Paul Kupperberg on June 6th, 2011

I’ll be a guest at the Scranton Comic Book Convention in (where else?) Scranton, PA this coming Sunday, June 12! This will be my first time attending, but it look to be a good old-fashioned one-day local show and I’m looking forward to it.

Also appearing are Archie artist Dan Parent, Marvel artist Dave Hoover, artist Rudy Nebres, DC writer C.J. Henderson, and about a dozen more writers and artists from all over.

I’ll have a table from which I’ll be talking, selling, and signing! Admission is $3.00, hours are 10:00 A.M. to 4:00 P.M., and the location is Johnson College, 3427 North Main Avenue, Scranton PA 18508 (exit 190 off of I-81). If you’re in the neighborhood, I hope to see you there!

Tags:

Paul Kupperberg on June 3rd, 2011
Click on the Amazon links to the right to order!

I’ve just put my three eBooks up on Amazon.com at new, lower prices. Check ’em out, buy a book (or three) if you’re so inclined by clicking on the Amazon links to the right, and support a starving writer.

Well, okay, not exactly starving. But I am feeling rather peckish…

$4.99
$3.99
$2.99

Tags:

Waaay back in 1988 I wrote a miniseries for DC Comics starring the Joe Gill/Pat Boyette-created character, Peacemaker. Peacemaker was originally published by Charlton Comics in 1966 as part of editor Dick Giordano’s “Action Hero Line” and lasted only a couple of years. Years later, DC acquired the rights to the Charlton Comics heroes (nearly losing them to Alan Moore’s whim in the 1980s, had his Watchmen gone as originally conceived), and I have managed, happily, to be involved with many of these characters over the year as both writer and editor.

I got my shot at Peacemaker in the pages of Vigilante, where he was portrayed as a dangerous psycho who listened to the voices of the people he had killed who spoke to him via his helmet. In 1988, I spun him off in the aforementioned miniseries (with artists Tod Smith and Pablo Marcos), which was a total psychotic, blood-spattered romp against international terrorism. The voice in his head/helmet now belonged to his deceased and unrepentant Nazi father, and my editor’s marching orders to me had been to push the envelope on crazy and violent.

DC has just posted the entire 4-issue Peacemaker miniseries online for download at .99¢ each via it’s DC Comics app for the iPhone and Android devices, as well as at Comixology.com.

It was, someone in DC Digital told me the other day, sick enough that it was “a book that had to wait for the market sensibility to catch up with it.”

Not shabby for a guy who writes Archie and Scooby Doo, huh?


Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

Paul Kupperberg on May 29th, 2011

The adventures continue…

Tags: , , ,

Paul Kupperberg on May 19th, 2011
The new novel by the author of Two Tales of Atlantis and In My Shorts: Hitler’s Bellhop and Other Stories.

 Click on the cover image to order The Same Old Story from Smashwords.com!
eBook Price: $4.99 USD. 78,290 words. Fiction by Paul Kupperberg, published by Buffalo Avenue Books on Smashwords.com on May 18, 2011.  
 
It’s 1951 and the comic book industry is undergoing a recession that’s sent half the writers and artists in New York to the streets scrambling for the work that remains. Among that number is writer Max Wiser, former pulp scribe and son of a legendary N.Y.P.D. homicide cop, on whose life Wiser based his bestselling pulp stories. When the industry’s top writer dies in an accidental drunken tumble from a subway train that proves to have been murder, Max is plunged into a world of lies and conspiracy…discovering that there is often a fine line between real life and the pulp fiction around which he has built his life. Especially after the beautiful blonde mistress of the murdered man works her way into his life…and as the death toll mounts, Max Wiser learns that even in the cliche-ridden world of comics and the pulps, there’s really no such thing as The Same Old Story

Tags:

Paul Kupperberg on April 19th, 2011

I do my public service in Archie Double Digest #217, featuring the story “The MADD Cowboy of Riverdale High!” I wrote it, the talented Jeff Schultz drew it, and it guest-stars Dallas Cowboy star, tight end Jason Witten making his pitch for the new Mothers Against Drunk Driving initiative, “PowerTalk 21 Day,” which encourages open talk between parents and kids about teen drinking.

Newsarama.com has a nice piece on it.

Tags: , ,

Paul Kupperberg on January 19th, 2011

John Siuntres interviewed me last week for his Word Balloon: The Comic Book Podcast about Life With Archie: The Married Life, my earlier work at DC, and my eBook endeavors. Have a listen!

Tags: , , ,

Paul Kupperberg on January 15th, 2011

According to voters of CaptainComics.com’s Cappies Awards 2010, it’s Life With Archie: The Married Life! We copped not only Best Ongoing Series, but Most Underrated Title in the voting, and I couldn’t be happier, humbler, or more gratified.

You like us! You really like us!

Tags: , ,

Paul Kupperberg on December 23rd, 2010

Looks as though the events in Life With Archie: The Married Life #6 (on sale December 29) have struck a chord. I’ll admit, when I wrote the issue I got a bit choked up, so I’m not surprised at the response, from the New York Times to the fan press.

I’d like to remind everyone that way back in the mid-1970s, I also offed Aquababy in Aquaman, and ten years later I did the same to Vigilante (the Aquaman story is scheduled to be reprinted in the Death of the Prince trade paperback next summer). Someone stop me before I kill again!

Click on the images below to see them at a readable size!

LIFE WITH ARCHIE ©  Archie Comics

Tags: , , , ,

Paul Kupperberg on December 15th, 2010

My second eBook from Buffalo Avenue Books has just gone online at Smashwords.com and is available for download! It’s called In My Shorts: Hitler’s Bellhop and Other Short Stories, and looks something like this…

eBook Price: $8.99 USD. 40,570 words. Fiction by Paul Kupperberg, published by Buffalo Avenue Books at Smashwords.com on December 14, 2010. 

Included are three previously published short stories, “Reflected Glory,” (from the anthology Superheroes), “Food For the Beast” (from Fear Itself), and “Man Bites Dog” (from Vampires: Dracula and the Undead Legions), as well as three never-before-published pieces:

“Hitler’s Bellhop,” a story told by a film magazine essay and the lost fragments of a Jerry Lewis screenplay that never was but, really, could have been;

“A Stone for the Grave of Mr. Aronson,” a mood piece about a man’s last hour of life, set in a lonely graveyard;

“The Zombie King,” a piece of flash fiction that takes a Roger Cormanish look at the New Testament.

The cover is courtesy of Kansas City’s own Rick Stasi, my pal and graphic artist extraordinaire.



Tags: , , , ,