OEL updates

One of the interesting things about OEL manga is that many of the creators have blogs, so we can check out how the next volume is coming along. It helps pass the (long) time between volumes.

Let’s see how everyone is doing. Rivkah took a few weeks off from Steady Beat after NYCC:

feel like I’ve been lazy, though I know I haven’t, by any means, because I’ve been doing other Very Important things. ;_; But it shouldn’t take much to finish the last pages by the end of the month, and I just remembered that I’m ahead on inks and tones, but still . . . bleh. I put WAY too many backgrounds in book 2, and though it looks good . . . they take forever to pencil and ink. ;_;

Queenie Chan, on the other hand, seems to have kept her nose to the grindstone; she’s working on chapter 10 of The Dreaming, which is due out in November.

M. Alice LeGrow hasn’t updated her blog since February, but she’s probably pretty busy right now as the second volume of Bizenghast is out in June. Check out the reviews on the right-hand navbar for a chuckle.

Amy Hadley, a.k.a. Tentopet, chronicles the ups and downs of the creative life on her livejournal site—check out the graph. The first three chapters of Fool’s Gold are up on the Tokyopop website. This looks like a great book, and I’m looking forward to reading it when it comes out.

Some happy news at The Sad Circus by the Sea, Rikki Simons’ blog. Ranklechick and his Three-Legged Cat, the latest creation of Rikki and wife Tavisha, is available via Amazon and Barnes & Noble. No word on when Shutterbox 4 is due, however.

Rikki got stung by an offhanded criticism on the Tokyopop OEL blog and it spurred him to eloquence:

And really, kids, elitism is in no way clever or cool. It doesn’t make you smart, special or important to be an elitist. It makes you a non-creator trying to wear create pants. Elitism is an easy sickness wrapped in a dogma.

And then he proceeds to critique the critics!

Svetlana Chmakova must be hard at work on Dramacon, because she hasn’t posted to her livejournal site since the end of February, when she was still recovering from NYCC. Her last post about work was in mid-February, but it’s good news:

Like I mentioned, the script for the second Dramacon is DONE. It was very difficult to write, the first one was much easier—things just sort of fell into place then. But this one just wouldn’t come together right. I had to cut out characters and entire scenes, sew it back up and then beat it with a bat to make it live (because I am too cheap lazy practical to do that whole Evil Genius Lab thing and harness electricity from lightning or whatever). The good news is that the effort’s been worth it, or so I’ve been told by my lovely proof-readers.

Reading all these blogs is very reassuring to me. It’s good to be reminded that I’m not the only one who has mood swings, creative despair, and surly critics. (Fortunately, not too many of the latter at the moment, but that probably means I’m not doing enough.) And it also makes me happy to think of all those creative people sitting at their computers working on the next volumes of all those series that I just can’t wait to read.

UPDATE: I just realized that The Beat is featuring new creators and has a link to Amy Kim Ganter’s blog. Ganter is the creator of Sorcerers and Secretaries, which was released last month. Her blog has plenty of good links and commentary and is worth adding to the daily reading list.

About Brigid Alverson

Brigid Alverson has been reading comics since she was 4. After earning an MFA in printmaking, she headed to New York to become a famous artist but ended up working with words instead of pictures, first as a book editor and later as a newspaper reporter. She started MangaBlog to keep track of her daughters’ reading habits and now covers manga, comics and graphic novels as a freelancer for School Library Journal, Publishers Weekly Comics Week, Comic Book Resources, the Barnes & Noble Sci-Fi & Fantasy Blog, and Robot 6. She also edits the Good Comics for Kids blog at School Library Journal. Now settled in the outskirts of Boston, Brigid is married to a physicist and has two daughters.
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