Click Here To Join The Celebration!

Outside the Box

Pete Stathis sets the tone for our latest Book Quarterly.

 
Published: Jun 25, 2008

Give a boy a comic book and he'll read it for a day. But what happens if you teach him how to make one? If he's lucky — and mighty talented — he'll grow up to be like Pete Stathis, our Book Quarterly cover illustrator and well-known Philly graphic novelist.

We approached Stathis, whose Evenfall series has just become a Webcomic (check evenfallcomic.com every Monday, Wednesday and Friday for updates), with just one request: Make up a story. Our parameters were simple — it has to be set in Philly, and it should relate, somehow, to reading.

The rest was up to Stathis, who, it turns out, is a freaking mastermind; within a week he showed up at my office bearing three sketched-out pitches (because, as he rightly points out, "Comics can't really be described adequately with words alone; they're a unique language with their own alphabet"). The concept we chose is the loosest interpretation of our must-be-about-reading rule, but we dug it because it tells a story, and lets you, dear readers, make the connection. (Plus, it's totally meta and reminds us of A-ha's "Take on Me" video.)

We're honored to display Stathis' work in our honor boxes, well, because it looks pretty sweet. But also because graphic novels don't always get their due in the lit world. That's why, along with the usual slew of fiction and nonfiction reviews in these pages, we've included a roundup of recently released graphic novels.

ADVERTISEMENT
Search Restaruants

It's also why our BQ feature this time around focuses on Jane Golden, Sherman Fleming and the Mural Arts Program's latest endeavor: collaborating with youth on a mural and a comic book, conceived and created by kids who've got something to say. These kids are not all that different from Stathis, who started drawing at a very young age. "I still have a comic I did when I was 6," he says. "It's a couple of pages of the Super Friends rescuing a train from a tornado. I always liked to make believe with my drawings."

If you teach a kid how to create something unique, who knows what'll come of it?

 

Comments

Be the first to comment on this article.


All reader comments are subject to our Terms of Use. By clicking Post Comment, you acknowledge that you have reviewed and agree to these Terms.

Name
please enter your name
Email (will not be published)
please enter a valid email
Comment
please enter a comment
Enter the security code on the right in the textbox below.
Security Code
please enter the code
Join the City Paper Mailing List
 

Also In This Week's Cover Story Section

Comic Verite
by Patrick Rapa and Sam Tremble

Graphic Jam
by Dominic Mercier

Non-Fiction Reviews
Fiction Reviews
Recent Comments
Classifieds
Advertisements
 
Search Restaurants


search restaurants by name
search by neighborhood
Search
search by cuisine
Search Movies
title
theater

Search
Search Jobs
search for:
within:   of  
more jobs
(use zip or city, state)
Search
"Great vision without great people is irrelevant."
—Jim Collins, Author,
"Good to Great"
In Partnership with JobCircle
Search Events
Search For:
Category:
Search
Search DJ Nights
Date:
Search:
Genre:
Search
Search Classifieds
Category:
Keywords: Search

Search Real Estate
Search Happy Hours

ALL | MON | TUE | WED | THU | FRI | SAT | SUN

or

LOCATION:

ADVERTISEMENT Search Restaruants