That song came on my playlist at Rhapsody tonight. Shit, I haven’t heard that sing since I was a senior in High School. I hated the Sugarcubes, but the goth-boi I was going out at the time, loved them–and I just tolerated them until they grew on me. Then I heard Treat Em Right, by Chubb Rock! OMG – that song was playing at the MEPS station in Brooklyn- the day I shipped out for boot camp in Orlando. Needless to say, Rhapsody is now off. >_< I have a hard enough time dealing with being 37, I don’t need to add sporadic memories of my youth to my cocktail of ego-trauma.
Wow! I made the list of creators-bios at the new Class Comics web site [Zowie, the front page is 100% SAFE FOR WORK!] 0_0.

I know this reveals what an incredible dork I am because I’m jazzed about something this silly…but having my name up there with creators I admire is important to me—I’m appreciative of the gesture, and grateful for the opportunity that Class still leaves open to me as a creator. I’d publish with them again in a heartbeat—now if I could write something that their audience might be into.
My last submission to them crashed and burned: my chapters tend to run 32 to 36 pages long; this is great for graphic novels but not for serial pamphlets…also, I had no artist attached at the time and so they couldn’t give my opus the green light. And yeah—it was an opus—over six issues.
Diplomatic Immunity always sells well for me at cons!

That’s right, Chibi Cam and Felicia…
never thought you’d see that, did ya?!
Speaking of conventions…
I’m curious to know, in light of the Iris Print royalty-check bouncing fiasco and not contacting their GN creators with any promise of a check or updates–if Yaoi Jamboree are still going to allow the company to sell at the venue. R.W. has asked her fans not to support Iris Print by purchasing her novel A Strong and Sudden Thaw, but I’m on the fence about what to do.
On one hand I would love to say– don’t buy my manga from Iris…on the other, I’m just ready and willing to accept that I wont see a cent from any future sales of Only Words, and so it’s time to just move on.
















