Skip to content

Tag: cartoons

Marketing Plan

A little too on the nose, Tom. 

(Tom Gauld for The Guardian)

Comments closed

A Writer’s Hierarchy of Needs

Grant Snider for the New York Times Book Review.

Comments closed

Decisions, Decisions….

Tom Gauld. 

Comments closed

The Nine Rs

Grant Snider for the New York Times. (Oh, and Grant has a book out too)

Comments closed

Living with a Genius

Tom Gauld for The Guardian.

Comments closed

Find Your Place in the Market

Tom Gauld for The Guardian.

Comments closed

The Archaeology of the Book Tower

Well, this is a little close to home isn’t it?

Tom Gauld for The Guardian

On a related note, Tom’s musical cover for April 16 edition of The New Yorker is lovely.  

Comments closed

Grown Men Reading Nancy

Writing for the New York Review Books, Dash Shaw reviews How To Read Nancy: The Elements of Comics in Three Easy Panels by Paul Karasik and Mark Newgarden: 

Today, comics are studied in colleges and reviewed in prominent magazines, but they are often discussed either as vessels for urgent, personal stories or as objects filled with beautiful, unusual graphics. They are rarely discussed or reviewed for their “cartooning,” the particular panel-to-panel magic, the arrangement of elements that mysteriously combines reading and looking, and distinguishes why a comic like Nancy is masterful and others are not. Beautiful cartooning affects a comic the way a well-chosen word, arriving at the right time in a sentence, makes for good writing, or the way a room composed with the right combination of things in the exact right places is good interior design.

I don’t think it’s any secret that I love Ernie Bushmiller’s Nancy. It is, as the review points out, a beautifully constructed comic strip. But it is more than that. It’s also genuinely warm, funny, and relatable. I see a bit of my kids in Nancy and Sluggo, I see a bit of myself too.

I that think Steven Heller kind of gets to it in this interview with co-author Paul Karasik: 

Nancy reminded me of someone close to me. In fact, she reminded me of me in a deeply existential way that cannot be explained properly in this brief column… In any case, whenever a collection of strips emerged, I’d scarf them up. They were gags but poignant. They were comic but deep. And Sluggo. How can you not love Sluggo? This was the world of comics where kids were the wise ones, the keepers of wisdom and truth. 

If you haven’t read any of the Nancy comic strips don’t start with How to Read Nancy (with all due respect to Karasik and Newgarden!), start with Nancy is Happy, the first volume of daily strips republished by Fantagraphics.  

1 Comment

Questions from the Audience

 

By Tom Gauld for The Guardian, of course.

This has happened at pretty much every event I’ve ever attended at a book festival. 

1 Comment

The Ghost of Future Book Sales

Tom Gauld for The Guardian.

Tom’s latest collection of cartoons, Baking With Kafka, is in stores now. 

Comments closed

Memoir, Chapter 1

Oh, Batman.

(Zachary Kanin for The New Yorker)

Comments closed

It Is a Truth Universally Acknowledged…

Tom’s new book, Baking with Kafka, is now available in the UK from Canongate Books, and in the US and Canada from D+Q next month.

Comments closed