THE LIBERTARIAN ENTERPRISE Number 451, January 13, 2008 "Words have power." Special to The Libertarian Enterprise Roswell, Texas: Page 1 Roswell, Texas: Page 640 As everybody who frequents the virtual pages of BigHeadPress.com is aware, our graphic novel Roswell, Texas is complete, as of today, January 10, 2008. The work, as far as I know, is unique, unprecedented in the annals of graphic novelia (hey, I'm an authorI can make up words if I want) and may also be the most detailed and widely-reaching alternate history tale in literature. I'm extremely proud to have been a part of it as co-author of the original story and principle adaptor to comic form. One reason I'm writing this is to bring your attention to the indispensible others involved. First, my good friend and co-author Rex F. "Baloo" May, who came up with many of the more imaginative bits, including creation of a whole new language, Texperanto. He and I will finish the text novel now, and we're looking for a publisher even as I write this. Know anybody in the publishing business who wants and action-adventure science fiction western that already has a "fan-base" and over six hundred pages of graphic advertising on the web every day? Next, I want to mention Scott Bieser. I can't say what his work has meant to me. Twice, now, in The Probability Broach and R,T, he's brought my settings and characters to life in a way I never thought could happen, and I'm more than grateful to him, just for existing. His brain and mine seem to mesh and the only really weird part is when he gets a scene exactly as I imagined it, only flopped, from left to right. His amazing art, especially in R,T has more than made up for the fact that, having started my career as a novelist in the Dark Ages of Political Correctness, I never got any scantily-clad maidens on my book covers. Wait'll you get a load of what we're doing next! Jen Zach is our esteemed colorist, an extraordinarily creative and intelligent young woman whose mind and clever hands never seem to stop working at something beautiful or funnyor both. I have sat in the same room many times with her and my family and watched her crochet funny little animals, squid, octopi, and shrimp as she watched TV, the same way other artists doodle with a pencil and pad. Jen brought a magic of her very own to R,T (see the rainbow following the Emperor's Flying Boat as it lands, for example) I hope we'll get to see again, soon. Not to be forgotten is Sean "Zeke" Bieser, a naturally talented graphic artist in his own right, who did as much of the lettering for R,T as he could. What he may lack in years, he more than makes up for in extremely funny sarcasm, and I am certain that he will write and draw his own graphic novels for you much sooner than even he may realize. Finally, we get to Our Publisher, Frank Bieser, whose adventurous spirit has made all of this possible. I only wish he could be up here in Fort Collins to celebrate the completion of the work this coming Sunday. We will send him pictures, however, and you will see them, eventually. Now it's your turn. We need two things from those of you who have enjoyed R,T or are enjoying it now. The first thing you can do is send the URL to as many other individuals as you can, at least a dozen. The second thing is to write us and tell us what you think about R,T. It doesn't matter what: everybody likes or dislike something different about everythingthat's what individualism is all about, really. Please write us a word, write us a sentence, write us a review, cheerful and flippant, sarky and snotty, long or short, superficial or depthy, John Waynishly straightforward or twisted and devious like 90% of what the critics write. Tell the gnomes who hand out all those Nebulae, Hugii, and Prometheii what a swell thing we've accomplished here. We'll publish the remarks we likeand hatemost. We believe sincerely that the work deserves it, as it deserves a wider audience. But then that could just be me, I guess.
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