List Of Volumes Of Flight
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List Of Volumes Of Flight
'' Flight'' is a graphic novel anthology edited by Kazu Kibuishi and published annually since 2004. Originally published by Image Comics, it has since moved to Ballantine Books, an imprint of Random House. The most recent volume is number 8, published June 28, 2011. {, class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; width:80%;" , + Flight , - ! scope="col" , Volume ! scope="col" , Publication Date ! scope="col" , Contents ! scope="col" , Publisher ! scope="col" , Pages ! scope="col" , ISBN , - , - valign="top" style="text-align:left;" ! scope="row" , 1 , August 25, 2004 , "Air and Water" - Enrico Casarosa "Copper: Maiden Voyage" - Kazu Kibuishi "Hugo Earheart" - Jake Parker "I Wish..." - Vera Brosgol "Paper and String" - Jen Wang "Taj Mahal" - Neil Babra "Formidable" - Bengal "Outside My Window" - Khang Le "Untitled" - Chris Appelhans "Tumbleweed" - Catia Chien "Fall" - Catia Chien "Dummy Brother" - Jacob Magraw-Mickelson "All Time Low" - Dylan Meconis and Bill Mudron ...
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Flight (comics)
''Flight'' is an American comics anthology series edited by Kazu Kibuishi, showcasing young and innovative artists and writers. Image Comics published the first two volumes. In June 2005 Kibuishi announced that the series would move from Image to Ballantine Books from Volume Three on in an attempt to increase sales through mainstream bookstores. Kibuishi also stated that subsequent volumes would be released twice-yearly. Publication history Volume One was published in July 2004 and contains 23 stories, totalling approximately 208 (unnumbered) pages. Volume Two, published in March 2005, is 432 pages long and contains 33 stories with a greater average length. The increase in size is almost certainly due to the interest generated in prospective contributors by the first volume. Volume Three was released in June 2006 and contains 26 stories over 352 pages. Volume Four was released in July 2007, with 344 pages, Volume Five in July 2008, with 368 pages, Volume Six in July 2009 with 28 ...
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Erika Moen
Erika Moen (born 1983) is an People of the United States, American comic book artist, known for her Autobiographical comics, autobiographical comic ''DAR'', and the educational/Erotic comics, erotic comic ''Oh Joy, Sex Toy''. Biography Moen was born in 1983 and based in Portland, Oregon, Portland, Oregon. She graduated from Pitzer College with a BA in Illustrated Storytelling in 2006. She identifies as queer. She and her husband, fellow artist Matthew Nolan, have been married since October 2008. Moen is the creator of the self-published autobiographical online comic ''DAR!'' which has been collected into self-published print volumes. She also has contributed comic work to ''Best Erotic Comics'' 2008 (Last Gasp (publisher), Last Gasp), ''True Porn Volume 2'' (Alternative Comics (publisher), Alternative Comics), ''Flight (comics), Flight Volume 1''; and ''Unsafe for All Ages'', a collection of erotic short stories by gay and lesbian artists published by Prism Comics in 2005. In 2004 ...
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Raina Telgemeier
Raina Diane Telgemeier (/'ɹeɪna 'tɛlgə'maɪəɹ/, born May 26, 1977) is an American cartoonist. Her works include the autobiography, autobiographical webcomic ''Smile (comic book), Smile'', which was published as a full-color graphic novel in February 2010, and the follow-up Sisters (graphic novel), ''Sisters'' and the fiction graphic novel ''Drama (graphic novel), Drama'', all of which have been on The New York Times Best Seller list, ''The New York Times'' Best Seller lists. She has also written and illustrated the graphic novels ''Ghosts (graphic novel), Ghosts'' and ''Guts (graphic novel), Guts'' as well as four graphic novels adapted from ''The Baby-Sitters Club'' stories by Ann M. Martin. Telgemeier was born on May 26, 1977 in San Francisco and grew up there. She has two younger siblings, Amara and William. According to Telgemeier, she knocked out two front teeth while in sixth grade and needed braces and multiple surgeries as a result. Also according to Telgemeier, sh ...
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Graham Annable
Graham Annable (born June 1, 1970) is a Canadian cartoonist and animator. He is the creator of ''Grickle'', published by Alternative Comics, and one of the founders of the ''Hickee'' humor anthology (also published by Alternative Comics). Annable has created works for the television, film, video game, and comic book industries. Life and career Annable was born in Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, Canada. After graduating from Sheridan College in Oakville, Ontario, where he was classically trained as an animator, Annable ended up at LucasArts. He worked there for ten years, starting in 1994 on '' Full Throttle'' and ultimately as a lead animator on the cancelled '' Sam & Max: Freelance Police''. In addition, Annable has done illustration and cartoon work for (among others) Chuck Jones, Nickelodeon, and Walt Disney Productions. His self-produced short animated films are also popular among YouTube watchers. Annable was employed as creative director at Telltale Games during their first year, ...
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Scott Campbell (artist)
Scott Campbell (born December 28, 1973), known professionally as Scott C., is an American artist and production designer, known for his work for LucasArts and Double Fine Productions. Early life Born and raised in San Jose, California, Scott studied illustration at the Academy of Art University in San Francisco and graduated with a BFA in Illustration focusing on comic and children's book illustration in 1992. Career After graduation, Campbell began at LucasArts as concept artist on children's ''Star Wars'' games. In 2000, he left to join Tim Schafer at Double Fine Productions as Art Director on such games as 2005's ''Psychonauts'' and 2009's ''Brütal Legend''. Alongside this career in games, he has been involved in comics (including being featured in the comic anthology ''Flight'') and created paintings that have appeared in galleries around the world as well the alternative DVD cover for '' The King of Kong: A Fistful of Quarters''.
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Dave Roman
Dave Roman (born May 26, 1977) is an American writer and artist of webcomics and comics. Career Roman attended the School of Visual Arts in New York. He started working in comics as an intern at DC Comics, then got a full-time job at Nickelodeon Magazine as a comic editor for 11 years, until the magazine ceased publishing in 2009. Works Roman is the co-creator and writer of '' Jax Epoch and the Quicken Forbidden'', a webcomic co-created and drawn by John Green. The webcomic was first published in 1997; two books of the webcomic were published, subtitled ''Borrowed Magic'' and ''Separation Anxiety'' respectively. Roman also co-created ''Teen Boat'' with John Green. Two stories were published in print, while three are available online as a webcomic. Roman has published two books in his "Astronaut Academy" series, which started as a webcomic. The first, ''Astronaut Academy: Zero Gravity'' (First Second, 2011) is about a young boy who leaves behind life as an intergalactic superher ...
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Herval
Herval is a Brazilian municipality in the southern part of the state of Rio Grande do Sul. The population is 6,814 (2020 est.) in an area of 1757.84 km². Its elevation is 287 m. Its main industry is agriculture. Herval is situated south of the Piratini River, which was defined in 1777 as the border between the Spanish and Portuguese possessions. The current border between Uruguay and Brazil lies further south, at the Jaguarão River. Herval is famous for its international rodeo festival, organized every January. Bounding municipalities *Arroio Grande *Jaguarão *Pedras Altas *Pedro Osório *Pinheiro Machado *Piratini Piratini is a city in the Brazilian state of Rio Grande do Sul with a population of some 21,000. It is the former capital of the short-lived Riograndense Republic The Riograndense Republic, often called the Piratini Republic ( pt, República ... References External links *http://www.citybrazil.com.br/rs/herval/ Municipalities in Rio Grande ...
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Becky Cloonan
Becky Cloonan (born 23 June) is an American comic book creator, known for work published by Tokyopop and Vertigo. In 2012 she became the first female artist to draw the main '' Batman'' title for DC Comics.Beck, Laura (February 8, 2013)"Meet the First Lady to Draw Batman Since His Inception in 1939" Jezebel. Early life Becky Cloonan was born in Pisa, Italy. She attended New York's School of Visual Arts. Career Cloonan and her friends produced a comics anthology that they called ''Meathaus''. Cloonan created minicomics as a member of the ''Meathaus'' collective before collaborating with Brian Wood on ''Channel Zero: Jennie One'' in 2003. Since then, her profile (and workload) has steadily risen; her best-known work to date has been the twelve-issue comics series ''Demo'' (2004), also with Wood. '' Wizard'' named ''Demo'' its 2004 Indie of the Year. The series was also nominated for two Eisner Awards in 2005, for Best Limited Series and Best Single Issue or One-Shot (the latte ...
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Don Hertzfeldt
Don Hertzfeldt (born August 1, 1976) is an American animator, writer, and independent filmmaker. He is a two-time Academy Award nominee who is best known for the animated films ''It's Such a Beautiful Day'', the '' World of Tomorrow'' series, and ''Rejected''. In 2014, his work appeared on ''The Simpsons''. Eight of his short films have competed at the Sundance Film Festival, a festival record. He is also the only filmmaker to have won the Sundance Film Festival's Grand Jury Prize for Short Film twice. Hertzfeldt's work has been described as "some of the most influential animation ever created", "some of the most vital and expressive animation of the millennium", and "some of the most essential short films of the last 20 years". In 2020, GQ described his work as "simultaneously tragic and hilarious and philosophical and crude and deeply sad and fatalist and yet stubbornly, resolutely hopeful." In his book ''The World History of Animation'', author Stephen Cavalier writes "Her ...
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Sonny Liew
Sonny Liew (born 26 September 1974) is a Malaysia-born comic artist/illustrator based in Singapore. He is best known for ''The Art of Charlie Chan Hock Chye'' (2015), the first graphic novel to win the Singapore Literature Prize for fiction. Early life and education Born in Seremban, Malaysia, Liew attended school at Victoria School and Victoria Junior College in Singapore. He went on to read philosophy at Clare College in Cambridge University in UK and studied illustration at the Rhode Island School of Design in 2001. Career His first foray into comic illustration was with Singaporean tabloid paper ''The New Paper'' in 1995, contributing a comic strip titled ''Frankie and Poo''. A compilation of the strips was published by Times Publishing in 1996. Shortly after his graduation from Rhode Island Liew got his first break into the American comics industry when Shelly Bond signed him on for Vertigo Comics' ''My Faith in Frankie'' together with Mike Carey and Marc Hempel. His work ...
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Doug TenNapel
Douglas Richard TenNapel ( ; born July 10, 1966) is an American animator, writer, cartoonist, video game designer, and comic book artist whose work has encompassed animated television, video games, and comic books. He is best known for creating Earthworm Jim, a character that spawned a video game series, animated series, and a toy line. He is also the creator of the animated television series '' Catscratch'' (2005–2007), which aired on Nickelodeon, and was itself a loose adaptation of TenNapel's comic book limited series ''Gear''. Career TenNapel began as an animator on '' Attack of the Killer Tomatoes: The Animated Series''. He soon began working in the video game industry on projects like 1993's '' Jurassic Park'' and '' The Ren & Stimpy Show: Stimpy's Invention'' for the Sega Genesis and ''The Jungle Book'' for the SNES and Sega Genesis. In 1994, he created Earthworm Jim, the character that would star in Shiny Entertainment's video game, toy line, and cartoon series. Shiny E ...
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Michel Gagné
Michel Gagné (born 1965, Roberval, Quebec) is a Canadian cartoonist. Film Gagné studied classical animation at Sheridan College and worked for Sullivan Bluth Studios for six years, working on such films as ''An American Tail'', ''The Land Before Time'', ''All Dogs Go to Heaven'', '' Rock-A-Doodle'', and ''A Troll in Central Park''. While at Bluth's company, Gagné worked on his own short film, '' Prelude to Eden'', which was nominated for an Annie Award in 1996. After leaving Bluth, Gagné moved around and eventually settled at Warner Bros.' animation studio, where he worked on such films as ''Quest for Camelot'', ''The Iron Giant'', and ''Osmosis Jones''. More recently, Gagné designed the special effects for the Cartoon Network series '' Star Wars: Clone Wars''. He has also occasionally worked for Disney and Pixar. His short films, "Sensology", was short listed for an Academy Award in 2010. His graphic novel, ''The Saga of Rex'', is currently being adapted into an animated f ...
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