UFO: Undercover! comics review

UFO: Undercover! Yerstory Transmedia. (w) Eric Warwaruk. (a) Diego Lugli. 2023. 268pp. $24.99

When ordinary lives intersect with the supernatural you can end up with a very satisfying story. A really good space alien story needs a creator who embraces the tropes. Writer/creator Eric Warwaruk knows how to lean into the ordinary and the uncanny to achieve great results.

It’s the journey that is most important in these kinds of stories. The reader invests time in getting to know the characters, usually down on their luck with little prospects. And then, one day, something other-worldly happens. Suddenly, ordinary lives are seen in a new light. Suddenly, 25-year-old Tyler’s UFO podcast becomes very relevant. Not even his best friend Scott can scoff at him now.

If you are looking for a very relatable story with everyday folks confronting a certain X-factor like Stranger Things, then this slow-burn thriller will satisfy you.

The artwork by Diego Lugli is a perfect fit for this story about a daydreamer who dares to keep dreaming. There’s a very fine mix of the whimsical with the surreal. In this comic, in the spirit of such mighty daydreamers as David Lynch, the ordinary is quite extraordinary. There’s a very placid energy running through these characters, spooky in a good way. I love the fact that our hero is so reluctant. The publisher behind this project, Yerstory Transmedia, works with various media and I could see a movie version of this comic book. Sure, why not? That said, I’m charmed by the fun and weird vibes of this authentic work just as it is.

“Why me?”

I encourage you to seek out this very charming and quirky Sci-Fi thriller. And be sure to keep up with Eric Warwaruk and the rest of his comics titles at Yerstory.

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America First? Time to Protest! Time to March!

“We were always suckers for ridiculous hats.”

America First or

America Last?

A criminal, when possible,

gets an added delight

when he can pull off his crime

right in plain sight.

Sounds like something out of Green Eggs and Ham, doesn’t it? I just thought up those lines as I’ve been looking over Theodor “Dr. Suess” Geisel’s career as a political cartoonist (1941 to 1943).

We have come to accept that the Orange One revels in this hiding in plain sight, with his MAGA hats and his embracing fascism (look up America First) and it seems like we’ve normalized it. Well, no, I don’t really think so. You see, we can walk and chew gum at the same time. We will not get overwhelmed. We can process what is going on and we can protest–and vote. U.S. House and Senate midterm elections are November 3, 2026.

It’s happened before and history has a way of repeating itself. How to confront our current state of affairs? When just using words fail, there are alternatives, like political cartoons. What’s so powerful about political cartoons is that the very best of them continue to speak truth to power, well into the future and hold their relevance.

The “America First” isolationist slogan of yesteryear (U.S. reluctance to enter WW I) devolved into a loaded and not so subtle dog whistle for nationalists and fascists in the United States (U.S. insistence in not entering WW II). Donald Trump embraces it and uses it to represent U.S. foreign policy (U.S. avoidance of becoming involved with Ukraine, disparaging NATO and readily appeasing Russia).

Any American, no matter who you voted for in the last election, who appreciates we’ve entered into a crisis, can stay tuned, stay informed and voice your concern. You can protest, of course. You can contact your representative. You can vote. Here are some resources: You can streamline contacting your representatives with @5calls and Common Cause. You can also join the upcoming national protest at the Washington Mall on March 14, 2025. Go to nowmarch.org. At the end of the day, I believe that Americans just want an honest and straightforward government.

America First? No, it’s just that those of us that believe we’ve already entered into a Constitutional Crisis, to say the least, want America to return to the good work of aspiring to be at its genuine best (no doubt, it’s a journey): to lead, to care and work for the American people. No more secret hand gestures and signals. No more kleptocracy. Did any honest American voters vote for a kleptocracy? Didn’t think so.

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Todd Webb interview: The Cartoonist, the Comic Strip and THE POET

Comics artist Todd Webb chats about his ongoing comic strip, THE POET, which he posts daily to Substack. Keep up with Todd Webb at toddbot.com. We discuss being a cartoonist, the comic strip format and the world of THE POET! What is this comic strip about? Read my review here. Basically, you have the elder poet, searching for the meaning of life, and his snarky pigeon cohort always ready to knock him down a peg. And you just run with that premise.

The process of creating comics is multi-layered and complex. There’s quite a bit going on for an art form that hasn’t always gotten the respect it deserves. Well, attitudes have evolved over the years. The more I think about the comic strip format, in relation to the comics medium and beyond it, I find more and more to ponder over. The essence of a comic strip is to pare down to the basics. That said, just like any other creative endeavor, it’s all about how you get there.

Comic strips have been under the critical, and academic, microscope more and more over the years. After over one hundred years of comic strips, with landmark comic strips paving the way, from Krazy Kat to Peanuts, we have definitely had the time to make inroads in comics scholarship, which continues to find its place. After all, even a hint of “comics studies” really only dates back a few decades, when you stop and think about it, with such notable titles as Will Eisner’s Comics and Sequential Art in 1985 and Scott McCloud’s Understanding Comics in 1993.

Comic strips evolved, truly blossomed, with American newspapers. What we have now is a brave new world of online comics. If we consider comics scholarship to be a relatively new thing, then online comics is but a blink of an eye in the big picture. We discuss this subject as part of our conversation which naturally dovetails into a deep dive into how artist Todd Webb answers the call with his comic strip, The Poet, which he publishes daily and collects into a volume format and smaller books. You can say that Webb has learned his lessons well and incorporates many of the beloved tropes and mechanisms that go into a successful comic strip.

Today’s THE POET comic strip.

Everyone is entitled to their opinion on this or that work of comics. My general rule is to never forget to let the comic strip speak for itself. Upon reading one episode of The Poet, and as I steadily progressed, I was utterly charmed. It’s fascinating to me that a nice straightforward comic strip, pared down to the essentials, can speak to just about anything under the sun. And, yes, it is poetic, for good measure.

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Surrealism, Bugs Bunny, and the Blues by Franklin Rosemont book review

Surrealism, Bugs Bunny, and the Blues: Selected Writings on Popular Culture. Franklin Rosemont. Editors Abigail Susik. Paul Buhle. PM Press. 368pp. 2025. $26.95
The art of the essay provides a platform for writers to share their subject and perhaps a bit about their worldview. We read essays all the time, usually as reviews, mainly on books, movies and music. And there are notable collections such as Pauline Kael’s oeuvre. A writer who likes to write such essays tends to like a lot of things and Franklin Rosemont (1943-2009) was no exception. Rosemont was passionate about the masses, mass media and how it all interconnected. In this collection, the reader is swept up by Rosemont’s thoughts and vivid writing on the inclusive power of entertainment, particularly, cinema, comics, Surrealism, and popular music.
Beginning in the 1960s, and for the next thirty some years, Rosemont wrote and edited for progressive magazines, the two main ones being Cultural Correspondence (1975-1983) and Radical America (1967-1999). It seems only natural that Rosemont made connections with the Left, especially the Labor movement, and the democratic nature of mass entertainment. Anyone is free to enjoy it, to contribute to it, to be transformed by it. As I read one essay after another, I was moved by the cumulative effect of Rosemont’s arguments, his deep belief that everyone has a place at the cultural table.

“The Dream That Came True,” by Dust Wallin, One Big Union Monthly, May 1920.

 

Mad Magazine, May 1, 1954. Basil Wolverton. As subversive as he needed to be.

The more I read, the more I gave myself over to the people power theme in these essays. It certainly fits in well with Rosemont’s writing on cartoonists for Wobbly newspapers, like Industrial Worker (1909-1931). But can one be certain that Basil Wolverton (Mad Magazine, 1950s) was so closely aligned with the proletariat, as Rosemont seems to imply in another essay? Well, maybe so but you just never know for sure. The greatest satirists will leave you wondering which side they’re on, if any. Of course, one can argue that anything unusual in the 1950s potentially carried subtext. It is a different case with the Surrealist movement which, beginning with its founder, Andre Breton, made clear it was indeed an anti-fascist movement. It’s interesting to consider Surrealism’s history, starting in 1924 and into the 1950s. What began as an art and political movement, in response to the aftermath of World War I, was constantly pushing against authority. In this context, it is not surprising to bring in the subject of anarchists. One of Rosemont’s most insightful essays discusses how the anarchist political and philosophical movement, focused on the viability of stateless societies, came to be maligned in the United States and caricatured as bomb-toting terrorists.
It’s the 1920s, the era of silent movies, where I will conclude my review. If we are looking for connective tissue to Rosemont’s writings, we need look no further than dreams. It is in the land of dreams, after all, that we can all indulge our most subversive desires. We can all return to our youthful ambitions of leading the charge in the subculture! It is the world of silent movies, with its play of light and shadow and uncanny expression that we enter a netherworld closely aligned with our own private slumberland. In this world, such figures as Buster Keaton, the Great Stone Face, reign supreme. No wonder such a world would utterly fascinate Rosemont and lead to some of his most compelling writing. Here is an excerpt:
These two films (Sherlock Jr., 1924; Cameraman, 1928) best exemplify Keaton’s revolutionary/poetic worldview. When he passes through the looking-glass, he is not content merely to see what is on the other side: he braves his way through a whole succession of looking-glasses, each behind the other, and each reflecting only the meagerest hint of what we call “the real.” And what motive could possibly underlie such feverish wanderings back and forth through the interpenetrating spheres of the pluriverse? The answer is crystal clear: Keaton’s audacity is in the service of sublime love. His agility is always radiant with a lover’s grim determination. There is no risk that he will not take for the woman he loves. Only Buster Keaton, moreover, can sustain a single kiss for two years (The Paleface, 1921).
We can always return back to Keaton, with that iconic poker face, champion of subversion but always leaving you to wonder as to what side he’s on, if any. When I simply consider Keaton’s artistic considerations, I feel confident he was seeking a more universal tone with whatever he did. Let his movies speak for him, he would say. Ah, there’s that one scene with Keaton (Cops, 1922) when he takes a bomb, by then popularly accepted as the symbol for the anarchist or, more plainly, widespread mayhem, uses it to light his cigarette, and then throws it back to the police. A great political statement? Hmm, how about just a funny visual prank? The Great Stone Face would never tell.
Like any great collection of essays, there is something for everyone in this book. Give yourself over to the vast array of subjects discussed here, and you’ll be the richer for it. I can imagine Rosemont going from one cultural signpost after another and reaching his own conclusions such as embracing Bugs Bunny as a folk hero for the masses. Well, more than fair enough. And he takes it one step further and implicates Elmer Fudd. Again, more than fair enough, as well as relevant for today. Yes, be wary of the Elmer Fudds of the world, those who only think in terms of transactions. The Fudds of the world are the conformists and the sell-outs. But, with will and determination, the Bugs Bunnies of the world will prevail!

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Milky Zest by Steve Hogan comics review

Milky Zest. Steve Hogan. Acid Keg Comics. One-Shot. 2024. 28pp. $5.99

I would never tell Steve Hogan to stop making comics even though this comic book is begging me to do so. Ah, I only kid. I kid in the stubbornly ironic way that Hogan loves. If you followed alt-comics in the ’90s, you know precisely what brand of humor I’m talking about. It permeated the very air. All of hipsterdom worshiped the crass sarcasm tempered by a devastating self-deprecation. That was Gen X sensibility for you. In our youth, we valued spot-on humor and were not overly timid and cautious in its pursuit. It was a certain vibe we were playing with in music, fashion and comics: Peter Bagge’s Hate; Daniel Clowes’s Eightball; Rick Altergott’s Doofus, and so on.

Steve Hogan provides a sharp wit that harkens back to the snarky humor of ’90s alt-comics and makes it his own. At a deeper level, Hogan also honors the respect for craft with spot-on design sense. The antecedents date back even further to mid-century modern, dealing in crisp clean lines and a wry and dry sense of humor, often dealing with wacky and larger-than-life subjects. To engage in this kind of comics as a cartoonist today is certainly tricky. You don’t want to just repeat something that essentially already was a sly post-modern look back. That said, this retro style of comics is totally valid and various contemporary cartoonists work in it to one degree or another: Sammy Harkham and Rich Tomasso are a couple of excellent examples. As you can see from the page excerpt above, and the panel excerpt below, Hogan revels in visual treats and packs in as many added gags as possible.

The story for this comic is a fun MacGuffin-packed roller coaster of a tale. If you like a good comedy thriller with the very fabric of reality at stake, then this is for you. And, along with all the irony, there’s even a sweet romantic subplot. It turns out that our hero, Milky Zest, is a good guy with Tuesday, a good woman, by his side. It’s up to Milky to prove his worth as the newbie at a private detective agency. Little did he know that he would end up in the thick of a case with earth-shattering repercussions. Yeah, that sounds about right. All in all, I enjoyed this comic and, without a hint of irony, I look forward to what Steve Hogan does next.

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Tad in D.C.: A Bit of Humor in a Dire Time

“USAID is a criminal organization and needs to die.” — Elon Musk

An update from today’s across-the-board firings in the U.S. govt.–so far.

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L.A. STRONG Charity Comic Ready for Retail Orders

I’ve reviewed a number of anthologies, and read even more than I’ve shared, and the main thing I always come back to is clarity of purpose. The problem with comics anthologies based on tragedy is the slippery slope of coming across as maudlin but,  in the case of L.A. STRONG, I believe the end result works. What drives home the point is that here is a book where the proceeds from sales go to help those hurt by the Los Angeles fires. The publisher of this project, Mad Cave Studios, states that 100% of the profits are being donated to relief efforts. This book is being made immediately available to retailers via Lunar Distribution. So, if you own a comic book shop or bookstore, then this will be of special interest to you. For comics fans, L.A. STRONG will be available as of 03/19/25, and you can pre-order.

Art: P.J. Holden. Text: Geoff Ryman. Lettering: Jeff Eckleberry.

Art: Nicola Izzo. Text: Stephanie Phillips. Lettering: Jeff Eckleberry.

Art by Nicola Izzo.

Getting a chance to look over the sample pages, I gotta say that the above piece with art by Nicola Izzo really stands out. Honestly, you could buy this comic for this page alone.

Retailers, head over to Lunar or check out the mailer you have already received:

The comic book industry pulls together to support fellow creators who lost homes to the tragic 2025 Los Angeles fires with this benefit anthology special. Featuring contributions from Barbara Kessel, Brian Azzarello, Brian Michael Bendis, Christos Gage, Dan DiDio, Daniel Kibblesmith, Frank Tieri, Greg Pak, Jimmy Palmiotti, Jody Houser, Marv Wolfman, Paul Cornell, Rob DenBleyker, Sina Grace, Stephanie Phillips, Steve Orlando, Alex Cormack, Alison Sampson, Amanda Conner, Christian Ward, Geraldo Borges, Ian Churchill, Michael Avon Oeming, Nico Leon, Rian Gonzales, Salvador Larroca, Sami Kivelä, and many, many more. Together, as a community, we can be L.A. strong for one another! 100% of the profits will be donated for relief efforts.

Art: Janet Sung. Text: Christos Gage. Letterng: Jeff Eckleberry.

 

Retail:
$9.99
Initial Due Date:
2/24/2025
FOC Date:
2/24/2025
In-Store Date:
3/19/2025
UPC:
60196140480900111
Product Code:
1224MA843

 

Art: Rian Gonzales. Text: Jody Houser. Lettering: Jeff Eckleberry.

 

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The Poet by Todd Webb comics review

The Poet collection, Volume One

The Poet is a comic strip by Todd Webb. If you are not familiar with it, I encourage you to check it out. There are a number of ways to dive in, including purchasing a full collection or sampler book. First off, you can check it out online. The following are some of my own thoughts on the comic strip format in general and how Todd Webb’s remarkable comic strip fits into this tradition.

The art of the comic strip is a very specific format. What do I mean? Well, there are the differences in dynamics between superhero vs. indie; or the traditional art world vs. the comics medium. And then there’s the comic strip which most definitely has its own very specific turf. Honestly, sometimes I wonder if the diehard fan base for comic strips and graphic novels overlap very much. So, when you hear someone say, “Oh, it’s all just comics!” that is pure nonsense. Comics is not one big pot of stew. However, at the end of the day, I’d still like to think that there’s enough common ground. Anyway, this is all to say that I realize I spend a lot of time with issues dealing with the graphic novel, or what aficionados like to call, “long-form comics.” However, I also love comic strips, or “short-form comics,” and I like to create them as much as I do graphic novels. Basically, there’s a big shift in how you approach either one and only a few comics artist would dare to seriously pursue both. The best example I can give you is Bill Griffith, known for his ongoing comic strip, Zippy the Pinhead, who in more recent years has also maintained a regular output of some very significant graphic novels. With all that in mind, I shift gears to a comics artist who has focused his efforts on the comic strip with some fabulous results, Todd Webb, the creator of the ongoing comic strip, The Poet.

From a recent The Poet post.

There are a number of elements and traits unique to comic strips, a creature of the newspaper, with a whole set of traditions. What Todd Webb does best is respect those traditions and contribute something uniquely his own. That happens in many ways, both instantly and over a period of time. It begins with a notion that the cartoonist plays with; and that leads to a thought-out scene; and, ultimately, to a resolution which, in the case of The Poet, tends to be a gag or punchline of some kind involving a gentle poet and a skeptical pigeon.

The Poet and sampler books.

One of the most fascinating qualities of a comic strip is its potential for delivering something pleasant, even compelling, over and over again, in a very familiar setting, a pattern led by its anchoring main character. You have these things in graphic novels, of course, but not to such a formalized level–and perhaps that is one of the things that diehard fans find so attractive, a love affair with the familiar. Well, I see that Todd Webb understands this very well. The fact is that the loyal fan of the comic strip enjoys a good laugh delivered in a certain way and comic strips have this built-in delivery mechanism. If you honor that, you’re on the right track.

Comic strips, by their very nature, are compact and tend to not mince words. In fact, a verbose comic strip seems to go against the whole spirit of the format. The best example of a wordy, perhaps sometimes too wordy, comic strip has got to be Doonesbury. The gold standard is to make every single word count, very concise, near to a haiku. And the prize for the best example, arguably, is Peanuts. Here is where the diehard fans get their kicks in comparing who is best. And, I gotta say, it can be some pretty wacky fun. Apparently, the biggest rivalry is between fans of Peanuts and fans of the original Nancy. And, here again, I believe that Todd Webb fully appreciates the tropes, the canon, the whole tradition–and he delivers.

Comic strips are, as I say, a whole world onto themselves, just like New Yorker cartoons. You can push boundaries and limits but there’s much to say for keeping true to what works. One of the most distinguishable traits of any comic strip that wants to keep to the old school standards is regularity. If the cartoonist can set up a routine and platform that keeps this engine going, then the path is clear. Once you have created this well-oiled machine, you just keep delivering. You refine here and there. You make adjustments. But you ultimately stay on brand, whatever it is that you have cultivated. This is exactly what Webb has managed to construct over a series of various experiments. Finally, he hit upon something he was compelled to dedicate a substantial amount of time and effort: an elder gentleman poet and his wisecracking pigeon cohort. It’s a simple and clear concept and it delivers. You can find Webb’s latest comic strips on his Instagram and then you can take a deeper dive on his Substack. Plus, of course, you can buy his books and whatever else he might have for sale on his site.

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Waymo is My Friend: comics by Henry Chamberlain

I have grown quite curious, and sympathetic, to the comings and goings of Waymo cars. This is a discussion we are all gradually, yet steadily, beginning to share as Waymo becomes better known. If you’ve never heard of Waymo, I can appreciate that. And, if you’re hip to it, please stick around as well. I’ll share with you what I’ve experienced firsthand. In fact, you can view a YouTube video I did all about it here:

So, how many Waymos does it take to start a movement? I asked Google and, since it should know, especially since it runs Waymo, it states: “As of October 2024, Waymo operates around 300 driverless cars in San Francisco. This is part of a national fleet of about 700 driverless cars.” That seems like a fair amount! The rest of “the fleet” of robotaxis is in Austin, Phoenix and Los Angeles (with more cities emerging, like Atlanta). Nice start, don’t you think? Waymo was so special, only a few months ago, that you needed to be on a waiting list to get access to the app. On a visit to San Fran in November, it was no big deal for me to get the app and hop into a Waymo. As of this writing, the big thing right now is people posting their first Waymo rider experience. That is not going to end anytime soon. People’s reaction to Waymo appears to run the gamut from all-in early adopter to cautious newcomer.

I have to admit that Waymo, or any extended thoughts on self-driving cars, was not on my radar before my visit to San Francisco last November (just prior to the election of you-know-who). Waymo was way in the back of my mind, along with a million other bits of news items and random factoids. And, then, suddenly, I find myself loading up a new app and hopping into the future. I had recently read Mr. Penumbra’s 24-Hour Bookstore by Robin Sloan, the now-classic 2012 novel that plays with the tension and intermingling of bookish old hippie culture and nervy high tech in San Francisco. The night before, I had gone to a reading at the epicenter of the old guard counterculture, City Lights Bookstore. The moment I was finally inside, I felt a sense of relief and resolution: I had waited a certain amount of time; I had figured out a new app; I was already in the throes of being driven without anyone behind the wheel when it steadily became a new normal. Here I was, this bookish neo-hippie inside this futuristic vehicle (a taxi with a robot for a driver!) but I wasn’t quaking in my sandals!

In fact, there is more of a process in breaking in a new human driver interaction than there is in letting a machine do the work. And that, in a nutshell, is the essential difference; the crossing of a threshold done with each new innovation: letting go and letting the machine do the work!

Did the machine do as good as job as I would like? Well, a driverless car will inevitably be a better driver, overall, than I could ever hope to be what with the help of sensors, radar and cameras. A machine never gets tired or distracted. That said, a machine does not have the human touch, that common sense that tells a human driver what to do in a human moment. Anyway, while I was on this recent trip, I used a Waymo on three separate rides. I noticed that the Waymo does not truly know how to improvise. It will not do well with more obscure pickup spots, but neither will a human driver. A Waymo may opt to pick you up at an alternate location for no good reason, at least not for your benefit, and the same can be said for a human driver. A Waymo may pull over to the curb, again for no clear reason, at least not for your benefit, and so too a human. All that said, I never felt unsafe in a Waymo. We still have a long road ahead for Waymo but, overall, I remain optimistic. And, heck, I don’t always like to make small talk and the Waymo is more than cool with that.

For more comics, art and related items, visit henry-chamberlain.com.

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Les Normaux graphic novel review

Les Normaux. Janine Janssen. S. Al Sabado. HaperCollins. 2025. $30.

If you’re looking for something fun, breezy and with heart, then check out the new graphic novel, Les Normaux, which collects the popular LGBTQ+ webcomic for the first time. This is the story of boy wizard meets boy vampire set in Paris with a cast of supernatural characters. It’s like a cross between Bewitched and Emily in Paris.

These kind of soap opera comics are not without a certain amount of repetition and slow-paced narrative but that goes with the genre. I think it takes a magic touch to set the right tone and find ways for the characters to resonate with the reader and that is what the book’s creator, Janine Janssen, achieves. This comic is in the tradition of coming-of-age tales, with a witty sense of humor and an empathetic spirit, that will appeal to any reader. The artwork by Jansen, along with backgrounds and design by S.Al Sabado, compliment this comic’s upbeat vibe.

Our story kicks off when a young man grows weary of living at home and strikes out on his own. In no time, Sebastien is in a whirlwind of intrigue. No sooner has he set foot on his path to freedom than he crosses paths with Elia, a young man after his heart. Sebastien is a wizard-in-training. Elia is a seasoned vampire and fashion influencer. Paris and adventure, or misadventure, awaits. For those new to this webcomic, you can find it at Webtoon, where it has accumulated 95,000 subscribers and 8 million views since it began in 2021. This new book, published by Avon, an imprint of HarperCollins, collects the beloved webcomic for the first time as a graphic novel.

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