About

Ferret Press is a publisher of fine indie comix. PANEL is a comic book writer/artist collective, based in Columbus, Ohio. This is our group blog.

Check out our books at: Ferret Press

Check out Dara Naraghi's new site here.

RSS Feed

Lifelike

Dara Naraghi's graphic novel Lifelike is now available in both digital and print editions. Click here for more info.

Books – Dara
Image of Lifelike
Image of Igor Movie Prequel
Image of Witch & Wizard: Battle for Shadowland (Witch & Wizard (Idw))
Image of Terminator: Salvation Movie Prequel
Image of Witch & Wizard Volume 2: Operation Zero (Witch & Wizard (Idw))
Image of Ghostbusters: Haunted Holidays
Image of Cory Doctorow's Futuristic Tales Of The Here And Now
Image of The Absurd Adventures of Archibald Aardvark Volume 1: Bullets, Booze, and Beelzebub
Image of MGM Drive-in Theater: Motel Hell and IT
Books -Panel
Image of No Dead Time
Image of Comic Book Tattoo Special Edition
Image of Saint Germaine: Tales of an Immortal
Image of Sherlock Holmes & Kolchak: Cry For Thunder S/N Limited Edition HC
Image of Ghost Sonata
Image of Vampire The Masquerade Volume 1: Blood and Roses
Image of Moonstone Monsters Volume 1

Archive for March, 2006

Dayton Daily News on Ferret Press and this weekend’s con

Don Thrasher of the Dayton Daily News has written a small write-up of this weekend’s Gem City Comic Con (use jimmys@jimmy.com/jimmy to access the article.)

“It’s always great to meet people at shows like the Gem City Comic Con, because they have a more relaxed, intimate vibe,” said Ferret Press publisher Dara Naraghi, a founding member of the PANEL creator collective. “We can chat with fans and hopefully introduce new readers to our books. For a small publisher like Ferret Press, word of mouth and face-to-face interaction at shows are the best forms of advertising.”

Man, that Dara. He’s so insightful!

Like this? Share it:

Gocco prints

I think Tom mentioned something about a Gocco machine at the last meeting. Anyway, this caught my eye and I thought I’d share. The Wurst gallery is selling art prints made on the Japanese silk screen printer.


(via boingboing)

Like this? Share it:

Kubert School on CBS Evening news tonight

“CBS Evening News will broadcast a short segment on the world famous Joe Kubert School of Cartoon & Graphic Art, Inc., on Friday, March 31, at 6:30-7:00 PM ET. This will be part of a nation-wide broadcast. This is part of the “Assignment America/Steve Hartman Reports” together with two other story ideas. Viewers will have the chance to vote for one of the three story ideas on www.cbsnews.com. Their decision will then be developed into a full segment for broadcast on Friday, April 7.”

More details in the press release.

Like this? Share it:

A little color for Gem City

I recently added a little color for the second printing of Sean McGurr’s Jury Rigged minis. These beauties will be available at Gem City this weekend.
Enjoy…

JRC #1

JRC #2

Like this? Share it:

Must read: Matt Kish’s website

It’s no secret that I’m a huge fan of fellow PANEL member and all around cool guy Matt Kish. I love his art. I can never get enough of it. In fact, if he’d let me, I’d publish a “Ferret Press Little Art Book” of his works.

But enough with my gushy love fest. The real reason I’m posting this message is to direct your eyes to Matt’s website, specifically the news section. Read his Wednesday, March 29 entry about life changes, endings, and new beginnings. It’s heartfelt and bittersweet and joyous. I wish you the best of luck with all your new ventures, Matt.

(And by the way, great use of the killer Walt Simonson image in your essay, man.)

Like this? Share it:


Beyond the rim of the starlight …

There may not be someone for everyone, but there is certainly an online dating site for everyone. Set your phasers on “stunning” and head over to trekpassions.com, a dating site for Trekkies.

Extra geek points to whoever can identify the reference in the headline. Google is cheating.

Animated Kirk is afraid to look.

Like this? Share it:

Ferret Press at Gem City Comic Con this Sunday, April 2

For those of you in and around Ohio, you may want to check out the first annual Gem City Comic Con in Dayton. Show is this Sunday, April 2nd, at the Student Union of Wright State University, from 10-5. Guests include:

  • Paul Gulacy – Shang-Chi: Master of Kung Fu, Six from Sirius, Batman, Catwoman, and many more.
  • Frank Brunner – Doctor Strange, Man-Thing, Howard the Duck, Conan the Barbarian, The Seven Samuroid, and others.
  • Jerry DeCaire – artist on Werewolf: the Apocalypse, Vampire: the Masquerade, and The Cisco Kid for Moonstone, plus Green Hornet and lots of stuff for Marvel.
  • Dan Davis – inker on Justice League Adventures, BatGirl, Green Arrow, Catwoman, Harley Quinn, Green Lantern, Space Ghost, Superman Adventures, etc.

And of course your favorite PANEL and Ferret Press creators:

  • Andy Bennett – Vampire: the Masquerade, Kolchak: The Nightstalker.
  • Tom Williams – No Dead Time, Misa, Crash Comics.
  • Dara Naraghi – BigCityBlues, Lifelike, AKA.
  • Sean McGurr – Jury Rigged Comics.
  • Matt Kish – Spudd 64.
  • Dan Barlow – BigCityBlues.
  • Tony Goins – Guns of the Nightchild.

Admission is only $3. Check out the website for more details.

Like this? Share it:


Hard Life

Do you remember Jasmine Gray? The one model who was catty-corner across from Craig and me at Mid-Ohio? The one that heavyset gentleman was trying to push up on?

She died.

It got a brief mention in the latest Goon comic book, and her official Web site has the details. Apparently she died in a car crash Dec. 12, shortly after Mid-Ohio.

A lot of things about this story are sad. The life of a con model’s got to be sad anyway. I feel weird about the people who bought her DVD and don’t know she’s dead. I feel bad for making fun of that one guy.

And on her Web site … you can buy a naked picture of her to help pay for her headstone.

Like this? Share it:

Broken Frontier reviews Panel: Music

Over at BrokenFrontier.com, Sam Moyerman reviews our latest anthology, Panel: Music.

“The stories range from humorous tales of a Homeland Security agent to a real life report of a music festival, each one to varying levels of effectiveness, but overflowing with honesty and enthusiasm.”

Andy, Sean, and Tim made a great impression on him. I didn’t fare as well ;-)

Like this? Share it:

Hey kids! Wanna be in comics?

Viper Comics wants to publish your story:

“Viper Comics will be accepting submissions for a 5-page short story in the noir, crime, or horror genre until April 28, 2006. The winning selection will be run as a back up feature in the first issue of A DUMMY’S GUIDE TO DANGER, a four-issue crime noir that is scheduled to hit shelves this July. All entries must be fully written, inked, and colored/shaded for consideration. Submissions received after the April 28th deadline will not be eligible for consideration.”

More details in the press release.

Like this? Share it:


Desert Island Comics, part 8

The night after exchanging phone numbers with a woman I ran into at a concert, I had the idea to take her to Stache’s without actually checking any listings to see who might be playing that evening. The club could usually be counted on to have someone of interest booked to entertain the masses on any given night, and walking into the place blind had actually paid off handsomely on a couple of occasions; my brother stumbled onto a very young Robert Cray when he dropped in one evening, and we discovered the Fleshtones in a similar fashion. Even when the band playing wasn’t a revelation, the atmosphere was great and it was usually cool to see anyone onstage there. This time, however, we walked into open stage night. Some guy was banging a single chord on an acoustic guitar, screeching “Goth! Goth! Goth! Goth!” over and over and over. My date sat across from me wondering what kind of serial killer would enjoy going out to see something like this, while I grinned nervously and wondered how the hell I could possibly save the evening.

It’s a wonder that woman married me.

Even back in my days as an art major at OSU, I felt a certain loathing for the artsy pretentious types. I was showing up in my Duke Robillard tour shirt and jeans wanting to draw cartoons, and I found myself surrounded by black-clad, beret wearing fools yearning to pour their inner anguish into a wire sculpture of a crushed aluminum can. When I left school after repeatedly being told cartooning wasn’t art, I told everyone it was because I felt I could learn more about creating comics by actually creating comics, but I think they knew I simply didn’t feel enough pain to create art. And so it’s a very personal connection that places the following issue so high on my countdown of comics I would take with me were I stranded on a desert isle…

#3: Preacher Special: Cassidy: Blood & Whiskey

Let me first make clear: My child is named after the Grateful Dead song, not this character.

My countdown is lacking in newer comics primarily because the made-for-tpb format adopted within the last ten years has made it nearly impossible for single issues to stand out; most read as one sixth of a story, with every sixth issue being a climax which could have been related in a handful of pages. Fortunately my favorite recent series, Preacher, came with a series of one-shot specials focusing on individual characters, the standout of these being the tale of a drunken Irish vampire named Cassidy partying in antediluvian New Orleans.

Given that the roots of vampire myths cast the monsters in the form of aristocracy, I’m of the opinion that a modern translation of the creatures should more resemble Donald Trump or Dick Cheney than the goth wankery of Anne Rice. Writer Garth Ennis seems to find the modern portrayal equally preposterous, as his decidedly blue-collar undead antagonist encounters a less experienced fellow vampire named Eccarius who has embraced the more pretentious pasty-faced, black clad, cape wearing lifestyle.

The result is the funniest comic I’ve ever read; Cassidy alternately heaps scorn and ridicule on his new comrade, and tries to teach him to live unlife to the fullest with his new abilities in hopes of finding a companion for his walk through eternity. The other vampire fights his teacher every step of the way, desperately clinging to the clichés he thinks he must live by in his role. He takes Cassidy to meet a group of hangers-on who worship their vampire leader and praise him with awful poetry; Cassidy gets him drunk and takes him back to moon them later (“Why are we running away?” “Because it’s funny!”). When he is repulsed by his host’s collection of bottled AB negative, Cassidy must instead reacquaint him with beer and teach him about the many uses of Haagen-Dazs. Throughout, Eccarius cannot understand why Cassidy rejects all the conventions of vampirism he has gleaned from watching numerous movies on the subject (“I’m NOT sleeping in a f***in’ COFFIN!”).

Garth Ennis’ wonderful humor is complemented perfectly by the master of deadpan expressions, Steve Dillon. Whenever something horrible happens to someone in any issue of Preacher, the uncomprehending look Dillon puts in the character’s eyes as they begin to assimilate their twisted misfortune always has me falling out of my seat laughing. Often the action in a given scene occurs between panels, and only the artists’ sly portrayal of people’s reactions relates the events which have occurred, which adds to the comic effect. There are a hundred little moments in this book I could relate, but that would simply spoil it for anyone wishing to read or revisit the issue. So I’ll leave with just this one:

As Cassidy is trying to pick up a babe in a bar, Count Poser enters saying something like “the night has come, and it is time for us to find the dark places, and go down, and commit our unspeakable acts.” Cassidy can only bury his head in his hands and tell the woman “It’s not what you think…” as she turns away smirking. Goth! Goth! Goth! Goth!

Like this? Share it:

Kewl

So these guys just linked to the Panel Jam comic we’ve been doing. Can anyone translate? :-)

Like this? Share it:

GRUBS.

Damn it, I’m a GRUB. (Couldn’t they come up with a better nickname) I refuse to torture my child (If I spawn) with Sufjan Stevens. That child’s listening to the Sigur-Ro’s damn it!!

“In part, because how can their parents hate Interpol when they sound exactly like Joy Division? And in part, because how can their parents hate Bloc Party when their parents just downloaded Bloc Party and think it’s awesome and totally better than the Bravery!”

Like this? Share it:


Subplots

There are many things to like about the original Star Trek, but one of my favorites is the use of subplots.

Subplots on the original Star Trek are a bit different from what you see today. Generally, today’s subplots involve minor characters having a personal problem. The problem usually doesn’t have much bearing on the main story, but rather serves to flesh out the character.

On the original Star Trek, however, the subplots are all about plot. They add a twist to the main plot, heightening the tension and adding to the overall experience. For example:

Not only has the transporter beam split Captain Kirk into good and evil sides, there’s also a contingent of crewmen on the surface of the planet, freezing to death.

Not only is Captain Kirk aging at an accelerated rate, but also the Enterprise is under command of a commodore with no field experience.

Not only does Kirk have to ensure the death of a beautiful woman to save the timeline, but also Dr. McCoy has taken a psychotropic drug that will kill him.

Is it good character development? Maybe not. But the original Star Trek was more about finding insights into our world, rather than insights into specific characters.

Like this? Share it:

Monday Morning “Guess the Artist”

Another guest contribution from F!nch. Thanks dude. Guess away.

(click image to magnify)

(previous weeks: 9/12/2005, 9/19/2005, 9/26/2005, 10/3/2005, 10/10/2005, 10/17/2005, 10/24/2005, 10/31/2005, 11/1/2005, 11/2/2005, 11/3/2005, 11/4/2005, 11/5/2005, 11/6/2005, 11/7/2005, 11/14/2005, 11/21/2005, 11/28/2005, 12/5/2005, 12/12/2005, 12/19/2005, 12/26/2005, 1/2/2006, 1/9/2006, 1/16/2006, 1/23/2006, 1/30/2006, 2/06/2006, 2/13/2006, 2/20/2006, 2/27/2006, 3/6/2006, 3/13/2006, 3/20/2006)

Like this? Share it:
Search
Categories
Archives

Copyright © 2012 Ferret Press – PANEL Blog. Search Engine Optimization by Star Nine. Distributed by Wordpress Themes