Happy Valentine's Day!
I'm celebrating with a pop-up sale of my three most beloved graphic novels, pictured below.
Death Plays a Mean Harmonica is a limited edition graphic novel set in Oaxaca, Mexico. It has a screen-printed cover.
Then we have the Complete BugHouse and the Complete Dog Boy, giant tomes collecting my work! Just hit that link above for details. Cheers!
-Steve Lafler
Steve Lafler, a self employed cartoonist / entrepreneur, holds forth on "Self Employment for Bohemians". If holding down a job is your idea of a LIVING DEATH, this may be the blog for you!
Showing posts with label Steve Lafler. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Steve Lafler. Show all posts
Thursday, February 13, 2020
Thursday, March 30, 2017
Reviews of Death in Oaxaca #3 by Steve Lafler
My new comic Death in Oaxaca #3 from Alternative Comics has garnered a couple of reviews.
Here's one at High-Low from Rob Clough
Here's one at Optical Sloth
I've started drawing the final chapter of Death in Oaxaca, so I'll get this graphic novel out in due course!
-Steve Lafler
Here's one at High-Low from Rob Clough
Here's one at Optical Sloth
I've started drawing the final chapter of Death in Oaxaca, so I'll get this graphic novel out in due course!
-Steve Lafler
Tuesday, January 31, 2017
Listen: La Leyenda del Gato Sucio
Give a listen to La Leyenda del Gato Sucio. Click play at the landing page.
Song by Radio Insecto, playing Oaxacabilly Music.
Check out my weekly comics at my Patreon page.
Thanks!
Steve Lafler
Sunday, May 29, 2016
Oaxaca Paintings from Steve Lafler
I've been out and about Oaxaca with my painting kit again. Let me know if you're interested in your own little piece of Oaxaca via email.
-Steve Lafler
-Steve Lafler
Parque Llano Memela Puesto
Parque Llano Bench
San Agustinillo "Kids Club"
Parque Llano Monument
Organic Market Vegetable Women
Wednesday, May 18, 2016
Friday, October 02, 2015
HEY, You Gotta Get Steve Lafler's New Oaxaca Comic Book
Here's some of the latest AHT from my new title Death in Oaxaca #2. Now's the time to order your copy!
Discover the intrigue of craft tobala mezcal from small stills in the campo, and tejate, the cacao/maize drink of indigenous Zapotec kings. Oh, there's masked wrestler babes and ancient vampires too.
Discover the intrigue of craft tobala mezcal from small stills in the campo, and tejate, the cacao/maize drink of indigenous Zapotec kings. Oh, there's masked wrestler babes and ancient vampires too.
Monday, July 06, 2015
Kim Thompson Was a Great Guy in My Book
I've been thinking about Fantagraphics co-founder Kim Thompson on the 2nd anniversary of his untimely death.
I was never close to Kim, but we had a friendly acquaintance and mutual respect. He made a difference in my life, indeed he help me quite a bit as I was struggling to make it as a cartoonist.
By December of '85, I'd already published six issues of my seminal indy comics title Dog Boy under my Cat-Head Comics imprint, but I was hungry for a bigger audience. I submitted a huge batch of pages to Fantagraphics, and Gary Groth wrote back with a thumbs up. I was delighted! Gary wrote that Dog Boy was more up Kim's alley than his, so I'd be working with Kim.
Via the mails, Kim and I went back & forth for a few months, discussing the particulars, but nothing really happened, and I was getting frustrated. I published Dog Boy #7 under Cat-Head, and hoped I could still work with Kim and Gary.
Fast forward to the San Diego Comic-Con, summer 1986. I haunted the Fanta booth looking for Kim. Jaime and Gilbert were in the house, but I froze up and was too shy to go over. Dork! Finally, I cornered Kim at the booth, and showed him 46 finished pages, about two-and-a-half comic books worth of Dog Boy. A great conversation ensued, and Kim said, "This is publishable work". We agreed he'd send a contract for me to look over, and I was over the moon.
Later that evening, I was hanging with a bunch of ne'er-do-well cartoonists by some hotel pool. Dori Seda had the world's tiniest bathing suit, and she was saying to her boyfriend Don Donahue, "I'm a very bad girl" and she jumped in. That looks like fun! Knowing I had on brand new black bikini briefs, I peeled my clothes off and in I went.
After the swim, I noticed Gary Groth and Carol Lay by the pool too -- Carol was up to the same as I that summer, inking up a deal with Fanta. Gary and I chatted, and he confirmed that I'd talked with Kim. I was happy as a clam.
Working with Kim, I did ten comic books with Fanta, and some work for his title Critters at a nice page rate. Kim was a straight shooter, no bullshit. Quietly enthusiastic, a real pro and very knowledgeable. And, I will say that the checks arrived in good time, with honest reporting on sales. Believe me, that is appreciated in the funky world of indy/alternative comics.
Did I mention this all happened in a brief window in the 80s referred to as the "black & white boom"? Well, the boom went to bust. Kim called one day, somber. He asked if I was still freelancing for other clients. "Sure", I said. Always have a few sticks in the fire. Turns out my sales of 10,500 for our first issue were down to about 2800 by issue #5. Ouch! So it goes.
Later, I mighta pissed off Kim a bit when my anthology title Buzzard ran a parody of the Comics Journal in Buzzard #6 in 1992. But I'll tell you, the piece, entitled "The Comics Urinal", was in truth an homage, a love letter to Kim and Gary.
I was never close to Kim, but we had a friendly acquaintance and mutual respect. He made a difference in my life, indeed he help me quite a bit as I was struggling to make it as a cartoonist.
By December of '85, I'd already published six issues of my seminal indy comics title Dog Boy under my Cat-Head Comics imprint, but I was hungry for a bigger audience. I submitted a huge batch of pages to Fantagraphics, and Gary Groth wrote back with a thumbs up. I was delighted! Gary wrote that Dog Boy was more up Kim's alley than his, so I'd be working with Kim.
Via the mails, Kim and I went back & forth for a few months, discussing the particulars, but nothing really happened, and I was getting frustrated. I published Dog Boy #7 under Cat-Head, and hoped I could still work with Kim and Gary.
Fast forward to the San Diego Comic-Con, summer 1986. I haunted the Fanta booth looking for Kim. Jaime and Gilbert were in the house, but I froze up and was too shy to go over. Dork! Finally, I cornered Kim at the booth, and showed him 46 finished pages, about two-and-a-half comic books worth of Dog Boy. A great conversation ensued, and Kim said, "This is publishable work". We agreed he'd send a contract for me to look over, and I was over the moon.
Later that evening, I was hanging with a bunch of ne'er-do-well cartoonists by some hotel pool. Dori Seda had the world's tiniest bathing suit, and she was saying to her boyfriend Don Donahue, "I'm a very bad girl" and she jumped in. That looks like fun! Knowing I had on brand new black bikini briefs, I peeled my clothes off and in I went.
After the swim, I noticed Gary Groth and Carol Lay by the pool too -- Carol was up to the same as I that summer, inking up a deal with Fanta. Gary and I chatted, and he confirmed that I'd talked with Kim. I was happy as a clam.
Working with Kim, I did ten comic books with Fanta, and some work for his title Critters at a nice page rate. Kim was a straight shooter, no bullshit. Quietly enthusiastic, a real pro and very knowledgeable. And, I will say that the checks arrived in good time, with honest reporting on sales. Believe me, that is appreciated in the funky world of indy/alternative comics.
Did I mention this all happened in a brief window in the 80s referred to as the "black & white boom"? Well, the boom went to bust. Kim called one day, somber. He asked if I was still freelancing for other clients. "Sure", I said. Always have a few sticks in the fire. Turns out my sales of 10,500 for our first issue were down to about 2800 by issue #5. Ouch! So it goes.
Later, I mighta pissed off Kim a bit when my anthology title Buzzard ran a parody of the Comics Journal in Buzzard #6 in 1992. But I'll tell you, the piece, entitled "The Comics Urinal", was in truth an homage, a love letter to Kim and Gary.
Friday, February 20, 2015
I Will Eat My Own Pants if it Means I Can Make Comics
Funding Death in Oaxaca with Sales of
Classic Dog Boy & Bughouse Original Comics Art
I'm about 70 pages into drawing Death
in Oaxaca, my new graphic novel. I'm serializing it as old-school
comic magazines with publisher Alternative Comics, working
towards the complete novel. The muse is handing this book over to
me—it's flowing like honey! I live for this sensation, fully alive,
deep in the trance of art-making, that I worked to such satisfaction
with Dog Boy in the '80s and on BugHouse in the '90s on up to 2005.
Problem is, I'm focused on the new work
but struggling to make ends meet. My solution: Put the artwork for my
Bughouse & Dog Boy material up for sale at attractive prices. I
have a deep stock of more than 500 Dog Boy pages on hand, and close
to 400 Bughouse pages. These comic art pieces are executed in brush &
ink on bristol board, generally around 11” x 17” in size.
I'm offering the Dog Boy pages at $100
and the Bughouse pages at $200. The best way to see them is with my
online publisher CO2, with Dog Boy here and Bughouse here. Pick the page or pages you that just call your name, and zip me an email. I'll check on availability of the pages you request and report back. Payment is
handled via Paypal.
I'm excited to offer these seminal works of original comic art to help drive my next work to completion. You'll receive a luminous piece of comics history while helping me to create more of the same!
CO2 also offers deluxe print editions of my back catalog, DoggieStyle: The Complete Dog Boy and Menage a Bughouse (The CompleteBughouse).
Art shipping details: All art is shipped in
a heavy duty shipping tube, insured, via DHL from Oaxaca, Mexico.
Shipping charge is $55, with no extra shipping fee for multiple
pages. Ask about discounts for multiple pages. Note that you can select Dog Boy pages by issue at the CO2 site.
Thanks!
503-213-3671
Thursday, February 05, 2015
Death in Oaxaca #2 Slated for Summer 2015 Release
My next comic book Death in Oaxaca #2 is slated for a June, 2015
release from Alternative Comics.
I'm really pumped about this comic book series from Alternative Comics, building towards an eventual graphic novel. I'm in the best groove creating this material since my signature work, Bughouse. You can still pick up Death in Oaxaca #1 from Alternative.
My shit-kickin' country punk outfit, The Dick Nixon Experience, will likely assemble in the San Francisco Bay Area this July to kick out the jams with a raucous publishing debacle on behalf of Death in Oaxaca #2! Details to follow...
Steve Lafler
Here's the promo rap on Death in Oaxaca #2, which will be a 32 page comic book at around five bucks:
Gertie, the glamorous expat writer
living in Mexico, stalks a 2000-year-old giant vampire bat while
dressed as Lucha Lucy, Oaxaca's newest costumed wrestling sensation.
She doesn't find the bat, but a couple local kids mock our hero
mercilessly, chanting “You Can't Fly!” Meanwhile, Gertie's
husband Rex, the swashbuckling guitar-slinging expat cartoonist,
talks about drunk driving with Death himself in the back seat. All
this plus Tlayudas, the most delicious Mexican food you've never
heard of.
I'm really pumped about this comic book series from Alternative Comics, building towards an eventual graphic novel. I'm in the best groove creating this material since my signature work, Bughouse. You can still pick up Death in Oaxaca #1 from Alternative.
My shit-kickin' country punk outfit, The Dick Nixon Experience, will likely assemble in the San Francisco Bay Area this July to kick out the jams with a raucous publishing debacle on behalf of Death in Oaxaca #2! Details to follow...
Steve Lafler
Tuesday, December 09, 2014
Steve Lafler's Holiday Art Sale 2014
Come on in, check out these favorite Lafler art pieces at ridiculous
deals for the Holidays! Paintings and original comics pages &
covers.
You’ll know which one you just have to buy, it’ll call your name.
The sale is a my Steve Lafler site here, with a full gallery of the offerings.
Have a fantastic holiday!
You’ll know which one you just have to buy, it’ll call your name.
The sale is a my Steve Lafler site here, with a full gallery of the offerings.
Have a fantastic holiday!
Friday, December 05, 2014
Just Finished
Just finished this page, from the upcoming comic book Death in Oaxaca #2.
Brush & ink on bristol board, 10.75" x 16.5".
First $250 takes it. Email Steve for details.
Thursday, September 18, 2014
Death in Oaxaca Ebook at Comixology
Steve Lafler's new comic magazine Death in Oaxaca (Alternative) shipped to comic book stores in August. Now it's also available as an Ebook at Comixology--and it's a real steal, 34 pages of great comics for only 99 cents!
Visit Comixology to order Death in Oaxaca for .99
Meanwhile, Lafler is hard at work on issue #2 of Death in Oaxaca.
Somebody better give this guy a cuppa strong coffee! Time to buzz out more pages!
Visit Comixology to order Death in Oaxaca for .99
Meanwhile, Lafler is hard at work on issue #2 of Death in Oaxaca.
Somebody better give this guy a cuppa strong coffee! Time to buzz out more pages!
Monday, August 18, 2014
Steve Lafler Catalog Update: New Series, Old Faves, and Cool T-Shirts
First and foremost, I'm delighted to offer my brand new comic book set in my adopted home town of Oaxaca, Mexico. But there's more, I've peppered this post with links to the major works from my entire comics career. Thanks for visiting! I can honestly guarantee a fun, weird and unusual ride from all of these here comic books and graphic novels.
Steve Lafler
My new comic book Death in Oaxaca is here! You can get it from the publisher Alternative Comics or from Amazon at this link for $4.99.
Ménage à BUGHOUSE collects the funky jazz noir BUGHOUSE trilogy by Steve Lafler in one volume. Tenor saxophone maestro, Jimmy Watts, leads his talented band of bugs from the swing era into the uncharted maelstrom of Bop. And as he and his band mates claw their way to the top of the jazz world, they must fight the temptation to be consumed by addiction to a substance known as "Bug Juice".
Read Bughouse online at CO2
Steve Lafler
My new comic book Death in Oaxaca is here! You can get it from the publisher Alternative Comics or from Amazon at this link for $4.99.
The
mundane, the sublime and the bizarre show up in their best party
attire in the new comic book series from the creator of Dog
Boy and
Bughouse.
Two expats move to remote Oaxaca, the fabled highland city in
southern Mexico. Rex, earnest yet duplicitous, flees from mid-life
crisis and fear of death. Beautiful Gertie, cynical but honest, is
just plain bored and craves adventure. They contend with Lucha
Libre wrestlers and an ancient vampire who prefers chicken, and enjoy
the best fresh corn tortillas on the planet.
And of course you need the Death in Oaxaca T-Shirt to complete the experience! OK, so it's in Spanish, so it's really a "Los Muertos de Oaxaca" T Shirt. Here is the Design:
Available at this link from my Redbubble shop for $26.97. Visit my entire line of shirts at Redbubble here.
My back catalog books El Vocho and 40 Hour Man are available from Wow Cool, the mail order arm of my new publisher. You can also order these titles from my Lulu shop. Here's the books:
El Vocho. Love at the twilight of oil. Rosa the Latina hottie inventor and Eddie
the geek artist meet in a fender bender. Tempers flare but sparks fly
and they fall in love. Working together, they create the perfect clean
energy motor while being tracked by goons working for big oil.
40 Hour Man. Is it a career, or a series of really lame jobs? Stephen Beaupre
(author) and Steve Lafler (cartoonist) pose this timeless question in
Forty Hour Man, a hilarious saga of one working stiff's three-decade
journey into the minimum wage heart of the American Dream. It's all here
- from scrubbing a steakhouse floor with a toothbrush to going bust in
the Internet boom. Every bad boss. Every crazy co-worker. All the more
shocking because it's true!
Wait a Minute! What about Bughouse and Dog Boy?
Don't worry, I did not forget about the work I am best known for! I've published two huge legacy volumes with CO2, collecting every page of both series!
Ménage à BUGHOUSE collects the funky jazz noir BUGHOUSE trilogy by Steve Lafler in one volume. Tenor saxophone maestro, Jimmy Watts, leads his talented band of bugs from the swing era into the uncharted maelstrom of Bop. And as he and his band mates claw their way to the top of the jazz world, they must fight the temptation to be consumed by addiction to a substance known as "Bug Juice".
Read Bughouse online at CO2
Doggie Style: The Complete Dog Boy. Imagine an enthusiastic, ambitious young artist of the 1980s who happens
to have an enormous golden retriever head on a human body. Given to
flights of fancy and the odd meditation on the truly mundane, this Dog
Boy searches for meaning, all too often via a six pack of Rainer Ale
pounders!
Steve Lafler sat down from 1882 to 1988 and drew nearly 500 pages of Dog
Boy. Most of the time, he drew with no script, and in fact looked to
emptying his mind before putting pencil to bristol board.
The entire results are collected here in in the 488 page omnibus, DOGGIE
STYLE The Complete DOG BOY! Now you can pay witness to the genius that
flowed from Steve's streaming consciousness as he created one of the
most truly independent comic works of all time!
Read Dog Boy online at CO2
AND, one more thing! We've looked at my print books and T-Shirts, lets go ahead and buy a copy of my Ebook, Cat Suit!
CAT SUIT. What kind of whack job would put on a mask and a skin-tight suit and head out into the city after midnight? I mean, what is this guy really up to? What pathology, what perverse proclivity are we dealing with here? Is he fighting crime? Of course not, he’s just going clubbing—and he’s frankly perplexed when the aggressive bar flies & drunks single him out. The guy in question is Manx, a costumed cat man. Available digitally!
Read Dog Boy online at CO2
AND, one more thing! We've looked at my print books and T-Shirts, lets go ahead and buy a copy of my Ebook, Cat Suit!
CAT SUIT. What kind of whack job would put on a mask and a skin-tight suit and head out into the city after midnight? I mean, what is this guy really up to? What pathology, what perverse proclivity are we dealing with here? Is he fighting crime? Of course not, he’s just going clubbing—and he’s frankly perplexed when the aggressive bar flies & drunks single him out. The guy in question is Manx, a costumed cat man. Available digitally!
Friday, August 01, 2014
Steve Lafler's 2014 Comic Art Sale
I'm offering these select pages of original comic art from my new title Death in Oaxaca for $200 each.
These gorgeous works are 11" x 16.5", executed in brush & india ink on bristol board. I picked my favorite ten pages to feature in this offer.
Here is a historic chance to get some early art from my next major work, indeed each purchase is an investment in the ongoing production of the eventual publication of the Death in Oaxaca graphic novel.
I'm in the states through August 4th, and on August 5th I'm returning to my home in Oaxaca. So I can process any order that comics in up to the morning of August 5. Payment via paypal preferred, but checks and cards are a possibility.
Interested parties can email me here, or call 503-213-3671.
Pages are shipped insured.
Steve
The serious collector (or institutional collector) may want to consider purchasing the original art for the entire 34 page story for $5500.00
Copyright 2014 Steve Lafler
These gorgeous works are 11" x 16.5", executed in brush & india ink on bristol board. I picked my favorite ten pages to feature in this offer.
Here is a historic chance to get some early art from my next major work, indeed each purchase is an investment in the ongoing production of the eventual publication of the Death in Oaxaca graphic novel.
I'm in the states through August 4th, and on August 5th I'm returning to my home in Oaxaca. So I can process any order that comics in up to the morning of August 5. Payment via paypal preferred, but checks and cards are a possibility.
Interested parties can email me here, or call 503-213-3671.
Pages are shipped insured.
Steve
The serious collector (or institutional collector) may want to consider purchasing the original art for the entire 34 page story for $5500.00
Copyright 2014 Steve Lafler
Saturday, July 12, 2014
New T-Shirts Designs from Steve
Here's a couple new T-Shirt designs I just put in my Redbubble Store (here). If you order them, I can eat!
Rots of Rove, Steve
Rots of Rove, Steve
Saturday, July 05, 2014
Monday, June 09, 2014
New Music: The Skinny
Andy Keith and Steve Lafler comprise The Skinny (so far.)
We are a couple of guitar slinging guys with a fresh batch of our own tunes, working up our sound in the city of Oaxaca de Juarez in southern Mexico.
Andy is a midwestern son of Minneapolis, bringing his cracker-barrel Buddha, country infused songs to life with a warm, familiar voice and an ingenious signature rhythm all his own.
Steve is a longtime Californian by way of Western Massachusetts with a penchant for short bursts of surreal country punk narrative.
We went into the studio in Oaxaca in April, 2014 and laid down basic tracks for a bunch of our original tunes. Our ten song initial release is available from Amazon at this link for $7.99
We are a couple of guitar slinging guys with a fresh batch of our own tunes, working up our sound in the city of Oaxaca de Juarez in southern Mexico.
Andy is a midwestern son of Minneapolis, bringing his cracker-barrel Buddha, country infused songs to life with a warm, familiar voice and an ingenious signature rhythm all his own.
Steve is a longtime Californian by way of Western Massachusetts with a penchant for short bursts of surreal country punk narrative.
We went into the studio in Oaxaca in April, 2014 and laid down basic tracks for a bunch of our original tunes. Our ten song initial release is available from Amazon at this link for $7.99
Wednesday, June 04, 2014
Death in Oaxaca: The New Comic Book From Steve Lafler
Cartoonist Steve Lafler
(Bughouse, Dog Boy) is back with a new comic book series set in
Oaxaca, the magical city in the remote highlands of southern Mexico.
Death in Oaxaca will be a
six issue miniseries and subsequent graphic novel published on the Alternative Comics imprint.
The surreal adventure
serves up Lucha Libre wrestlers and an ancient vampire who prefers
chicken to human blood. Rex and Gertie are expats, moving to remote
Oaxaca. Rex, earnest yet duplicitous, flees from mid-life crisis and
fear of death. Beautiful Gertie, cynical but honest, is just plain
bored and craves adventure. Their son Myles is simply in love with
Oaxacan food.
Comics Retailers can order Death in Oaxaca from the June 2014 Diamond Previews comics distribution catalog. The book ships in August. Here is a copy of the catalog listing:
Death in Oaxaca is a 36 page comic book (plus covers) retailing at $4.99. There will also be ebook versions available in English and Spanish.
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