Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Beanworld 3.5: Tales of the Beanworld

The best place to start a long story is at the beginning.



So...


After Beanworld Book Three: Remember Here When You Are There! I started to work on the next original graphic novel in the series: Something More!


Last summer, and all conventions since, I've been handing out free little fold-up mini-preview of Book Four. Readers of the preview find out that the next book has stuff in it about the mysterious Orbulators. The last page implies, well, something more.


Those that understand Heyoka-speak understand that her answer to Proffy's whispered "what?" is the exact opposite--in other words this.




The "Asylum Story" as it was known at the time was a bit of an oddity.
(As a minor historical aside--in addition to the explanations in the link above, I also had Marvel Comics' mid-decade bully tactics used after their acquisition of Hero's World distributors on my mind. )




Rob Liefeld's Maximum Press went away and the color Beanworld story was never reprinted except for a very low print run ashcan comic that was printed from photocopies of the original art. That black & white ashcan with the green cover was titled "While We Were Eating." I'd sell them off of my table over the years and they recently sold out at last. (As I was reworking the material I noticed for the first time that pages 10 & 11 are flipped in the ashcan!)




There was actually some question between close friends of the Beanworld whether or not the Asylum Story was "in continuity" or not.


It is.


Proof positive of this is on display in "Here There" page 50.


Yep, right above the dessicated remains of Der Kveen are the artifacts from the last page of "Eating."


So as I was moving along with Something More! I recognized that I had some explaining to do to the majority of contemporary Beanworld readers who had little to no idea of these previous, almost forgotten story points.


My idea was to reprint it as a black & white stand alone comic.

I pitched it to Dark Horse when I was up there last summer.

In that meeting, brainstorming between Beanworld editor, Diana Schutz; Dark Horse VP of Marketing, Micha Hershman; VP of New Business Development, Michael Martens; and Marketing Director, Jeremy Adkins turned my single comic idea into a Yokai-style color volume.




It totally makes sense.


It takes all the loose pieces of color work and puts them all together in one volume that can shelve with all the other hardcover books.


I would have never thought of that.


This volume takes all of the above material and through flashbacks twines it together into one new story with a beginning, a middle, and an end. There are 12 brand new new pages featuring just about everyone.


The "Asylum Story" has been revised and reworked and recolored.

Its new title is "While We Wuz Eatin'!" which is how Mr. Spook would have really said it.

It's a direct lead-in to Book Four.




Somewhere along the way, Diana started calling it "Book 3.5" and the name stuck.



More as I know more.


Larry






10 comments:

John R. Platt said...

Consider is pre-sold!

(And yay, now I can finally get rid of my old Asylum issues!)

Allen Varney said...

I never even knew those stories existed. How exciting to have them all suddenly float into view!

The late Don Thompson always objected to the comic-book lingo "wuz"; he always wondered how the writer would pronounce "was" differently.

At some point on the blog or elsewhere I'd love to see a diagram of Prof. Garbanzo's workshop with all those different chambers labelled and referenced.

Brian Jacoby from Secret Headquarters in Tallahassee Florida said...

WHEN???????

David Akers said...

At Stumptown, didn't you also say it would include the Holiday book?

And any chance it might also include the bits from Giant Size Mini Comic?

BTW, thanks again for the new pieces of artwork! I can't wait to get them framed like my Beanish piece from a couple years ago.

-David

bob said...

Excellent, I look forward to it (partly because I can't seem to find my copy of the mini-comic version).

Don't know if it's feasible, but I'd love to see this include a cover gallery of the original 21-issue run (including some of the backcovers). Some of those used colour really well, especially #4 and #15.

And I agree it would be a good place to include stray stuff like the Giant Size Mini Comic pages.

Desert Scribe said...

Can't wait for this! I've been a Beanworld fan since TotB #1 back in the early '80s, and I've enjoyed the hardcovers as they've come out. I've also introduced my wife to Beanworld, and she loves it, too. I'll tell my local store to put aside a copy for me.

Unknown said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Unknown said...

We missed you here at C2E2 this year. It would have been fun to have attended Stumptown this year. I would have definitely been at your panel and cheered with gusto when you announced the details of Book 3.5. Can't wait to get my hands on it.

Larry Marder said...

Thanks for all the enthusiasm folks.


The supplemental bits of material being suggested here and there (TOTB covers, Giant-Size Mini, Heyoka, Goofy Service Doodle Books) will have to wait for a deluxe "Art of Larry Marder" coffee table type book.

Dark Horse does those really, really well. The Denis Kitchen book is up for an Eisner this year--it's truly great.

Neither Beanworld or I have quite earned the right to have such a book published....yet. As rabidly hardcore and wildly enthusiastic as our fan base is, it's still small compared to other readerships.

That said, Beanworld IS growing in small increments and I'm very comfortable with that growth.

Anyway as readers o this blog know--there is an unbelievable wealth of material in my archives and so when the day for an artbook DOES come--the book WILL be a knock-out.

Whenever that might be.

shawnesey o'hern said...

i know what is going on on the cover of 3.5... hint ... what do you not see on the ground in this picture?