nickmaynard:

QUESTION:
What makes comic books great literature?

LEVAR BURTON:
People ask me all the time, because I did Reading Rainbow on PBS for 25 years, “How do I get my kids to read?” And I say, “Find something that they’re passionate about.” If it’s comic books that they want to read, then buy them comic books, for goodness sakes. Comic books are good literature and, like science fiction, they have a tendency to really draw us toward that part of ourselves that imagines that which we create.

I’m one of those people that believes that there was some kid back in the 1960s watching Star Trek, and he kept seeing Captain Kirk pull out this communicator and flip it open – and that kid grew up and became an engineer, a designer of products, and we now have a device that is more common than the toaster. How many flip phones do you see on a daily basis? That which we imagine is what we tend to manifest in third dimension – that’s what human beings do, we are manifesting machines. The metaphor of a man who has an external electronic device, something man-made that serves him and somehow serves humanity, and that he becomes so aligned with that device, with the power of that device, that at one point he can discard it – I think that’s a real metaphor for the human journey. One day we won’t need a transporter device to get from one place to another. And it begins with the wheel and then migrates through airplanes to some future technology that we can’t produce yet but we can imagine. Imagination is really the key part of the human journey, it’s the key to the process of manifesting what our heart’s desire is.

When I was a kid, it was comic books that pointed me in that direction and from comic books I went to science fiction literature, which is still one of my most favorite genres of literature to read. Don’t underestimate the power of comics and what they represent for us and how they inform us on the journey of being human – because it’s powerful. It’s very powerful. They give us permission to contemplate what’s possible. And in this world, in this universe, there’s nothing that is not possible. If you can dream it, you can do it.

http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=article&id=22629

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cbeth:

HEY EVERYONE, COME TO MY BIRTHDAY PARTY!
Extra points if you wish me happy birthday in Klingon.

cbeth:

HEY EVERYONE, COME TO MY BIRTHDAY PARTY!

Extra points if you wish me happy birthday in Klingon.

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Are cbeth and Whiskey still working on a comic together…?

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vinh:
Jesus… the Devil… Siamese beard? Wonderful. (via Drawn!)

vinh:

Jesus… the Devil… Siamese beard? Wonderful. (via Drawn!)
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(via bunkercomplex)

Painfully out of touch.

(via bunkercomplex)

Painfully out of touch.

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QUERY

cbeth:

If myself and a few friends were to start a Comic Book Club that met twice a month at Black Rabbit, and there were drink specials and a special discount at a certain local comic book shop on the book of the week, would anyone be interested in joining?

(reblogged because this tumblog needs more content)

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walkwhilereading:

This will be my first and only post about Harry Potter on Walk While Reading. I haven’t read a single page of the Harry Potter series.  I’m not sure why I needed to tell you this, I just thought I should let you all know.

walkwhilereading:

This will be my first and only post about Harry Potter on Walk While Reading. I haven’t read a single page of the Harry Potter series.  I’m not sure why I needed to tell you this, I just thought I should let you all know.
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Marc Bell is wonderful.

Marc Bell is wonderful.

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