Edited by Mike Dean & Kristy Valenti; Gary Groth, Executive Editor
Format:
Softcover
Pages:
640
Dimensions:
6.75" x 8.5"
Colors:
black & white/color
Year:
2011
Publisher:
Fantagraphics
ISBN-10:
n/a
ISBN-13:
978-1-60699-291-3
Additional Details:
Designed by Eric Skillman
Price:
$30.00
2012 Eisner Award Nominee: Best Comics-Related Journalism
The Comics Journal has been, for
almost 35 years, the standard bearer of critical inquiry,
discrimination, debate, and serious discussion of
comics as art, and the object of love and devotion
among the comics cognescenti — and hate and
scorn among the philistines, natch. We published our
300th issue in late 2009 and spent the ensuing year-plus re-
conceptualizing the institution as an annual book-length “magazine” — over 600 pages long, chock full
of the kinds of criticism, interviews, commentary, and
history that has made it the most award-winning and
critically lauded magazine in the history of comics.
This volume features a focus on R. Crumb’s most
commercially successful project of his career, his
comics adaptation of Genesis, including the most
extensive interview he’s given on the subject as well
as a long critical roundtable among six comics critics
reviewing the book and debating each other over its
merits; plus:
• An interview with Joe Sacco about his recent
journalistic masterpiece, Footnotes in Gaza (read an excerpt at TCJ.com);
• A peek into the private sketchbooks of (and
accompanying interviews with) Jim Woodring, Tim
Hensley, and the novelist Stephen Dixon;
• A conversation between Mad Fold-Out creator Al
Jaffee and Thrizzle auteur Michael Kupperman (read an excerpt at TCJ.com);
• A complete full-color reprinting of the 1950s "Gerald
McBoing Boing" comic;
• The first significant biographical essay charting the
turn-of-the-century cartoonist and illustrator John T.
McCutcheon;
and essays and reviews by R. Fiore, R.C. Harvey, Chris
Lanier, Rob Clough, and others.
Over 600 pages long, this is a year's worth of The Comics Journal rolled into one extraordinary objet d'art. As a special treat, this volume is guest designed by internationally respected Criterion art director Eric Skillman. The Comics Journal #301 is no mere magazine but a
gigantic compendium covering comics past and present
that will shock and delight every truly curious comics
reader.