Alison Bechdel comes to Quimby’s 10/8

Oct ’11
8
7:00 pm

Alison Bechdel is guest editing THE BEST AMERICAN COMICS 2011.

“An insightful compilation.”—USA Today

It is widely acknowledge that comics is, by and large, a printed medium, and in the foreword of THE BEST AMERICAN COMICS 2011, series editors Jessica Abel and Matt Madden trace the evolutionary print trends of this art form – from Sunday pages and daily strips to fanzines and minicomics to a mail art movement and self-publishing faction.  However, they also recognize that comics have invaded the digital medium, and many of the aforementioned DIY-ers have created a webcomics scene that parallels, yet doesn’t necessarily intersect with, the print world.  In part as a reflection of this new trend, this year’s volume of THE BEST AMERICAN COMICS features a first for this series: Kate Beaton’s clever, buzz-worthy, and hilarious Hark! A Vagrant, the first included comic by an artist who emerged entirely from the webcomics scene.

Star guest editor Alison Bechdel, author of the seminal chronicle of lesbian lives and loves, Dykes To Watch Out For, and the highly-acclaimed graphic memoir Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic, continues this reflection on comics trends in her introduction.  Though she originally became a cartoonist because of its alternative, underground nature far from mainstream literary and art criticism, she acknowledges – and appreciates – the incredible growth spurt and popularity boost comics have undergone in the past decade.

Submission after submission, Bechdel writes, shows how cleverly, confidently, and infectiously young comics are playing with the balance of art and language.  Selections like Brendan Leach’s Pterodactyl Hunters about fictionalized 1904 New York, Chris Ware’s Jordan Lint to 65 about the complete, fictionally-realized life of Jordan Lint, and Joe Sacco’s historiography, Footnotes in Gaza don’t fit neatly into a single category.  And yet, many of these pieces address a metacomic theme, commenting on their own art form in some way – David Lasky’s cheeky send-up of recent trends in the ‘graphic novel’ phenomenon and Joey Allison Sayers’ Pet Cat, which investigates the negative qualities defining the more commercial reaches of the comicsphere.

And although Bechdel questions why there’s still such a gender disparity in the field, she also lauds the fact that female cartoonists are beginning to experience a form of freedom that she hopes will extend to the art form as a whole.  “Freedom from having to explain or defend ourselves.  Freedom from being confined to one section of the bookstore.  Even freedom—one day, maybe—from books like this one.”  And it is this liberation, this ability to “look just a little beyond the horizon” that truly defines each of the pieces in THE BEST AMERICAN COMICS™ 2011 which begins, appropriately, with Gabrielle Bell’s heartfelt Manifestation.

Allison Bechdel began drawing the comic strip Dykes to Watch Out For in 1983.  Dykes was syndicated in fifty alternative newspapers, translated into multiple languages, and collected into a book series with over a quarter of a million copies in print. Bechdel is also the author of the best-selling graphic memoir Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic, which was named a Best Book of the Year by Time, Entertainment Weekly, the New York Times, People, USA Today, the Los Angeles Times, the Village Voice, and the San Francisco Chronicle, among others.  Her new graphic memoir, Are You My Mother?: A Comic Drama, will be published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt in April 2012.

Announcing Anobium

Anobium: Volume 1, due July 31st, is the first literary biannual from Chicago’s Anobium Books. It features new writing from local and international names and artwork from Jacob van Loon. It will also feature work from Jonathan Greenhause, Rich Ives, Stephanie Plenner, Joe Meno, and a fancy-dancy handful of other spectacular folks. We’ll have it here when it comes out, but until then for more info see anobiumlit.com

Weekly Top 10

Here’s the topsellers. But first, a reminder about our event this coming Saturday (July 23rd) at 7 pm, we’re excited to welcome Cassie J. Sneider with Dave Roche and Danny ‘Ratso’ Rathbun, which should be hilarious and fun. See our event calendar for more info.

Weekly Top 10

1. Add Toner: A Cometbus Collection by Aaron Cometbus (Last Gasp) $12.00 – Collects highlights from #44 to #48. including tales from the Dead End, Lanky, and the Back to the Land series.

2. Logan Square Literary Review #7 Sum 11 $5.00 – Fiction from Ray Cline and Evan Seeder, photos from April Lynn, poetry from Alicia Hilton and Brandon Holmquesta bike comic, a profile on the Logan Square CROP project and a recipe for kroppkakor.

3. Five Stories Published on a Printer #1 by Dustin Michael Edward Davenport $2.00

4. Roctober #49 $4.00

5. Believer #82 Jul Aug 11 Music Issue $12.00

6. Mojo #213 Aug 11 $9.99

7. 8-Track Mind #101 Zines vs Blogs ed. by F.R. Russ Forster $3.00 – WELCOME BACK 8-TRACK MIND!!!! Holy Moly! After a 10-year hiatus 8-Track Mind heeds the call of the Revenge of Print and pulls a fresh new issue out of the oven! Man, this was the zine that I remember reading way-back-when that REALLY made me think, “Woah, you really can make a great zine about ANYTHING.” Truly. This issue goes light on the 8-trackology but stays true to its analog-obsessed roots with a well-rounded symposium all about “Zines Versus Blogs”. -EF — Contributors: Chris Barrows, Peter Bergman, Joe Carducci, Kim Cooper, Brendan DeVallance, Tony DuShane, Sam Green, Lance Laurie, Alison Levy, Tom Lynch, Danny Plotnick, Dan Sutherland, V Vale and Lucien Williams.

8. Your Secretary #10 Dig Deep #3 by Jami Sailor and Heather C. $2.00 –  Library-themed librarian zine split. Heather gushes about working the Young Adult program and Jami gives a run down of Library School field work and public library porn use. Something to definitely check out! -EF

9. Hobo Magazine #13 $15.00

10. Yeti #11 $11.95 – Another great issue of Yeti – a cd of exclusive tracks and a thick journal of comics, interviews, photos and art. Always a stunner. This issue: ON THE CD: all rare/unreleased music –a dozen tracks that are as long as their respective track numbers, so that track 12 is 12 minutes long and track 4 is 4 minutes long and you probably don’t need any more examples than that. The result is a 78-minute-long disc featuring Snake Hole, Sloppy Heads, Johnita and Joyce Collins, Atole, Gospel Creators, White Rainbow, The Dirashi Tribe, Roy Montgomery, Golden Retriever, Oneida, Phill Niblock, and Happy New Year. INSIDE THE BOOK: .interviews with Phill Niblock, Roy Montgomery, and Brian Chippendale; photography by Olivia Wyatt and Megan Holmes; art by Marcellus Hall and Victor Kerlow; an archival interview with Joe Brainard by Anne Waldman; fiction by Kimberly Parko and R. Foggo; rare May ’68 posters from Grenoble, and the Skaters.

David Shrigley comes to Quimby’s 9/20!

Sep ’11
20
7:00 pm

David Shrigley – Live and in person! 9/20 7pm at Quimby’s

and 9/21 at Columbia College

WHAT THE HELL ARE YOU DOING? The Essential David Shrigley

“David Shrigley is probably the funniest gallery-type artist who ever lived.” -Dave Eggers

“With a casual gesture Shrigley points to that hideous shape whose name I’ve never known—and then he names it. And the name is profoundly, embarrassingly familiar. I’m laughing while frantically searching for a pen, so desperate to capture the feeling he has unearthed in me.” -Miranda July

David Shrigley is the rare artist that can comfortably walk the fine line between pop culture and high art. While he’s animated videos for musicians such as Blur and Bonny Prince Billy, his work can also be seen in world renowned museums such as MoMA and the Tate Modern, and his highly distinctive style has been on display in galleries in New York, Paris, Berlin, Melbourne, and beyond. He is also clearly a madman.

The aptly named WHAT THE HELL ARE YOU DOING: The Essential David Shrigley [W. W. Norton & Company; October 24th, 2011; $35.00 hardcover] is an outrageous compilation of his illustrations, comics, photography and sculpture. His crude drawings and unexpected compositions are at once childish and clever, and each depiction oddly sincere. They capture the morbid humor of Edward Gorey, the absurdity of a Monty Python sketch, and the peculiar perspective of a Charles Addams cartoon. In short, this beautiful, full color collection is an indispensible introduction to one of contemporary art’s most fascinating and provocative minds.

The pieces in this book are an eclectic and encompassing representation of Shirgley’s interest in the surreal. From a photograph of a hot dog (affixed with googly eyes and tucked comfortably into bed) to childlike drawings of humanity’s most grotesque members (a man drinking a goblet of blood, captioned simply with “CHEERS!”) this book is a both a celebration of condemnation of humanity’s most base urges, fears, and delights.

WHAT THE HELL ARE YOU DOING? is remarkably bold, and Shrigley leaves no topic untouched. Through colorful commentary, he explores everything from clowns to caffeine, sexuality to God, and all the delightfully inappropriate bits in between. You would be hard-pressed to find, in any other work of art, a match to Shrigley’s satirical brilliance. As Will Self points out in the introduction, “Shrigley’s photographic works suggest the refined eye of someone sent back from the future beyond the looming apocalypse, charged with assembling images that, while ostensibly of the mundane, nonetheless explain how it came to pass that humanity destroyed itself.” By turns unsettling, moving, and gut-wrenchingly funny, WHAT THE HELL ARE YOU DOING? is a revealing glimpse into an offbeat, darkly comedic, and utterly hilarious artistic mind. For more info: davidshrigley.com/

Also, click here for a hilarious animated video abut the book!

Tues, Sept 20th, 7pm here at Quimby’s Bookstore 1854 W. North Ave., Chicago

Wed, Sep 21st , 6:30pm – 9:30pm at Columbia College Chicago – Stage Two 618 S. Michigan Ave., 2nd Floor — Quimby’s will  be there to sell books!

These events are co-sponsored by Quimby’s Bookstore, Columbia College and AIGA Chicago.

New Stuff This Week

Pitchfork weekend is upon us. Well, need an AIR-CONDITIONED respite? Why not join us here? We have some very exciting new things, including a new issue of 8 Track Mind, a Cometbus comp, two steampunk art books (how splendid!), a Tao Lin book, new ishes of Juxtapoz and Hi-Fructose and more.

ZINES & ZINE-RELATED BOOKS!
Add Toner: A Cometbus Collection Collects by Aaron Cometbus (Last Gasp) $12.00 Collects highlights from #44 to #48 including Lanky, Back to the Land and more.
8 Track Mind #101 Zines Vs Blogs by Russ Forster $3.00 – First issue in TEN YEARS! 2011 has truly become The Revenge of Print. Now where’s your zine?
Syndicate Product #18.2 Syndicate Consumption Second Quarter Apr-Jun by AJ Michel $1.00 – A truly entertaining overview of what master zinester AJ has been reading and enjoying. Always a compelling read.
Paper Radio #6 Formerly Signals A Radio and Media Zine by DJ Frederick $3.00
Comic Bible vol 4 #1 $10.00
Man Meat by Susie Swanton $1.00
I Dont Understand Farming #6 and I Dont Understand Farming #7 $.75 each
Niente $3.00
Uptown Problems #2 $4.00
Atlas #1 and Atlas #2 $3.00 each
Sob Story #9 $4.00

COMICS & MINI COMIX!
2012 by Sam Gaskin (Secret Acres) $7.00
Thirteen Steps of Getting Dumped by DGW Hedges and Otto Splotch $5.00
Melted Shelter by Otto Splotch $8.00
Death of Elijah Lovejoy by Noah Van Sciver $5.00
RASL #11 by Jeff Smith (Cartoon) $3.50

GRAPHIC NOVELS & TRADE PAPERBACKS!
Twisted Savage Dragon Funnies vol 1 by Fiffe Michel (Image) $18.99
Classic Next Men vol 1 by John Byrne (IDW) $24.99
Incognito TPB Bad Influences by Ed Brubaker and Sean Phillips (Icon) $17.99
Jack of Fables vol 9 The End TPB by Bill Willingham and var. (Vertigo) $17.99
New X Men TPB Book 3 by Grant Morrison (Marvel) $14.99

ART & DESIGN BOOKS!
Steampunk: The Art of Victorian Futurism by Jay Stongman (Korero) $35.00
Art of Steampunk: Extraordinary Devices and Ingenious Contraptions from the Leading Artists of the Steampunk Movement by Art Donovan (Fox Chapel) $19.95
Kicks Japan by Manami Okazaki and Geoff Johnson (MBP) $30.00

FICTION!
You Are a Little Bit Happier Than I Am by Tao Lin (Action) $14.00
Dance With Dragons HC by George RR Martin (Three Rivers Press) $35.00 – Song of Ice and Fire Book five.
Johannes Cabal: The Detective by Jonathan L. Howard (Anchor) $14.95
Midnight Movie by Tobe Hooper and Alan Goldsher (Three Rivers Press) $14.00 – Local writer Goldsher with the creator of Texas Chainsaw Massacre.
I Knew You’d Be Lovely by Alethea Black (Broadway) $14.00
Fantastic Women: 18 Tales of the Surreal and the Sublime From Tin House (Tin House) $18.95
American Gods 10th Anniversary Edition by Neil Gaiman (Morrow) $26.99
Thackery T. Lambshead Cabinet of Curiosities: Exhibits, Oddities, Images and Stories From Top Authors and Artists by Ann and Jeff Vandermeer (Harper) $22.99
Johnny Too Bad by Heather Augustyn and Carrie Coslov $15.00 – Augustyn is also the author of the comprhensive book Ska: An Oral History. One might say Johnny Too Bad is a book of historical fiction based in the birthplace of ska.

LITERARY JOURNALS, CHAP BOOKS & POETRY!
Camera Obscura vol 3 Sum Fall 11 $12.95
Gathering of Tribes #13 $12.95
Ninth Letter vol 8 #1 $14.95

MUSIC BOOKS!
Tom Waits On Tom Waits: Interviews and Encounters ed. by Paul JR Maher (Chicago Review Press) $19.95

CHILDRENS!
Symphony City by Amy Martin (McSweeneys) $17.95
Beyond Stolen: Flames Forbidden Fruit and Telephone Booths- Our Own Myths Our Own Futures by students at June Jordan School for Equity (826) $22.00

MUCKRACKING, MEMOIRS, MAYHEM, MISCREANTS & MISCELLENOUSNESSESESNESS!
Sinister Forces Book 2: A Warm Gun – A Grimoire of American Political Witchcraft by Peter Levenda (Trine) $24.95 – Now in soft cover.
Celebrity Comics Babble: 34 Stars In Their Own Words by Mary Ann Pierro $18.95 – From Comic Bible Magazine.
Shock Value: How A Few Eccentric Outsiders Gave Us Nightmares Conquered Hollywood by Jason Zinoman (Penguin) $25.95
Muldoon: A True Chicago Ghost Story – Tales of a Forgotten Rectory by R. and D. Facchini (Lake Claremont) $15.00
Near West Side Stories: Struggles For Community in Chicagos Maxwell Street Neighborhood by Carolyn Eastwood $17.95
Politics of Place: A History of Zoning In Chicago by var. (Lake Claremont) $19.95
Sports Traveler Chicago by var. (Lake Claremont) $15.95
On the Job: Behind the Stars of the Chicago Police Department by Daniel P. Smith (Lake Claremont) $17.95

POLITICS & REVOLUTION!
People Wasn’t Made to Burn: The True Story of Race Murder and Justice in Chicago by Joe Allen (Lake Claremont) $22.95
Fascism and Big Business by Daniel Guerin (Pathfinder) $24.95
Reform or Revolution by Rosa Luxemburg (Pathfinder) $14.95
Sexism and Science by Evelyn Reed (Pathfinder) $20.00
Blood on the Tracks: The Life and Times of Brian S. Wilson (PM Press) $20.00 – Autobiography of an activist who lost both his legs courtesy of a U.S. government munitions train during a nonviolent blocking action. Chomsky said that this memoir “should be read and pondered, and its lessons should be taken to heart by those who hope to create a more decent world.”

MAGAZINES!
Juxtapoz #127 Aug 11 $5.99
Hi Fructose #20 $6.95
2600 Hacker Quarterly vol 28 #2 $6.25
Fortean Times #277 Aug 11 $11.99
Yeti #11 $11.95
True Crime Jul 11 $8.99
True Crime Summer Special 11 20 All True Murder Stories $6.99
Namaste vol 12 #2 $9.99
Open Minds Aug Sep 11 $6.50
True Detective Jul 11 $4.99
Art of Mary Jane Jul 11 $6.99
Scootering #301 $8.99
Dazed & Confused #99 Jul 11 $9.99
Horror Hound #30 Jul Aug 11 $6.99
Wire #329 Jul 11 $10.99
Classic Rock #160 Sum 11 $11.99
Black Velvet #69 $6.25
Hip Mama #49 $5.95
Radical Philosophy #168 $13.00
Dissent Sum 11 $10.00
Bound By Ink vol 1 #6 $7.99
Tattoo Life #71 $6.99
Tattoo Scout #24 $9.60

SEX & SEXY!
Last of the Live Nude Girls: A Memoir by Sheila McClear $14.95
Filament vol 3 #1 $12.50
Front #157 $9.99