Author Archives: Mr. Morrow

Baltimore, here we come!

Our ever-able Eric Nolen-Weathington is on his way to Baltimore as I type this, to man our booth for the Baltimore Comicon. If you’ve never been, it’s a great show, lots of guests, fun times galore. If you’re there, stop by and ask Eric to tell you about Diamond Comic Distributors, and why his Modern Masters volumes on Mike Ploog and Kyle Baker were both solicited in Previews the same month, instead of two months apart as we’d requested. (I just love Diamond sometimes…)

Oh yeah, buy some stuff at our booth, before our government spends that $700 billion out of our pockets to bail out Wall Street. That way, you’ll have something to read on your coffee breaks, while we’re all working twice as hard trying to earn the extra money we’ll all need to pay the estimated $10,000 per family it’s going to cost us, all because those morons in Washington wouldn’t regulate the financial industry over the last 8 years.

(Sorry if I sound grumpy; I’m just so ticked off at our lousy administration for allowing this to happen, especially when they were warned this subprime mortgage mess was coming years ago, by the CEO of Self-Help, a major non-profit credit union who’s an advertising client of ours. That, plus my 3-year-old daughter was up all night throwing up, so I didn’t get much sleep.)

Now please excuse me; I’ve decided, for the good of the country, to suspend my blog temporarily while I rush off to focus my attention on the Presidential Debate tonight.

So, where’s Kirby Collector #51?

Kirby fans: Really, I’m working on it. Have been since July. So many things have jumped in the way of getting it done, but I hope to have it to press (finally) be the end of next week, and shipping by the end of October. Be patient; it’ll be worth it, I promise!

FINAL WEEK of our “Back-To-School Blowout” sale!

It’s been nothing short of crazy here the last few weeks, as our “Back-To-School Blowout” sale has been going on, generating hundreds of orders in the space of a couple of weeks. I thought I’d stocked our local inventory with plenty of copies of our sale items, but after the first week of the sale, we ran out of several of the sale items, and had to wait while more copies were delivered from our printer in Canada, where we store some of our books. We also literally ran out of shipping boxes, and had to scramble while waiting for our usual supplier to get more to us. So while the sale’s been super-successful, we’ve had to rely on a few customers’ patience in getting their copies shipped to them.

As of about a week ago, everything was cleared up, and shipping’s back to normal (we usually get orders shipped within two days of when they’re placed, and often the next day). The sale ends September 30, so next few days are your final chance to take advantage of the largest sale in our 15-year history: $2 magazines and 50% off books. Already, several items have sold out (and more are about to), so if there’s a publication you’ve been meaning to buy, this could be your last chance (especially at these low sale prices)!

The complete list of sale items includes:

$2 MAGAZINES:
Rough Stuff #1-9 (edited by Bob McLeod)
Write Now #1-18 (edited by Danny Fingeroth)
Comic Book Artist (all in-stock issues) (edited by Jon B. Cooke)
Comic Book Nerd (by Pete Von Sholly)
Crazy Hip Groovy Go-Go Way Out Monsters #29 and #32 (by Pete Von Sholly)
Wallace Wood Checklist (edited by Bhob Stewart)

50% OFF BOOKS & DVDs:
Alter Ego: The Best of the Legendary Comics Fanzine (by Roy Thomas and Bill Schelly)
Best of the Legion Outpost (by Glen Cadigan)
Best of Write Now (by Danny Fingeroth)
Blue Beetle Companion (by Christopher Irving)
Brush Strokes With Greatness: The Life & Art of Joe Sinnott (by Tim Lasiuta)
Comic Book Artist Collection – Volume 3 (by Jon B. Cooke)
Comic Books And Other Necessities of Life (by Mark Evanier) – ALMOST SOLD OUT!
Comics Above Ground (by Durwin Talon)
Comics Gone Ape! (by Michael Eury)
Comics Introspective: Peter Bagge (by Christopher Irving)
Dick Giordano: Changing Comics One Day At A Time (by Michael Eury)
G-Force: Animated (by George Khoury and Jason Hofius)
I Have To Live With This Guy! (by Blake Bell)
Image Comics: The Road To Independence (by George Khoury)
John Romita… And All That Jazz (by Roy Thomas and Jim Amash)
Modern Masters: In The Studio with George Perez DVD
Modern Masters: In The Studio with Michael Golden DVD
Mr. Monster – Volume 0 (by Michael T. Gilbert) – ALMOST SOLD OUT!
Streetwise (edited by Jon B. Cooke and John Morrow)
Superheroes In My Pants (by Mark Evanier)
The Art of George Tuska (by Dewey Cassell)
THUNDER Agents Companion (by Jon B. Cooke)

SOLD OUT ITEMS:
Alter Ego Collection Volume One (by Roy Thomas)
Wertham Was Right! (by Mark Evanier)
True Brit (by George Khoury)
Secrets in the Shadows: The Art & Life of Gene Colan (by Tom Field) – SOFTCOVER IS SOLD OUT (but we have some hardcover copies left)
Comic Book Artist #9

What’s a LEGO convention like, you ask?


Over Labor Day weekend, I went to BrickFair in Vienna, Virginia (just outside Washington, DC). This was my first true LEGO convention, and was quite an eye-opener. While there was a very vital LEGO presence at Comic-Con this year, BrickFair was an entirely different animal. It was more intimate (there was an estimated 3500-4000 people who attended the “public” days on Saturday and Sunday), and the vibe was more indicative of the early comic conventions I attended back in the 1970s and ’80s. Everyone seemed to know everyone else, and there was a sense of fun and comraderie that’s missing at a lot of today’s mega-conventions. (And no, that’s not a specific slam on MegaCon in Orlando; just a turn of phrase.)

The first full day is for “attendees” only, who are the hearty souls who’ve paid a nominal registration fee, to have the privilege of displaying their “MOCs” (stands for “My Own Creation”) out of LEGO bricks. They’re not selling them, mind you (or selling anything else, generally); they’re just there to show off what they can build. There’s probably 50-100 of these attendees, and for their fee, they get a table slot (assigned by the convention organizers, based on how much space their MOCs need, not based on how much they paid, since everyone pays the same price to be an attendee). The result is a room full of spectacular LEGO constructions, all there for the general public to view and enjoy on the “public days”.

The attendee-only day lets everyone get their MOCs set up, and allows a lot of good bonding time between old friends, and making of new ones. The result is a lot of people having a lot of fun, enjoying the hobby they love. No one’s really buying or selling anything, just displaying.

For the public days, there were probably only 4-5 actual “vendors” there selling anything (one table had a few assorted bags of LEGO parts for sale, another had mini-figures and other accessories, and one guy was selling a few LEGO sets, and doing custom engraving on the sides of LEGO bricks), and they paid a reasonable fee for their tables. The convention had a table selling BrickFair hats and t-shirts (and, nicely, copies of our mag BrickJournal for us). But that was about it; thousands of people there, with not much to spend money on; a far cry from today’s big comic-cons.

The crowd was really big (lined up all the way around the Sheraton hotel, with the parking lot overflowing into the adjoining streets). Admission was $10 per day, and was well worth it. Other than the main ballroom where all the MOCs were displayed, there was a “free play” room with tons of LEGO bricks dumped on the floor for anyone to play and build with, a silent auction room full of items donated by LEGO, and a room that housed the “Great Ball Contraption”, which was an M.C. Escher-style construction that filled the room, and took balls on a whirlwind journey through LEGO mazes, trucks, and along tracks, right back to where it started to do it over and over again, all day long. There was also a film room, where fans aired their home-made LEGO movies, done with stop-animation and mini-figs. And comic-con style panels were offered (including a BrickJournal one moderated by editor Joe Meno, where I got an even greater sense of just how much LEGO fans want to see the magazine succeed).

Head personnel from the LEGO Group in Denmark were there, walking the floor, giving keynote addresses to the attendees, and talks to the public. They were there to meet and greet people who love LEGO, and to evangelize the company and its products. There was also a big Bionicle display, to draw in kids that are more geared toward that product line. However, LEGO didn’t have any actual display; they just donated items for raffles and auctions, and sent personnel to interact with the fans (although the LEGO retail store at the nearby shopping mall was literally MOBBED with customers when I stopped by). In my dealings so far with the LEGO Group, I’ve got to say that comic book companies could learn a lot from following how they run their business, and deal with their fans.

The hotel was fabulous and affordable ($95 a night for a 4-star Sheraton), and the location was great, with plenty of great shopping and food nearby (but far enough from Washington DC that the traffic wasn’t too bad). The main problem is, the ballroom was so crowded, I was afraid the fire marshall might shut it down, so a larger venue will probably be needed in the next year or two.

I’ve been to a few recent comic conventions that, despite their much larger size, just weren’t that much fun. BrickFair, however, wasn’t about size at all; it was ALL about fun. All the profits from the registration and admission fees go to charity, and putting on next year’s convention. Everyone involved is there to make sure everyone else has a great time, and based on my experience as a NOOB (ie. newbie to the LEGO scene), they did a spectacular job! I hope some comic-cons can learn from their example.

My new name

According to my three-year-old daughter, who just spent close to 30 minutes vehemently fighting against my repeated demands that she go to bed, I am officially a “poo-poo baby”. Gotta say, while I’ve been called worse in my day, I’ve never had quite that combination of astonishment and hilarity from an insult before. It’s tough to discipline your child when you don’t know whether to laugh or get mad.

Back Issue #31 preview up

Although #30 is just on press now (and will be shipping in about two weeks), Westfield Comics has just posted a preview of Michael Aushenker’s “Gerber’s Gruesomes” article from BACK ISSUE #31 preview on their site. Here’s a link.

http://westfieldcomics.com/feature/225

The issue’s got some great tributes to the late Steve Gerber, so check it out! BI #31 ships in early November.

Biggest Sale in TwoMorrows history is on!

This is it! Starting today, we’re having the largest sale in our company’s 15-year history: $2 magazines and 50% off books, as part of a “Back-To-School Blowout” sale, now through September 30, 2008.

We’ve had other sales, on a much smaller range of titles, but never anything to rival this. I took my 6-year-old daughter back-to-school shopping recently, and was astonished at what the total for a first grader came to. With convention season winding down and school starting up across the country, I thought it was time to offer our customers some relief from high gas, food, and comics publication prices.

So all in-stock issues of Rough Stuff, Write Now, and Comic Book Artist, plus other miscellaneous magazines, are only $2 each. We’re also featuring more than 25 of our acclaimed book and DVD titles at 50% off cover price, including several “Companion”, “Artist”, “Comics History”, and “How-To” titles. This sale is only valid for orders placed at www.twomorrows.com through the end of September, and does not include shipping costs.

Here’s a complete list of sale items:

$2 magazines:
Rough Stuff #1-9 (edited by Bob McLeod)
Write Now #1-18 (edited by Danny Fingeroth)
Comic Book Artist (all in-stock issues) (edited by Jon B. Cooke)
Comic Book Nerd (by Pete Von Sholly)
Crazy Hip Groovy Go-Go Way Out Monsters #29 and #32 (by Pete Von Sholly)
Wallace Wood Checklist (edited by Bhob Stewart)

50% Off Books & DVDs:
Alter Ego Collection Volume One (by Roy Thomas)
Alter Ego: The Best of the Legendary Comics Fanzine (by Roy Thomas and Bill Schelly)
Best of the Legion Outpost (by Glen Cadigan)
Best of Write Now (by Danny Fingeroth)
Blue Beetle Companion (by Christopher Irving)
Brush Strokes With Greatness: The Life & Art of Joe Sinnott (by Tim Lasiuta)
Comic Book Artist Collection – Volume 3 (by Jon B. Cooke)
Comic Books And Other Necessities of Life (by Mark Evanier)
Comics Above Ground (by Durwin Talon)
Comics Gone Ape! (by Michael Eury)
Comics Introspective: Peter Bagge (by Christopher Irving)
Dick Giordano: Changing Comics One Day At A Time (by Michael Eury)
G-Force: Animated (by George Khoury and Jason Hofius)
I Have To Live With This Guy! (by Blake Bell)
Image Comics: The Road To Independence (by George Khoury)
John Romita… And All That Jazz (by Roy Thomas and Jim Amash)
Modern Masters: In The Studio with George Perez DVD
Modern Masters: In The Studio with Michael Golden DVD
Mr. Monster – Volume 0 (by Michael T. Gilbert)
Secrets in the Shadows: The Art & Life of Gene Colan (by Tom Field)
Streetwise (edited by Jon B. Cooke and John Morrow)
Superheroes In My Pants (by Mark Evanier)
The Art of George Tuska (by Dewey Cassell)
THUNDER Agents Companion (by Jon B. Cooke)
True Brit (by George Khoury)
Wertham Was Right! (by Mark Evanier)

Special categories atop our home page link directly to the magazines and books on sale. So head on over, and check it out! If you’ve ever wanted to try out any of these books, I’m certain you’ll never find a better deal on them than this.

Late Comic-Con update

Comic-Con International: San Diego’s been over for several weeks now, but we’re just now getting unburied from the pile of work and orders that accumulated while we were gone. I take wife Pam and our girls there every year, and we always stay an extra week for vacation, since we’re shelling out the airfare money. (Sidenote: We flew on Southwest Airlines this year, and booked our flights back in January before gas and ticket prices skyrocketed, thankfully. Despite all the horror stories I’ve heard about other airlines and the fees they’ve been charging for luggage, blankets, etc., Southwest was great, with no extra fees for anything, and the service was just fine. Really, really good airline.)

A quick overview: We went with a single booth this year (rather than our usual double-size booth), to save on the increasing costs of exhibiting at the con. Hotels are ridiculously overpriced, but hey, they know you’ve gotta sleep somewhere, and with too few rooms for too many people, they can charge whatever they like, especially in a big tourist town like SD. As it was, we were awfully crammed in, trying to fit our usual comics stuff, plus our new LEGO-related material into a single booth, and we’re planning to expand back to a double next year.

The show was insanely crowded, although Saturday (which is usually our busiest day at conventions) was actually our slowest, and Sunday (which is usually the slowest) was our busiest. We figured out why; all 125,000 were at the other end of the hall on Saturday, seeing the Watchmen Owlship (very cool, I might add), and attending the movie studio panels. On Sunday, with the end coming and fewer panels going on, they all converged on our end of the con (Hall A/B). What matters is the overall response, and all four (and a half) days were very busy, adding up to one of our best cons ever, in spite of the economy.

But after exhibiting at Comic-Con for 14 years now (plus an additional year as an attendee), I’ve got to say, it’s just not as much fun as it used to be. In fact, this year really ended up being mostly a business trip, lacking most of the fun from years past. A lot of the usual friendly faces we see each year weren’t there (probably due to the economy), so we didn’t get to spend time with many of the friends we’ve made over the years.

Before you think I’ve just become jaded from too many cons over the years, I had an absolutely fantastic time at this year’s New York Comicon. It’s centered more exclusively on comics than San Diego, and the vibe in NY was more like the cons of old that I’ve always enjoyed. It hasn’t grown too big (yet), and gotten away from comics as much as SD. But at the same time, NY doesn’t bring in nearly the sales (or attendees) of San Diego, and it costs about the same to attend. So from a business standpoint, San Diego still makes the most sense, for us at least.

Maybe things will change at San Diego, but it’s looking like it’ll continue to get bigger each year (although with tickets sold out for all days this year, and actual scalpers selling them outside, they’ll have to move elsewhere to get more people through the doors, or add days to the con). That’s great for business, and we’ll keep going. But it’s just not that much fun anymore, at least for me. But the weather’s sure nice!

The week after the con, we took the kids to LEGOLand California (where they’re doing brisk business selling copies of our new mag BrickJournal), plus Disneyland (which is WAY better than Disneyworld in Orlando, FL, IMHO). We had literally just walked through the Disney gates when a pesky 5.6 earthquake hit, and almost knocked me over. In all our years of visiting California, we’d never experienced a quake before. My wife Pam had just stepped into a gift shop with our daughter Lily when it hit, and stuff started flying off the shelves and hitting them on the head. The employee rushed over and herded them under a doorway until the quake ended and the building stopped swaying, and Pam was pretty freaked out the rest of that day. (I was outside, so I thought it was actually kinda cool to see the ground literally shift first left, then right, under my feet; it was sorta like the moving sidewalk you have to walk on to ride the Haunted Mansion, only much more violent.) But in thinking about what could’ve happened if it’d been a stronger quake, the novelty wore off. I’ve experienced one now, and that’s just fine, thank you; no more needed.

Disneyland shut down all the rides until they could inspect everything, but they were very nice in comping us an extra day on our tickets. We had dinner with the Disney Princesses (if you have young daughters, take them to do that at least once; you won’t believe the look on their faces when Cinderalla, Ariel, Jasmine and company come over to your table to chat). We rode the amazing new Toy Story ride at Disney’s California Adventure Park. And we even spent an entire day just sitting around the awesome kids’ pool at the Howard Johnson’s resort in Anaheim (a really great family hotel, BTW; reasonably priced, super clean, and wonderful for kids–and only a couple of minutes walk to the gate of Disneyland).

So while Comic-Con tuned out to be just another business trip this year, the week after was a blast (other than the earthquake). A good trip as usual, so I don’t mean to sound like a complainer. And I’m already looking forward to next year, albeit with a few changes in how we tackle the trip in general. See you then!

Bill Schelly in OK

O.A.F., the Oklahoma Alliance of Fans, is sponsoring a collectors convention on October 3rd and 4th in Oklahoma City, and Alter Ego ‘s associate editor Bill Schelly will be the special Fan Guest of Honor! Bill’s book The Golden Age of Comic Fandom put him on the map as a premiere fandom historian; we at TwoMorrows were proud to publish his memoir Sense of Wonder: A Life in Comic Fandom several years ago. OAFcon 2008 will be the first time AE’s associate editor has been to a Southwestern convention, and Bill’s really excited about meeting the fans from that region, judging from his emails. Details about the show are up at http://oafcon2008.blogspot.com.

Hot time in San Diego

I’m writing this from the lobby of the San Diego Convention Center, taking full advantage of the free wi-fi offered this year. Comic-Con International 2008 has been in full swing for four days now, and it’s massive to say the least. Another amazing year, with undoubtedly record attendance.

It’s Saturday morning, and so far we’ve have some great panels (the Modern Masters: Live and the BrickJournal/Lego were packed, with people being turned away from the Lego panel, due to overcrowding). All our new books are selling briskly, and we’re already making plans to add more booth space next year.

Food’s great, weather’s wonderful (back in the 70s, after two years of record heat waves), and everyone seems to be having a great time. I’ll report more fully after we return to the office on August 5, but if you didn’t make it this year, start making plans for 2009. It’s an unforgettable experience.