Clear eyes, full hearts, can’t lose.

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he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
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@janemdee
Clear eyes, full hearts, can’t lose.
Raven the Pirate Princess is Sinking
I despise doing posts where I ask for help, but here we are.
About two years ago I started a new creator owned project. It began as a spin-off of Princeless, but the reality is this - Raven The Pirate Princess is its own thing altogether. I knew this from the first issue and if you’ve been reading, so have you.
Sure, the first few issues of Raven: Pirate Princess had that heroic lady feminist banter for which Princeless has become known both among its fans and detractors. I mean, Raven had this scene:
and issue 1 had this scene:
But perhaps much more importantly, the first issue of Raven had this:
but that wasn’t where that ended. This is a book about a community of diverse queer women actively claiming their place in the world and taking what’s theirs. It’s about Raven, who is desperately in love with her childhood best friend Ximena
It’s about Ximena, a girl who was held captive for years by a pirate king who pretended to be her liberator. Who fell in love with the pirate’s daughter, only to be left behind by that father when she outlived her value.
About Sunshine, the thief that chose the wrong target and ended up falling in love with a woman already hopelessly in love with somebody else.
It’s about Katie, the bisexual second in command who’s motivated by honor…and occasionally beating the snot out of a dude or two
Oh and in case I forgot to mention, Katie is also incredibly muscular:
And Jayla, the asexual science genius who’s tired of being treated like a little sister
and Cid, the deaf engineer who quietly keeps the ship running
and of course, these two:
The socially awkward poet and the angry sword fighter who couldn’t stand her who have somehow become these two:
But here’s the thing: this comic is failing. It has a very dedicated and exuberant but at this point SMALL fanbase. Today I had a hard conversation with Action Lab about the reality of the numbers on this book versus what it costs to produce this book and, suffice it to say, Action Lab isn’t ready to cancel the book, but they aren’t ready to greenlight year 3 either. After Year 2 #13, Raven is set to go on the shelf until numbers can support continuing it.
This is where I need your help
If you care about this book full of queer pirate ladies and you want it to continue, we need to find a way to spread the word about it. We don’t need to sell single issues (it would be nice) but ultimately we need the trades sales that back up the continuation of this big YA Pirate/Revenge/Adventure/Romance thing.
Digital copies can be bought instantly right on Comixology: https://www.comixology.com/Princeless-Raven-The-Pirate-Princess/comics-series/46971
You can buy the physical volumes on amazon here: https://www.amazon.com/gp/bookseries/B01BF7U91Q
In fact, if you’ve already purchased volumes 1-4, volume 5 is available for preorder there right now!
Maybe you’ve bought all the issues already. Thank you! If you still want to support Raven, you can review the books on Amazon or other retailers, you can share, reblog or retweet this post. You can tell a friend about the book!
If you have a comics review site or, say, a blog where you talk about LGBT media, contact me for review links or interviews. Please, help us save our ship.
Today, in lieu of a regular positive example, let’s reblog this overdue signal boost for the comic made entirely of positive examples!
If you remember and enjoy the scathing wit of Princeless (like this sequence about female armors from issue 3), supporting its pirate-themed spinoff series should be a no-brainer, for all the awesome reasons listed above.
Hopefully the signal boost is working so far, because my retailer of choice is fresh out of volume #1 physical copies… I didn’t manage to get one :(
~Ozzie
REBLOG because this series is Amazing!! Women of every shape, color, size, personality and sexuality, all in one comic! Please PLEASE support this series and let the pirate princess continue her reign!
I love this series. Please consider buying them or if you can’t, then give this awesome series a signal boost.
This pleased me during my morning commute #fucktrump #subwayart
Partied out #beans
Down with the Cis-tem
Down with the Cis-tem by Sophie Labelle is a great starter for anyone looking to educate themselves on trans issues. The comic follows a school-aged male to female character named Stephie, who always finds herself educating the people in her life. She doesn’t even catch a break from her parents. There is one scene where her dad wants her to wear “boy’s clothes” because he’s worried about what his friend will think of him as a parent. Down with the Cis-tem helped me put my privilege into perspective.
Asa and Cookie cat #asamichmac #cookiecat #stevenuniverse #sharedhat @woolandbrick @jmacphee (at Interference Archive)
Pretty super (at Central Station M Trainline)
Beans the Pug’s Bluestockings book recommendations!!
“Living My Life” by Emma Goldman & “Black Metal: Evolution of the Cult” by Dayal Patterson
Excellent choices from Bluestockings’ cutest volunteer ❤
#beans!
#beans
My favorite mural always puts a spring in my step #thegroundswellnyc #streetart #bedstuy #streetharassment #feministpride #daniellemcdonald #jazminehayes #feministstreetart (at Myrtle Av-Broadway (J,M,Z))
My last body positive post for the day is from Bitch Planet #3: The Secret Origin of Penny Rolle, written by Kelly Sue DeConnick. This issue is an instant classic in the realm of feminist body tales. In this sci-fi dystopian future world, Penny is rigged up to fancy Drago-esque machines and forced to look in the mirror and see her ideal self, of course with the assumption that she sees a thinner version of her body. The jokes on you, patriarchs! Penny is already the ideal version of herself. “…and you bastards ain’t never gonna break me.” Dystopia becomes utopia, and Penny’s in a place that I want to be.
Today is day two of comics that influenced me - in very different ways. Optic Nerve by Adrian Tomine influenced me more than any other in terms of storytelling. Tomine has deadpan narratives, often focused on relationship woes, that end on an awkward note that refuses satisfying conclusion.
This isn’t non-linear storytelling in the wild Thomas Pynchon vein, but non-linear in that it begins at a point where there may not yet be a conflict, or is mid-conflict, and the narrative may end long before or long after the conflict is resolved. Optic Nerve’s awkward endings engage this “slice of reality” idea that I really respond to- the fantastic beauty, pain, awkwardness and boredom of the everyday, where there may not [ever] be resolution.
I think I was introduced to Joe Sacco when i had my first NYC job at St. Marks Comics, which I held for all of a month from August - September 2001. I had been haphazardly working some leftie politics into my comics as a college student without real focus and definitely hadn't been exposed to well thought out or well told radical political history through comics before reading Joe Sacco’s Palestine. At that time, I hadn't known about the oppression and human rights violations of Palestinians by the Israeli state before I read Palestine, which Sacco told with such personal experiential details, which makes sense when considering Sacco’s background as a journalist. There’s a difference between reading about apartheid and seeing it from a first hand perspective that is certainly impactful.
“no compassion and definitely no attraction”
From hothead paisan-homicidal lesbian terrorist issue #9 by giant ass publishing
Xena and Gabrielle, because we all know they were lovers!
Thursday’s theme? Lovers, of course!
This excerpt is taken from graphic memoir Honor Girl by Maggie Thrash. All girls summer camp, crushing out on an older counselor, backstreet boys drag and more! If you haven’t read it yet, DO IT and buy it here!
Small Favors by Colleen Coover was a sex positive queer comic from the early 2000′s that is unfortunately out of print. “Small Favors features bondage (sometimes magical), sadism, and masochism, but the girls always do it with a wink and a nod, telegraphing that it’s all done in great fun, in the name of everyone’s physical and emotional pleasure.” (Comics Alliance, Davis, 2012) It is creative feminist erotica and if you can get your hands on it, I highly recommend doing so! You can check out more of Coover’s work on her website: http://www.colleencoover.net/ Read More: ‘Small Favors’: A Girly Porno Comic about a Woman in Love with her Conscience [Sex]