GAREN EWING
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About
This is the blog of Garen Ewing, writer, illustrator and researcher, creator of the award-winning Adventures of Julius Chancer, and lover of classic film, history, humanism and karate.

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BLOG : WEBBLEDEGOOK
inkyBlog

This blog began in 1997 as a single news page called Nucelus. In 2005, during a long wait to move into a new house, I decided to learn some php and MySQL and write my own blogging system, which became inkyBlog and which now powers this, my own Webbledegook blog.

Thank you to my brother, Murray Ewing, for help with some of the more challenging aspects!

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THE END OF THE MOEBIUS STRIP
Sat 10 Mar 2012

Jean Giraud, also known as Moebius, has died age 73. I was introduced to his stunning work through Heavy Metal magazine, and at the UK Comic Art Convention (UKCAC) in 1988 I saw him interviewed live on stage at Logan Hall.

He was a rare genius of the art of the comic strip with an incredible imagination and vision. He leaves a treasure trove of work - hopefully more of which will be translated into English.

Visit this wonderful tumblr blog of his work.

posted 10.03.12 at 9:13 pm in Comics | permalink | comment 2 |
LILY LAWRENCE
Thu 8 Mar 2012

As it's International Women's Day today I thought I would write a blog post about Lily Lawrence. This follows on from the other character posts I've written - on Julius Chancer and on the Tayaut twins. And with it being just a month away from publication of The Rainbow Orchid volume 3, you can expect to see a couple more on their way in the coming weeks.

Lady Lilian Catherine Scott Lawrence (to give her full name and title, though she squirms at being called Lady - see volume 2) has her origins in a script I wrote a few months before I started The Rainbow Orchid, in 1996, in a story called 'Stage Fight'. In that she was called Lily Lowell, a cast member in a terrible melodramatic play that becomes a hit when the two male leads, both sweet on Lily, have their off-stage antagonism spill over into their performances. Another character in that script was one Evelyn Saxon, who would morph into Evelyn Crow for Orchid. I later adapted this story to fit in to the Julius Chancer universe and it appeared as a Lily Lawrence 'origin story' of sorts, called 'Sword of Fate', appearing in The Girly Comic issue 5 back in 2004. A shorter Lily origin (4 panels long) appears in The Rainbow Orchid volume 2

So, what do we know about Lily? She is the daughter of Lord Reginald Tybalt Stone Pritchard Lawrence and Ann Blyth McKay (deceased) and had a brother, Peter Stone Scott Lawrence, who was killed on the Western Front in 1916. She ran away from home to become a stage actress and then ran away from that, to America, where she eventually became a film star at United Players.

Visually Lily took a little while to come through. At first she was too tom-boyish, though I didn't want her to be too 'girly' either. The inspiration for clinching her look came when I saw a photograph of a young Coco Chanel, though she changed more from that point on. Lily has the most complicated hair style and I still sometimes struggle to get it right!

Below is an early watercoloured drawing of Lily, from 1997, and one of the scrapbook pieces I came up with for volume 1 in 2009, Lily on the cover of Picture Show magazine.

posted 08.03.12 at 1:54 pm in Julius Chancer | permalink | comment 2 |
DRIVETIME TALKINESS!
Tue 7 Feb 2012

Yesterday lunchtime I was asked if I'd appear later that afternoon on the Simon Mayo Drivetime show (BBC Radio 2) to talk about comics. This was in response to 9-year old William who had come up with his own comic about a super-powered frog and his adversary - an evil toilet! It was good fun, if a bit of a blur down the phone, and I'm rather glad I didn't realise, at the time, that the show had somewhere in the region of five million listeners, though I knew there were quite a lot!

It wasn't really a piece where I was able to promote The Rainbow Orchid in particular - though it got a good mention, of course, and I also managed to give mentions to The Beano, The Dandy, Toxic and The Phoenix. It's available on the BBC iPlayer to listen to for the next week, roughly 20 minutes in.

posted 07.02.12 at 12:46 pm in Comics | permalink | comment 3 |
BOOKINESS!
Sat 28 Jan 2012

The lovely designer on The Rainbow Orchid, Faye Dennehy, sent me her copy of volume three ahead of my own comp copies. So here it is for you to see ...

posted 28.01.12 at 2:16 pm in Julius Chancer | permalink | comment 5 |
AN EARLY REVIEW
Tue 24 Jan 2012

The first volume three review has appeared online over at The Book Bag - and there's not even a book out yet. Actually, that's no longer true - I hear that the first advance copy is now in the Egmont office - so it really is done, and you'll be able to read it for yourselves from April 2nd.

I must correct something alluded to in the above review, and I've seen it put more explicitly elsewhere too - The Rainbow Orchid was never intended as a webcomic and was never formatted to fit online reading (though it does happen to suit it very well). It was always intended as a single book, a graphic novel, if you like. What became volume one was originally serialised, in print, in BAM!, and was afterwards published in a single magazine-format edition. I then published it on my website because I wasn't able to print up volume two and I didn't want to lose the readers I'd earned in print. A small point of very little concern, but I thought I'd say it!

posted 24.01.12 at 11:27 pm in Julius Chancer | permalink | comment |
POST CHRISTMAS
Fri 13 Jan 2012

A little late, perhaps, for a post-Christmas blog entry, but January has got off to a busy start, workwise, so finding the time to write has not been easy (same old story!).

I had a nice quietish Christmas and took some days completely off for the first time in, oh, a long time. I decided to do some family history research, which I haven't spent any proper time on for at least a couple of years or more, and I found some good stuff and cracked a research mystery that has been something of a brick wall for twelve years.

When I mention I enjoy researching my family history a common reaction is surprise that someone so young (ahem) should be interested in a hobby that is generally regarded as the preserve of the retired. I love history, and I love doing research, but the catalyst in this case was a postcard album that my mum inherited from her mother when she died. It had belonged to my great-grandmother, and looking through it mum and I agreed that it might be fun to research some of the people the cards were written to, many of them long-forgotten and now unknown family members. Sadly, my mum died not long after, and the postcard album ended up with me permanently.

A few years later I decided to begin researching my family history and started gathering information from various relatives. At that time a lot of research still had be done by going to the Family Records Centre in Islington (for birth, marriage and death records and census returns) and the National Archives at Kew (most commonly for military service papers). I spent a lot of time with index cards, microfiche readers and gazettes, searching through lists and taking notes. Things are so much easier now! All those indexes and, indeed, many of the original records, are available and searchable online - what a difference. It's great that it's easier, and you can do so much more with database searches, but I must admit the sense of discovery is somewhat lessened when you're not 'out in the field', and you miss sights such as the American lady I saw at the FRC once, who had come to England especially to search the 19th century census returns, and sat at the microfilm reader in full Victorian dress to get into the part.


My gg-grandfather, Andrew Phillip (1843-1931), a stone mason, and his family in about 1888.

Discovering and learning about my family history has been a revelation. There are some who just can't understand the fascination, but I find it odd that many people just about know who their grandparents were but nothing beyond that. Knowing the story of how I came to be here, both genetically and geographically, having a 'history-map' of the people and movements that combined to put me, my brother and my parents on the earth, and knowing not just the depth of my background, but the width as well (6th cousins!). It's a big picture that I'm glad to be aware of and I've been able to find the truth behind some well-worn family stories as well as learning a lot about life in the past in general

In my family I've discovered tinkers, tailors, soldiers, sailors, nurses, firemen, artists, Gypsies, actresses, musicians, thieves, murderers, paupers, servants to publicans and peers, teachers, footballers, chimney sweeps, farmers, labourers, coal miners, clerks, shopkeepers, makers of cities, roads, ships, shoes, hats and fancy boxes, drivers of trains, trams, taxis and horse-drawn carts, preachers, vicars and, I'm sorry to say, one less than admirable Catholic Priest (very distantly related, I stress!).

One resource that has opened up relatively recently are newspaper archives. With this you can delve into the actual detail of life, beyond names, dates and occupations. Unfortunately, it's usually the bad news that gets reported - deaths and criminal activity especially, but they do, it has to be said, make for some of the most fascinating stories.


My g-grandmother Minnie Alice Lees (1887-1943, centre - it was her postcard album that started all this off) at Blackpool with her best friend Millie Wilson and Millie's sister Nellie, c.1912.

This Christmas I learned what had happened to a gggg-uncle, Robert Ewing, who had previously disappeared from the records as a 10-year old flax winder in Dysart. It turns out he went on to become the captain of his own ship and ended up being thrown into a stormy ocean and drowning off the coast of Syria when he was 32. Another one to add the the tragic Ewing family deaths.

The wife of another gggg-uncle, Henry Higson, I knew had died at age 37, but I had no idea how until a fairly lurid newspaper article revealed that she cut her own throat in front of her children at breakfast one morning - very shocking stuff. The fact that her brother was in an insane asylum was enough, it seems, to explain her tragic actions at the inquest. Knowing this sad story has made me want to now find out what became of the three daughters who witnessed it and were 12, 10 and 4 years old at the time.

The most 'sensational' story was the 1903 murder of a policeman committed by three Gypsy brothers who each received fifteen years in prison. One of them came out to fight in World War One and was killed at the Somme.


My ggg-uncle Donald Cameron (far left, 1852-1926), a piper with the 72nd Highlanders with whom he marched from Kabul to Kandahar in 1880.

My most exciting find is far less sensational and more personal - and would no doubt bore you to death if I explained it in any detail! Since 2000, when I started, I've been trying to break through a wall to discover who the parents were of my ggg-grandmother, Eliza Sherriff. I have finally found the answer. It's been a long and torturous route to make the discovery - but that's what makes it so rewarding; finding the clues, one here one year, one there another year, until a door is finally unlocked and a whole pile of new questions and puzzles is revealed. It's hugely enjoyable.

This link will show you the family history category blog entries on this blog, and this link will take you to my little family history website.

posted 13.01.12 at 3:28 am in Family History | permalink | comment 7 |
CHRISTMAS POST
Fri 23 Dec 2011

A few little bits before Christmas hits and I go into complete Chrimbly Relax Mode.

Back in 2002 some friends and I decided to each write a Christmas ghost story and then read them to each other that Christmas eve night. My contribution was called Silent Night and I've put it up online here - so go and have a read if you'd like a little Festive Fright!

Last week Murray and I completed our podcast discussions for those ten adventure films I blogged about earlier in the year and you can listen to our chat about Ray Harryhausen's The Golden Voyage of Sinbad at the Adventure Film Podcast blog. We do intend to record an eleventh podcast, an overview of film adventure and to see if any interesting conclusions can be drawn from the films we discussed. Your thoughts are most welcome too!

I wanted to review a small pile of excellent small press titles received over the past couple of months, but have run out of time. Instead, let me point you towards them - all top quality and well worth adding to your reading list: wonderful artwork and superhero drama with Martin Eden's Spandex; stylistic and metropolitan comics antholgy from David O'Connell and friends with Ink + Paper; worthy and marvellous successor to Whores of Mensa, Strumpet; north-east heroics and intrigue with Daniel Clifford and Gary Bainbridge's Sugar Glider. And if you want some excellent comic reading throughout 2012, and you haven't done so already, do yourself a big favour and go and subscribe to The Phoenix - it is something truly special.

Lastly, don't forget that The Rainbow Orchid volume 3, the concluding episode, will be published at the beginning of April 2012 - precisely ten years since it was first serialised in BAM! (issue 22, April 2002). The Dutch edition, De Regenboog Orchidee, will be published in May. In the meantime, here's the completed cover for you.

Have a lovely Christmas!


posted 23.12.11 at 1:08 pm in Comics | permalink | comment 6 |
YVES CHALAND TRIBUTE
Tue 13 Dec 2011

I was invited by the Klare Lijn International blog to contribute to their Yves Chaland tribute (see here and here) so I drew my favourite characters, Freddy, Dina and Sweep. It's been up for a while now, so thought I could post it here as well.

posted 13.12.11 at 10:14 am in Sketchbook | permalink | comment 2 |
THE PHOENIX
Fri 18 Nov 2011

The Phoenix website was launched today, revealing some of the lovely strips that will be appearing in this new weekly from January 2012. One of the comics I'm especially looking forward to is Pirates of Pangaea, written by Daniel Hartwell and drawn by Neill Cameron. Neill's artwork for it, the little I've seen, is wonderful - just look at this breath-taking image ...

Other contributors include some equally firm favourites such as Jamie Smart, the Etherington Brothers, John and Patrice Aggs, Dave Shelton, Kate Brown, James Turner, Gary Northfield - I could go on! I also have a strip, a one-off story written by the amazing Ben Haggarty - I say amazing because he wrote Mezolith, and amazing is one of the many apt words to describe that marvellous book (yup, marvellous is another). Here's a panel from our strip, called The Golden Feather ...

If you're able to seek out a Waitrose store then pop in and pick up their free Waitrose Weekend paper (dated 17 Nov). As well as a feature on The Phoenix there is a code with which to get a special (and also free) Phoenix issue zero.

For lots more information (including subscription details) see the new Phoenix website!

posted 18.11.11 at 9:31 am in Comics | permalink | comment |
DEMONCON 2
Tue 8 Nov 2011

On Sunday I attended my one and only public event this year, Demoncon 2 in Maidstone. As a last minute change of plan, Elyssa decided to accompany me and give our 7-month old daughter her first comics event experience! I think she enjoyed it - she was on good form all day and enjoyed going off to the shops to look at all the sparkly and tinsely Christmas decorations that are starting to appear on the shelves.

Demoncon is organised and run by Graham Beadle and his Maidstone comic shop, Grinning Demon. It was a lovely intimate event taking place in a small sandwich bar (Eden in Bank Street, though I believe a bigger venue is on the cards for next year) and had a really nice atmosphere. I have to admit my expectations for sales were modest, but I sold 19 books and a handful of badges and met some great people too (I was delighted to meet the fantastic Phil Elliott after many years of more distant and irregular correspondence).

Huge thanks to Graham, his team, and his shop regulars and other attendees for a very welcoming and enjoyable day.

posted 08.11.11 at 7:10 pm in Comics | permalink | comment |
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