinda Gebbie's Lost Girls, Eiji Tsuburaya: Master of Monsters, Jon Savage's Teenage: The Creation of Youth Culture and Jodi Picoult -- more fave books of 2007!

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    Monday, July 23, 2007

    Dream of the Dream of the Rarebit Fiend:
    An Interview with Ulrich Merkl (with Three Addendums)

    Sample page from Ulrich Merkl's Dream of the Rarebit Fiend book: imaginative imagery, impeccable restoration, immaculate design (pg. 65, "Circus, Curiosities" imagery)

    [Note: If you’ve already read about, or ordered or own, Ulrich Merkl’s Dream of the Rarebit Fiend book, don’t skip this post -- a new interview with its archivist and editor awaits, just below. If you’re going to San Diego Comicon, scroll to the end of today’s post for booth info -- yes, you can check out the book yourself if you’re going to be there! If this is all new to you, read on, please!]

    Now and then, a truly essential book surfaces. This is one of those, and this post is about one of these essential books.

    In January of this year, fellow comics and animation fan Miron Murcury sent a joint email to Ulrich Merkl and myself, urging us to get in touch with each other, with
  • this link to Ulrich’s site in the Comic Art for Fans galleries venues.

  • Dr. Merkl was hard at work on a new book, aiming for a March 2007 publication, and his description of the project read, quite literally, like a dream.

    This dream came true -- and I urge those of you who can possibly afford the $133.00 (cost of the book and shipping; discounted if you can roust a single order for two or more copies) to order this glorious book for yourself now, today, while you can,
  • via this website.
  • If you’re going to San Diego Comicon this week, you can see copies there -- display copies can be browsed at Bud Plant’s and Peter Maresca’s (#2646) booths -- in any case, don’t dawdle! Once this book is out of print, it will be far dearer in price.

    It’s impossible to describe the magnitude and scope of the book, or the quality of McCay’s work therein. Rarebit Fiend was arguably the seminal comic strip of the early 1900s, the wellspring for much of what we take for granted today as cartoonists, comic readers, and in the pop culture as a whole -- regardless of where, on the creation/production/consuming food chain, you reside. McCay’s skills and ingenuity are legend, and his draftmanship remains second to none -- simply put, Dream of the Rarebit Fiend is one of the essential comics creations of the 20th Century, and Ulrich’s book is the ideal showcase for the entirety of Dream (what isn’t in print of the strips is on the bonus DVD; it’s all here, all 821 strips, and much, much more!).

    Warning: Do not drop this book on your cat!

    Winsor McCay's Dream of the Rarebit Fiend is the precursor to all dream comics, a genre that has become central to dream research (and near and dear to the heart of one of my best friends, Rick Veitch, whose Rarebit Fiends series remains the high-water mark of its peculiar but remarkable genre). But there’s so much more to say -- McCay single-handedly invented and refined many devices the entire comics medium relies upon to this day; it’s almost impossible to find a basic storytelling, graphic or sequential panel tool McCay did not invent, refine or put to use in the Rarebit canon.

    Dream of the Rarebit Fiend
    also introduced many visual narrative conceits and concepts all 20th and 21st Century visual media utilize.

    For almost 20 years, via my Journeys Into Fear slide lecture series, I’ve discussed and illustrated a number of McCay Rarebit Fiend innovations that resonate through the horror genre, including first-person ‘point of view’ comics narratives. Many of these remain primal experiences revisited in the reading of Ulrich’s Rarebit Fiend collection, and this alone makes this book an essential volume for any media scholar’s library.

    The historic beginning of the 'ever-growing creature' archetype in the 20th Century: McCay's delightful distillation of mythic monsters threatening for their unchecked growth in this March 8, 1905 installment ofRarebit Fiend inspired his 1921 animated film The Pet. As Ulrich notes, this may have also been inspired by one of Edward Lear's illustrations in the 1870 The Book of Nonsense.
    Note this scan is not from
    Ulrich's book, but rather a pre-restoration-process scan; the version printed in the book is much sharper.


    [A note for Myrant regulars: Given my own predeliction for dinosaur and ‘giant monster’ literature, movies, comics and media, I’ll just note (in the context of this blog’s ongoing Tyrant Media Guide) that one of the tropes McCay seemed to have introduced for the 20th Century was the 'ever-growing creature' archetype, which has many subsequent incarnations, from numerous science-fiction pulp stories to Tex Avery's King-Size Canary to monster movies like 20 Million Miles to Earth (1957) and monster comics like Marvel's Amazing Adventures (Stan Lee/Jack Kirby/Dick Ayers's "Sserpo" in Amazing Adventures #6, 1961). In fact, via his animated version of that particular Rarebit Fiend strip, The Pet (1921), McCay introduced the entire 'giant monster attacks metropolitan city' genre, predating Willis O’Brien’s spectacle of a Brontosaurus [sic] attacking London for the climax of The Lost World (1925; in the source novel, Conan Doyle only had Professor Challenger’s specimen pterodactyls fly the coop into the London skies).]

    Hello, Dali!: The September 26, 1908 Rarebit Fiend anticipated Salvador Dali's "Soft self portrait with fried bacon," 1941, and the cosmetic surgeries of Terry Gilliam's Brazil (Merkl, pg. 55)

    The final specs of Ulrich’s Dream of the Rarebit Fiend volume are indeed impressive, and having this book in my own hot little hands, I can personally confirm them all to be true:

    Hardcover, handbound
    464 pages (139 in color)
    Illustrations: 1010 (219 in color, 791 in black & white)
    Dimensions: 17 x 12 x 1.2 inches / 43,5 x 31 x 3 cm (large horizontal format)
    Weight: 9 1⁄2 pounds / 4,3 kg
    Language: English
    Cover price: Euros 89.00 / $ 114.00

    Why so expensive? Read Addendum I, below, after our interview, covering Dr. Merkl’s initial response to FAQs, for the hows and whys of that -- and then order your copy now, while the very limited supply lasts. At the time I ordered the book two weeks ago, there were only about 700 copies left. Don’t wait!
  • Again, here's Dr. Merkl's website, the only place to order this limited edition beauty.

  • I have already seen to it that a copy now resides in The Schulz Library at The Center for Cartoon Studies, and am shipping a copy to Lea Ann Alexander and her associates at the HUIE Library at Henderson State University, as part of the Stephen R. Bissette Special Collection. This ensures comics creators, scholars and researchers some measure of future access to this rare tome after it goes out of print. I urge any relatively wealthy Myrant readers to consider purchasing and donating a copy or copies to your local libraries while supplies last (impressing upon any library accepting the donation the scarcity, uniqueness and value of the book, and some assurance it will remain in their respective special collections and/or reserve shelves).

    Finally, wishing to find out more, I proposed an interview exchange with Ulrich, who graciously rose to the challenge. Here’s our conversation -- hardly the last word on his stunning project, but hopefully enough to sweeten the dreams and reading of McCay and comics lovers everywhere...
    ________

    'Silas' aka Winsor McCay at work: he had lots of ideas... (pg. 84)

    SB: When did you first lay eyes on Winsor McCay's work -- and a Dream of the Rarebit Fiend strip?

    ULRICH MERKL: I started collecting comics and books about comics when I was 5, and I guess I saw my first McCays when I was 10 or 12, but I didn't pay much attention to his work, because it was still too sophisticated for me. At age 20, I started attending conventions and collecting original artwork, there was the [John] Canemaker [Winsor McCay] biography, and suddenly I had access to the McCay universe, both in the form of reproductions and original art. It simply blew me away, and I just couldn't believe that original artwork by this outstanding master was available at all, and then even at prices also a normal person could afford (I am referring to the year 1986). Unfortunately, I didn't buy any McCay originals then, mainly because dealers told me they were already much too expensive...

    SB: You've articulated your reasons for publishing Dream [see Addendums, below] -- but what was the specific gestalt experience that prompted your undertaking this massive publishing venture?

    UM: I am an art historian and archaeologist, and a book/comic book/culture/history maniac. I wrote a Ph.D. thesis about medieval book illumination (comparable to the Rarebit book in weight and size), and during the course of the work I was totally surprised to find outstanding masterworks nobody had ever looked at before. I discovered a new world that had been buried in archives for 500 years and I learned that you can find treasures if you are digging a little bit deeper than the others.

    I had always wished to see more of McCay's work, but it was inaccessible. In 2002, when my life had turned a little bit more quiet than before, I decided to start digging. My main reasons were:

    1) McCay was one of the most talented artists of all times. While mainstream artists like van Gogh, Monet, Klimt, Picasso, etc. etc. are reprinted again and again (and they do deserve it), McCay, whose work is 100% the same quality, is more or less unknown among the broad public -- something I cannot accept. He, and the public, deserved a publication of his legacy.

    2) TV, cinema, comics, computer games, pop music, even fine arts -- wherever you look, 90% of the production flooding us is pure shit, a big fuss about nothing, no substance, no quality, only hot hair. On the other hand, McCay's outstanding top-quality work (and many other vintage comic strips) hidden, buried, inaccessible, and deteriorating in archives? A big unjustice! I wanted to show to people how real quality looks like, what is possible, how they are all being cheated and poisoned every day, to give them an impulse.

    3) I wanted to see those strips, just for my own enrichment.

    Bungle in the Jungle: McCay's Dream of the Rarebit Fiend for March 9, 1907, anticipating Ray Bradbury's classic short story "The Veldt" (pg. 261)

    SB: How did you assemble, and/or where did you find, this extensive and complete a collection of the original Rarebit Fiend and McCay strips?

    UM: When I decided to work seriously on this project, in 2001, I started screening eBay regularly for keywords like "Rarebit" and "McCay". Soon after, I was lucky enough to win a large collection of original newspaper clippings, c. 400 Rarebit Fiends. This gave me the courage to continue. The next step was the purchase of 80 microfilm reels from the New York Public Library, containing a complete run of the New York Evening Journal from 1904 to 1913. This was the only newspaper carrying the strip from the beginning to the end, and therefore the basis for any research (mainly for the dates). The Ohio State University contributed another c. 100 strips from their collection. Other strips were taken from printed books, from original art sales catalogs and from original artwork. I cannot exclude there might be some minor gaps, mainly in the later period, from 1911 on, when the strip appeared irregularly, but only very few. I did not find any new strip in the past four years, although I never stopped continuing my research.

    Small World, In't It?: Rarebit Fiend, Sept. 21, 1907 (pg. 292)

    SB: You've included a vast array of new information, visuals and insights on McCay and his work. What previously untapped resources did you rely upon for this?

    UM: I am an art historian and archaeologist, and I learned to go back to the roots, to the original sources, this being the vintage newspapers. I bought dozens of vintage newspapers, containing McCay info or illustrations, on eBay; I took a great deal of information & images from the New York Evening Telegram microfilms, other images from online newspaper archives, and other several important newspaper clippings were generously contributed by my Italian friend Alfredo Castelli (who also contributed two essays to the book).

    SB: Yes, Castelli's chapters are excellent! One of the facets of your book I personally found most fascinating were the links between Rarebit and subsequent pop culture creations. When, in your own experience, did you first begin to recognize the ripples from Rarebit in other media?

    UM: Again, I am an art historian, and we are trained for doing nothing else than searching for precursors and followers of styles and motifs. All art historians in the world are constantly asking the same questions: who did this invent, who took it up and developed it, and how? This is a fascinating sport, and when you are open-minded, when you read and watch a lot, and if you have a good visual memory, you will discover the whole culture of mankind being a sequence of developments, of evolutions, in all genres, literature, painting, film, comics, etc.

    There is no use searching systematically, for example asking the question "is there any book, film or comic containing the motifs 'somebody is attacked by squirrels', 'somebody is being fried in a skillet', and 'an elevator pops out of the top floor of a building'?" will not lead to anything if you never saw Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. What you need is a huge image reference archive in your brain, and suddenly it makes 'click'. Browsing the Rarebit Fiends, I had a lot of 'deja vus', and in most cases McCay was the earlier reference.

    SB: I'm curious about what was involved with clearing permissions for the images you include from key films, from L'Age d'or to Dumbo -- and what the stories are behind the images we aren't permitted to see. Were there any other materials you would have included in the book, if you could have secured permission to do so?

    UM: Any author writing about movies sees himself confronted with the enormous problem of obtaining film stills and reprint permissions for those stills. The first problem is: there is no major film still database, so you have to research if the film is available on DVD, you have to buy the DVD, you have to search for a tool enabling you to paste downs stills from those DVDs, that's all very time-consuming and often leads into a blind alley. The second problem: copyright owners are incredibly difficult!! They want to know everything, the reprint size, the print run, the exact context, the exact texts accompanying the image, etc... Let's take the Walt Disney Company: it took me 1 1/2 years and 16 letters (they don't communicate via e-mail) to obtain permission for the Disney images in my book. But -- nothing against Disney, they only wanted to be convinced of the seriousness of my project, and they were cooperative and friendly. Other companies however are almost inaccessible. Warner Bros., for example, unfortunately copyright owner of many important films, either do not grant reprint permission at all (for the more recent films) or, for the older films of low commercial interest, they are asking $500 per image (Disney is 'only' asking $50!). I would have loved to reprint 16 great stills from Tex Avery cartoons (now Warner property), but I was unable to invest another $8,000 only for permissions. I simply cannot understand the rip-off mentality of those multi-billion companies. First: those films were produced with the intention of reaching as many people as possible, not with the intention of being hidden in a secret vault. Second: my book is no rival product to any DVD. Third: reprint in a book means free publicity for the film.

    SB: Yes, I completely agree.

    UM: Some people are saying: "Ah, don't bother with them, just reprint the images and nothing will happen. And if someone complains, just say it was a clear case of 'fair use'". But I didn't want the whole project being killed by some stupid little copyright violation, that wouldn't be worth it. Other films I would have loved to reprint stills from are Hitchcock's The Birds (Rarebit Fiend 276+333) and Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (RF 649), but permissions were either too expensive or generally not granted. A very revealing still from Terminator II (RF 234) could not be included because actor Robert Patrick did not allow the use of his likeness... If any hardcore fan out there is interested in film stills I was not allow to reprint, just send me $10 and you will receive a CD-ROM with 30 stills for your private use.

    SB: This is heady stuff, for much of what McCay introduced in Rarebit Fiend goes beyond singular images or narratives; he created entire genres, including -- most obviously -- dream comics. Were you tempted to devote more space in the book to this phenomenon?

    UM: Well, you will always find more when you are digging deeper and deeper, and I have enough material to fill another book, but at some point you have to say "stop, it's enough now". I believe most readers are mainly interested in the Rarebit strips rather than in the "scientific" or "scholarly" background info, so I limited myself to the most important aspects.

    Rarebit and Little Nemo Kith & Kin: Dreamy Mary (left, by Eddie Eksergian, 1904-1905) and The Naps of Polly Sleepyhead (by Peter Newell, 1905-1907), just two examples of the many eye-popping comic strips illustrating Alfredo Castelli's excellent chapter, "Dream Travelers, 1900-1947" (pg. 110)

    SB: Forgive me, but I have to play Devil's Advocate for the completists: What about the various McCay strips and Rarebit strips that might have eluded your current search -- is there hope of a definitive, complete edition down the road?

    UM: I am not sure if there are any strips that eluded my search. Perhaps my edition is definitive. At least, I did not find any new strip in the past four years, although I never stopped searching.

    To be absolutely sure, some poor soul would have to browse all the major U.S. newspapers from 1911 to 1924, very difficult to locate, very time-consuming, very expensive...

    SB: Let's consider your book definitive, then, and the last word. Were there any materials simply too degraded to restore digitally, or via any present means?

    UM: No, I was able to restore everything. The quality of some microfilms was quite poor, the images came out a bit blurry, you cannot do anything here, but that's all.

    SB: Was your Ph.D. thesis on medieval book illumination, which you described as "comparable to the Rarebit book in weight and size," published in a form available to us?

    UM: Yes, it was printed, a nice little book with 589 pages, 100 images in color, 400 images in b&w, and it weighs only 7 pounds. It's in the German language, however, but the images are really beautiful, almost all of them published for the very first time, weird stuff like witches, dwarfs, people tormented in hell, like Rarebit Dreams. It is available from Amazon Germany for Euros 126 ($174). It is also in several U.S. libraries and I was told it also appears on eBay U.S. from time to time.

    SB: Well, I'm going to have to track down a copy, if only for my teaching and research work. Thanks for your time, Ulrich, and most of all thank you for this fantastic book. Good luck in all you do!

    ____________

    Addendum I:
    Everything You Wanted to Know About Dr. Merkl's
    Rarebit Fiend Volume, But Were Afraid to Ask

    Anticipating questions about his motives, the book and the scope of the project, Ulrich circulated these statements earlier this summer. I present them here as they were presented, and as an introduction of sort to both Ulrich and his momentous book:
    _________

    On the production of the book:

    The whole book is a one-man-show. As some of my previous publications had suffered due to indifferent editors and printers, I took the risk of monopolizing all the work myself. That meant text and image research, obtaining pictures, copyright research, image scanning, image restoration, printing, promotion, selling and shipping.

    The only person besides me who contributed substantially to the book was my designer, who knocked my ideas into shape.

    On the uniqueness of the volume, and other McCay reprint volumes:

    My book does not have anything to do with Winsor McCay, Early Works I-VII and Dream of the Rarebit Fiend, The Saturdays, published by Checker Books from 2002-2006. Despite all its merits, this reprint is fairly disappointing. There is no additional information, the individual episodes are not dated, the large horizontal episodes are reproduced in a small format, a lot of illustrations are of disastrous quality, and many episodes are completely missing.

    The work on my book began in 2001, two years before the first volume of this reprint was published. Its shortcomings made me determined to continue my project, despite the loss of exclusiveness. Unfortunately, this cheap reprint satisfied the demand of many potential buyers of my book.

    I did not use any images from this reprint (which would have saved me several thousand hours of restoration work), but took everything from my own sources (original newspaper clippings, original artwork, and, for the
    gaps, microfilm).

    Without the Checker reprint, my book would have been the first reprint for over 600 out of 821 strips, now only 300 are presented exclusively in my book.

    The Statue of Liberty: Skating on thin ice, Rarebit Fiend for June 30, 1906 (pg. 228)

    Errata: On typos in The Dream of The Rarebit Fiend volume [suggestion: save and print to insert into your copy of the book]:

    Although me and many friends worked through the galleys again and again, the printed book revealed a couple of minor mistakes we all overlooked. Some examples:
    - p. 61: The Chicago Examinator should read Examiner, of course
    - p. 74: several copies have a line of nonsense text on bottom left, under the red image (we eliminated this during the course of the printing)
    - p. 117: caption for "Chilly Cholly": the series ran from May 26, 1911 to October 29, 1911 (not from October 29 to May 26)
    - p. 120: Primo Carnera died in 1967, not in 1947
    - p. 127: the image on bottom right is from episode #266, not from #226
    - p. 432: the Joan Steiner image is printed too dark
    - p. 437: President Taft is printed too dark

    On reproduction size, printing, binding and the book’s format:

    Reproducing the large horizontal strips to their original published size required an unusually large and horizontal book format. When I started working on the project, I did not at all consider this being a problem.

    During the course of the work I learned that a book of this size and shape cannot be bound automatically, therefore requiring handbinding. Handbinding being incredibly expensive in Europe (c. $90.00 per copy), I was lucky to find somebody in Egypt to take over this work. Binding in Egypt meant also printing in (because it is impossible to ship tons of printed paper to EgyptEgypt without damage), so I spent a week in Cairo supervising the printing process. The handbinding makes each copy a unique piece of superb craftsmanship.

    A Rarebit Fiend meets Washington and Eliza: crossing the river, July 9, 1911 (pg. 410)

    On pricing and the print run:

    We produced a total of 1,000 copies. I would rather have made more (1,500 or 2,000, resulting in a lower price per copy), but paying everything from my own (my bank's) money, this would have been too big an investment for me. I invested a total of $90.000 into this book (+ 6000 working hours).

    Euros 89.00 / $ 114.00 sounds much, but the book is actually cheap, considering that
    - there were only 1,000 copies printed
    - 464 of the oversized pages correspond to 928 large, respectively 1856 normal pages
    - 144 pages are printed in color (the most expensive part of the production)
    - the book contains over 1,000 illustrations (1/2 of them reprinted for the first time ever)
    - it is handbound (one of the most expensive aspects of book production).

    I was only able to offer the book at such a low price because I did all the scanning and image restoration work by my own (6000 working hours all together), because bookbinders' wages in Egypt are low, and because I am
    doing all the advertising and distribution by my own, thus avoiding the wholesalers' 50-60 % percentage.

    If I had realized this project the regular way, involving a professional graphic studio for the scans, a publishing house, local printers and bookbinders, and using the usual distribution channels, we would have had to ask over $400.00 for a single copy (rather than $114.00) just to cover the costs.

    And I am even offering attractive bulk discounts. (Note to U.S. buyers: unfortunately, the book was produced in the Euro zone, and the $ exchange rate is unfavorable now. Four years ago, I could have offered the book for $68.00 instead of $114.00, obtaining the same Euro amount, but the exchange rate is something beyond my control.)

    On the DVD accompanying the book:

    It contains high resolution scans (8 or 3 MB each) of all 821 episodes known to exist (including 452 strips not reprinted in the book), a 600 page WORD file with a catalogue raisonné of all episodes, containing a
    vast array of additional information about the individual episodes, the printed text of the book (which can be browsed by using keywords), and an animated film by Winsor McCay, all together more than twice the image and text material printed in the book.
    _______

    Addendum II:

    Ulrich’s original announcement read as follows:
    _______

    DREAM OF THE RAREBIT FIEND is a comic strip published in American newspapers from 1904 to 1913.

    Each episode presents the dream of some poor soul who had the misfortune of partaking of Welsh Rarebit (a melted cheese toast) before retiring, a decision that results in unusual and fantastic dreams. In the last panel, the dreaming victim awakens, vowing never to partake of Rarebit before bedtime again.

    The strip was written and drawn by Winsor McCay (1867–1934), famous for his Little Nemo in Slumberland.

    Other than Little Nemo, which was addressed to children and mainly lived from its spectacular layouts, DREAM OF THE RAREBIT FIEND focuses on the plots, seen from a decidedly adult point of view, and is devoted to adult nightmares and phobias, making it one of the weirdest, absurdest, most amazing and shocking comic strips of all times, simply “the most bizarre newspaper feature in American history” (Jeet Heer).

    Star Power, circa 1906: Among the many remarkable contents not listed in the announcement or press release is "Prominent Personalities," Dr. Merkl's exhaustive indexing of the celebrities of the day featured in various Rarebit Fiend dream adventures (pg. 80)

    This book contains:
    - detailed information about the life and works of Winsor McCay and about the DREAM OF THE RAREBIT FIEND series
    - 400 [final count: 362] reproductions of the best DREAM OF THE RAREBIT FIEND episodes, taken from the best available sources, digitally restored, and reproduced to exactly the size they were when first published, many of them reprinted for the first time since their original publication a century ago
    - 600 additional images [actually, 641 images, 219 of which are in color] illustrating the author’s life & work and the historical and artistic background to individual DREAM OF THE RAREBIT FIEND episodes
    - two articles by comic book historian Alfredo Castelli, “Dream Travellers 1900–1947: Precursors and epigones of Winsor McCay - A dreamer with his feet planted firmly on the ground”
    - an article by dream worker Jeremy Taylor, “Some archetypal symbolic aspects of the DREAM OF THE RAREBIT FIEND”



    [And] a DVD with
    - high resolution scans (8 or 3 MB each) of all 821 episodes known to exist
    - a 500 page WORD file with a catalogue raisonné of all episodes, containing a vast array of information about the individual episodes, including chronological strip numbering, original publication dates, later reprints, whereabouts of the original artwork, inspirations used by Winsor McCay, later quotations taken from this strip, historical background information etc.

    Apart from the strip’s fascinating content and outstanding graphic qualities, DREAM OF THE RAREBIT FIEND is also an important source of information about everyday culture in the United States during the early 20th century, as it was here (and only here) that Winsor McCay incorporated real daily life in almost every episode – from fashion, sport, politics, work, architecture, technical progress through to prominent personalities, so much so that one can virtually speak of an encyclopedia, or a mirror on the United States in the early 20th century.

    It is easy to identify all the people, events and objects mentioned in the book, as the enclosed DVD contains the printed text as well as the complete catalog of episodes in the form of a WORD document, which can be browsed by using keywords.
    _______

    Addendum III (and final):

    The Press release:


    Unlike other cheap reprints that flooded the market recently, churned out quickly and produced without any editorial care, my book has been carefully researched, written and produced, choosing always the best (and most expensive) solution in every aspect of the production:

    I invested 3000 hours of my time into research work and another 4000 hours into digital image restoration. Simply because I am admiring Winsor McCay’s genius and because I saw there was a treasure to be raised.

    Whenever possible, the scans were taken from original artwork and from original newspaper clippings collected over the years. Microfilms (the principal base of most other reprints) were only used to fill gaps.

    July 6, 1911 Rarebit: cartoonists snagging ideas; Winsor McCay, Tom E. Powers (pg. 409)

    I hired the best book designer I can think of, and we invested 800 working hours into the design of this book.

    My production man invested months in organizing the best printing machine, the best printers, the best paper, and the best bookbinders.

    I spent five days and nights at the printing machine in order to ensure the best possible quality.

    Everything in honor of Winsor McCay’s genius.

    The only thing YOU have to do now is to BUY the book! :-)

    As I am writing this, I have already sold 300 (out of 1000) copies, before the book was ever listed on eBay, before my website www.rarebit-fiend-book.com went online, and before the first review has appeared. So buy your copy now; the book will most likely be sold out before Christmas! I am not planning a second edition at the moment, being already deeply involved into my next time-consuming book project.

    The cover price is Euros 89,00 / $ 114.00

    Sounds much, but please consider that

    - there were only 1,000 copies printed

    - 464 of the mammoth size pages correspond to 928 large, respectively 1856 normal pages

    - 144 pages are printed in color (that’s expensive!!)

    - the book contains over 1,000 illustrations (c. 1⁄2 of them published for the first time ever)

    - it is handbound (the large horizontal format required handbinding, the most expensive aspect of book production you can think of).

    I am only able to offer the book at such a low price because I did all the scanning and image restoration work by my own, because I had it printed and bound in a low-wage country, because I am doing all the advertising and distribution by my own, thus avoiding the wholesalers’ 50-60 % percentage (the book cannot be obtained from normal book stores or online booksellers, but only from the me, the author/publisher, and from a few selected booksellers and stores).

    If I had realized this project the regular way, involving a professional graphic studio for the scans and the image restoration, a publishing house, local bookbinders, and using the usual distribution channels, we would have had to ask over $ 400.00 for a single copy (rather than $ 114.00).

    So YOU benefit financially by buying direct from the author!

    “Euro 89 / $ 114 for such a large and beautiful book offering such an incredible amount of material is actually cheap” – that’s what all my customers are saying, without exception. And you will agree.

    (… my regrets to all U.S. customers; the book was produced in the Euro zone, and the $ exchange rate is unfavorable at the moment. Four years ago, I could have offered the book for $68.00 instead of $114.00, obtaining the same Euro amount, but the $ exchange rate is something beyond my control. And I am already picking up $7.00 per copy because the $ continued going down after I had done my final calculation …)

    Wanting to get my investment back ASAP, wanting to see the book circulate, and being an idealistic comic strip fan rather than a tough businessman, I am offering attractive discounts:

    If you take 3 copies, you will pay only $95/Euro 74 each, rather than $114/Euro 89 for a single (if you decide to purchase additional copies after receiving the first book, I will consider this alltogether one order, granting the same discount as if you had ordered all copies at the same time). For further discount details, see www.rarebit-fiend-book.com.

    This book will make the perfect (Christmas) gift for your friends, e.g. for people without access to the Internet, or for people not only interested in vintage comic strips but also in other important aspects of DREAM OF THE RAREBIT FIEND, like the interpretation of dreams, or the early 20th-century history and culture of the United States and New York City, for authors and designers seeking inspiration, etc.

    I can also ship books directly on your behalf, which would save you a lot of trouble with packaging materials, shipping rates, time for wrapping up, walking to the post office, etc.

    You will be absolutely surprised by the sheer size & weight of the book, surprised by the ingenuous and unusual design, surprised by the unveiling of new intimate details from Winsor McCay’s life (the artist used DREAM OF THE RAREBIT FIEND as a kind of ‘encrypted diary’), and, of course, surprised by the collection of RAREBIT FIEND strips, still as amazing and breathtaking as when published a century ago!

    This book is large and offers a lot of material!

    This book is beautifully designed!

    This book has been carefully produced!

    This book is as bizarre, surprising and beautiful as its subject!
    Missing out on this book will cause you to have nightmares. So buy it!

    100% satisfaction guaranteed!

    Note to all U.S. collectors:

    My distributor is in Morganville, NJ, and the books will be shipped from there.

    Therefore I cannot offer personal inscriptions – unless you are willing to pay $69.00 for shipping an individual copy directly from me to you. Sorry.

    "Matrimony": marital distress & discord, Rarebit Fiend style (pg. 74)

    If you attend San Diego: display copies can be browsed at Bud Plant’s and Peter Maresca’s (#2646) booths.
    _______

    That's it -- I'll add illustrations to this post throughout the day, but this is the best push I could provide for Ulrich's handsome tome. There's nothing in this for me, and it's rare I lavish this kind of attention on a book, but believe me, it's worth it!

    Have a great Monday, one and all!

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    Friday, July 13, 2007

    World War Awesome is Here!

    Yesterday was the penultimate day of The Center for Cartoon Studies first July 2007 workshop -- and it was a beehive of comics creativity, as we all cranked ourselves up and over the work needed to complete our collaborative 48+ page comic, World War Awesome!

    Yep, that's the title the group voted onto the cover masthead of our massive collaborative comic scrimmage between the group's menagerie of characters.

    I drew the final confrontation (three pages) between the last survivors, Spork and Wolor Burtle. I also re-introduced a character from the first round, due to a narrative loophole the storytellers of that particular page left dangling (and didn't notice until I pointed it out yesterday morning, much to their consternation). I also drew the cover, inked the back cover and Robyn Chapman's beguiling four-panel "L'il Sally meets Surly Snail" (originally intended to be an inking demo piece, nothing more -- hope it made the final editorial cut, but I won't know until I see the book myself), and typed up the credits page. Just doing my part, with Robyn jumping in and helming the afternoon session of intensive production which spilled well into the evening -- and will spill into this morning! Robyn Chapman and James Sturm are handling this morning's session, which will wind up this amazing whirlwind week of creativity, drawing and publishing in style.

    It's been a lot of work and a lot of fun. It's been a pleasure to get to know and work with all the Create Comics 1 students -- Matthew Loiosa, John Woods, Liberty Roach, Rebecca Miller, Lee Williams, Dominick Cariddi, Ellen Langtree, Daniel Matthews, Michel Valdes, Nick Langley, Emily Kelly, Brendan Cornwell, Kyle Warren, Jonathan Gorga, Joseph Worthen, Tom Laurent, Dave Remillard and Cory Daniels (ages 16 through various stages of adulthood, including three teachers/professors). Kudos, one and all, and happy trails -- it would be my pleasure to see you and draw with you again.

    We couldn't have done it without our stellar summer interns, Jon Chadurjian, Simon Reinhardt and Ellie Manny, who juggled many tasks all week and still contributed characters to World War Awesome! Simon played a critical role, coordinating the final cartography of clashes to ensure we arrived at the correct final face-offs in World War Awesome (and in a timely manner), a tall order given the plethora of characters and tag-team nature of the enterprise -- thanks, Simon, for keeping it all in order! I can't wait to hold a copy of World War Awesome in my hot little hands -- what a zine, what an accomplishment for this group!

  • In every corner of New England this week, comics are being created. I know CCS graduates Colleen Frakes and Adam Staffaroni are working in various comics camps -- Colleen is somewhere in New Hampshire this week, filling in for N.E.'s busiest cartoonist Marek Bennett, who (click here) is busy with another comics camp in Keene, NH!

  • The buzz is in the air, the ink's on the fingers, and the images and word balloons are spilling off the pages.

    If you've the inclination and energy, join the beehive -- and if not this summer, next summer. We've already had four returnees (Dan, Liberty, Tom and Simon were part of prior CCS summer workshops, happily back for more), and I've no idea who or what next week will bring.

    Looking forward to the people, the energy and the comics next week...
    ___________________

    It has arrived!

    Dr. Ulrich Merkl's massive, marvelous Dream of the Rarebit Fiend has arrived -- and what an incredible book it is.

    This hefty, lavishly-produced and bound book boasts 464 glorious pages and over 1000 illustrations, with the first 135+ pages alone dedicated to a rigorous overview of McCay's life, work and career; the precursors to, and imitators of, McCay's pioneering Dream strip; the influences of Dream on the pop culture (with many delicious frame blow-ups from the films and animated cartoons placed side-by-side with the relevant McCay panels), from Salvador Dali and Luis Bunuel's L'Age D'Or to Walt Disney's Dumbo and beyond -- and then, the strips themselves! Over 300 pages of the Dream of the Rarebit Fiend strips, beautifully restored and reproduced, showcased in their original chronological order, footnoted and indexed for handy cross-referencing (based on associative content, imagery, etc.).

    Do you have a shelf big enough for this book? Trust me, you do!

    Simply put, this is the comics archival book of the year, an essential text for all comics fans, creators, historians and archivists; for all Winsor McCay fans; for all libraries; for -- well, for you. Yes, it's pricey ($114 plus shipping, from NJ), but it's worth every penny of its price, and a bargain at that. It's also an absolutely essential companion to Peter Maresca's Little Nemo in Slumberland: So Many Glorious Sundays! in every way.

  • I first wrote about Dr. Merkl's book this Monday (click here to revisit that post),
  • and am conducting an email interview with Dr. Merkl (as I did with Peter Maresca about his 2005 masterwork Winsor McCay's Little Nemo in Slumberland: So Many Splendid Sundays!) to post next week, with more info on the man, the dream, the dreams and the tome.

  • But I urge you all not to wait for that post to get excited. This is a simply stunning book -- and there's only one place to order your copy -- now! -- and that's here, at Dr. Merkl's website. Note he is generously offering discounts for bulk purchases (two or more), so find someone to order with you. Whatever you do this month, set aside the $114 (plus shipping) needed for this book, and get your copy now!

  • FYI, this is not an ad -- I get nothing from this, and bought my own copy, mind you. This is an enthusiastic recommendation from a fellow reader of the book, and devoted McCay and comics scholar.
    ________________

    The entire deck enclosure is now framed, the roof going on -- good progress from our contractors in just two days. But we'll miss today's efforts -- we're off this morning to pick up our incoming guest from Denmark; he's flying into Burlington at some point today (alas, his arrival is already delayed due to a canceled flight from Copenhagen, but he'll still be here before midnight!), and we'll be there to pick him up.

    I don't know what the rest of Friday the 13th has in store for us here, but I hope it's nothing but roses for all of you --

    Have a Great Friday, and a fantastic mid-summer weekend!

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