Staff Pick
Such a cool anthology! If you love video games, role playing games, and card games, then you'll love this comic. A bunch of awesome ladies talk about their relationships with and growing up with games. All of the artwork and stories will leave you wanting more. Recommended By Hannah B., Powells.com
Synopses & Reviews
Like a well-designed game, Chainmail Bikinisets forth a straightforward premise and then challenges as it delights, capturing your imagination and before you know it, youand#8217;ll find yourself invested in it.and#151;My Entertainment World
Whether youand#8217;re a hardcore gamer who wants to see stories by others who share your passion [or] a comics lover who wants to see a wide variety of excellent comics from a wide variety of talented creators . . . this is a book that youand#8217;ll enjoy, treasure and be able to return to over and over again.and#151;Autostraddle
Chainmail Bikini is an anthology of comics by and about female gamers! Forty cartoonists have contributed comics about the games theyand#8217;re passionate aboutand#151;from video games to tabletop role-playing to collectible card games. The comics in Chainmail Bikiniexplore the real-life impact of entering a fantasy world, how games can connect us with each other and teach us about ourselves. Alliances are forged, dice get rolled, and dragons get slain! Chainmail Bikini shows that while women are not always the target market for gaming, they are a vital and thoroughly engaged part of it, and are eager to express their personal take as players, makers, and critics of games.
Chainmail Bikiniis edited by Hazel Newlevant (If This Be Sin), and features a cover illustration by Hellen Jo and comics by established talents and rising stars including Annie Mok, Jane Mai, Molly Ostertag, MK Reed, and Sophie Yanow.
Synopsis
Comics by women about their love of gaming, from video games to tabletop role-playing to collectible card games.
Synopsis
Chainmail Bikini is an anthology of comics by and about female gamers Forty cartoonists have contributed comics about the games they're passionate about--from video games to tabletop role-playing to collectible card games. The comics in Chainmail Bikini explore the real-life impact of entering a fantasy world, and how games can connect us with each other and teach us about ourselves. Alliances are forged, dice get rolled, and dragons get slain Chainmail Bikini shows that while women are not always the target market for gaming, they are a vital and thoroughly engaged part of it, and are eager to express their personal take as players, makers, and critics of games.
Chainmail Bikini is edited by Hazel Newlevant (If This Be Sin), and features a cover illustration by Hellen Jo and comics by established talents and rising stars including Annie Mok, Jane Mai, Molly Ostertag, MK Reed, and Sophie Yanow.
About the Author
Hazel Newlevant: Hazel Newlevant is a cartoonist living in Queens, NY. Her comic Ci Vediamo was awarded a Xeric Grant, and her graphic novel If This Be Sin was awarded the 2013 Prism Comics Queer Press Grant.
Sophie Yanow: Sophie Yanow has been an artist in residence at La Maison de la Bande Dessinand#233;e, and the fellow at the Center for Cartoon Studies. Her comic War of Streets and Houses was nominated for the Doug Wright Spotlight Award and the Ignatz Award for Outstanding Graphic Novel.
Jane Mai: Jane Mai is a freelance illustrator and comic artist from Brooklyn, New York. Her work has appeared in several anthologies and self-published zines. Her comics Sunday in the Park with Boys and See You Next Tuesday are published by Koyama Press.
Molly Ostertag: Molly Ostertag graduated from the School of Visual Arts in 2014. She makes comics with a focus on powerful women of all kinds, and draws the webcomic Strong Female Protagonist. Her work has received an SVA Alumni Society grant.?
MK Reed: MK Reed is the author of Americus and The Cute Girl Network , from First Second. Americus was the winner of NAIBAand#8217;s 2012 Carla Cohen Free Speech Award, and was a 2011 American Booksellers for Childrenand#8217;s New Voices title. The first chapter was nominated for an Ignatz for Outstanding Story in 2008.