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Best Comics of 2011 – A List of Lists for the Listophiles
Posted by Corey Blake
Whether published as comic books, graphic novels, manga, web comics, digital comics, or some other form of sequential art, comics published this year continues a fantastic renaissance in the art form that brings more creativity and innovation. Barely able to contain their excitement, several outlets have already released their lists for the year’s best. And since we’re now knee deep in the holiday shopping season, let’s see what has won the attention of critics and reviewers in 2011.
I’ll add to the list as more are released. Check out the artists own webpages and check out the publisher links for more info on each book. Select quotes are taken from the site/publication, visit each for more.
First, here are some Black Friday shopping guides that are still worth consulting and will no doubt influence those site’s final Best Of lists:
- San Francisco Chronicle
- The Comics Reporter
- Comic Book Resources
- GeekChicDaily
- LA Times’ Hero Complex
Also of note is the Washington Post’s Comic Riffs blog sending out an open call for nominations for this year’s Best Webcomics. Let me know if I’ve missed a Best Of list worth reading. OK, on with the lists!
Amazon.ca – Best Books of 2011: Comics & Graphic Novels (published November 28, 2011) [mostly the same as Amazon.com's list below except for 4 items]
- Habibi by Craig Thompson, published by Pantheon Graphic Novels, $35.00
- Hark! A Vagrant by Kate Beaton, published by Drawn and Quarterly, $19.95
- Mister Wonderful by Daniel Clowes, published by Pantheon Graphic Novels, $19.95
- Pogo: The Complete Daily & Sunday Comic Strips Volume 1: Through the Wild Blue Wonder by Walt Kelly, published by Fantagraphics Books, $39.99
- Love and Rockets: New Stories Volume 4 by Los Bros Hernandez, published by Fantagraphics Books, $14.99
- Green River Killer: A True Detective Story by Jeff Jensen and Jonathan Case, published by Dark Horse Comics, $24.99
- Kill Shakespeare Volume 2: The Blast of War by Conor McCreery, Anthony Del Col and Andy Belanger, published by IDW Publishing, $19.99
- The Death-Ray by Daniel Clowes, published by Drawn and Quarterly, $19.95
- Joe the Barbarian by Grant Morrison and Sean Murphy, published by Vertigo, $29.99
- One Soul by Ray Fawkes, published by Oni Press, $24.99
Publishers Weekly – Best Books 2011: Comics (published November 7, 2011)
- Zahra’s Paradise by Amir and Kahlil, published by First Second Books, $19.99
“An Iranian blogger goes missing and his family enters a hellish twilight zone of obfuscation in a story that captures the uncertainty of living under religious dogma.”
- Daytripper by Fábio Moon and Gabriel Bá, published by Vertigo, $19.99
- Hark! A Vagrant by Kate Beaton, published by Drawn and Quarterly, $19.95
- The Influencing Machine: Brooke Gladstone on the Media by Brooke Gladstone and Josh Neufeld, published by W. W. Norton, $23.95
Host of NPR’s On the Media, Gladstone uses a cartoon persona to take the reader on a thoughtful and entertaining excursion through the history of the media from ancient Rome to the rise of digital technology.
- Love and Rockets: New Stories Volume 4 by Los Bros Hernandez, published by Fantagraphics Books, $14.99
- Infinite Kung Fu by Kagan McLeod, published by Top Shelf Productions, $24.95
- Finder: Voice by Carla Speed McNeil, published by Dark Horse Comics, $19.99
“In this epic work of science fiction, Rachel Grosvenor, an outcast in a world ruled by a complex network of clans, looks to find a place for herself by attempting to join a very exclusive clan.”
- Big Questions by Anders Nilsen, published by Drawn and Quarterly, $44.95
- Farm 54 by Galit Seliktar and Gilad Seliktar, published by Fanfare / Ponent Mon, $25.00
- Habibi by Craig Thompson, published by Pantheon Graphic Novels, $35.00
Amazon.com – Best Books of 2011: Comics & Graphic Novels (published November 8, 2011)
- Habibi by Craig Thompson, published by Pantheon Graphic Novels, $35.00
“Habibi, Craig Thompson’s intricate and moving fairy tale about familial and romantic love, one’s relationship to their environment, the shared roots of Christianity and Islam, and the effects of industrial modernization, tops our list of the best Comics & Graphic Novels of 2011.”
- Mister Wonderful by Daniel Clowes, published by Pantheon Graphic Novels, $19.95
- Hark! A Vagrant by Kate Beaton, published by Drawn and Quarterly, $19.95
- Big Questions by Anders Nilsen, published by Drawn and Quarterly, $44.95
- Pogo: The Complete Daily & Sunday Comic Strips Volume 1: Through the Wild Blue Wonder by Walt Kelly, published by Fantagraphics Books, $39.99
- Batman: The Black Mirror by Scott Snyder, Jock and Francesco Francavilla, published by DC Comics, $29.99
- Love and Rockets: New Stories Volume 4 by Los Bros Hernandez, published by Fantagraphics Books, $14.99
- King of the Flies Volume 2: The Origin of the World by Mezzo and Pirus, published by Fantagraphics Books, $18.99
- Green River Killer: A True Detective Story by Jeff Jensen and Jonathan Case, published by Dark Horse Comics, $24.99
- Daytripper by Fábio Moon and Gabriel Bá, published by Vertigo, $19.99
The New York Times – Holiday Gift Guide: 100 Notable Books of 2011 (published November 21, 2011)
- Big Questions by Anders Nilsen, published by Drawn and Quarterly, $44.95 (New York Times review)
“In this capacious, metaphysically inclined graphic novel, a flock of finches act out Nilsen’s unsettling comic vision about the food chain, fate and death.”
Posted in News and Analysis
Tags: Amazon.com, Amir, Anders Nilsen, Andy Belanger, Anthony Del Col, Batman, Batman: The Black Mirror, Big Questions, Brooke Gladstone, Brooke Gladstone on the Media, Carla Speed McNeil, Conor McCreery, Craig Thompson, Daniel Clowes, Dark Horse Comics, Daytripper, Drawn and Quarterly, Fabio Moon, Fanfare, Fanfare/Ponent Mon, Fantagraphics, Farm 54, Finder, Finder: Voice, First Second Books, Francesco Francavilla, Gabriel Ba, Galit Seliktar, Gilad Seliktar, Grant Morrison, Green River Killer, Habibi, Hark! A Vagrant, IDW Publishing, Infinite Kung Fu, Jeff Jensen, Jock, Joe the Barbarian, Jonathan Case, Josh Neufeld, Kagan McLeod, Kahlil, Kate Beaton, Kill Shakespeare, King of the Flies, King of the Flies: The Origin of the World, Los Bros Hernandez, Love and Rockets, Love and Rockets: New Stories, Mezzo, Mezzo and Pirus, Mister Wonderful, One Soul, Oni Press, Pantheon Graphic Novels, Pirus, Pogo, Pogo: The Complete Daily & Sunday Comic Strips, Ponent Mon, Publisher's Weekly, Ray Fawkes, Scott Snyder, Sean Murphy, The Death-Ray, The Influencing Machine, Top Shelf, Vertigo, W. W. Norton & Company, Walt Kelly, Zahra's Paradise
Comic-Con Wrap-Up: Comics Debuts
Posted by Corey Blake
I know it’s hard to believe with all the big flashy Hollywood things, but Comic-Con actually had stuff about comic books! There were a number of exciting debuts this year. Scroll through and see if something catches your eye. If so, read the blurb I’ve put together from the publisher’s write-ups, and if you’re intrigued, click the links to find out more.
Any Empire by Nate Powell (Swallow Me Whole) recalls aimless summers of Nancy Drew and G.I. Joe, treehouses and army surplus stores… but when fantasy starts to bleed into reality, whose mission will be accomplished? [Interview]
Big Questions by Anders Nilsen: A haunting postmodern fable, this beautiful and minimalist story is the culmination of ten years and over 600 pages of work that details the metaphysical quandaries of the occupants of an endless plain, existing somewhere between a dream and a Russian steppe.
Daybreak by Brian Ralph is an unconventional zombie story. Drawing inspiration from zombies, horror movies, television, and first-person shooter video games, Daybreak departs from zombie genre in both content and format, achieving a living-dead masterwork of literary proportions. [Interview]
The Death-Ray by Daniel Clowes: Classic staples of the superhero genre – origin, costume, ray-gun. sidekick, fight scene – are reconfigured into a story that is anything but morally simplistic. With subtle comedy, deft mastery and an obvious affection for the bold Pop Art exuberance of comic book design, Daniel Clowes delivers a contemporary meditation on the darkness of the human psyche.
Freakshow by writers David Server and Jackson Lanzing, and artist Joe Suitor: When five refugee survivors develop monstrous mutations from a devastating chemical explosion that leaves their city in ruins, they band together to seek revenge against the clandestine government quarantine that has seized control in the aftermath. But are they monsters…or heroes?
WAIT, there’s more! Click through…!
Posted in Events
Tags: A Treasury of XXth Century Murder, A Zoo in Winter, Alan Moore, Anders Nilsen, Andrew Constant, Any Empire, Ape Entertainment, Batton Law, Big Questions, Bill Mauldin, Brian Ralph, Century: 1969, Chris "Elio" Eliopoulos, Chris Eliopoulos, comic books, Comic-Con, Daniel Clowes, David Server, Daybreak, debut, Drawn and Quarterly, Edgar Allen Poe, Emily McGuiness, Eric Reynolds, Exhibit A, Fanfare, Fanfare/Ponent Mon, Fantagraphics, Freakshow, Gestalt Publishing, Gil Jordan, graphic novels, Hark! A Vagrant, Infinite Kung Fu, Jackson Lanzing, Jacques Tardi, Jean-Patrick Manchette, Jeffrey "Chamba" Cruz, Jeffrey Cruz, Jiro Taniguchi, Joe Suitor, Joh James, Johnny Ryan, Kagan McLeod, Kate Beaton, Kevin O'Neill, Kinky & Cosy, Lewis Trondheim, Like a Sniper Lining Up His Shot, Little Nothings, Lorenzo Mattotti, Los Bros Hernandez, Lou Reed, Love and Rockets, Love and Rockets: New Stories, M. Tillieux, Mark Twain's Autobiography 1910-2010, Mattotti, Michael Kupperman, Mike Huddleston, MOME, Murder By High Tide, My Shadow in the Distance, Nate Powell, NBM Publishing, Nicola Scott, Nix, Okie Dokie Donuts, One Soul, Oni Press, Petrograd, Philip Gelatt, Pirate Penguin vs. Ninja Chicken, Ponent Mon, Prison Pit, Private Detective, R. Macherot, RandomVeus, Ray Fawkes, Ray Friesen, Richard Sala, Rick Geary, Robert Venditti, San Diego, Sibyl-Anne vs. Ratticus, Supernatural Law, The Death-Ray, The Hernandez Brothers, The Hidden, The Homeland Directive, The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, The Life-Partner of Frankenstein, The Lives of Sacco and Vanzetti, The Raven, Ties, Ties: A Chronicle of Letters and Scotch, Top Shelf, Torn, Tyler Crook, Udon Entertainment, Willie & Joe, Willie & Joe: Back Home




