LAST FEW DAYS for Artist Editions! PLUS TMH LIVE Saturday

TODAY, FRIDAY, is the last day to receive a free ebook by forwarding us your Machine of Death order confirmation from Amazon or TopatoCo. If you’ve purchased a print edition, you can get a Kindle, ePub, or rich text version for free simply by sending your confirmation to info at machineofdeath dot net! Or, you can buy the ebooks directly for ten dollars, that’s fine too. Or of course just download the PDF for nuthin!

SUNDAY is the last day to order Artist Edition Wondermark books, which are books that feature original sketches perhaps similar or perhaps wildly divergent from the example above. This is the only Holiday Offering — I won’t be doing any more Artist Editions until next spring.

Some folks have asked about COMBINING THESE EFFORTS and commissioning a Machine of Death Artist Edition. This is a bit like crossing the streams in Ghostbusters, and so I’m disinclined simply for safety reasons, but rest assured that we have lots of interesting MOD stuff coming down the pike and there will be no shortage of delights in the future.

Now after all those deadlines, here’s one splendid aliveline:

SATURDAY at the New England Webcomics Weekend, I’ll be doing a live performance of Tweet Me Harder with my handsome friend Kris Straub! We’ll be streaming the show online at tweetmeharder.com — just head over there a little before 10:30 AM Pacific / 1:30 PM Eastern to tune into the live program. It is guaranteed to be astonishing.

Now I am off to attend a Final Fantasy-themed wedding. Jealous?

TONIGHT: ArtNight @ Pasadena Central Library

Quick! What day is it? Where are you? If you answered “Friday, October 8th” and “within walking, driving or teleportation distance of Pasadena, California” then do I have an event for you. It’s the Pasadena ArtNight, from 6-10pm tonight!

From 6-10pm tonight, the entire city becomes an arts festival, with exhibits and panels at galleries, museums, performing-arts centers, colleges, the Symphony and even City Hall. Specifically, I’d like to draw your attention to the “Art of the Book” exhibit at Pasadena Public Library, where you’ll have the opportunity to meet and physically interact with authors such as Dave Kellett, Kazu Kibuishi, and myself! And presumably some other people too.

Further, different artsy events are taking place all weekend as well!

The Significance of Sunday

This Sunday I’ll be at the West Hollywood Book Fair, participating in a panel discussion with a book signing following:

THE FUTURE OF WEB COMICS

11:00AM-12:00PM, Comics & Graphic Novels Pavilion

Joshua Dysart (Moderator)
Lorelei Bunjes (Head of Digital Comics, IDW)
Jorge Cham (Piled Higher & Deeper)
David Malki ! (Wondermark)
Signings @ The Comic Bug booth

What place does a medium with no motion and no sound have in the streaming, blinking inter-cloud? Can traditionalism and innovation stand side-by-side? Vertigo author Joshua Dysart talks process, intent and the future with cartoonist and Caltech roboticist Jorge Cham, satirist David Malki and the woman who is guiding a major comic book publisher into the stormy seas of the web, without a map, Lorelei Bunjes.

You know you’ve made it when they label you a satirist! That’s the sort of thing someone has to call you. You can’t call yourself a satirist with a straight face; you sound pompous. I’d prefer to call myself a “dashing ne’er-do-well,” but, you know, satirist is good too. Maybe it’ll make NPR perk its ears up.

Also, reminder that Sunday is the last day ever to pick up one of our limited-run STRANGER DANGER shirts to benefit our community dodgeball league! UPDATE: We’re done! Thanks! In tonight’s game, I got hit in the face TWICE, once in the temple and once just full-on as if the ball was fired from a cannon that was taking my mugshot. There are some real athletes in this league! It is fun exercise but it is definitely teaching me humility. My organized sports experience is, in its entirety, almost playing football one summer when I was 14 and then subbing on a softball team another time when I was 23. My heavy offensive move in that game was staring at the pitch, confused by its arcing, softball-specific parabolic motion; my key defensive play was slipping in the grass trying to go for a grounder. Anyway, the ball to the face tonight drew some blood, so at least I feel kind of manly.

SPX recap, featuring MEMORIES

This is a lovely video shot at this year’s Small Press Expo in Maryland last weekend. I was impressed by how well it captures the feeling and the mood of the show — if you’ve never been to SPX or a comic show like it, take two minutes and watch the video. It’s really lovely, and it gives you a good sense of what this whole nonsense is all about.

This was my fifth year at SPX, and I like to think I’ve come a long way since those first strange days when we were convinced we had to be loud and attract attention to our booth with stunts like organized staring contests and freestyle rapping. SPX is a peculiar convention because it’s held in a hotel in North Bethesda, and while there are some restaurants in the neighborhood and a subway stop nearby, it’s dissimilar to the other two major indie-comics shows (New York’s MoCCA and San Francisco’s APE) which are held in major cities where folks don’t lodge near the venue and everyone scatters as soon as the doors close each day. SPX is a capsule, a spaceflight full of cartoonists that launches with everyone hermetically sealed inside. It’s sort of like going to comics sleep-away camp, where you check in, hole up for a while, do some crafts and sing some songs and then emerge a few days later with a new outlook on life.

This year Dave Kellett and I decided to do the red-eye from LAX so we’d arrive the early morning before the show. After a quick nap in the hotel and some bleary breakfast, we set up our wares and got ready for an incredibly busy day. Part of the fun of SPX is seeing what conference is invariably scheduled for the banquet hall next door — last year it was a Miss Teen Maryland competition; this year it appeared to be something having to do with eye diseases, if the giant blown-up photos of corneas were any indication. Maybe next year it’ll be a Miss Teen Conjunctivitis convention, and maybe the year after that they’ll think twice about allowing me on the planning committee.

Anthony Clark, of Nedroid, premiered his new book Beartato and the Secret of the Mystery at the show; it’s a TopatoCo book which I helped Andrew design and set up, and it’s absolutely gorgeous. If you don’t read Nedroid, you should, because it’s remarkable, a comic that’s both hilarious and wonderfully, actively pleasant. You should pick up his book too. It is that rare jewel, a work that is enjoyable for just good ol’ everyone.

After a full day of comickin’ on Saturday and some additional comickery on Sunday, I spent Monday in Washington, D.C. I’ve already mentioned how last year I missed my Monday-morning flight home and killed the entire day waiting for the next one by browsing the old newspaper records in the Library of Congress, looking for interesting articles about beards. This year I only got as far as the Library’s coat-check to drop off my luggage before heading to the Smithsonian Air & Space Museum. The last time I was there I was ten years old, and my mom knew to allot the entire day. I felt that just the same this time.

It’s funny: I didn’t recognize at all the layout of the museum — I’m sure they’ve remodeled the place in the last twenty years — so it was like exploring a brand new place, an awesome hall of airplanes that I might as well have never seen before. (I guess the place could have been exactly the same, but I was just way tinier then.) I get giggly around airplanes, especially old airplanes; I probably made some weird noises in the museum. Luckily it was loud in there.

IN CONCLUSION: SPX was once again great, meeting folks and saying hi to some I remembered from years previous, hanging out with friends and colleagues and making new ones too. These are the days, in my strange profession, when I am “at the office” — my cubicle is a convention table, my shift a 10-hour day of shifting on my feet and trying to hold conversations in a room where hundreds of other people are trying to do the same. It’s marvelous, and I can’t wait to do it again.

A BUSY WEEKEND on BOTH COASTS

This weekend I’ll be in Bethesda, MD for the annual Small Press Expo! I gotta say, I love SPX. It’s run by volunteers, features work by a truly amazing lineup of independent and creative artists and entrepreneurs, and last year I missed my flight home and got to spend a long, delightful day looking up weird old newspaper articles in the Library of Congress.

I’ll be in the TopatoCo Nation along the right-hand wall, joined by luminaries and friends such as Kate Beaton, Scott C, Anthony Clark, and many more people whose work you should also already be familiar with. Hope to see you there!

If you’re not going to be at SPX because you’re stuck in dumb ol’ Los Angeles under an extradition treaty, on Saturday the 11th check out the ShadowMachine Art Show in Hollywood! ShadowMachine is the animation company that produces the TV show Robot Chicken, among others, and this art show is all Robot Chicken artists and animators showing off their own personal work. My wife Nikki, a Robot Chicken puppet fabricator, will have several pieces in the show, including sculptures she’s made of characters from the comics Goats, Hark! A Vagrant, Diesel Sweeties and xkcd.

The pony figurine at the art show may well be the last one in the world still available for sale (they were a limited-edition run that sold out very quickly, earlier this year) so come check out the show!