<UNKNOWN TAG: [page.putfile] >
New Here? Forum Extras E-Mail Dave Advertise Store

Sold Out! (7 comments)

Sold Out!

Saturday, May 17, 2008 - 12:13 AM

I have some really cool news to share with you guys: The Image Comics book I co-authored with Brad, Kris, and Scott — "How To Make Webcomics" — looks like it's sold out! There are 100 or so copies left in the Sheldon Store, and apparently the distributor and publisher are down to their last copies as well! Which is amazing, as it's only been out on the market for three months.

This book was a real labor of love for the four of us. A labor of love because...to be honest, we weren't sure we'd sell all that many. But we're cartoonists who genuinely, genuinely love the craft of cartooning, and recognize that the artform is in a changing state at the moment. Newsprint is slowly but inexorably dying, and to a great many cartoonists, the Web holds out little or no hope to replace it.

But here's the beauty of cartooning: It is an amazing, amazing artform... an artform that has already outlasted many a change in print, distribution, audiences, and economic models. It has weathered the change from individually-sold "subscriptions" in Hogarth and Gilray's 18th-Century prints, it has survived the death of once-massively-popular 19th- and 20th-Century periodicals such as "Punch" and "Saturday Evening Post", and it will, I'm happy to report, survive the death of newspapers.

In America, the comic strip and comic panel have been so tied to newsprint that many cartoonists have trouble separating it from the past 100 years of newsprint success. And there's no disputing that, in these last 100 years, comic strip print syndication has worked like magic: It has generated huge audiences, and equally huge careers and incomes for cartoonists like Capp, Kelly, McManus, Schulz, Davis, Trudeau, Johnston, Adams (...the list goes on and on). But here's the crux of the problem: The core, fundamental product that a newspaper delivers, the "news," is now beat to market by an infinitely faster, more efficient system. The basic function of delivering "news" (a term originally coined in English to represent "the new") now gives you the less-new news.

Tie that to the fact that newspaper audience sizes, ad rates, and income from classifieds are all trending downward, and it doesn't take a genius to figure out what will happen to newspapers. They are going away. That's not me being hyperbolic: I'm not saying they'll all disappear completely. Newsprint will survive in some fashion, just as radio survived by transmogrifying into an all-music format. But for comics — and this is key — for comics, the fundamental economic and distribution system which made them possible within newspapers — that of print syndication — will assuredly fail. It will fail because syndication relied on the existence of many and directly-competing newspapers, of which there are fewer each passing year. Yes, newspapers will survive in some format, somehow, somewhere. But print syndication will not survive in a way that works for comic strips and panels. Sadly, it's already largely failing for them.

So it's understandable that newspaper cartooning should be despondent. By the measure of the corporations that distributed, printed and profited from comics in the past...the print syndication model is unsalvageable, going forward. And there is no large-scale, corporate Web model on the horizon to replace it.

But just because that large-scale model is failing, doesn't mean that cartooning — or careers in cartooning — are doomed to fail as well. My friends, cartooning is not only surviving... it is flourishing on the Web. Like a forest floor after a massive fire... a huge number of unique, compelling strips are popping up all over the place! Look at Achewood, Copper, Kukuburi, Diesel Sweeties, Dinosaur Comics, xkcd, Penny Arcade, Dr. McNinja, Girl Genius, Goats, Octopus Pie, Scary Go Round, or Wondermark! These are amazing, variegated displays of comic artistry. The likes of which I guarantee you have not seen in your local paper. And they're just a sampling of the variety I could list out if I had an hour.

And over the last 10 years, I've seen two-to-four dozen Webcomics go from hobbies to part-time jobs, and from part-time jobs to full-time careers. I'd even hazard to say that more careers have been created in Webcomics over the last 10 years than all three major syndicates combined. Which, for a nascent comics distribution system, is pretty amazing.

And it's a big part of why we wrote this book: It was our attempt to take all our mistakes, failed attempts, lessons learned, and course corrections from the last decade of experimentation and hand 'em to the next generation of cartoonists. To help others learn from and hopefully leapfrog our mistakes. To show them what works, what works well, and what works really well. And, gratifyingly, the book really seems to have resonated!

We were so happy to hear at Emerald City ComicCon how the book has really filled a need for cartoonists and illustrators. And, surprising to us, even musicians, painters, sculptors and artists who work online. (...that, we assuredly did NOT expect!)

So a huge 'thank you!' to everyone who picked up a copy, or who e-mailed the four of us with (no joke) far kinder messages than I ever received even for Sheldon. It's exciting for me, as a cartoonist, to see the small and large impacts the book is already having for artists all over the world. It's one of the most gratifying things I've ever done.

[EDITED: I should've mentioned... it looks like we'll be going into a second printing, though I don't know the dates 'n times. Fingers crossed, the second printing will be out by San Diego Comic-Con.]

Shalaina
Shalaina



Posts: 143

Registered:
Nov 2006
Re: Sold Out! (Score: 1)
posted Saturday, May 17, 2008 - 12:21 AM (#42745)

I'm not surprised How to Make Webcomics has sold out - it offers lots and lots of important information AND is fun to read. :) I wish the same could be said for all non-fiction books.


Locked profile
the_Siliconopolitan
the_Siliconopolitan



Posts: 33

Registered:
Jan 2008
Re: Sold Out! (Score: 1)
posted Saturday, May 17, 2008 - 02:23 AM (#42748)

1) Congratulations! I'm really happy you've had such success. I must admit to having been a bit worried when the new Halfpixel was announced. Simply because there'd been so much 'aggro' (is that the word?) about Kurtz. I was honestly worried it would reflect badly on three cartoonists that I liked very much. I'm glad to know that my prejudice was put to shame.

2) I know you're not likely to have the time, but reading your comments about the history of comics, knowing you have two degrees in that subject and recently seeing Sheldon quoted on Language Log (without hattip, so I must conclude that Liberman is a regular reader), made me think that it would be fun to see you as a contributor over there.

3) I think it's interesting how you anglophone's haven't really had a culture of graphic novels or 'bandes dessinées' for lack of a better word. Just yesterday I was pleasantly surprised to find that one of my favourite childhood stories/series had an entry on WP [wikipedia.org] (I also found that there appears to be fanfic for it - in French, though). That article included a very revealing analysis: " A reviewer for the Times Literary Supplement found Alix singularly lacking in humour compared to Asterix, effectively killing prospects for continued publication in a market not yet acculurated to the wider Franco-Belgian tradition." That aspect of cartooning seems to have only really come to the US very late. I'm not familiar enough with that market, myself, to know many examples - I can actually only think of Maus and Bone pre-webcomics.

4) What is your take on/advice to the 'old hands' in cartooning? The current 'middling' names in print who stand a big risk of getting dropped - unlike Dilbert, Doonesbury, Peanuts &c? Do they have a chance to transition to the web and still make a living?

5) In that same vein, do you by any chance read Jimmy Johnson's blog [arloandjanis.com] (now that it's gone to actually being a blog rather than a neverending webpage ...)? He was the one who first made me aware of webcomics - and I found Sheldon through the Ucomics once I realised Arlo & Janis was on the web (zap! pow!).


Locked profile
Kamazar
Kamazar



Posts: 34

Registered:
Mar 2008
Re: Sold Out! (Score: 1)
posted Saturday, May 17, 2008 - 06:28 AM (#42749)

Hopefully, when comics make the transition from newspaper to web, they'll keep drawing it on paper. Not that I'm anti-enviromentalist, but it's just not the same if someone draws on a Wacom.

I would've been sure to get one of those books. I would've pre-ordered it, but cartooning's not my thing. I'd say you've made an impact with cartoonists and non-cartoonists alike.

Nice little speech, too.


--
A little rudeness and disrespect can elevate a meaningless interaction to a battle of wills and add drama to an otherwis
Locked profile
Shalaina
Shalaina



Posts: 143

Registered:
Nov 2006
Re: Sold Out! (Score: 1)
posted Saturday, May 17, 2008 - 06:43 AM (#42750)
In Response to Kamazar (#42749):

I'm sure that'll be the case for many artists... if simply due to the fact that - as Dave and the others pointed out in How to Make Webcomics - selling originals is an additional source of income.

Oh and I'm not a cartoonist myself, but reading all those background infoabout what it takes to be a webcomic artist was still very interesting and enlightening.


Locked profile
jynksie


From: New England (NH)

Posts: 2

Registered:
May 2008
Re: Sold Out! (Score: 1)
posted Saturday, May 17, 2008 - 09:31 AM (#42753)

I got one just in time then ! I am about 100 pages into it and its great. If you aren't sure you know what your doing, these first 100 pages really give you the guidance you need.


Locked profile www
cmurrin
cmurrin



Posts: 34

Registered:
Jan 2008
Re: Sold Out! (Score: 1)
posted Saturday, May 17, 2008 - 10:50 AM (#42754)

Congratulations. The book definitely deserves all the attention and accolades!


--
Chris Murrin

http://www.mxyzptlk.com

Locked profile www
ryos


Posts: 9

Registered:
Feb 2008
Re: Sold Out! (Score: 1)
posted Saturday, May 17, 2008 - 12:44 PM (#42756)

This is too funny not to share.

While I was reading this post, right in the middle of the part where Dave talks about newspapers dying, there came a knocking at my door. It was a nice kid representing the "Boys and Girls Club", which apparently is doing a lot of good trying to keep kids out of gangs and out of trouble. He said that, if I try the Daily Herald for a month (for $9.50), the paper would give $5 to the club.

I said I didn't want the paper, but I'd gladly give the $10 directly to the club instead. He said he wasn't allowed to accept direct donations and would "probably get in trouble" if they found he had, so I sent him away disappointed.

Think of it. I declined to contribute to an organization that I wanted to support because, if I did, it would mean I'd have to fuss with a print newspaper. Print is dying indeed.

In other news, I'm happy your book is doing so well! I didn't buy one because I can't draw to save my life, but I'm glad so many others have. I hope it leads to the further success of webcomics. (BTW, does the book say anything about RSS feeds? There are more than a few comics I would have started following, but didn't because they lacked syndication...XML syndication, that is.)


Locked profile
Discussion: Sold Out! | Login/Create an Account | 7 comments
Threshold:  Locked
The Fine Print: The above comments are owned by whoever posted them. The Sheldon site is not responsible for them. However, if you suspect a post has been spammed by a person or 'bot, or that illegal of offensive posts need removal, contact your friendly neighborhood cartoonist.

forums

welcome! please login or register.

 

 
Copyright © 1998-2008, Dave Kellett. Privacy Policy.