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Topic: Melinda Gebbie


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In the News (Fri 25 Dec 09)

  
 Joelsin
Gebbie’s butch-dykes plotting the attacks as a reaction to the cancellation of Ellen Degeneris’s show on TV feature buzz cuts, bad pants, and mullets, while her Reverend Jerry Falwell is not rendered by her; it is a TV still put into a TV set rendered in the panel—multi-media, remediation, what have you.
Moore narrates the ambient of fear in Northampton, as well as an anecdote from his childhood: potty aunt strolling through the flout with her accordion, uncle Albert, electrified by throwing water on an exposed power line he thought was a power cable.
Moore and Gebbie end it on a humanist note, suggesting the widest context of understanding, in two boxes: “any single human life has more complexity, more energy bound up in it than our tallest towers” and “and any death simplifies that, horribly” (190).
joelsin.blogspot.com   (5367 words)

  
 Melinda Gebbie Encyclopedia Article, Definition, History, Biography   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
Looking For melinda gebbie - Find melinda gebbie and more at Lycos Search.
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www.greatartworks.com /encyclopedia/Melinda_Gebbie   (223 words)

  
 Grants -- Chautauqua-Cattaraugus Library System
In 2000, the Gebbie Foundation awarded the System a three-year grant to help the public libraries in the Chautauqua and Cattaraugus counties cover the on-going costs of the Gates computers.
Libraries will be able to use the Gebbie grant to help cover the costs of providing the Internet to their patrons not paid for by the Gates Foundation.
The Gebbie grant will help pay for computer related expenses such as the library’s Internet Service Provider, any building modifications including cabling and electrical wiring not covered by the Gates’ subsidy, printer supplies, furniture, staff time and any other related expenses for the next three years.
www.cclslib.org /grant.html   (458 words)

  
 The 11th Hour Web Magazine
Written by Alan Moore, Penciled by Kevin Nowlan, Melinda Gebbie, Jim Baikie, and Rick Veitch.
Sure, it doesn't always work as well as his full-length books, but it's an exciting venture from a man who is still opening up the medium in fresh and intriguing ways.
The artwork, by Kevin Nowlan, Melinda Gebbie, Rick Veitch (longtime Moore collaborator) and Jim Baikie is uniformly excellent, with each style suitably adapted to the subject matter -- often emulating the classic comics they're so enamored with.
www.the11thhour.com /archives/042000/comicreviews/tomorrowstories.html   (895 words)

  
 News Article @ Pucknation.com   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
Moore and Gebbie set out to answer these difficult and ambitious questions in Lost Girls, a 240-page fully painted graphic novel that has been in the works for over a decade.
The three protagonists are the familiar faces from Wonderland, Oz and Neverland, who meet as grown women in a mysterious hotel in 1913 England.
There, they embark on a journey through an erotic fantasy world of their own conjuring, all rendered in Gebbie's beautifully painted, full-color art.
www.pucknation.com /news/news_article.asp?id=2107   (216 words)

  
 4ColorHeroes The Alan Moore Store:Lost Girls
Melinda Gebbie (c/a) this issue also contains a 5 page Lost Girls Sketchbook.
Book One: Older Children Chapters 4-7: Each chapter is 8 pages, chapters 4 and 5 Melinda Gebbie (a), chapters 6 and 7 Melinda Gebbie and C.
Alexander (a), last issue to be published and the harder of the two to find.
www.4colorheroes.com /lostgirls.html   (105 words)

  
 GEBBIE   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
Search the GEBBIE Family Message Boards at Ancestry.com (if available).
Search the GEBBIE Family Resource Center at RootsWeb.com (if available).
Find graves of people named GEBBIE at Find-a-Grave.com (or add one that you know).
www.worldhistory.com /surname/US/G/GEBBIE.htm   (73 words)

  
 Cobweb (comics)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
Artist Gebbie had a deep background in feminist erotica.
Gebbie utilized a number of styles, making one story a surrealist collage in the André Breton/Max Ernst style, another a tribute to Marjorie Henderson Buell's beloved "Little Lulu" strip.
Gebbie drew most of the Cobweb stories in the twelve-issue run of Tomorrow Stories.
www.worldhistory.com /wiki/C/Cobweb-(comics).htm   (343 words)

  
 Melinda Gebbie -- Facts, Info, and Encyclopedia article   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
Melinda Gebbie -- Facts, Info, and Encyclopedia article
Melinda Gebbie is a comic book artist, partner of (additional info and facts about Alan Moore) Alan Moore.
Her artistic endeavours include (A dense elaborate spider web that is more efficient than the orb web) Cobweb in Mr Moore's (additional info and facts about Tomorrow Stories) Tomorrow Stories, and the (additional info and facts about Lost Girls) Lost Girls mini-series.
www.absoluteastronomy.com /encyclopedia/m/me/melinda_gebbie.htm   (68 words)

  
 Comic creator: Melinda Gebbie   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
Melinda Gebbie discovered comics in 1973, when she met Lee Marrs at a publishers' fair.
Lee asked her to contribute to Wimmen's Comix, and Melinda, who had been a fine artist until then, decided to make her first comix.
In 1996, Gebbie teamed up with writer Alan Moore on the erotic comic series 'Lost Girls'.
www.lambiek.net /gebbie_melinda.htm   (72 words)

  
 Printer Friendly: Glory #1 Review - Silver Bullet Comics
Nearly half of this issue is drawn by long-time Moore collaborator Melinda Gebbie, yet no mention is made of this on the credits page - the implication is that Marat Mychaels did the whole issue himself, then you hit the middle pages, the art changes, Gebbie is credited, and you wonder what happened.
In a way it is not surprising - the script was almost certainly written around the time Moore was playing with Supreme, and his affectation on that book for diving away from the main plot at a crucial moment to present a Silver Age-style flashback (invariably drawn by Rick Veitch) is present here too.
As for this issue, it reads extremely well and the flashback sequences by Gebbie to explain Glory's past are handled innovatively and easily.
www.silverbulletcomicbooks.com /reviews/101699940888571,print.htm   (602 words)

  
 Printer Friendly: Tomorrow Stories HB Review - Silver Bullet Comics
From the merging of the text into the pictures, from the strange panel layouts specific to each story to the dialogue, this is the closest Tomorrow Stories comes to having twists in the tale, and they are always interesting, always an experience.
Cobweb, with Melinda Gebbie, is rather more hit-and-miss.
The undercurrent of sexual tension between Cobweb and her driver tends to become far too overt when subtlety is called for, but fortunately each tale offers something unique which rescues them from complete disasterdom.
www.silverbulletcomicbooks.com /reviews/101499174398465,print.htm   (567 words)

  
 NameTraq | Last Name: Gebbie
Head teacher Morag Gebbie said: ''He was a very goods hot and managed to score a goal.''.
During part of the trip, the car was driven by Andrew Gebbie, a documentary filmmaker from Scotland whose wife, Kay, is the Sydney Paralympic Gold Medal...
I really look forward to all of our publications this year, but if I had to single out one, I'd have to say Alan Moore and Melinda Gebbie's Lost Girls," Staros...
www.nametraq.com /genealogy_jan04/G/Gebbie.shtml   (264 words)

  
 yendi: LoEG moves to Top Shelf
According to Rich Johnston (a phrase which, admittedly, has often carried the same credibility as "according to The Weekly World News"), Alan Moore has severed all ties with DC, and future League of Extraordinary Gentlemen books will be published by Top Shelf and Knockabout.
ETA: The article also mentions that Moore and Melinda Gebbie are engaged.
Which means, I can only hope, that they'll finally get another volume of their jointly-produced erotica out there.
www.livejournal.com /~yendi/746498.html   (416 words)

  
 comicreaders.com - Top Shelf Asks the Big Questions
Top Shelf Asks the Big Questions is a response to the censorship of Alan Moore and Melinda Gebbie's six page "Cobweb" story, which was spiked from the DC / America's Best Comics anthology title, Tomorrow Stories.
And censorship is definitely at the forefront with Moore and Gebbie's "Cobweb" story now titled "La Toile" (French for "the Web").
But the only questions were in an advertisement for an upcoming release of Moore and Gebbie's graphic novel Lost Girls, which has been in the works for over a decade.
www.comicreaders.com /modules.php?name=News&file=print&sid=140   (1119 words)

  
 Index to Comic Art Collection: "Gb" to "Gedovius"
Call no.: PN6710.S23 1993 ----------------------------------------------------- Gebbie, Melinda, 1940- --Miscellanea.
Call no.: PN6725.C69 1993 ----------------------------------------------------- Gebbie, Melinda, 1940- --Miscellanea.
Call no.: PN6710.S24 1996 ----------------------------------------------------- Gebbie, Melinda, 1940- --Miscellanea.
www.lib.msu.edu /comics/rri/grri/gb.htm   (3930 words)

  
 The Friday Review: Top Shelf: Asks The Big Questions
There is no denying that art-comics, as the occasionally more restrained offspring of underground comics, have a history with the anthology format that dates back to their very genesis.
Also of particular note was the inclusion of an Alan Moore/Melinda Gebbie piece (along with a particularly naughty advertisement for the upcoming Top Shelf release of LOST GIRLS in 2004) that was originally banned by DC/Wildstorm from publication in Moore's bizarre anthology from the ABC comics line, TOMORROW STORIES.
To an unprepared reader, this narrative-driven piece's appearance amidst a sea of largely artist-dominated work is probably a little jarring, but the blow is no doubt softened by Gebbie's sensual linework that is both smartly coloured and immaculately reproduced on great paper.
www.ninthart.com /display.php?article=606   (574 words)

  
 Comic-Book Superstore: Alan Moore
The writing is the usual complex, layered, rich style you've come to expect of Moore, but with the added fun of lots of sex.
Melinda Gebbie's illustrations are intense and often unsettling in their choice of color and the juxtaposition of her personal style with the art deco ornamentation, but always highly expressive, beautiful and, amazingly, both erotic and non-idealistic (i.e., no balloon breasts.
Moore and Gebbie's lost erotic classic from TABOO continues.
www.zianet.com /comic-booksuperstore/collected/moore-alan.html   (1167 words)

  
 Diamond News   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
Top Shelf Productions has announced that it will publish Alan Moore and Melinda Gebbie’s erotic work Lost Girls.
This 240-page epic – of which 56 pages were published in the mid-90s – will finally see completion beginning summer/fall 2001.
Since the mid-90s, Moore and Gebbie have continued working on the project, and 180 pages of painted art are now complete.
www.diamondcomics.com /news/2000/05_22_00/briefs05_22.htm   (171 words)

  
 Pulp Fiction Comics - The Mail Order Specialists   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
Hints of lasciviousness and thinly disguised references to exotic sexual practices are certainly nothing new to funnybooks, but somehow Moore (in this case Steve, not Alan) and longtime collaborator Melinda Gebbie make what is essentially a platform for teasing and innuendo tasteful and culturally rich.
Yes, this ‘story’ is no more or less than a series of exotic pin-ups, but it is no mean feat to portray yards of flesh bursting free of inches of diaphanous silk and consistently maintain a sense of whimsy and tasteful fun.
Melinda Gebbie’s art achieves this beautifully because her portrayals of Indigo’s Midnight Mistress and her ever-faithful Gal Friday (or is it servant?) emphasise feminine sexuality while never reducing their subjects to production-line adolescent fantasy material.
www.users.on.net /~pulpfiction34a/reviews.htm   (14112 words)

  
 ULTRAZINE
Alan made me realize the potential of comics, and also inspired me to make my most dreaded and obsessive internal statement: "I could do this!" -- and thus, a new obsession was born.
It's hard to believe that ten years later I'm actually working with Alan -- comics' all-time greatest creator -- by representing him and Eddie Campbell on FROM HELL and THE BIRTH CAUL, and actually publishing his and Melinda Gebbie's LOST GIRLS starting later this year.
and Melinda for the first time in person on April 20th, 2000, we spent the entire day together, with both of them treating me like a long lost friend.
www.ultrazine.org /um007eng-1b.html   (232 words)

  
 Alan Moore   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
Melinda Gebbie illustrates another side of the mauve metropolis with Cobweb, whose strangely enticing attitude leads her into the steamy side of crime-fighting and curious adventure.
Rick Veitch has often collaborated with Alan Moore on projects like Swamp Thing and Supreme, as well as writing and drawing his own Bratpack, Maximortal and the Greyshirt: Indigo Sunset series.
Melinda Gebbie emerged from the underground comics scene in titles such as San Francisco Comics and Anarchy before pursuing animation work in England, and has teamed with Alan Moore on Supreme, Glory, 1963 and Lost Girls.
www.twbooks.co.uk /authors/alanmoore.html   (1570 words)

  
 4ColorHeroes The Alan Moore Store:Tomorrow Stories
The Cobweb: “La Toile dans le Chateau des Larmet" Melinda Gebbie (a) 6 pages, the titles translates to "Cobweb in the Castle of Tears".
The Cobweb: “Shackled in Silk!" Melinda Gebbie (a) 6 pages.
And Splash Brannigan: “Splash of Two Worlds" Hilary Barta (a) 6 pages, Melinda Gebbie (c).
www.4colorheroes.com /tomorrow5.html   (244 words)

  
 Captain Comics Round Table > TIME previews 2005 comics   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
Dec 14 2004, 11:10 AM And re: "Lost Girls" - Melinda Gebbie's art most certainly does not suit my taste either.
She did a couple of separate chapters of "Supreme" when Moore was writing, and we're talking about REALLY bad art...
Dec 14 2004, 12:59 PM I didn't mind Gebbie's art on the Cobweb series in Tomorrow Stories.
www.captaincomics.us /forums/lofiversion/index.php/t12462.html   (1948 words)

  
 ALAN MOORE'S TOMORROW STORIES by Gebbie, Melinda, Moore, Alan, etc., Veitch, Rick   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
ALAN MOORE'S TOMORROW STORIES by Gebbie, Melinda, Moore, Alan, etc., Veitch, Rick
Use our email a friend feature to pass on the details of this title to friends and colleagues.
Thrill to the exploits of the lady crimefighter 'The Cobweb', ponder the inventions of Jack B. Quick, follow the cases of 'gentleman sleuth' Greyshirt, and laugh at the tribulations of the 'First American'.
www.studentbookworld.com /BookDetail/184023220X.html   (94 words)

  
 > > Compare UK book prices. Tomorrow Stories , Alan Moore, Jim Baikie, Kevin Nowlan, Rick Veitch, Melinda Gebbie. ...
Tomorrow Stories, Alan Moore, Jim Baikie, Kevin Nowlan, Rick Veitch, Melinda Gebbie.
Alan Moore, Jim Baikie, Kevin Nowlan, Rick Veitch, Melinda Gebbie
Compare book prices at Best-Book-Price.co.uk to find which UK online shop is selling your book at the cheapest price.
www.best-book-price.co.uk /compare-book-price-code-1840234385.html   (264 words)

  
 COMICON.com: THE BEAT: OCTOBER 11, 2002
Bell has interviewed the wives of famous cartoonists, including Ann Eisner, Joanie Lee, Adele Kurtzman, Melinda Gebbie, and Virginia Romita.
Bell calls it "a fascinating tale of how partners navigate life in this medium and their struggles to define themselves outside of their spouses' needs.
Melinda Gebbie is the wife of a famous cartoonist?
www.comicon.com /cgi-bin/ultimatebb.cgi?ubb=get_topic&f=36&t=000252   (2599 words)

  
 Comic Book Resources - Comic Book News, Reviews and Commentary - Updated Daily!
A slightly dally later and I'm introducing myself to artist Melinda Gebbie and Top Shelf's Brett Warnock.
They were here in London on pre-press work for Top Shelf's imminent release of the "Lost Girls" volumes by Alan Moore and Melinda Gebbie.
Brett's a regular reader of this column so we geek out together, while Melinda stayed serene, above such asinine surroundings, flicking through some nearby comics.
www.comicbookresources.com /columns/index.cgi?column=litg&article=1832   (1110 words)

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