New York Times Introduces a Comics Section
That stodgy old geezer paper has decided to run some sequential art section or other.
A comic strip, a humor column and a Sunday serial of fiction will appear each week in "The Funny Pages," a new 10-page section making its debut September 18 in The New York Times Magazine. The section will offer The Magazine's audience a new reading experience that complements "The Way We Live Now," the style section and the signature reportage for which The Magazine is known.
"The Funny Pages is our own take on the traditional Sunday paper funny pages," says Gerald Marzorati, editor, The New York Times Magazine. "We wanted a place in our pages for genre fiction - mysteries, detective stories, and the like - which is having a particularly vibrant moment in popular culture just now. And we wanted to make a place for the work of those creating narrative comics and graphic novels, a great new art form. We wanted to publish humor - narrative, memoirish humor. And most of all we wanted to give our readers some new things that would bring a smile to their faces each Sunday morning, and our youngest readers a go-to destination when the paper arrives."
"The Funny Pages" include:
-- "The Sunday Serial" - In the most ambitious feature of the new section, "The Sunday Serial" marks the first foray by The Times Magazine into fiction with approximately 14 weekly installments of an original, commissioned work. Best-selling author Elmore Leonard, whose highly acclaimed novels include "Get Shorty," "Freaky Deaky" and "Tishomingo Blues," launches the first serial.
-- "The Strip" - Stars of the graphic novel create serialized comic strips exclusively for Times Magazine readers. Each week's full-page color-strip features one self-contained story, and each strip will run for approximately six months. Chris Ware, whose best-selling graphic novel, "Jimmy Corrigan: The Smartest Kid on Earth," has won numerous literary prizes, will create the first strip. It tells the story of a young girl and her adventures in her apartment house.
-- "True-Life Tales" - A new column showcasing the best young humor writers who tell hilariously true stories about everyday family life and societal trends. The Magazine will draw on top writers from the world of late-night television, public radio's "This American Life" and elsewhere.
If readers miss an installment of "The Sunday Serial" or want to catch up on "The Strip," or the humor column, "The Funny Pages" will be available on NYTimes.com.
And so we have some stuff to look at.
Can't be any worse than most of what's in the regular newspapers... soitenly the format is more sane.
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