The Legend of Lion Man Lives Again
In 1947, Orrin C. Evans created one of the world's first Black superheroes--Lion Man! Appearing in the only issue of All Negro Comics, superhero history was forever changed. And now Lion Man is back!
Readapted and remixed for modern times, the award-winning visionary team of John Jennings and David Brame (After the Rain) create a mind-blowing Afrofuturistic tale of cosmic splendor while Bill Campbell (The Day the Klan Came to Town) and up-and-coming Zimbabwean writer, Yvette Lisa Ndlovu (Drinking from Graveyard Wells) deliver a Bondian African spy thriller full of plot twists, conspiracy thriillers, and political intrigue.
In The Adventures of Lion Man, our hero steps bravely out of the past into a bold new future.
John Jennings is a professor, author, graphic novelist, curator, Harvard Fellow, New York Times Bestseller, 2018 Eisner Winner, and all-around champion of Black culture.As Professor of Media and Cultural Studies at the University of California at Riverside (UCR), Jennings examines the visual culture of race in various media forms including film, illustrated fiction, and comics and graphic novels. He is also the director of Abrams ComicArts imprint Megascope, which publishes graphic novels focused on the experiences of people of color. His research interests include the visual culture of Hip Hop, Afrofuturism and politics, Visual Literacy, Horror, and the EthnoGothic, and Speculative Design and its applications to visual rhetoric.Jennings is co-editor of the 2016 Eisner Award-winning collection The Blacker the Ink: Constructions of Black Identity in Comics and Sequential Art (Rutgers) and co-founder/organizer of The Schomburg Center's Black Comic Book Festival in Harlem. He is co-founder and organizer of the MLK NorCal's Black Comix Arts Festival in San Francisco and also SOL-CON: The Brown and Black Comix Expo at the Ohio State University.Yvette Lisa Ndlovu is a Zimbabweansarungano. Her debut short story collection Drinking fromGraveyard Wells (University Press of Kentucky) was selected forthe 2021 UPK New Poetry & Prose Series, and her novelmanuscript-in-progress was selected by George RR Martin for theWorldbuilder Scholarship. She earned her BA at Cornell University andher MFA at UMass Amherst. Her work has been supported by fellowshipsfrom the Tin House Workshop, Bread Loaf Writers Workshop, and the NewYork State Summer Writers Institute. She is the Newhouse VisitingAssistant Professor of Creative Writing at Wellesley College and hastaught at UMass Amherst, Clarion West online, and the JuniperInstitute for Young Writers. She is the co-founder of the VoodoonautsSummer Fellowship for Black SFF writers. Her work has beenanthologized in the World Fantasy Award-winning anthology Year'sBest African Speculative Fiction 2021 and the NAACPaward-nominated Africa Risen (Tor). Her work has appearedor is forthcoming in the ColumbiaJournal, F&SF, Tor.com, Lightspeed, FANTASYMagazine, and Fiyah Literary Magazine for Black SpeculativeFiction. She is currently at work on a novel.Bill Campbell is the author of SunshinePatriots, My Booty Novel, and the anti-racism satire, KoontownKilling Kaper. Along with Edward Austin Hall, he co-edited thegroundbreaking anthology, Mothership: Tales from Afrofuturismand Beyond. He also co-edited Stories for Chip: A Tributeto Samuel R. Delany with Nisi Shawl, Future Fiction: NewDimensions in International Science Fiction and Fantasy withFrancesco Verso, and APB: Artists against PoliceBrutality with Jason Rodriguez and John Jennings. HisAfrofuturist spaceploitation graphic novel, Baaaad Muthaz (withDavid Brame and Damian Duffy) was released in 2019. His historicalgraphic novel with Bizhan Khodabandeh, The Day the Klan Came toTown, was released by PM Press in 2021. Campbell lives inWashington, DC, where he spends his time with his family and helmsRosarium Publishing.David Brame is proudly blackity black, an afrofuturist and scholar. His most recent scholarly creative accomplishments for 2019 and 2020 include Sanford Biggers: CODESWITCH in collaboration with Professor John Jennings, The Bronx Museum and produced by Yale University Press. His scholarly work geared towards black youth called, is called The Struggle, produced by Minnesota Press. His graphic novel After the Rain, disseminated by ABRAMS/Megascope, a short story written by Nnedi Okorafor and adapted by Professor John Jennings, was nominated for an Eisner. His comic work explores issues of race and identity in the context of the American South, Black Gothica, mysticism and the African diaspora. Damian Duffy is a cartoonist, scholar, writer, curator, lecturer, teacher, and a Glyph Comics, Eisner Comics, Bram Stoker, and Hugo Award-winning, #1 New York Times bestselling graphic novelist. He holds a MS and PhD in Library and Information Sciences from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, where he teaches courses on computers & culture, and social media & global change.His many publications range from academic essays (in comics form) on new media & learning, to art books about underrepresentation in comics culture, to editorial comics, to a graphic novel adaptation of Kindred by Octavia E. Butler, with his J2D2 Arts counterpart John Jennings. Kindred: A graphic novel adaptation (Abrams ComicArts) was awarded the 2017 Brame Stoker Award for Superior Achievement in a Graphic Novel, and the 2018 Eisner Comics Award for Best Adaptation From Another Medium. Their follow-up, Parable of the Sower: A graphic novel adaptation (Abrams ComicArts) won the 2021 Ignyte Award for Best Comics Team, and the 2021 Hugo Award for Best Graphic Story or Comic.The co-editor of the Black Comix Returns art book from the Magnetic Collection at Lion Forge Comics, Damian has given talks and lead workshops about comics, art, and education internationally.
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