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Badger is coming

IT’S Coming!

News - March 2006

Went to Vegas day after Superbowl to celebrate 11th wedding anniversary with the beautiful and charming Madeline.  While there, met with James Hudnall, (www.thehud.com) whose website is a beacon of light for those seeking good writing and informed opinion.  James gave me several discs he’d made, labeled “lounge music.”  In fact, they were all jazz with a lot of Mel Torme, Jo Stafford, Vic Damone, and others of the swing era.  We saw The Fab Four at the Aladdin, an uncanny Beatles recreation act that was note perfect.  Before the show, I leaned over and said to Madeline, “Be nice if Ed Sullivan introduces them.”  Seconds later Ed Sullivan appeared.  He was very funny.  The Fab Four did the early Beatles in the heavy dos, suits, and skinny ties.  They reappeared in their psychedelic Sgt. Pepper gear for Sgt. Pepper and points north.  The show was far too short, and I could have used a lot more Sgt. Pepper, White Album, and Abbey Road.  Naturally they have a website: www.thefabfour.com.

 

             Set off for Madison with Kim Yee (www.karatewestinc.com) in Kim’s Element, a tall box on wheels.  It had snowed heavily and we foolishly made our way on Fourteen East, a lonely two-lane blacktop that winds among desolate prairie.  We gave up and headed north to Wyoming to pick up Interstate 80.  The misfire probably set us back an hour.  Interstate 80 was littered with trashed semis until we got to Nebraska.

             Got to Omaha, dropped in sans notification at Joe Comstock’s house.  Joe and his lovely wife Meredith didn’t bat an eye when I asked if we could crash there.  Joe showed me the bronze he had created based on Barry Smith’s Conan drawing.  It takes your breath away.  Joe is the equal of any star toy sculptor working today.  I hope Dark Horse picks this up. 

Joe's ConanConan Back

Twenty below in Madison.  Mom was not happy in her new digs.  They are smaller than her old digs.  Aging is a process of giving up: physical ability, space, material possessions.  The nursing home is among the best in the world, and the staff are competent and caring.  Except for the inevitable thieves who somehow slip through the screening process and lift anything they can take.  They stole my father’s gold chain and other pieces of jewelry.  They stole the Theracane.  There is little left to steal—it has been dispensed to the children or delivered into safe hands. 

             Naturally Mom wanted a cigarette.  She’s been smoking since she was eighteen.  Since she is always on oxygen and it was twelve degrees below zero outside, this was quite a production.  I went to the third floor nurse’s station where the cigs are kept under lock and key.  I had been there when the nursing staff confronted Mom about her smokes, and asked her to sign a waiver absolving them of all responsibility.  Lighting up could mean the Big Casino.  Jimmy Cagney prancing atop that burning gas refinery.  “Top of the world, Ma!”  The nurse’s station told me they’d sent the Carltons down to the Health Center.  Health Center is a euphemism for the Last Stop.  Mom dons her faux lambs wool coat.  Her sparrow-like hands are too frail to force themselves through the wrist elastic, so I reach in from the outside and guide her arm through the cuff like a tug boat.  Then the black Russian hat which resembles a sea anemone.  Sunglasses.  We switch Mom from the stationary oxygen unit to her portable scuba tank.  Slowly, slowly I push the wheelchair through the carpeted halls.

             Through the doors.  Freezing.  The Alberta Clipper’s in full force.  Gotta have that smoke.  I remove the breathing tubes from her nostrils, turn off the oxygen, step back into the foyer to light the cigarette, step back out and hand it to her.  A constant memory—driving from Mitchell to Sioux Falls, South Dakota for temple every Sunday in the old Dodge station wagon, Mom chain-smoking Kents.  She takes three puffs before reality sets in.  “All right.  That’s enough.”

News - May 2006

Oyez, oyez, oyez!  Let all herein know that the threatened comics have arrived at www.bigheadpress.com!  They went live May 1, in honor of International Workers’ Day, even though nobody was working. 

             THE HOOK!

             THE ARCHITECT!

             ROSWELL, TEXAS!

             Up now.  L. Neil Smith wrote Roswell, I wrote the other two. 

 

             A big comic week.  Nick came over Friday night to discuss the future of Obsidian and other projects.  If Obsidian happens, the other projects would go by the wayside.  But if the other projects happen first, Nick gets sucked in and Obsidian goes by the wayside.

             Saturday night came the rest of the group: Pete, Jeremy, and Gabe.  Pete brought Chicken.  Everybody brought beer.  I got drunk and handed out advice.  Pete challenged me to demonstrate my karate skills on Gabe.  I tried to put a wrist lock on him.  Gabe’s wrists are four inches in diameter.  Might as well try to put a wristlock on an oak.  I put my hands around his neck and started kneeing him in the balls.  “Why would you knee me in the balls?” he asked, stunned.  “Because I couldn’t get the wrist lock!”

             Whereupon he picked me up and threw me into the one remaining Eames chair which crumbled like an imploded casino.  That’s twelve hundred bucks he owes me.   

             Jeremy showed his new cover for Rogue Lawman (www.jdelagarza.blogspot.com). 

             On Sunday came Jared and Kevin from Denver.  I met Jared two years ago when I was teaching comic book theory (!) at Rocky Mountain College of Art and Design.  Comes up here with the same endless heroic epic on which he’d been working for two years.  No sketching, no life-drawing, just this endless heroic epic with blocks and blocks of exposition, courtesy the writer Kevin.  I got drunk and handed out advice. 

Mike hands out advice

Mike hands out free advice

Dear Friends and Patrons,
             David Miller here. Publisher of
The Writer's Block series. At one point I had solicited for a Writer's Block trade paperback collecting the first 2 issues of the series and the as-yet unpublished third issue featuring the works of Peter David, Gail Simone and Fabian Nicieza.
             I was very happy with the finished product and looked forward to it's publication. Unfortunately, initial orders meant that I would have to publish the trade at a loss (not a huge loss, but a loss just the same).  After weighing all options I cancelled the Writer's Block trade.
             I apologize to everyone that took the time to order this special product and have wanted to make it up to you ever since. Now, I can. Advances in print technology has made it feasible to do a specific order print run of a standard comic. So I've decided to come out with a third issue of the Writer's Block to make available the unpublished work.
The Writer's Block 2006 presents the unpublished work that David, Simone and Nicieza did for the series.
             You can order the book directly from
David Milller Studios by following the
below link:

http://mysite.verizon.net/vze80er1/davidmillerstudios/id26.html
             I thank everyone who's supported
The Writer's Block in the past and look
forward to your comments on this third issue.

All my very best,
David Miller