Exclusive i, ZOMBIE interior art reveal and JOE THE BARBARIAN cover

This weekend Vertigo heads to Emerald City Comic Con in Seattle, WA for the first time. Editor Shelly Bond will be in attendance with Mike and Laura Allred (I, Zombie), Chris Roberson (I, Zombie), Jeff Lemire (Sweet Tooth, The Nobody), Sean Murphy (Joe the Barbarian), G. Willow Wilson (Air), Peter Bagge (Other Lives) and others! So join in the fun Sunday at 2pm in Panel Room A (4C1-2)

Here’s a peek at a few things you’ll see:

iz01pg21
Amazing interior art from i, ZOMBIE by Mike Allred colored by Laura Allred

jobar-cv6-clrpromo
Fantastic cover of JOE THE BARBARIAN #6 by Sean Murphy

Ultima Thule? Fairy Godmothers?

In CINDERELLA: From Fabletown With Love #5 Cindy and Aladdin head to an obscure Homeland to find out who’s behind the arms trade. There, Cindy must revert to her former days of cleaning house and…wearing clogs? Yes, this is a footwear catastrophe…until a blast from her past appears.

Check out the sneak peek below and pick up issue #5 this Wednesday!

CIFL Cv5 CS3.indd

cifl_5_dylux-2-copy

cifl_5_dylux-3-copy

I, ZOMBIE Prequel

Last week I posted the cover to I, ZOMBIE issue #1 by Mike Allred here and the variant by Darwyn Cooke here.

And, if you recall, back in October we published THE HOUSE OF MYSTERY HALLOWEEN ANNUAL which included a 7 page prequel to the upcoming new series I, ZOMBIE. Well, that was a long time ago. Rather than having to dig through your long box to find the issue and re-read it before you pick up issue #1 this May, we're posting it in its entirety in this very blog post.

Enjoy!

[gallery link="file"]

First look at the cover to I, Zombie #1 by Mike Allred

Told from a female zombie’s perspective, the new monthly comic book series, I, ZOMBIE is a smart, witty detective series with a mix of urban fantasy and romantic dramedy. Gwendolyn “Gwen” Dylan is a 20-something gravedigger in an eco-friendly cemetery. Once a month she must eat a human brain to keep from losing her memories, but in the process she becomes consumed with the thoughts and personality of the dead person until she eats the next brain. She sets out to fulfill the dead person’s last request, solve a crime, or right a wrong.

Our zombie girl detective is joined by a radical supporting cast: her best friend Eleanor who happens to be a swinging 60s ghost; a posse of vampires who play paintball; a smitten weredog, and a sexy but demented mummy.

Here's the first look at issue 1:

IZOM_Cv1.indd

Come back at noon when I will reveal the variant cover!

FABLES . . . after Cindy

In 2009, you traveled to the Black Forest and were exposed to the power of Frost and Fire with PETER & MAX, learned more about the witches of the 13th floor in FABLES, followed Jack Frost as he learns the hero trade in JACK OF FABLES, and have embarked on a spy mission worthy of 007 with Cindy in CINDERELLA: From Fabletown With Love.

Today's question is: who is the next FABLES character you’d like to see have his/her own miniseries?

CIFL Cv2 CS3.indd

What Vertigo titles do you recommend giving this holiday season?

I’d recommend the latest issue of SCALPED cuz nothing says “Happy Holidays” quite like a gritty crime comic about a meth-addicted, under-cover FBI agent with a heroin junkie for a girlfriend, a murdered mother, and a pretend job as an enforcer for the local Mob boss who would not hesitate to kill him if he found out the truth. God bless us all...everyone!” –Will Dennis

PREACHER: Book One. Put the Christ back into Christmas with this kick-ass comic. One of the greatest series of all time. Period. –Mark Doyle

Miserable during the holidays? Feeling like you’re trapped with your family members who won’t leave you alone? Imagine being stuck with a bunch of strangers in a sinister house. Share your pain with the five lost souls who make THE HOUSE OF MYSTERY their home with Volume 1: Room and Boredom. –Angela Rufino

I'd like to recommend FILTHY RICH for your favorite incarcerated relative. –David Hyde

On a budget? I'd like to recommend CINDERELLA: From Fabletown with Love issues 1 & 2 to give to all those fun, fearless females in your life who think Cindy is just a feeble girl who can't keep her shoes on. –Pamela Mullin

Chris Roberson's Top 5 Ladies That Kick Butt

Top 5 Ladies That Kick Butt
by Chris Roberson, author of CINDERELLA: From Fabletown With Love

Bill Willingham’s take on Cinderella in the pages of FABLES transformed her from a fairy tale princess into a superspy who kicks butt and takes names. This reimagined Cinderella proudly took her place in the pantheon of femme fatales and lady spies who have high-kicked their way through pop culture. And who were some of the kick-butt ladies who came before? Here’s a few of my personal favorites, all of whom were influences when I sat down to write Cinderella’s first solo miniseries, CINDERELLA: From Fabletown With Love.

Irma Vep – This gal was the original femme fatale. Portrayed by music-hall performer Musidora in Louis Feuillade’s 1915 French silent film serial Les Vampires, Irma Vep was a member of a secret society of thieves and villains called “Les Vampires,” and she slinked around on rooftops in form-fitting catsuits. She set the standard for all of the butt-kicking ladies who followed in her footsteps.

Emma Peel – Diana Rigg wasn’t the first female companion to Patrick Macnee’s John Steed on the long-running UK television series The Avengers, and she wasn’t the last, but she was for my money definitely the best. No shrinking violet or damsel-in-distress, Rigg’s Emma Peel was a champion fencer, a martial artist, and was quick with a quip.

Wai Lin – The 1997 James Bond film Tomorrow Never Dies is far from perfect, but that doesn’t stop Michelle Yeoh from being 100% awesome in it. As James Bond’s opposite number from the Chinese People's External Security Force, Yeoh’s Wai Lin is if anything even more of a dashing badass than Bond himself. It’s been more than a decade since, and I’m still waiting for Michelle Yeoh in a Wai Lin solo vehicle—From Beijing With Love, anyone?

Sydney Bristow– Speaking of “far from perfect,” the last couple of seasons of J.J. Abrams’ Alias left a sour taste in the mouths of a lot of viewers, myself included. The resolution of the Rambaldi subplot that had been threaded through the show since its first season was a disappointment, among other sins. But the fact that the last seasons didn’t meet up with the high standards set by the earlier seasons shouldn’t detract from those first couple of seasons, in which former college student Sydney Bristow, played with panache by Jennifer Garner, kicked butt from one side of the planet to the other, through a dizzying array of costume changes, wigs, and cover identities.

Black Widow – Cinderella is far from the first female superspy to grace the pages of a comic book. I don’t know if Black Widow was the first, but after Cinderella she might be my next favorite. A few years ago Richard K. Morgan did a couple of stellar miniseries with the character, and this very week my old pal (and Clockwork Storybook stablemate) Paul Cornell has just started a new one, Black Widow: Deadly Origin. And if the first issue is any indication, it promises to be a fun ride.

VERTIGO GRAPHIC CONNECTION

WIRED and CBR feature interviews with G. Willow Wilson about Vol. 2 of AIR featuring Amelia Earhart and LARGE HEARTED BOY posts her air themed music playlist.

BOING BOING calls JACK OF FABLES Vol. 6 “gripping and thought-provoking; philosophically substantial and sparklingly funny." Check out the full review.

NEWSARAMA features an interview with Chris Roberson about CINDERELLA: From Fabletown with Love.

And Jason Aaron talks SCALPED at CBR and IGN reviews issue #32.

Pages

Subscribe to chris roberson