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Thanks to Blank Slate Books the work of two outstanding German comics creators has finally seen print in English translation — so to my monolingual pals I say “Cast aside those German editions you bought solely for the pictures! These ones have words you can understand!”


Mawil is part of the influential Berlin comics collective Monogatari, is an award-winning cartoonist, and regularly teaches at comics festivals in Europe. His lively illustration style last appeared on our shelves in the form of The Band, in which he relives his schoolboy fantasy of being in a rock band, and Home & Away, which is about growing up in East Berlin after the wall came down, and fighting videogame addiction. Joe Matt (Spent) thinks it’s brilliant. They join Mawil’s Sparky O’Hare and We Can Still Be Friends on the Gosh! shelves.

 


Uli Oesterle is the author of several graphic novels in German, is also a graphic designer, and has provided countless illustrations for advertisements and magazines. Over on his blog he regularly posts his latest cartoons for magazines such as Playboy, joining legends such as Jules Feiffer, Shel Silverstein, Gahan Wilson and Vargas in the well-thumbed pages of Hefner’s finest. His first book from Blank Slate is Hector Umbra, a sci-fi detective story involving a trip to the realm of the dead. One to watch if you’re a fan of Mike Mignola’s Hellboy

We’ll have a bunch of their books for you to purchase on the night, and following their signing (6pm to 7pm) the two will be in conversation with Alex Fitch (Panel Borders) as part of Paul Gravett’s Comica festival. You’ll also get a chance to ask some questions of your own before the night is through!

November 18, 6pm onwards, at Gosh!

Here’s a thing: Richard McGuire is going to be in conversation at Gosh! and even those of us who aren’t at work that day are coming in for this event, because, well — look at this daunting list of achievements and weep:


Richard McGuire is a highly influential illustrator whose work has appeared in The New Yorker, McSweeney’s, children’s books and toy designs. Back in 1989 Art Spiegelman included his groundbreaking 6-page comic strip Here in Raw magazine, an experimental piece of work that played with time and space and the entire way that comics work. Comicbook Resources talk about it here, and have a link to the full strip online (it’s surprisingly hard to come by, but oh! The internet! Praise be!). Chris Ware (Jimmy Corrigan) wrote a lengthy essay in appreciation of the man and that one particular non-linear strip, whose influence deafeningly loud in everything he does.

McGuire is also an accomplished animator, but before he turned to illustration he was a the man responsible for the oft-sampled bassline in this song as a member of the post-punk band Liquid Liquid. Anyone here know the top-notch Glaswegian DJ duo Optimo? They got their name from a Liquid Liquid song! When the LCD Soundsystem played their farewell gig earlier this year at Madison Square Garden in New York City Liquid Liquid was their support band. Basically, McGuire is like Zelig, or (I guess) Forrest Gump. Everywhere you look he’s done something notable, somewhere. Sammy Harkham (Kramers Ergot) has a bookshop in LA called Family and has attempted a Richard McGuire primer on the shop blog. Do a Google. It’s ridiculous.

McGuire will be appearing here at Gosh! on Monday the 14th of November between 7pm and 8pm in a Comica Conversation with Stephen Appleby. There’ll be a slide show of images and McGuire will be playing some of his animated films for us too.

Stephen Appleby’s cartoons have been appearing in British newspapers for decades, and he has a new book coming out through Square Peg called The Coffee Table Book of Doom which lists the 27 horsemen of the apocalypse we should really be worrying about. The evening will be hosted by comics guru Paul Gravett (1001 Graphic Novels You Must Read Before You Die) as part of the Comica festival.

Edit! Due to the huge amount of interest in this event we’ve had to make it a ticketed thing. It’s still totally free but if you’d like to come you’d best send us an email to info@goshlondon.com to reserve your place.

Coming up next on the Gosh! calendar is an extra-rare treat:a talk, Q&A and signing by Swiss graphic novelist Frederik Peeters as part of Paul Gravett’s COMICA festival.

Best known for his award winning and bestselling memoir, Blue Pills: A Positive Love Story (about his relationship with an HIV positive girl called Cati and her son), Peeters will be talking about his life, his work, and his new book from SelfMadeHero, Sandcastle, on the day of its English language release.

Early morning on a perfect summer’s day, people begin to descend on an idyllic, secluded beach. Amongst their number, a family, a young couple, a refugee and some American tourists. Its fine white sand is fringed with rock pools filled with crystal clear water. The beach is sheltered from prying eyes by green fringed cliffs. But this utopia keeps a dark secret. A woman’s body is found floating in the waters – which brings these 13 strangers together to try and unravel the riddle of the sands and escape the beach alive in this tense, fantastical mystery.

Sandcastle is a deeply unsettling science fiction story written by the French film director, Pierre Oscar Levy, who is currently working on a film adaptation of PeetersBlue Pills.

SelfMadeHero will be supplying us with a limited number of their already very limited edition art print (only 350 in existence!) featuring a new illustration by Peeters, signed and numbered by the artist himself. Make sure you’re here at 6:30pm for a 7pm start. We’ll have our usual supply of beer and wine to keep you happy while we get ourselves organised.

And most importantly, we doff our caps to the very excellent Arts Council of Switzerland Pro Helvetia for making this happen.

11th November, 6:30pm for 7pm.

Gosh! 1 Berwick Street, Soho. W1F 0DR.

Sorry to say this bookplate edition is now SOLD OUT. There are plenty of unsigned copies available.

This November, a 54-strong army of British comics creators launch Nelson, an experimental, collaborative, biography of a girl called Nel.

London, 1968. A daughter is born to Jim and Rita Baker. Her name is Nel. This is her story, told in yearly snapshots. Each chapter records the events of a single day, weaving one continuous ribbon of pictures and text that takes us on a 43- year journey from Nel Baker’s birth to 2011.

The cream of the UK comics community each take a day in her life, beginning with her birth in 1968, and wing their way through her biography in a sort of art relay race, making it up as they go along, much like the surrealists’ exquisite corpse. “The idea came from wanting to do something that reflected the variety and talent in UK comics and also do something unique with the anthology format that created a genuine cover-to-cover read,” said editor Rob Davis (Don Quixote). “The core Nelson idea of using an anthology format to tell a complete story is something I’ve wanted to do for years, it comes from a love of the British anthology titles I grew up with and a novelistic ambition to make all the stories connect.”

Everyone is involved in this unprecedented experiment helmed by Davis and his co-editor Woodrow Phoenix (Rumble Strip). There are people from The Beano, The Dandy, MAD Magazine, children’s books, indie and small press comics, webcomics, 2000AD, Marvel, DC, and Dark Horse. Just look at this list:

Paul Grist, Rob Davis, Woodrow Phoenix, Ellen Lindner, Jamie Smart, Gary Northfield, Sarah McIntyre, Suzy Varty, Sean Longcroft, Warwick Johnson–Cadwell, Luke Pearson, Paul Harrison–Davies, Katie Green, Paul Peart–Smith, Glyn Dillon, I.N.J.Culbard, John Allison, Philip Bond, D’Israeli, Simone Lia, Darryl Cunningham, Jonathan Edwards, Ade Salmon, Kate Charlesworth, Warren Pleece, Kristyna Baczynski, HarveyJames, Rian Hughes, Sean Phillips & Pete Doree, Kate Brown, Simon Gane, Jon McNaught, Adam Cadwell, Faz Choudhury, JAKe, Jeremy Day, Dan McDaid, Roger Langridge, Will Morris, Dave Shelton, Carol Swain, Hunt Emerson, Duncan Fegredo, Philippa Rice, Josceline Fenton, Garen Ewing, Tom Humberstone , Dan Berry,Alice Duke, Posy Simmonds, Laura Howell, Andi Watson, and Dave Taylor.

To celebrate the release of this ambitious project from Blank Slate featuring dozens of Gosh! favourites, we’re letting them loose in the shop with pens and paint. They’ll be making their mark on our windows over the space of five days (20th – 25th of November), mirroring the relay race that led to the book’s birth. And when they’re done, we’ll toast their mighty efforts.

THEN

NELSON IS GO!

Signing, Exhibition Opening and Launch Party

25th November

Events kick off at 6pm with a signing

line-up includes:

Roger Langridge, Rian Hughes, Sarah McIntyre, Woodrow Phoenix, Rob Davis

and a host of other Nelsonists.

We’ll have Gosh! Exclusive Bookplate Editions available on the night featuring art by Frank Quitely (Batman & Robin) signed and numbered by the man himself. It’s limited to just 200 copies so if you’d like one send an email to us at info@goshlondon.com and we’ll sort out the rest. It costs no more than the cover price of £18.99, and all proceeds on the book go to Shelter, the housing and homelessness charity, a very good thing indeed. If you’d like to arrange a mail order we can do that too: it’s a flat-rate of £5 anywhere in the UK (elsewhere depends on weight).

Click the full post link below for a tentative list of titles due to ship next week.

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The light has been particularly lovely in Gosh! of late and I ventured out of the basement to snap this picture. I know some people who would thumbtack bedsheets over the windows lest the sun gets to the books, but stuff shoots out the door so fast these days the sun barely touches them.

The news this week is the return of the 100 Bullets team – Brian Azzarello, Eduardo Risso, and Dave Johnson on covers – with Spaceman #1, a nine-part series about a strange guy called Orson.

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Click the full post link below for a list of items in store this week.

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Click the full post link below for a tentative list of titles due to ship next week.

Read the rest of this entry »

As I type this I can hear a new exhibition being hammered onto the walls here at Gosh! The Dave McKeans and the Kevin O’Neills have gone back to their houses and in their place stand the first nine pages of Luke Pearson’s upcoming book Hilda & The Midnight Giant.  The new comic will be launched right here with a party and signing in late November. We haven’t entirely organised that yet but we’ll have the details in a bit, I promise. You’ve got other stuff to worry about right now like these books we’ve just unpacked and will happily part with for your hard-earned cash:

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Click the full post link below for a list of items in store this week.

Read the rest of this entry »