Bodog Announces Deal to Release Graphic Novel by Top Comic Talents (PRWeb via Yahoo! News)
c. If you are having trouble thinking of something original to write, begin by developing a concept, a point if you will, that you want to convey to the reader. Whether you are bringing awareness artistically to something, or merely just trying to tell a story, think of an end goal that you want to reach. Par example, let's say that you want to write a short story, but cannot think of how you should go about accomplishing your goal. You could easily take a basic issue (for the sake of example, we will use the recent situation in the Catholic Church), and write a story revolving, either metaphorically or realistically, around that issue. By trying something similar to this, you are recycling an event, issue, or concept of some sort, and transmographying it into art. Styllistically, this method can be applied in a likewise manner. Say that you are writing a depressing story about little kids being mutilated or something, and you wish to be original in your use of written word. You could put a new twist on it by writing it like a fairy tale or something (i.e. Once upon a time there was a little boy named Timmy ) to provoke a suprised reaction from the reader. Kurt Vonnegut's novel Breakfast of Champions is similar to this; taking adult concepts of the dying American dream and the faults of modern society and writing it in a simplistic, almost childlike way.
Bodog Announces Deal to Release Graphic Novel by Top Comic Talents (PRWeb via Yahoo! News)
Bodog Entertainment announces a deal to release a graphic novel created by top comic talents Adam Slutsky, Shawn Martinbrough and Joseph Phillip Illidge.
Read full post here. Copyright (c) 2004 Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved.
Bodog Announces Deal to Release Graphic Novel by Top Comic Talents (PRWeb)
Bodog Entertainment announces a deal to release a graphic novel created by top comic talents Adam Slutsky, Shawn Martinbrough and Joseph Phillip Illidge. (PRWeb Aug 18, 2007) Post Comment:Trackback URL: http://www.prweb.com/pingpr.php/SGFsZi1Mb3ZlLVpldGEtSGFsZi1UaGlyLVplcm8=
Read full post here. Copyright (c) 2004 Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved.
Funeral today for Durham-based comic artist (The News & Observer)
In an unassuming split-level ranch, Michael Wieringo channeled comic books' best-known heroes. The prolific artist died Sunday. Funeral services are scheduled for 2 p.m. today.
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Comic Lewis Black is riled up – and that’s good (Tacoma News Tribune)
Picture an angry bull or bulldog in an old cartoon: His hoofs/paws beat the ground, his nostrils flare and steam is coming out of his ears.
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Out and About: Weekend Notes Aug. 3-9 (The Morning News)
The Thing to Do "Annie" It's not all sadness at the orphanage when "Annie," based on the 1924 comic strip by Harold Gray, comes to the Rogers Little Theater stage this weekend. The musical is under the direction of Ed McClure, with musical direction by Lisa Welty-Auten, choreography by Martina Peacock and Dru Wiser and technical direction by Mike Manning. It stars Emily Weeden as Annie; Kathy ...
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From Salzburg, a Mozart-a-thon (New York Times)
With the Salzburg Festival?s remarkable opera marathon now on DVD, listeners can explore Mozart?s operatic development at close range and make up their own minds about which works are deathless and which expendable.
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Q&A with William Gibson (Boston Globe)
SCIENCE FICTION WRITER William Gibson has a reputation for forecasting the future that dates to his first novel, "Neuromancer" (1984), in which characters used computers to "jack" into a virtual world Gibson dubbed the matrix, a term that seemed ready-made for the Internet explosion soon to envelop us all. "Neuromancer" won science fiction's top prizes -- the Nebula, Philip K. ...
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Friday August 17, 2007 - 13:51 EST (Rolling Good Times)
ST. JOHN'S, Antigua -- (PRESS RELEASE) -- Multimedia powerhouse Bodog Entertainment is continuing its expansion into the digital entertainment industry, branching out into uncharted realms of amusement by announcing a deal to release a graphic novel created by top comic talents Adam Slutsky, Shawn Martinbrough and Joseph Phillip Illidge.
Read full post here. Copyright (c) 2004 Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved.
Farewell then Bill, a jolly old gent to the last (Times Online)
IN THE 1930s he went off to report a colonial war in Africa in a double-breasted Huntsman suit, and in the 1980s he provided an escape from the pressures of Downing Street for Denis Thatcher through their mutual love of golf.
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Babes and Monsters (The Memphis Flyer)
Locally produced online comic goes to print. In the comic book world, hot anime babes sell. And so do monsters. So local cartoonists Lin Workman and Dave Beaty had an inspired idea: create a comic series where hot babes fight monsters.
Read full post here. Copyright (c) 2004 Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved.
Bodog Announces Deal to Release Graphic Novel by Top Comic Talents (PRWeb via Yahoo! News)
c. If you are having trouble thinking of something original to write, begin by developing a concept, a point if you will, that you want to convey to the reader. Whether you are bringing awareness artistically to something, or merely just trying to tell a story, think of an end goal that you want to reach. Par example, let's say that you want to write a short story, but cannot think of how you should go about accomplishing your goal. You could easily take a basic issue (for the sake of example, we will use the recent situation in the Catholic Church), and write a story revolving, either metaphorically or realistically, around that issue. By trying something similar to this, you are recycling an event, issue, or concept of some sort, and transmographying it into art. Styllistically, this method can be applied in a likewise manner. Say that you are writing a depressing story about little kids being mutilated or something, and you wish to be original in your use of written word. You could put a new twist on it by writing it like a fairy tale or something (i.e. Once upon a time there was a little boy named Timmy ) to provoke a suprised reaction from the reader. Kurt Vonnegut's novel Breakfast of Champions is similar to this; taking adult concepts of the dying American dream and the faults of modern society and writing it in a simplistic, almost childlike way.
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