Now and Other Dreams collects a decades worth of Daryl Seitchick's artfully intimate short comics tales.
| softcover | 200+ pages | Black & White (w/ some full color in "Caryatid" from 2018) |
“Playful, confident experiments from one of the form’s more singular voices. Seitchik’s cartooning is always a pleasure to read.” — Michael Deforge
“Reading Daryl’s comics is like walking through the woods alone. You’re struck by the majesty of it all, you’re lost, and then a wind blows through to guide you home. Whenever I feel like I’m forgetting what art is, or what it means to me, I just need to look at this collection to remember.” —Tillie Walden
ON SPECIAL
You Are Not a Guest is a very nice edition, collecting of Leela Corman's lushly painted, water color, short comics, beautifully printed on paper that has the look and feel of watercolor paper (including the cover, which is printed on extra stock). It provides an experience approximating that of reading a bound set of the original art. Nice.
| softcover | 72 pages | 8" x 10" | full color |
"In You Are Not A Guest, Leela Corman is in a no holds barred wrestling match against Trauma set to the tune of an antifascist punk band. She leads us into the heart of her personal tragedies: the death of her daughter, and her family’s history in the Holocaust, but in not sparing the reader, she gives us her power. These are 'wounds that never heal', but she provides us with a roadmap of the changed place beyond sorrow, a cosmic song that reaches beyond time and space to comfort us. I am deeply grateful for her fearless work." — Lauren Weinstein
"Corman's stories show us how contending with history and loss can heal as well as it can haunt. She gracefully dances us through past and present, revealing how inextricable pain can be from the full experience of being alive." — Vanessa Davis
"Leela Corman is an exemplary tour guide through these labyrinthian stories of sub and hyper consciousness, the deep humanity of her voice holding us safe amid the dreamlike beauty and horror of her artwork. Her stories navigate some of the darkest territories of the human condition with love and courage and a wicked gallows humor." — Thalia Zedek, musician, Thalia Zedek Band, E, and Come
The amazingly prolific, self-publishing comics maker (and former Comics Workbook Magazine editor), Andrew White presents comics biographes of three of the most important figures of modernism – Virginia Woolf, Gertrde Stein and Georgia O'Keefe. In it's close to 300 pages – with roughly 100 pages devoted to each of its subjects – Together & Apart works to synthesize a form of comics moderism out of its subjects' respective approaches to literature and art. Much food for thought – and for the eyes.
| hardcover | 296 pages | 5 3/4" x 8 1/2" | black & white |
“Together & Apart at first glance appears light and airy, but a hundred pages in, you realize how dense this ghostly book actually is — how much ‘there is there!’ White draws, in his best drawings to date, sensations in and around the text of three great artist-writers.” — Dash Shaw
“White’s amazing work does exactly what Woolf’s, Stein’s and O’Keeffe’s work does - create real, alive experiences of reading and seeing. This is not illustration or narration, it is the world itself, drawn on pages. He joins his three subjects in making comics ‘stories’ that defy simple explanations and reward close looking.” — Warren Craghead
Feather is a lushly rendered pantomime comic book. Through it's vibrantly printed, full color pages, the images do the talking in telling this tale of parenting, domesticity, constraint and self-discovery.
| saddle-stiched softcover | 24 pages | 7" x 9" | full color |
“Tyler Cohen’s Feather shook me, leaving me feeling like I had just witnessed an unsettling dream. She creates an atmosphere that is equal parts love, beauty, and terror. This book is beautiful and strange, uncanny.”
- Leela Corman
“Such a heartfelt, poignant comic about connecting threads, breaking free and letting go. Quiet, thoughtful, intricate, and colorful — I love getting lost in Tyler’s world.”
- Rina Ayuyang