
Andrew Wheeler
Articles
-
Jan 23, 2025 |
aiptcomics.com | Mark Waid |Alan Davis |Andrew Wheeler |David Brooke
Marvel Comics has announced a new four-issue series titled Fantastic Four Fanfare, which will launch in May. The series will feature creators, new and old, who have worked previously on the series, including Jonathan Hickman, Mark Waid, Dan Slott, Alan Davis, J. Michael Straczynski, Chip Zdarsky, Mike Allred, Mark Bagley and more.
-
Jan 14, 2025 |
antickmusings.blogspot.com | Your Hornswoggler |Andrew Wheeler
It's not. The Renegade I was thinking of - Renegade Press, the mid-80s enterprise from Deni Loubert - shut down more than thirty years ago. This is a newer company, founded in 2008, that publishes comics, graphic novels and audiobooks out of Canmore, Alberta. So it's mildly amusing there were two comics publishers from Canada with sort-of the same name, but there was a good twenty years between them, and they were from close to opposite ends of that large country.
-
Jan 7, 2025 |
antickmusings.blogspot.com | Andrew Wheeler |Your Hornswoggler |Andrew Wheeler
Nancy Wins at Friendship is the second collection of the Olivia Jaimes era of that long-running newspaper strip; it was published in 2023 but seems to mostly reprint strips from the 2019-2020 era. Jaimes took over the strip in 2018, and her first collection, just called Nancy, came out less than a year later - in some world where newspaper comic strip collections are things "the kids" buy and read and crave, there could have been eight or ten books this length by now.
-
Dec 6, 2024 |
antickmusings.blogspot.com | Your Hornswoggler |Andrew Wheeler
Julia Gfrörer draws thin lines, mostly all the same width. Her stories are set in the deep European past, told straightforwardly with a cold but not unsympathetic camera-eye. They are about death most of the time, I think. Laid Waste was her 2016 graphic novel; it followed Black Is the Color, and - if Wikipedia can be trusted - is still her most recent book. It's set during the plague: probably the 1300s, somewhere in Europe.
-
Nov 26, 2024 |
skyword.com | Andrew Wheeler
In my conversations with content marketers, one challenge always stands out: the relentless pressure to create more—faster, better, and across a fast-growing list of channels. Balancing these demands with quality, brand consistency, and budget constraints isn't easy, especially as audiences expect increasingly personalized, timely content. Content atomization provides a scalable way to tackle this.
Try JournoFinder For Free
Search and contact over 1M+ journalist profiles, browse 100M+ articles, and unlock powerful PR tools.
Start Your 7-Day Free Trial →