
Monthly Archives: July 2010
Daily Comic: Semicolon Sentries

Daily Comic: Semicolon Sentries

_A Note From the Cartoonist_:
Wait, what? Why does _The Wavy Rule_ look a little different today? Well, comics develop and grow, just like capybaras do, and _The Wavy Rule_ is breaking free from its regular oval-like constraints. But I’ll continue to receive inspiration from daily life and universal themes, and also be inspired by my favorite cartoonists, which include Liniers, Jason, Daniel Clowes, Adrian Tomine, and David Mazzucchelli. I’m pouring what I’ve learned into “various graphic novels and collections”:http://www.blurb.com/user/Polylerus, which I continue to expand. Hello!
So You Love Punctuation? Write a Letter to Your Favorite Mark, and You Might Win a Copy of Ben Greenman’s Brand-New Book!
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Update: We’ve announced the finalists, and the winner!
We loved every single letter to every single mark. Thank you!
Ben Greenman‘s new book, What He’s Poised to Do, was recently published by Harper Perennial, and critics are already hailing its mix of emotional sophistication and formal innovation. Just the tip of the iceberg: Steve Almond, writing in the Los Angeles Times, calls the fourteen stories in the collection “astonishing,” and Pauls Toutonghi at Bookslut calls them “beautiful”–even better, “a book so beautiful, you’ll feel mysteriously compelled to mail it to a stranger.”
The book, in large part, deals with letters: how they are (or aren’t) effective conveyances for emotional intimacy and truth. Along with the book, Mr. Greenman has launched a site called Letters With Character, which invites readers to write letters to their favorite fictional characters–most recently, Alyosha Karamazov, Madame Psychosis from Infinite Jest, and Ernest Hemingway’s Yogi Johnson from The Torrents of Spring.
Here at Emdashes, we love letters (especially those sent through the postal mail), but there’s something we love even more: punctuation. Indeed, when we discovered that the upside-down question mark–as in ¿Qué?–had no official name, we challenged you, our readers, to rename it, and now the frequent (you wouldn’t believe how frequent) googlers who seek this information know the answer: it is the interroverti, all thanks to you.
In the same spirit, we’re combining two of our top-ten passions in life and challenging you to write a letter to your favorite punctuation mark, or perhaps one you find elusive, insufficiently loved, or sound but overexposed. Tell it anything you want: your fears, your frustrations, your innermost desires. Then put it in the comments section below so we can read it, too. Deadline: August 16. (We know all too well that it can take a bit of time to write a good letter–or even a telegraphic telegram.)
Here is a partial list of possible correspondents, with the current tally of blushing recipients marked in bold, and also ranked here in descending order of popularity: the acute accent, the air quote, the ampersand (3), the apostrophe (7), the asterisk (2), the at-the-price-of, the at sign (3), the backslash, the bracket, the bullet, the caret, the colon (3), the comma, the curly quote, the dagger, the dash ditto mark, the diaeresis, the dollar sign, the double hyphen (which is perhaps not what you thought it was), the ellipsis (10), the em dash (2)–toward which some jurors are slightly biased–or the en dash, the newly coined exclaquestion mark, the exclamation point (7), the full stop (2), the grawlix (2), the hyphen, the interpunct, the interrobang (2), the inverted exclamation point, the interroverti (formerly the inverted question mark), the little star, the macron, the manicule (2), the number sign, the parenthesis (((3))), the percent sign, the period (3), the pilcrow, the pound sign, the question mark (3), the quotation mark (or a pair of them), the controversial semicolon (7), the smart quote, the slash, the tilde (2), the underline, the Oxford comma, or any other mark close to your heart but not listed here. We will select the best letter and award the writer a signed copy of Mr. Greenman’s book, which may in fact contain the beloved mark in question. He may even add an extra one just for you.
Remember: Post your letter in the comments below by August 16, and you’ll be entered to win a signed copy of this exceptionally satisfying book of stories by one of our favorite writers. The best of the entry letters will all be collected in a post of their own, with sparkles, blue ribbons, and plenty of punctuation. If you can’t wait till mid-August to find out if you’ve won, and/or have friends who love letters and will love this book, of course, you can also order a copy.
Posting tip: You can use basic HTML tags to make line spaces; try the paragraph and break tags, as needed. If you don’t know how or would like our help, we are obsessive editor types and are happy to right the spacing for you.
Art note: The painting on the book cover is by Alyssa Monks, whose portraits of women and men and bodies and children and water and funny faces are scorchingly beautiful.
Factual note: We realize that some of these marks are really less punctuation than they are typographical elements. But since they’re getting letters, or we think they should, we’re including them.
Related posts and links:
Short Imagined Monologues: I Am the Period at the End of This Paragraph. [Ben Greenman, McSweeney’s]
Exciting Emdashes Contest! ¿What Should We Call the Upside-Down Question Mark?
Our in-depth coverage of punctuation–five years and counting!
More Emdashes contests, giveaways, and assorted bunk
Is That an Emoticon in 1862? [NYT/City Room]
Daily Comic: Universal Signal

Panelled Tribute: Vanessa Davis’ “Splendor”
_Pollux writes_:
“People called Pekar a curmudgeon–but I know that his brand of grumpiness comes from the truly tender-hearted.” That’s from “Splendor,” “Vanessa Davis'”:http://www.spanielrage.com/ “illustrated remembrance”:http://www.tabletmag.com/arts-and-culture/39684/splendor/ of Harvey Pekar for _Tablet Magazine_.
A lot of wonderful written tributes to Pekar have been created this week, and it is great to see homage paid in words and pictures as well.
Check out an interview with author and cartoonist Vanessa Davis at “Gothamist.”:http://gothamist.com/2005/08/01/vanessa_davis_authorcartoonist.php
Katha Pollitt, Roman Polanski, George Orwell, and Saul Steinberg Updated
Martin Schneider writes:
POE (pal of Emdashes) Katha Pollitt skewers the misguided Roman Polanski apologists.
It’s funny: I suspect that at FOX News headquarters the defenses of Polanski are an instance of the moral relativism of the Left. I’m a liberal, and most of my friends are liberals, and I have never spoken to anyone who seriously entertained the notion that Polanski shouldn’t be incarcerated, and here is one of the leading figures on the Left, ridiculing the idea that Polanski’s masterpieces give him a free pass on rape. Last year I was at a dinner party with about ten Viennese journalists, the very picture of decadent “European” elite, and everyone present agreed that Polanski was guilty and should be sent to jail.
So I don’t know who, exactly, is really defending Polanski. I wouldn’t be surprised if the set of people who defend Polanski consists mostly of cultural elite types; the point is that it’s a small group and that most liberals don’t hold this view. Can someone generate a Venn diagram for me?
Pollitt’s essay reminded me of George Orwell’s “Benefit of Clergy: Some Notes on Salvador Dali,” I was a big Orwell addict in the early 1990s, and I’m still a big fan, but what’s striking about the essay is Orwell’s cultural conservatism. Then again, it was 1944, pre-John Waters, pre-camp, pre-Lots of Things.
On the subject of Polanski: I should stress that I don’t dismiss his post-exile works. I’m a big fan of Frantic, and I thought Bitter Moon was terrific, and I liked Death and the Maiden a good deal too. (I haven’t seen The Pianist.) Polanski’s an extremely talented fellow. And he should be sent to prison.
Unrelatedly: some wag has updated Saul Steinberg’s famous map “View of the World From Ninth Avenue” (actually, it’s possible that its creator has never heard of Steinberg). What I don’t get about the update: What, exactly, is inaccurate about it? It looks just like a standard U.S. map to me.
Oh, one last thing: hail the jumper colon! I’ve sprinkled a few in this very post!
Daily Comic: Turn It Off

Splendorous Tributes: Eric Reynolds and Bill Kartalopoulos Honor Harvey Pekar
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**Above, a portrait of Pekar by artist Jeff Hurst.**
_Pollux writes:_
A lot of thoughtful and moving tributes to Harvey Pekar have emerged from the world of comics this week, and Emdashes would like to make special mention of two of them.
Eric Reynolds of Fantagraphics has written an insightful “piece”:http://www.fantagraphics.com/index.php?option=com_myblog&show=Harvey-Pekar-R.I.P..html&Itemid=113 on Pekar. Reynolds talks about his relationship with Pekar, both as a young fan and admirer and as a subsequent editor for _The Complete Crumb_ series.
Bill Kartalopoulos, an authority and teacher of comics (and a friend of Emdashes) has written a typically thoughtful “piece”:http://imprint.printmag.com/illustration/what-harvey-pekar-did-for-comics-2/ on Pekar that explores the Clevelander’s contribution to the world of comics.
Daily Comic: Voltron Break-Ups

