Updated weakly.

John P. has a PATREON. / King-Cat 78 is OUT.



Friday, May 10, 2013

WORD UP


Just a quick one guys and gals.

If you're in Toronto this weekend for the wonderful TCAF show and want to pick up a copy of the most recent King-Cat (#73) you can do so at the Koyama Press table.  I sadly won't be there.  Also drop by Blank Slate's spot and pick up the new Oliver East book Swear Down.  No one does what Ollie does, and in this age of instant fad bullshit and copycat high fives, that's saying something.

I'm not going to Toronto, but I will be in Downtown Beloit for Artwalk, tonight, May 10 from 5-9 PM and tomorrow Sat. May 11 from 10 AM to 2 PM.  I'll be upstairs at "My Apt.", 429 E. Grand Ave selling (and signing) some comic books to the masses.  Come on down!

Lastly, may I introduce you to the newest member of the family, Mr. Gibson P. Dawg (The "P" is for "Puppy") AKA Da Woofman, Li'l Hustla, Coach Gibs, and Dat Ding Dong Dog from Kalamazoo:


Ain't he cute?

GO BULLS
GO HAWKS

Thursday, April 25, 2013

SPACE RECAP


I made my annual spring trip to Columbus Ohio a few weeks ago for the 13th iteration of the Great Midwestern SPACE Comics Fest.  I love Columbus, and I love SPACE.  I've never had a bad time coming out for this show, and after thirteen years it's taken on a kind of family reunion aspect for me, as it has I think for a lot of other longtime attendees.  Plus, in the last few years, folks from the coasts have begun making the trek and that's cool too.  (Last year saw my pals MariNaomi (SF) and Colin Upton (Vancouver) come out, and this year Joseph Remnant (LA), Eamon Espey (Baltimore) and Tom Hart and Leela Corman (Florida) made the trip.)  Excellent all around.  I had a great time.

Spit and a Half corner



I was delighted to see Tom Spurgeon in the hallway when I first walked in.  I am a big fan of his writing on the Comics Reporter, and I didn't expect him to be there.  Happily, I got to spend a good amount of time chatting with him.

Penina Gal, Tom Spurgeon, Carol Tyler

Saturday night after the show, everyone went out for Vietnamese food and then headed down to a coffeeshop on High Street to see Eamon Espey perform his story "Ishi's Brain," as a puppet show with his partner Lisa Krause.  It was a beautiful thing.  Later, Leela and Maddie played music and JT Dockery wowed 'em, but I was on 4 hours sleep, so had to turn in early.

Saturday night performance of "Ishi's Brain".

Sam Spina flyin' the flannel on Sunday morning.

Detroit's Finest: Parisel

Nate McDonough, Nils Balls, Dan McCloskey: Pittsurgh represent

J.T. Dockery, whose balls out rock n roll performance Saturday night I unfortunately missed.


Cleveland's Kevin Czapiewski

Marnie Galloway and husband Tom

Leela Corman and Tom Spurgeon

The great Larry Blake, who kept things lively with a boombox jamming The Ramones and Sweet all weekend.

Whoa, I got this great original marker drawing of the Ramones from Larry for only $10!

Comics as Memoir Panel moderated by John Steventon, with Tom Hart, Nate Powell, Chris Monday, Dara Naraghi, and yours truly.

Sunday evening everybody cleared out quick.  I had some more Vietnamese food for dinner, and then sleep, blissful sleep.

James Thurber House, 77 Jefferson Avenue

Monday morning I kicked it around Columbus.  I had a couple days off, so I spent them book buying and sightseeing.  First stop, the James Thurber House, a Columbus attraction I had somehow never visited in all my trips there over the years.  Enjoyable.



Then I made my usual stops: Used Kids Records, the Wexner Center Bookstore, Laughing Ogre (where I picked up some nice 70's Marvel horror comics), and a couple Half Price Books where I loaded up on cheep comix/GNs etc.

Tuesday I went back into town to visit Gib at the Ogre, and yes, buy more comics.  This time the Wally Wood bio "Wally's World" and a copy of "Pussey!"  Why not.  That evening, on the way back to my lodging, I went for a walk in the woods, where the Dutchman's Breeches, Toothwort, and Rue Anenome were all in bloom.  Then: Rain.

Dutchman's Breeches
(Dicentra cucullaria)


Wednesday Morning I was picking up Stephanie at the Columbus Airport and we were heading east to Pittsburgh together, for the Drawing Power Conference at the Carnegie Library.  More on that next time!

Columbus, O.

Tuesday, April 9, 2013

ROCK



Hey all,

I'll be out on the road again, starting this weekend (April 13-14) with the great SPACE show in Columbus Ohio, one of my favorite towns in America.  Come on out and see Eamon Espey and Lisa Krause's puppet show based on his brilliant new Secret Acres book Songs of the Abyss.

Then I'll be moseyin' my way over to Pittsburgh, one of my favorite towns in America, for a cool event on Saturday April 20, called DRAWING POWER: Comics, Zines, and Books in Pittsburgh and Beyond!

And THEN, it looks like I'll be spending Monday April 22nd at Oberlin College, doing some lecturing/workshopping (details TBA).

Once I'm back home I've got clear sailing right through August, so I'm hoping to get a lot of work done, including finishing up both King-Cat #74 and The Hospital Suite (D+Q, 2014).

Thanks,
See you 'round!
John P.

Saturday, March 16, 2013

WHY I HAVEN'T BEEN ABLE TO GET ANYTHING DONE LATELY














Photographic proof that Ninny isn't the "Helper Monkey" he claims he is.

Wednesday, March 6, 2013

EL LAGARTO AND FRIENDS



Stephanie and I got back from Gainesville yesterday evening after a 17 hour white-knuckle ride from Atlanta to Beloit in pouring rain, sleet, and then whiteout blowing snow where you couldn't tell where the interstate ended and the great blue yonder began.  We're exhausted, but safe and sound.

While I was down there (running a 5-Day Comix Workshop at SAW), Tom Hart and I put together this little booklet of Florida Wildlife.  A portion of all proceeds go to the Sequential Artists Workshop, as fine an institution as I have ever seen.  More on the trip soon, but meanwhile, ordering info is below.  Thanks!



16 pages, drawn by John Porcellino, 4.25" x 5.5"
Two-color risograph printed by Tom Hart at SAW in Gainesville, Florida
(10 animal illustrations inside)


USA: $3.00 ppd check or mo / $3.40 via PayPal*
OTHER COUNTRIES: $4.46 USD via PayPal

Check/MO to:
John Porcellino
PO Box 142
South Beloit, IL 
61080 USA

PayPal to: kingcat_paypal AT hotmail DOT com

*Wisconsin residents, please add 5.5% to your total.  Thanks!

Thursday, February 14, 2013

FAREWELL, SOUTH BELOIT



Ye Olde Homestead
November 20, 2010 - February 6, 2013

On November, 20, 2010, in a desperate fugue of approaching homelessness, I signed a six-month lease on a small apartment in the little town of South Beloit, Illinois.  The landlord seemed like a nice guy, laid back, and he didn't make me fill out an application, run a credit check, or put me through the ringer.  He asked me what I did for a living, and I told him I was a writer, because that sounds more distinguished and safe than "cartoonist" or heaven-forbid "artist."  He looked at me askance and asked if I'd be able to pay the rent.  I said yes.  He replied, "If you get me $400, you can move in right now."  I borrowed some money from my mom, and moved my stuff in.

The first several months were grim.  November through January in North Central Illinois can be grim no matter what, but I was also coming off of a divorce, and following that, a heartbreaking love-affair that had seen me uproot myself from Denver, my home-sweet-home-away-from-home, bankrupting myself in the process.  I was not in, shall we say, the best mental state.  I was, shall we say, bitter about women, love, and life in general.

South Beloit is a pretty downbeat town.  There's not a lot of cushiony feeling there.  I remember that winter actually thinking, "This is where I belong."  When my friend Dan came to visit me, he said "Not only are you living in the most depressing town I've ever seen, but you're living in the most depressing building in that town."

I figured I would do my six months time, save some money, and then figure out my next step.

Eventually, I kind of, sort of, liked my weird old grey cinderblock place.  It looked like maybe once in the past it was a neighborhood grocery, or a mechanic's shop or something.  It was just down the street from where Fair Oaks ended at the train tracks, and a small dirt path wound into the woods towards the river.  I used to sneak in there all the time to look for aluminum cans, or simply to gaze at the river flowing past, slowly onwards to the Mississippi.

I became obsessed with the big island just west of my apartment.  Looking at an old USGS map online, I saw that it had a name: Boney Island.  That was the first thing I really liked about South Beloit, that there was an island there named Boney Island.  I also liked the old railroad bridge where the Union Pacific spur line rolled over Lathrop Terrace.  One day, on a warmish morning in early spring, I stopped to watch the South Beloit High School baseball team play Clinton (Wisc.) at the ballfield across from the Post Office.  (They won.)  For a second on that warm day I started to think, "Maybe it's not so bad here.  Maybe I could stay..."  Something had clicked.

On April 11, 2011, I met a girl named Stephanie, up in Beloit, Wisconsin, and we started dating.  The six months came and went.  We spent that first summer walking in the woods and fields around town.  I taught her the names of the prairie plants, and she took pictures for me with her new camera.  We'd take her dog Sherman for strolls in the evening and it felt quite domestic.  It felt good.

Even though Stephanie had a nice old house in Beloit, where we spent much of our time, I kept my little apartment in South Beloit.  Although the heat in it stunk, the water only worked intermittently, and the ceiling leaked on occasion (in a minor way), it was good to have a place to go, to work, to store all my distro stuff, and I liked being in Illinois.  Also, frankly, I was gun shy.  I didn't want to risk our relationship ending suddenly, leaving me with no place to go.

On January 29, 2013, I went down to my apartment to get to work.  I'd been on a roll, getting lots of artwork done, and busting some real progress on my new book.  I walked into the bathroom and saw water on the floor.  Looking up, there was an enormous blister in the ceiling, dripping water.  I threw a bucket under it and checked elsewhere.  A hole had burst through the kitchen ceiling as well, and in the back room, where I kept all my distro stuff, a new crack was dripping, and increasingly so.  Amazingly, even though nearly everything I own is made of paper, nothing was damaged.  I started packing my boxes immediately.

By that night the rain had turned to snow, and it snowed every day from then on, for the next ten days, as I drove carload after carload of comics and artwork up to Stephanie's place.  One night, driving up Route 2 towards Wisconsin, I almost got teary eyed, thinking of leaving good ol' South Beloit.  And I wondered why.  Partly, I felt like a traitor, leaving my home state, even though I was only crossing the line about half a mile.  And partly, I knew I would miss South Beloit's lonely desolation, the empty sounds of trucks rushing past at night.  And partly, because I knew another phase of my life was ending, and a new one beginning.  And I'm a lonely old sentimental fool, and the passing of time is the saddest and eeriest thing in the world.

* * *

PS: I'm keeping my South Beloit PO Box, so please continue sending mail there!