This Week in Comics Journalism - January 8, 2022

It hasn't been the biggest week for writing about comics, but we're always about quality vs. quantity anyway.

But in some more distressing news, it sounds like Image co-founder Jim Valentino has removed the names of unionizing members of the staff from the office credits of a recent comic from his Shadowline imprint.

Brigid has been a favorite of mine for a long time.  If she likes something, I feel the need to check it out.

And I don't want to be the guy who says "great, but take a look at her husband's accomplishments" but take a look at her husband's accomplishments:

She recently retired from a job in municipal government and lives north of Boston with her husband, a physicist who was part of the team that found the Higgs Boson.

A lot of prestige in that household there!

  • Naoki Urasawa's work is now available digitally... in Japan.  Deb Aoki uncovered this right after Christmas.

I wonder how long it will be before Viz or Kodansha (remember Billy Bat?) gets to release his work digitally in English. Urasawa has always been anti-digital releases, preferring to be a book and magazine artist up until now.

If you check out the follow-ups to Deb's post, she links to a YouTube video that Urasawa released (don't worry, it's subtitled) to talk about the whys and hows of this change to his publishing strategy.

  • Shelfdust head bunny, Steve Morris, dives into The Unwritten #1.
  • Not necessarily news or journalism, but there is an Ed Brubaker Humble Bundle available now. Also, issue 3 of What's the Furthest Place from Here is due out next month, but you can hear the Restorations cover "Radio Free Europe" from the 7 inch deluxe version at Stereogum. Finally, Strangers Fanzine and Publishing now has a new web address www.strangerspublishing.com and it looks state of the freaking art.
  • To close, here's a great Nancy strip for anyone who got snow this week and had to deal with school closures.