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NYCC ’17: Image Unveil “Analog,” “Infidel,” and “Bingo Love”

By | October 5th, 2017
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At the New York Comic Con, Image Comics announced three new diverse titles for 2018: “Analog,” “Infidel,” and “Bingo Love.”

“Analog” is an ongoing series from writer Gerry Duggan (“Deadpool,” “Guardians of the Galaxy”), artist David O’Sullivan (“The Crimson Blade”) and colorist Jordie Bellaire (“Moon Knight”) that takes place in a world where the Internet has fallen. Mass doxxing has compromised basic security, and now people, corporations and governments print confidential emails to be delivered in briefcases by armed couriers known as “ledger men.” The comic will follow a ledger man named Jack McGinnis, an alcoholic former US intelligence officer.

Next is “Infidel,” a horror series written by former Vertigo editor Pornsak Pichetshote with illustrator Aaron Campbell (“The Shadow,” “Felix Leiter”) and colorist José Villarrubia (“Cuba: My Revolution”). Described as a chillingly relevant “political horror” story akin to the movie Get Out, it tells the story of an American Muslim woman who moves into a building inhabited by creatures that feed on xenophobia. It will showcase a “diverse, multi-ethnic cast where character backgrounds affect the plot twists and pacing as the story unfolds from issue to issue.”

Lastly, there is “Bingo Love,” a graphic novel about Hazel Johnson and Mari McCray, two African-American girls who fall in love as children in 1963 only to be separated by their families. The story picks up in the present, when both women, now with families of their own, reunite at a church bingo. Written by Tee Franklin (“Love is Love”), the book is a reflection of her own life as a black woman who came out after being married, and is aimed at informing young readers that “happily-ever-after’s aren’t only for straight people. If Disney’s Carl and Ellie can grow old together, so can Mari and Hazel.” The book was drawn by Jenn St-Onge (“Jem and The Holograms”), colored by Joy San (“They Draw & Cook”), and was funded via Kickstarter earlier this year.

“Bingo Love” will be released in February, in time for Valentine’s Day. “Infidel” will start in March, and “Analog” will be out sometime next year. You can find all three press releases from Image below.

DUGGAN AND O’SULLIVAN ANNOUNCE NEW SERIES ANALOG

NEW YORK, NY, 10/05/2017 — Bestselling writer Gerry Duggan (THE INFINITE HORIZON, THE LAST CHRISTMAS) and artist David O’Sullivan team up for an all-new ongoing series in ANALOG.

“David O’Sullivan is lushly rendering a world that is chaotic, beautiful and repulsive, sometimes on the same page,” said Duggan. “He and Jordie Bellaire are the perfect collaborators to leap over this post-fascist tale of the great crash of the information age.”

ANALOG is the future our society is failing to prepare for. The basic security of the internet crumbles after devastating attacks on the internet result in mass doxxing. People, corporations and governments are all affected and the world is changed overnight. Secrets once entrusted to encrypted emails are now printed on paper, put into briefcases and sent around the world in the hands of discreetly armed couriers. Jack McGinnis is a hard-drinking, hard headed former member of the US intelligence community who now earns a living as a “ledger man”.

O’Sullivan added: “Gerry creates a world where all hope is lost and yet a glimmer exists in the very person who tipped it into the abyss. He makes you care about humanity when it’s at its lowest. There’s also lots of violence, the main character is essentially a walking punch bag!”

ANALOG is set to launch from Image Comics in 2018.

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INFIDEL—A NEW HORROR SERIES THAT EXPLORES ISLAMOPHOBIA

Bestselling writer and former Vertigo editor Pornsak Pichetshote and artist Aaron Campbell give horror a new name in the forthcoming INFIDEL set to launch from Image Comics this March 2018.

Rife with political undertones, the new series will explore Islamophobia through a haunting and chilling story about one American Muslim woman and her multi-ethnic neighbors who move into a building haunted by creatures that feed on xenophobia.

“I’m a huge fan of horror and was really interested in a horror story that more accurately reflected the multi-racial world we live in and the fears that seem to come with it,” said Pichetshote. “Aaron, Jose, Jeff, and I are really trying to take a classic horror staple—the haunted house—and update everything about it—setting it in the heart of the city, giving it a multi-racial cast where those backgrounds actually matter to the turns of our story, and centering our horror around the very distinct fears of today. I’ve taken to calling Infidel ‘political horror,’ and while we’ve been cooking this project for a while, the success of movies like Get Out make us optimistic that audiences will be as hungry to read something like this as we are to make it.”

Continued below

This tautly-woven new series tackles controversial topics in race and racism and how it can affect people from different cultures. INFIDEL features a diverse, multi-ethnic cast where character backgrounds affect the plot twists and pacing as the story unfolds from issue to issue.

Campbell added: “The horror genre has always been near and dear to me. From an early age it has shaped much of my artistic sensibilities, showing itself in deep shadows, gritting locations, and emotional dread. Really good horror gives us a safe place to indulge in our most primal emotions, confront fear eagerly, and ask deeply loaded questions with acerbic abandon. Great horror adds to this a dark mirror that reflects, with uneasy clarity, the existential and ontological threats of our humanity. For Stoker it was our place in nature. For Lovecraft, our place in the universe. Romero’s zombies threaten our individuality and King gave us normal people who could stand as surrogates for our own terror. Now more and more the genre is concerning itself with the threats of us vs. them. Tribalism. And so I could not be more proud or excited to be a part of the Infidel team. Finally, I get to work with the incomparable Jose Villarrubia who I’ve known since my MICA days as a shaggy haired illustration wimp. And Pornsak has written a truly terrifying tale that cuts directly to the quick of current events. It’s a story about the broad brush of fear. A young, wonderful, hateless girl wants to be, just be, but the fearful few have other plans…”

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IMAGE COMICS ANNOUNCES ORIGINAL GRAPHIC NOVEL, BINGO LOVE

Image Comics is pleased to announce BINGO LOVE, an original graphic novel created and written by Tee Franklin, with art by Jenn St-Onge, and colors by Joy San.

BINGO LOVE is about two Queer, Black women and the love between them that spans decades. Their story also explores the complications of coming out at an older age, and how that decision affects their families lives. BINGO LOVE will hit stores just in time for Valentine’s Day, February 2018.

“As a woman who was married once upon a time, I understand how it is to come out as a Queer woman to my family,” said Franklin. “Bingo Love was important for me to create for the youth, the LGBTQ youth needs to understand that happily-ever-after’s aren’t only for straight people. If Disney’s Carl and Ellie can grow old together, so can Mari and Hazel.”

Hazel Johnson and Mari McCray are two young, Black girls who meet at church bingo in 1963 and eventually fall in love…but in this time period, their love was not accepted. Hazel and Mari are broken up by their families’ “shame” and go on to marry and have families of their own. Almost fifty years later—in the fever pitch of church bingo—Mari and Hazel are reunited and rediscover the love they have for each other, even though they both are still married.

Tee Franklin is a Black, Queer, disabled woman, known in the comics industry as a vocal person of color and advocate for the LGBTQ and disabled community. She is credited for starting the popular hashtag: #BlackComicsMonth which aims to make comic book fans more aware of talented Black comic creators, and their diverse comic book characters and superheroes that already exist in the industry.

Franklin won the 2017 Queer Press Grant for BINGO LOVE and has raised almost $60k for this graphic novella via Kickstarter.

Advance praise for BINGO LOVE:

“Tee Franklin’s delivering a fresh, charming story of adolescent love with adorable, fluid art from Jenn St-Onge and Joy San. And if you care about representation, here’s a great opportunity to step up. The world needs more stories with African American girl heroes of all different kinds, and Bingo Love is leading the charge.” —Greg Pak

“Bingo Love is a dose of pure sweetness, about overcoming hardship without relying on tragedy, with beautiful, bright art to boot!” —Tini Howard, The Skeptics, Power Rangers: Pink

“Bingo Love is the young, tender love story that brown queer women have never been allowed to have. This is the coming of age story that 10 and 15 year old baby-queer me needed.” —Vita Ayala, Our Work Fills The Pews

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//TAGS | NYCC '17

Christopher Chiu-Tabet

Chris is the news manager of Multiversity Comics. A writer from London on the autistic spectrum, he enjoys tweeting and blogging on Medium about his favourite films, TV shows, books, music, and games, plus history and religion. He is Lebanese/Chinese, although he can't speak Cantonese or Arabic.

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