About admin

I am a journalistic writer for UK-based animation magazine Cereal:Geek, and a budding writer of children's fiction, and comic books. I am married to Leanne Hannah, pop-art and comic book illustrator http://www.leannehannah.com

Professional Comic Colorist Needed

I am looking for a professional colorist for a paid coloring gig starting around July/August. Pay will be negotiated. Preferably you will have some professional published credits in your portfolio.

The first project is a wild west fantasy world. We are looking at a minimum of 22 pages.

The second is a high fantasy manga which I want to test with colors as opposed to gray tones.

Before contacting me, make sure you do the following:

Please introduce yourself and tell me about your experience.
Please show me your most recent work.
Please do not point me to a photobucket or flickr. Either attach your best work to your email, or point me to a blog or deviantart account.
Please only contact me be email. Do not reply to this post.

It’s amazing the amount of people out there that just send a single sentence email with a link. If you can’t be bothered TRYING then neither can I. Sorry, but if you want a chance to be on a paying project that will look good in your portfolio then get some manners and reassure me why I should want to take a chance with you. Whoever does get this job won’t need any of the above advice.

New Collaboration with Brian Brinlee Has Begun!

Recently I posted about a project of mine that needed an artist for a collaboration. I was lucky enough to receive portfolios from many talented people. One in particular caught my eye. When you meet someone who has that fire and enthusiasm, coupled with talent and experience, you know that you just have to do something together. However, I was realizing the project I had in mind was too close to my chest to not retain 100% creative control. So, I asked that artist if he would be willing to instead do a new project of his choosing and make it a true collaboration. The result is that I’ve found an artist and he’s found a writer.

Brian Brinlee has been a penciler for the past few years on an indy title called Sky Pirates of Valendor by Jolly Rogue Studios. Sky Pirates recently completed its first series and is now available as a collected trade, as well as an anthology. While Brian is currently working on the second series, he has also illustrated for the Comicbook Artists Guild in their Iconic anthology as well as several covers, pin-ups, and books for various self-publishers. As fellow fans of the fantasy genre Brian and I look forward to bringing a new world to life in comic form in the near future. Check out Brian’s beautiful work over at DeviantArt.

Once Upon a Caper – Issue 0

Print Edition now available through Once Upon A Caper.com along with free PDF version.
Once Upon a Super Hero is a modern day fairy tale in spandex and a cape.

On her eleventh birthday in 1954, Russian born Sovena (pronounced “sov-eena”) mysteriously gained godlike super powers. Since that day, she has dedicated these amazing abilities to protecting the innocent and defending the world from all manner of super villainy as the hero Sovena Red. However, there was one small catch…

Read an 8 page preview of the amazing first issue of Once Upon a Super Hero.

“I enjoyed it a lot! Interesting character, nice art. It’s a good start and I’m looking forward to seeing where you go with it.” – Christy Marx (Animation, Comics and Video Game writer), October 21

How old was Holmes?

The following are my thoughts after reading a thorough and convincing Sherlock Holmes time line available online via it’s author, Brad Keefauver at Sherlock Peoria.net. Mr. Keefauver has done a sterling job researching, studying and applying solid deductive reasoning that I can stand by. But, why, I hear you ask, do I want to know how old Sherlock Holmes was? Why do I want to know what order (and what year) his cases took place? Because, quite simply, the order of his cases seems at a glance to be straight forward, but in actuality the order is a confusing puzzle missing many important pieces and some that don’t seem to fit at all!

Sherlock Holmes: By Leanne HannahAny devoted Sherlokian knows the basic outline of the events in Holmes’ life. He was active as a detective assisting Scotland Yard throughout the 1880s and 1890s together with his crime-fighting partner, Dr. Watson. Somewhere along the line Holmes defeated his greatest enemy, Professor Moriarty and the two were thought to have perished in the process. Then, after a couple of years absence, Holmes returned to London and took on new cases. He retired and was then called back into action for his final adventure to serve his country with the start of World War I. So, if his last thrilling adventure was after his retirement, how old was he exactly? The game is afoot!

If Holmes retired in 1903 to become a beekeeper and live in Sussex Downs, how old was he? The Old Age Pensions Act of 1908 was designed for persons over the age of 70, which tells us what the expectation for a retirement age was in Britain at the time. Sir John Tenniel retired in 1901 when he was 81 years old (he died aged 94 in 1914), yet he clearly retired late in life. It is unlikely that Holmes was anywhere near as old, primarily due to his coming out of retirement to handle the case of the Lion’s Mane in 1907, and again in 1912 prior to His Last Bow in which he spent two years undercover in Chicago and completed the case in 1914. The nature of the case and his activities posing as an Irish thug indicate the need for vitality and strength which suggest Holmes could not have been convincing at any older than his 50s. It is hard to believe that he could have retired in his 30s, brilliant detective though he was. So, retiring extremely early in his 40s seems more acceptable.

If we assume that Holmes was in his mid fifties, let’s say 55 years old by the time of his last canonical appearance in 1914 (His Last Bow), then that would have made him 44 years old at the time of his retirement in 1903. Going back further to his peak in 1891 (before his supposed death at the Reichenbach Falls) he would have been 32 years old. This also indicates that he began his career in 1881 at just 22 years old, fresh out of university. This would make his birth year 1859, right between the Crimean and American Civil War.

So why did Holmes retire so early? After ten years of cases and rising fame, Holmes went up against his most worthy adversary, the brilliant Professor Moriarty. Holmes acknowledged that ridding the world of a criminal so powerful and dangerous would make any further cases trivial in comparison. Holmes nearly dies as a result of this adventure and vanishes for almost three years, believed dead by most, including Watson. The truth of his deception, to protect Watson and himself, is revealed at last when Holmes returns to London to investigate a high profile murder (again, I’m going by Mr. Keefauver’s time line). Holmes spends the rest of the decade continuing to solve mysteries before finally tiring of the “game” and developing new interests.

I believe Holmes genuinely became bored after hitting his peak with the destruction of Moriarty’s criminal empire and the affects of his travels and absence from England caused his outlook and direction to shift. By 1903, at just 44 years old, this exceptional man officially retires from his work as a detective and makes a new life for himself in the country as a beekeeper.

Why did I spend a blog on this? Elementary my dear readers!

Zombie Weekend

Rod and Leanne Hannah with Rob Zombie, Dec 5, 2009

Our friend Rob Zombie is working on a new comic project called “What Ever Happened to Baron Von Shock,” and my wife, Leanne Hannah is in the editor role once again. Leanne worked with Rob on his Spookshow comic series for Image in 2003-2004 which featured many iconic characters from his twisted imagination, including many named after his songs. Comic Book Resources recently put up an article on Rob’s El Superbeasto animated film, the trade publication of Rob Zombie’s Spookshow and his new Von Shock project. Leanne was quoted a few times. Check it out here:

http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=article&id=23501

But something much, much cooler was meeting Rob in Washington DC before his last performance of his 2009 tour. Rob took great care of us and spoiled us rotten with VIP tickets at the 9:30 Club where he was playing. While the support acts, Captain Clegg and the Night Creatures, along with the Nek-Romantics were great, Rob blew everything out of the water with a huge performance for such a small venue. It kicked off with an excerpt from the El Superbeasto animated film with the titular hero and the his ass kicking sister, Suzi X (voiced by Rob’s beautiful and talented wife, Sheri Moon Zombie). Special guests included a giant Marvin, and later a giant Reaper / Creeper. The true test of my fandom is that I can’t name the latter character if it in fact is a character. Sorry Rob!

Here’s looking forward to Rob’s new comic, “What Ever Happened to Baron Von Shock”.