That Tanuki kid they are talking with is Glen Ota. He’s on the Fireball team at PS. Gamma Q, which are long time rivals with Astronaut Academy. You can expect a lot more drama to come!
That Tanuki kid they are talking with is Glen Ota. He’s on the Fireball team at PS. Gamma Q, which are long time rivals with Astronaut Academy. You can expect a lot more drama to come!
Can you guess some of the pop culture reference that inspired the rival schools seen in the Montage Games?
***
I’ll be at the Emerald City Comic Con from March 1st to March 3rd 2013 sharing a table with Raina Telgemeier and John Green.
We will have a table in Artist Alley! That table number is…
ARTIST ALLEY TABLE # B-10
I’m also participating in some programming! Both of these happen on Saturday, March 2.
RAISING A READER
Saturday, March 2
Start: 12:00PM
Room: ECCC KIDS! – ROOM 201
CBLDF Presents: Newbery Award winning Children’s book author and graphic novelist Jenni Holm (Babymouse series) discusses ways to get children excited about reading, encouraging creativity, and cultivating a love of literature and art, with a focus on great graphic novels and comics for younger readers. Raina Telgemeier and Dave Roman will join Jenni on the panel!
COMICS QUICKFIRE!
Saturday, March 2
Start: 3:00PM
Room: ECCC KIDS! – ROOM 201
Comics Quickfire! A fast-paced game show where volunteers are paired off with (or against) professional cartoonists in a series of fun-filled drawing challenges! Audience members will provide suggestions and add to the creation of totally improvised epic drawings! Featuring host Dave Roman (Astronaut Academy), Raina Telgemeier (Smile), Skottie Young (The Wonderful Wizard of Oz), Katie Cook (My Little Pony), John Green (Teen Boat), & more! Great for all ages!
Oh, the anticipation!
Be sure to tell your comic shop if you want them to order Astronaut Academy: Re-Entry in shiny book format!
SUIT UP! Clearly, a homage to all the great transforming sequences in anime and cartoons I grew up with. Can you hear the theme music playing in the background?
Seen here: AA in the current issue of Diamond’s PREVIEWS catalog! Now is the time to ask your favorite comic shop if they’ll order Astronaut Academy: Re-Entry and earn my eternal gratitude! Not every store can stock every book in print, so any help bringing awareness of AA to the world is super-appreciated! The first volume has also been re-solicited as well.
Bonus: the other two graphic novels published by First Second in May are by some of my favorite creators as well! Odd Duck by Cecil Castellucci and Sara Varon, and Nothing Can Possibly Go Wrong by Prudence Shen and Faith Erin Hicks are both going to be really rad books.
Can’t tell you how much all your support means to me. I really want to be able to keep doing more books like this!
Of course, I’m happy no matter where someone buys my book. But personally, my favorite places would be a local bookstore—whether that be a comic shop, an independent, or your closest Barnes and Noble.
Many comic book fans are accustomed to buying books directly from artists and writers at conventions, with the good intention of putting money directly in the pocket of the creative team (not to mention getting autographs and sketches at the same time). This may be financially desirable to many self-publishers, but is actually a bit counter-productive for authors like myself, whose work is put out by larger publishing houses like First Second, Random House, Scholastic, Penguin, Clarion, and so on. These publishers have long-standing relationships with various distributors and booksellers, and judge the success of a book by how well it “tracks,” via sales submitted by retailers to data services like Bookscan (run by the same organization that monitors TV Nielsen ratings) or the New York Times Bestseller list (which is like the Box Office sales chart for biggest hits). And much like Hollywood studios or network executives, book publishers pay a lot of attention to how many books move in the first few weeks and what the rate of sale is like over time. They sadly do not track “intentions to buy eventually,” or any sales sold at comic conventions, unless the creators are specifically selling their books via a retailer exhibiting at the convention(which is actually an awesome thing I’ve been trying to do more of).
The reason why book sales at conventions don’t “track” is because if an author like myself buys books directly from my publisher, these are considered “special sales” rather than retail sales. So in theory, I could sell thousands of copies of Astronaut Academy at conventions, but in the eyes of the book industry, would still be perceived as a sales flop. And “trackable sales” are vital to whether or not authors eventually earn royalties! We usually get paid an advance at the beginning of the publishing process, but until that advance is earned back in sales, we don’t see a penny in profits.
And if you don’t think there’s a comic shop nearby you can check out ther Comic Shop Locator service and perhaps there’s one near a relative!
To summarize, here’s the best places to buy my books:
–A local independent bookstore
—A comic shop.
Astronaut Academy: Re-Entry is listed in the current issue of Diamond Previews (the catalog comic shops order from):
MAR13 1155 ASTRONAUT ACADEMY RE ENTRY GN 05/15/13
–Your closest Barnes and Noble or big box bookstore
—IndieBound.org
Thanks, and happy reading!
“They Might Be Giants” by Dave Roman
“Muppet Babies, Spaceballs & Parody Films” by Dave Roman
“Manga I’d Recommend to People Who Think They Don’t Like Manga” by Dave Roman
After years of helping edit SpongeBob SquarePants stuff at Nickelodeon Magazine, and spending the past year writing one page stories for the SpongeBob comic book (published by Bongo), I can now add having drawn a SpongeBob comic to the the list! I wrote a drew a one pager called “Secret Tunnel” that appears in issue #17 of SpongeBob Comics. Like the one’s I’ve written for past issues, it is a fill-in the blanks story but this time drawn by me & completely in my own art style! Huge thanks to editor Chris Duffy for giving me this fun opportunity.
Here is a sneak peek.
Pick up the book at your local comic shop to see the rest! There’s several other great stories by folks like Bob Flynn, Dave Degrand, Robert Leighton, Gregg Schigiel, Corey Barba, Vince DePorter, & more!
Easter egg alert: Any time you see little kids wearing numbered shirts they are probably clones! These guys appear in several short comics I’ve drawn over the years, most notably in the book Nursery Rhyme Comics.
I immediately responded to the eclectic mix of upbeat tempos and strange subject matter found on the album Apollo 18, my entry point to They Might Be Giants. And when I first heard Flood, while in the backseat of a friend’s car driving around Long Island, I was impressed how the older songs were even weirder, yet fun for people to sing along to. For all the bizarre lyrics and non-sequitur musical shifts, they still managed to have harmony and catchy riffs, unlike other art/noise bands that failed to click with me.
“Muppet Babies, Spaceballs & Parody Films” by Dave Roman
“Manga I’d Recommend to People Who Think They Don’t Like Manga” by Dave Roman