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Preview Monday: GREEN LANTERN: NEW GUARDIANS ANNUAL #1 and FAIREST #11

Welcome back for another installment of Preview Monday! This week we’re giving you exclusive first looks at GREEN LANTERN: NEW GUARDIANS ANNUAL #1 and FAIREST #11.

 

Following the exciting events of GREEN LANTERN: NEW GUARDIANS #15, Kyle Rayner must travel through space on a mission to recruit allies against the unstoppable Third Army. While on his mission, he meets Jediah Caul, an undercover Green Lantern who is not what he seems. Will Jediah agree to help Kyle and the rest of the New Guardians? Or will the Third Army reign triumphant? You won’t want to miss this key issue that leads directly into the new series, THRESHOLD, on sale next week!  From writer Keith Giffen and artists Scott Kolins and Andrei Bressan, GREEN LANTERN: NEW GUARDIANS ANNUAL #1 flies into stores this Wednesday. Click here for an exclusive preview of the issue.

 

Meanwhile in FAIREST #11, “The Hidden Kingdom” continues. In this chapter, Rapunzel hatches a desperate plan to steal Tomoko’s foxfire back from the conniving shogun Ryogan. Everything leads up to a terrible, bloody invasion filled with murder, scheming, poisonings, safe-cracking, vengeful ghosts, and treachery revealed! Written by Lauren Beukes with art by Inaki Miranda, FAIREST #11 hits stores this Wednesday. Click here for an exclusive preview of the issue.

Preview Monday: THE PHANTOM STRANGER #3 and FAIREST #10

Welcome back for another installment of Preview Monday! This week we’re giving you exclusive first looks at THE PHANTOM STRANGER #3 and FAIREST #10.

 

Following the exciting events of THE PHANTOM STRANGER #2, our hero hangs on the verge of death. This week in “Family Matters,” The Phantom Stranger battles The Haunted Highwayman for the life of Terrence Thirteen. But can he save him from The Highwayman’s vendetta against the Thirteen family? Or will his curse prevail and force him to betray all those he encounters? Find out in THE PHANTOM STRANGER #3, in stores this Wednesday, written by Dan DiDio and illustrated by Brent Anderson, Philip Tan and Rob Hunter. Click here for an exclusive preview of the issue.

 

The last issue of FAIREST left us with the Rapunzel and her hairdresser, Joel, narrowly escaping from the CEG building. This week, “The Hidden Kingdom” continues … and we finally discover how Rapunzel lost her children! Meanwhile, the couple encounters a mysterious cat who offers to take them to the kids. Is it a trick or will our heroine finally be reunited with her family?  From writer Lauren Beukes and artist Inaki Miranda, FAIREST #10 hits stores this Wednesday. Click here for an exclusive preview of the issue.

This Just Happened: Rapunzel's Mom is Revealed and You'll Never Guess Who it is!

 

WARNING: If you have not read FAIREST #8 and do not wish to know what happens, do not continue reading this post (major spoiler ahead!).

 

Well, thanks to Lauren Beukes, we now we know who was responsible for braiding all that hair before Rapunzel had her own personal hair stylist following her around: Frau Totenkinder.  Yup, you read that right!  Frau Totenkinder is Repunze’s mom! The same wicked old witch who kept Rapunzel trapped in that tower and then kicked her out when she got pregnant is also her mom.

 

This big revelation happens in FAIREST #8 which is in comic book stores now! But you can see the exchange between Rapunzel and Frau Totenkinder right here, below.

 

Do you think Totenkinder is telling truth about not stealing Rapunzel’s children?  Answer in the comments below. 


On The Ledge: With Lauren Beukes


When Bill Willingham asked me to pitch a FAIREST storyarc on FABLES’ original bad hair day girl, I knew that Rapunzel was going to break all the rules, chafing under the strictest restrictions of all the fairy tale exiles living in secret in New York City.


She has to, you see, because that dead dog know as the past has come to sniff her out. And sometimes the only way to come to terms with your dark past is to turn and face it head-on. 

 

Of course, it’s not a literal dog. It’s a snowstorm of origami cranes that crashes through her window bearing a message that will force Rapunzel to defy Snow White and Bigby, make a devil’s bargain with the wicked witch of the 13th floor, Frau Totenkinder, and go on the run to Tokyo with a terrible choice of companions.

 

I was interested in what terrible secrets Rapunzel doesn’t confide in her hairdresser, Joel Crow, why we haven’t seen any Eastern-inspired Fables, even during the war, and why hair figures so prominently in so many Japanese ghost stories.

 

I took inspiration from a range of sources from Tekkonkinkreet to The Pillow Book, Kurosawa,Miyazaki, Miike and the Murakamis-three (Haruki, Ryu and Takashi), The Tale of Genji, Tokyo Vice and The Hundred Demons Night Parade. I researched fairy tales and history and true crime and listened to Japanese punk-pop and drank Japanese whisky and let my hair grow out. Just to get into character.

 

Artist Inaki Miranda was happy because he got to draw everything from seedy pachinko parlors and karaoke clubs in neon Shibuya to the lavishly corrupt celestial palace of the HiddenKingdom, as well as Harajuku girls, weird monsters, love, sex, magic, violence, and some very cool hairstyles. His artwork made the story deeper and richer and darker. His panels are breathtakingly beautiful. Or utterly horrifying. Or perfectly, subtly nuanced. On some pages all at the same time.  

 

FAIREST: The Hidden Kingdom is about a doomed love affair (or two), the compromises we make and the price of revenge, with shape-shifting yokai, yakuza, hungry ghosts and that amazingly Japanese clash of modernity and tradition where skyscrapers and shrines to the spirits of lost children can coexist on the same street corner. It all begins with issue #8 this October. I think you’ll like it.

 

 

--Lauren Beukes

 

Preview Monday: EARTH 2 #5 and FAIREST #8

For this week’s installment of Preview Monday, we’re giving you exclusive first looks at EARTH 2 #5 and FAIREST #8.

 

The fate of Earth 2 hangs in the balance as Hawkgirl, The Flash and The Atom take on Grundy … and each other! Will they be able to cooperate long enough to stop Grundy from destroying the Earth? Meanwhile, The Green Lantern travels deep into the matrix of The Grey, leaving his physical body behind and vulnerable to attack. Once in The Grey, he is faced with a heart-wrenching choice that will affect the entire Earth! Written by James Robinson and illustrated by Nicola Scott and Trevor Scott, EARTH 2 #5 goes on sale this Wednesday. Click here to see an exclusive preview of the issue.

 

Meanwhile, FAIREST #8 kicks off the all-new story arc, “The Hidden Kingdom.” While getting her hair cut, Rapunzel is attacked by a flock of origami cranes with one simple message scrawled in Japanese on them: “Your Children.” Defying the orders of Snow White and Sheriff Bigby, Rapunzel sets off to Tokyo with her hairdresser and Jack of Fables to find her children. But someone is waiting for them there and it’s not going to be pretty when they meet! FAIREST #8 comes to you from 2011 Arthur C. Clarke Award-winning writer Lauren Beukes and artist Inaki Miranda. Click here to see an exclusive preview of the issue, which hits stores this week.

Shelly Bond on FAIREST

Sure, talk is cheap, but the VERTIGO 2012 Preview Sampler is FREE! Head over to your local comics shop in early February for a FREE 32-page preview featuring four new Vertigo monthlies that debut in March. My contribution to the mix is FAIREST, the “sister” series to FABLES, written by Bill Willingham with art by Phil Jimenez and Andy Lanning and painted covers by the incomparable Adam Hughes. Two things you need to know about FAIREST: 1. Many of our stories predate FABLES. So if you’ve always wanted to read FABLES but felt like issue #113 and/or 16 volumes was a bit late in the game to join the party, fear not! This is the perfect opportunity to break out your formal wear and find out what the fuss is all about. You don’t have to understand FABLES at all/on any level to enjoy FAIREST. But if you’re an ardent fan, you’ve got some seriously satisfying surprises ahead! 2. It rotates. Future arcs will include stories by 2011 Arthur C. Clarke winner and always fashion-forward Lauren Beukes (rhymes with mucus—her words, not mine!) and art star Inaki Miranda. Also on deck is the fab Cinderella team of iZOMBIE’s Chris Roberson and Shawn McManus who bring on another spy story starring Fabletown’s favorite secret agent and noted scribe Sean Williams whose storyarc set in India will really take you places. Keep checking back here for more info on the other new series that make their mark in March — assuming their respective editors are just as shameless about self -promotion. And see you next week for Less talk/More action! --Shelly

Just Announced at SDCC: FAIREST to spin out of FABLES

From the pages of the acclaimed New York Times bestselling series FABLES comes an incredible new monthly series called FAIREST.

Arriving in early 2012, the first arc will be written by FABLES ongoing series writer Bill Willingham with art by Phil Jimenez. The second arc will be written by Lauren Beukes with art by Inaki Miranda and the series will continue with contributions from some of today’s best story tellers and artists.

From Sleeping Beauty to Rapunzul, to fan favorite Cinderella, FAIREST will explore the lives of some of the loveliest ladies in their respective homelands.

So get ready to find out just who is the fairest of them all.

Here's a look at the cover to issue #1 by Adam Hughes, as well as a gallery of art from the Fables panel (including 2 black and white pages from issue 1 and a colored page from the second arc).

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STRANGE ADVENTURES Q&A with Lauren Beukes

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Lauren Beukes is the writer of the incredible futuristic short story ALL THE PRETTY PONIES. I took a few moments to chat with her about it and her love of comics.

P.M.:Lauren, this is your first comic book story, have you always wanted to write a comic?

L.B.:I've always loved comics. I grew up reading ElfQuest, 2000 AD Monthly, Misty (a British horror comic for girls), Amethyst and my mom's VERY graphic graphic novel of Barbarella, and yeah, okay, I went through an Archie period too. Superheroes were okay, but I especially loved the dark and twisty subversive stuff; Black Orchid, Sandman, anything by Alan Moore. But yeah, I always wanted to write comics. And video games. And cartoon TV shows. And novels. And be a detective like on Hill Street Blues.

P.M.:What was it like to write this and work with Inaki Miranda?

L.B.:I've worked as a TV scriptwriter in South Africa on animated kids TV shows, including Disney's Florrie's Dragons for the last five years, and even directed a couple of episodes of URBO: The Adventures of Pax Afrika. So I'm used to thinking visually about how things will be interpreted by the storyboard artist and then the animators and keeping scenes tight and making every word of dialogue work hard. But this was something else.

The thing I struggled with most was the sheer versatility of panel layouts. In TV, it's really straightforward. Linear one-two-three. In comics, you can do anything, play with layout to create filmic techniques, not just in terms of cinematography, but editing too, creating a real sense of pace in how you frame your panels. Editor Shelly Bond and Inaki did a lot of hand-holding.

Inaki was amazing. He conveys so much emotion even in his sketches and I found that, just like in animation, the real magic is in collaboration. It was only after I saw his line work that I realised how much the illegal mind-connection HURT. It was so obvious! But only apparent when I saw the art.

Everyone was just really generous, open to input and patient when I was still figuring stuff out. I think Eva's colouring adds so much richness and depth. And it was fantastic working with Shelly Bond as an editor - as someone who appreciates the finer detail of a bullet tearing through flesh, but also what colour nail polish the protagonist is wearing (silver - thank you for asking. And I have to point out that Sofia's shoes are inspired by a fabulous pair that Shelly owns.)

P.M.:Where did your inspiration for this story come from?

L.B.:It was a mash-up of influences and stuff I was thinking about, from past journalism work I've done on slums for Benetton's Colors magazine to pushing the boundaries of reality TV and voyeurism, through to the growing disconnect between rich and poor, exploitation, cynicism, bored trust fund kids, better means of crowd-control for dictators, the Libyan and Egyptian uprisings, City of God, Strange Days and a fantastic documentary called Manda Bala (or Send a Bullet) about frog-farming, corruption and kidnappings in Sao Paolo.

P.M.:Thanks Lauren!

Read ALL THE PRETTY PONIES and more in STRANGE ADVENTURES #1, on sale now.

STRANGE ADVENTURES TOC and cover reveal

This May, Vertigo will publish STRANGE ADVENTURES #1, a collection of science fiction short stories as only Vertigo can do them.

Written and drawn by some of the comic industries most sought after talents, STRANGE ADVENTURES also features some exciting new talents making their Vertigo debut!

This volume also includes, the first chapter of SPACEMAN, a new series by the Eisner award-winning team of 100 BULLETS, Brian Azzarello and Eduardo Risso debuting this Fall.

Check out the issue’s Table of Contents below and here’s a first look at the cover by Paul Pope:

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Table of Contents:

“All The Pretty Ponies”
Writer Lauren Beukes
Artist Inaki Miranda

“The White Room”
Writer Talia Hershewe
Artist Juan Bobillo

“Case 21”
Writer Selwyn Hinds
Artist Denys Cowan

“Postmodern Prometheus”
Writer and Artist Kevin Colden

“Ultra The Multi-Alien”
Writer and Artist Jeff Lemire

“Refuse”
Writer and Artist Ross Campbell

“Partners”
Writer Peter Milligan
Artist Sylvain Savoia

“A ‘True Tale’ From Saucer Country”
Writer Paul Cornell
Artist Goran Sudzuka

“Spaceman”
Writer Brian Azzarello
Artist Eduardo Risso

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