Fantagraphics needs your help

Krug

Newshound
http://www.digitalwebbing.com/news/052803-7.html


Fantagraphics Books Needs Your Help!
Buy Books! Keep Us Alive!

To Comics Lovers Throughout the World:

Fantagraphics Books has just celebrated its 27th year publishing many of the finest cartoonists from all over the world as well as our flagship publication, the magazine people love to hate, The Comics Journal. We are proud of our long-term commitment to comics as an art form and our dogged determination to push excellence down everybody's throats. This is all very well and good but it doesn't mean much in the face of brute economics -- and it's the wall of brute economics that we've just hit, hard.

Due to two major financial obstacles over the last two years, we're hard against it.

Our former and now bankrupt book trade distributor went out of business owing us over $70,000 -- which we will never see. (To add insult to injury, we learned that the owner is selling copies of our books that he should've returned on e-bay!) This unexpected shortfall necessitated taking out a couple loans which have now come due. In late 2001, our line was picked up by the W.W. NORTON COMPANY, who took over our bookstore distribution, and has done a magnificent job of providing us unprecedented access to the bookstore market. Inexperience with the book trade resulted in our erring on the side of overprinting our books too heavily throughout 2002, so that our anticipated profit is in fact sitting in our warehouse in the form of books. Loans must be paid in cash, not books. The only way to get out of this hole we've dug ourselves into is to sell those books. Which is where, we hope, you come in.

Over the last few weeks, we've worked to fix our in-house problems (which included, most painfully, laying off several fine and long-term employees). We have put in place a system of checks and balances by which we will watch our inventory growth scrupulously. But, we have a debt to pay down and wolves at the door. It's so severe that this month we envisaged shutting down our active publishing, seeking outside investors, or similarly odious measures. (Fantagraphics continues to be owned 100% by Messrs. Gary Groth and Kim Thompson. We'd like it to remain that way.)

If you've respected what Fantagraphics stands for and what we've done for the medium, if you've enjoyed our books, and if you want to insure that this proud tradition continues into this new and ominous century, we're asking you to help us now in our especial hour of need by buying some books. Put simply, we need to raise about $80,000 above our usual sales over the next month, and the only way to do that is to convert books into cash.

We've spent the last quarter century trying hard to produce the best comics the world has ever seen. You've rewarded us over the years with your loyal patronage, your moral support, your praise, your intelligent and honest feedback, all of which are more than we could ever have hoped for. We know we have tens of thousands of loyal readers: if even a fraction of you come forward and order two or three books that you've been meaning to buy, we'll be over this hump. We've published some some of the best books ever over the last year -- Gene Deitch's (yes, that Gene Deitch!) THE CAT ON A HOT THIN GROOVE; B. KRIGSTEIN, Greg Sadowski's definitive biography of the pioneering artist from the '50s; the magnificent FRANK collection; and the third volume of the extraordinary KRAZY KAT series. Our publishing plans for 2003 include a huge coffee table book by Will Elder (WILL ELDER: MAD PLAYBOY OF ART); KRIGSTEIN COMICS, a 240 page follow-up collection of Krigstein's best comics from the '50s, and new collections and graphic novels by Gilbert Hernandez, Jason, Dave Cooper, Robert Crumb, A.B. Frost, Bill Griffith, Gary Panter...

We already sell books by mail, so, as clichéd as it sounds, we really do have operators standing by. You can view out catalogue online. You can order by calling our 800 number or on-line at our web site (all ordering information below.)

If this was a standard pitch, we'd offer you some extra incentive -- a discount or free books or knicknacks or whatnot. But, it's not. We're asking those of you who believe we've contributed something worthwhile and meaningful to help us continue to do so, that's all. We need the full retail value of our books. But we can offer something that won't cost us any money: anyone (individually or collectively) who buys $500 worth of books from us will get a personal phone call from Gary Groth thanking you for saving Fantagraphics' ass. Think how much fun this could be at a party!


via FAX: 206-524-2104
via mail: Fantagraphics Books,
7563 Lake City Way NE, Seattle, WA 98115
Secure Internet Orders: http://www.fantagraphics.com
phone: 206-524-6165 or 800-657-1100

 

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From what I've read at Newsarama and The Pulse, this is definitely not just some cheap promotional thing. Fantagraphics, one of the big names in alternative comics, is in serious, serious trouble. If it goes belly up, this would be a massive blow to alternative comics.

Personally, most alternative comics have had zero appeal for me. I love mainstream super-hero comics, manga, and some Vertigo-type stuff, but I've just never been into the alternative scene. Fortunately, there are quite a few items in their catalog that still look pretty good, like Usagi Yojimbo. So maybe I'll place an order.

And if it means anything to any of you who has any real money, at least a few indudtry pros are very concerned about this and doing what they can to help. Neil Gaiman has even offered (to try) to make personal thank you calls to anyone making those big orders, if a personal thank you from Gary Groth doesn't mean anything to you. That's enough to make me consider it, despite not having that kind of money!
 

Tarrasque Wrangler said:
No offense Krug, but this kinda feels like an ad.

It sounds more like a call for help. They've been bilked $70k by a distributor (who still sells their stuff on ebay!) and that's led to some bad business decisions. Well hopefully they can dig themselves out.

Cool of Gaiman to help out. And you really should try some alternative titles; only because of them has there been improvements in the mainstream.
 

I was working at Kitchen Sink Press at the time of its implosion, and was one of the first layoffs. I've seen an alternative comics publisher go down in bitterness and money problems, it's not pleasant.

Of course, I'm with Chun-Tzu... I mean, the whole time I was working at KSP, I didn't see one book published that had halfway decent art AND writing. They'd publish things by J. O'Barr and... uh... whoever it was that made that awful OINK comic... alternative comics publishers, IMO, should start publishing comics worthy of my cash before I feel bad for their going under. Commence flames.
 

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