Atrocity debuts in Hippopants

Feb 14th, 2010

As some people know, for the past year or so, I’ve been working on a series of 100+ short narratives that I call atrocities, set in a fictional city called “Baltimore.” I’ve kept them very close to the vest (except for presenting a few, perhaps unwisely, when I read down in Athens this past fall). I wanted to create the collection as whole, and to possess the whole world before I let it go. I felt that talking about it and sharing it would adulterate it in some way. Now, the writing is done, and the drawing has begun. To celebrate this, I’ve published a the first of these atrocities, a very short one called “High Hopes” in the Hippopants, a new journal of short graphic fiction. Sanaz and Stefan Kiesbye do an amazing job curating this journal, and it seemed like the right place to reveal even the smallest shadow of this project which has possessed me privately for so long.

Hopefully, the next few months will be filled with drawing, and I’ll be able to share dozens more atrocities when they’re all done.

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Dave Van Patten’s story at Hippopants

Jan 26th, 2010

This amazing new online journal was just brought to my attention. It’s called Hippopants, and the editors, Sanaz and Stefan Kiesbye, describe it as a journal that offers “short works that make text and art collide in inventive ways.” Basically, the exact thing I’ve been waiting for.

Just looked around a little and I was taken unaware by this piece called “Bobby and Sammy Book” by Dave Van Patten. Really fun and creepy with these coarse and garish watercolors (just the way I like them). The artist describes it as a ‘Children’s Book for Grown-Ups.”

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