Look, it's not that it makes sense. It's that it wins games. I think, anyway. I've never really tracked it.

Emerald City ComiCon: April 4-5

whoooosh

This coming weekend I’ll be in Seattle for the Emerald City ComiCon! I’ll have books, posters, a few T-shirts and a pad of paper for sketches. This is one of my favorite shows of the year, so I really hope you’ll come out to say hello.

Later this week or early next week: I’ll be launching a pre-order for my new hardcover strip collection, Clever Tricks to Stave off Death, as well as Return to Wondermark Manor: Dispatches from Wondermark Manor Volume III.
Both books will begin shipping in about a month, but you can secure your copies ahead of time with the pre-order — that’ll ensure you get the very first copies that I receive!

This week I will also be closing the window for Unique Sketch Cards and ludicrous phone calls — if you’d like to take advantage of those offers, you have through Friday! There will probably be a slim Venn-diagram of time when both the new books and the Sketch Cards will be available simultaneously, but don’t make it hard on yourself. Just order them separately. I really don’t mind.

See you in Seattle!

Send in Harvey Award nominations by Friday

haaaarvey

The Harvey Awards are one of the comics industry’s three or four major annual awards. Anyone who’s a comics professional can nominate any work they like that was published in the previous year — and what I’m told is that it only takes a relatively small number of nominations to push a title to the top of the list (above the hundreds of books with one vote each).

I don’t really know how to say this any other way — I would like Beards of our Forefathers to be on that list. I’m incredibly proud of the work I put into it, and if you’re a comics professional who feels the same way, I hope you’ll consider sending in a nomination for me.

The deadline for ballots is this Friday, 3/27. I’m not sure what the threshold is for “comics professional,” but if you’ve ever done work for a professional publisher, or have done okay as an indie and have some credits you can list, I say go for it! In addition, this is a great chance to nominate any other comics you’ve read this year that you really enjoyed — you can make up to 5 nominations in each category.

There’s a text ballot at harveyawards.org — I think you can just copy & paste it into an email and send it to harveyballots@hotmail.com by midnight Eastern time on Friday.

You don’t have to fill out nominations for every single category, but DO be sure to fill out the “Brief list of work in comics” section (for the verification of your “professional” status). The votes I would love your support for are:

Special Award for Humor in Comics: David Malki !, for Wondermark: Beards of our Forefathers
Special Award for Excellence in Presentation: Wondermark: Beards of our Forefathers (Dark Horse)

I know Wondermark isn’t necessarily the Best Online Comic of the year, nor was my book the Best Graphic Album, nor am I the Best Writer in all of comics — but nonetheless I will personally be nominating myself in those categories, as well as some of my colleagues. If you’re moved to nominate Wondermark or Beards in those categories, bless you.

Finally, I’ll also be nominating How to Make Webcomics (Image) in the Best Biographical, Historical, or Journalistic Presentation category.

Again, the deadline is in just a few days, so if you qualify to help out (or can lobby a friend or loved one who does), please do so right away. Thank you very much for your support!

Guest comic! Interview! Photos! Oh my.

it's the cool neww thing!

If you missed the New England Webcomics Weekend, mark your calendar now for March 2010, when it’ll be back bigger, better and (hopefully) just as awesome. If you were there, I hope you had just as much fun as I did! However, I believe this to be impossible, as I had the maximum amount of fun. I am in the one hundredth percentile of fun had. Gary does a pretty good job of doing it justice.

NEWW made for a wonderful kickoff to the convention season, and heaps of thanks and praise are due to Meredith, Rich, the TopatoCo and Dumbrella crews, the diligent volunteers and the building management at Eastworks. Here are some photos that some of the approximately 8 zillion attendees took at the show!

After the show wrapped on Sunday, new best-pal KC Green and I made a guest comic for Meredith! We thought it would save her some time, but I don’t think it did because she stayed up while we did it. We made her promise to post it blind, but really it didn’t matter because it’s not, like, dirty or anything. We didn’t go anywhere weird with it like some people might have.

Also over the weekend, a very nice profile of me appeared in the North Adams (MA) Transcript, which I think is an actual, ink-on-newsprint newspaper? I am almost certain that it is. Representative quote: “‘If I was just drawing a cartoon strip, I would one millionth-best cartoonist in the world,’ Malki said.” Thanks to John Mitchell for his dogged drive to make me known to everyone in North Adams!

Finally, I should probably mention the other places I’ll be lugging my charm to over the next few months: in just two weeks I’ll be in Seattle for the Emerald City ComiCon, one of my favorites; after that it’s Stumptown in Portland (April 18-19); the Toronto Comic Arts Festival (May 9-10); then MoCCA in Manhattan (June 6-7) before hitting San Diego in July. There’ll also be a Clever Tricks to Stave Off Death release party in Los Angeles somewhere in the middle there, and of course every state has their own Arbor Day. The list of “Upcoming Appearances” on the site’s sidebar (just there on the right, if you’re on the site now) can be your friend once this post has vanished into the Ozymandian dustbin of history!

Extra-finally, it should be reiterated that if you encounter me in person at one of these events or any other, the whispered word “huckleberry” will get you an immediate high-five in front of anybody, I don’t even care.

Dear Internet. It is strange.

up high
(photo by night86mare on flickr)

Dear Internet,

It is strange. I am on an airplane and I am not quite fully there, in the way that you get when every hundredth second or so you realize that you have fallen asleep, and you wake and the world changes. You realize that a moment ago, you were wrong about everything. Sunlight filters through the windows carving strange shadows on the black aisle floor — with my head canted on the headrest, the moving lines convince me that there is a dog on the airplane.

Sometimes I think the dog is going to be crushed by the stewardess, but it never is.

With my ear against the headrest, the entire airplane resonates. I bring work onto airplanes, my dear Internet, but it is impossible to think in here. Even watching television becomes a chore. Since when has watching television been a chore? Since we started to feel compelled to appreciate things. I do not like wasting time. I do not like watching things that I cannot appreciate. Everything is exhausting, now, even watching television. This time, I can’t manage it.

I sometimes come up with story ideas on airplanes, but they all revolve around airplanes and the circumstances of being on them. When I get off the plane my ideas all involve the struggles inherent in the airport parking lot. I am awash in newness and difference, and then, inevitably, along the long length of Lincoln Boulevard I am lowered slowly back into the same half-finished life from before.

Maybe I will not fit into it anymore! Maybe I have changed from my trip. But the life is like pants that have never been washed, Internet. It keeps its shape. Although it does, over time, become softer.

I like the idea of airplanes. I like going high, and fast, and becoming a guy who is in a different place. When I was a kid I used to imagine that maybe every time I got onto an airplane, vast crews of people leaped quickly into action tearing up roads, deconstructing the false fronts of buildings I’d never been into, and replacing it all with, say, Spokane. The plane would just stay up for as long as it took for all the work to be finished.

I don’t really think this anymore, but I don’t know that it’s any more fundamentally ridiculous a notion than what actually goes on. The difference is mainly in my decreased conception of my own importance in the world.

But I am uncomfortable with the airplane as a device for removing me from a place where I have changed, and reshaping me to fit the place I vacated. I think they do it with the rumbling. The rumbling is what breaks down all the molecules. The vibration allows them to settle.

Why am I talking in this melancholy manner to you, my good friend Internet? I have just read a book by Joey Comeau entitled Overqualified. It has wrapped me in its pages and made me mimic it. It is a thing that happens sometimes with me and books, because of chemicals in my brain. The book made me think of things, and then my brain did something with chemicals. I am not totally clear on the details but I think that is probably okay. I doubt I will be asked to explain it to a class or anything. There is not much I could teach children about it.

I mean, I could probably say “Forget that idea that your brain makes you feel things. You make your brain feel things, and then your brain does something with chemicals.” Then I would sort of halfheartedly shrug. Maybe I would add “Most people do it backwards.”

I do not mimic your work out of irreverence, Mr. Joey Comeau of Canada. I like things that surprise my brain into doing the chemical thing. So I figured if I must be shaped into something by this high, fast, gently-quivering softening chamber, I may as well try to make it something that surprises me.

Yours,

David Malki !

Overqualified

(Buy Joey Comeau’s Overqualified from Amazon,
or from an independent bookstore)

First look: Clever Tricks to Stave Off Death

chock full of just what it says

Look what came in the mail! It’s an advance copy of my new Dark Horse collection Clever Tricks to Stave Off Death, featuring over 100 comic strips, the coloring contest winners, and loads of methods to delay the inexorable approach of the inevitable. It’s available for pre-order from Amazon now, or order it through your local comic shop or independent bookstore.

If you’d like a signed or sketched-in copy, and/or would like to ensure that I make a few extra bucks from the sale, I’ll be offering a pre-order once I return from the New England Webcomics Weekend — where, by the way, I will be auctioning off this very advance copy to benefit our Webcomics Kiva microlending group.

Stay tuned…


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