In the Pipeline
December 12th, 2014 § 0 comments § permalink
Frederik Peeters’ Aama Makes Onion AV Club’s Year-End Best List!
December 10th, 2014 § 0 comments § permalink
Topping the (ahem, alphabetically ordered) Best Comics of 2014 is the first volume of aama, Swiss artist Frederik Peeters’ Angoulême -winning far-future science fiction series, equal parts Stanisław Lem and Stefan Wul, about family, AI, evolution, and strange plant life on distant planets. Oliver Sava says:
“The sci-fi aspects allow Peeters to venture into more experimental design territory with his artwork, but he doesn’t lean too heavily into genre elements, instead focusing on how to present Verloc’s personal experience with clarity and nuance.â€
If you’re hankering for the full-on SF visual explosion, wait’ll you see Book 2, just out in the UK, and Book 3, whose proofs I just went over. Peeters really ramps up the psychedelia, joining the ranks of psychedelic 70s animation classics from Topor, Moebius, and René Laloux one better. I mean, check it out:
Thank you, Oliver Sava and the Onion AV Club!
Topping the (ahem, alphabetically ordered) Best Comics of 2014 is the first volume of aama, Swiss artist Frederik Peeters’ Angoulême -winning far-future science fiction series, equal parts Stanisław Lem and Stefan Wul, about family, AI, evolution, and strange plant life on distant planets. Oliver Sava says:
“The sci-fi aspects allow Peeters to venture into more experimental design territory with his artwork, but he doesn’t lean too heavily into genre elements, instead focusing on how to present Verloc’s personal experience with clarity and nuance.â€
If you’re hankering for the full-on SF visual explosion, wait’ll you see book 2, just out in the UK, and and 3, whose proofs I just went over. Peeters really ramps up the psychedelia, joining the ranks of psychedelic 70s animation classics from Topor, Moebius, and René Laloux one better.
Thank you, Onion AV Club!
A New Review for Ferry
December 8th, 2014 § 0 comments § permalink
My translation of Jean Ferry’s The Conductor and Other Tales is now officially a year old! As if in celebration, over at the erstwhile Necessary Fiction, Matt Pincus says Ferry’s tales “linger somewhere between Kafka’s The Castle and Bataille’s Story of the Eye. At times transgressive, and at others with a Poe-like Gothic, the stories are also ironically mythical, creating a juxtaposition of nuance and beauty.
“These 25 stories have transient, wandering elements in which characters inhabit a place somewhere between fact and fiction, history and illusion, dream and reality of an eerie murkiness.
There is a ghostly, ethereal quality to each tale, which, as the collection progresses, become darker and phlegm-like. A tale not part of the original collection is of a man on a mountain expedition who loses his partner climbing an ice sheet, but seems to be only clinging a few feet off the floor in someone’s home. Each story shifts between admiration for spectacle, and violence or mortal danger within that spectacle. As any excellent story collection, the tension vibrates at unexpected moments, and the language expands, or crests at moments of insight to allow the reader’s creativity to see a new perception of their own imagination.â€
Thierry Horguelin and Yann Coridian in the latest issue of Epiphany
December 6th, 2014 § 0 comments § permalink
The latest Fall/Winter issue of Epiphany features two short translations by yours truly: Yann Coridian’s “Seagulls and Fig Newtons,†about memories stirred by a phone conversation between two brothers, and the return of Thierry Horguelin with “Positions in Space,†a neurotic extrapolation about getting lost in airports.
Coridian is a French filmmaker and a writer. He has written ten novels, many published by l’école des loisirs. His first feature film, “Ouf,†was released in theatres in February, 2013. He is currently completing his next screenplay.
Thierry Horguelin won the Royal Academy of Belgium’s Franz de Wever Prize for his collection The Endless Night (2009), a story from which was published in Eleven Eleven #15 and Best European Fiction 2014 from Dalkey Archive. He has published two other books of short prose with Quebec’s L’Oie de Cravan press: The Night Voyager (2005), and These Foolish Things (2012). He blogs at Locus Solus. My translations of his work have also appeared in Birkensnake.
Born in Montreal in 1965, Horguelin has lived in Belgium since 1991. For twenty years, he worked as a book reviewer and film critic for numerous magazines and newspapers in Canada, France, and Belgium. A former bookseller, he has also worked as a free-lance translator, copy-editor, and proofreader for various publishers in France and Belgium. He is currently copy-editor-in-chief at Indications (Brussels), editor and book designer for les éditions Le Cormier (Brussels), and assistant manager of Espace Livres & Création, a Belgian small-press network.
Comics in the Pipeline: World War X
November 30th, 2014 § 0 comments § permalink
When a team of scientists on the moon accidentally opens a long-buried alien tomb, similar ancient tombs activate all over the Earth, unleashing a vast destructive force. Is there any hope for humanity? Like Scott Glenn waking up half an hour into The Keep, the pandemonium also awakens a guardian who at various times throughout the ages–from the Roman era through medieval times–has led humanity to repel the creatures’ attacks. His name? Helios.
A series by Jerry Frissen, Peter Snejbjerg, and Delphine Rieu.
Coming to you soon from the good folks at Titan Comics!














