The Perry Bible Fellowship

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The Perry Bible Fellowship

Author(s) Nicholas Gurewitch
Website http://pbfcomics.com/
RSS web feed
Current status / schedule undefined
Launch date 2001

The Perry Bible Fellowship (or PBF) is a newspaper comic strip and webcomic by Nicholas Gurewitch. It originated in the Syracuse University newspaper The Daily Orange. The comics are usually three or four panels long, and are generally characterized by the juxtaposition of whimsical childlike imagery or fantasy with extremely morbid, surreal humour. Common themes include irony, religion, sexuality, war, science fiction, suicide, violence, and death.

The comic received its title, taken from the name of a church in Maine, in its Daily Orange incarnation.[1]

Contents

[edit] Comic

Despite the potentially offensive content in many strips, the comic rarely receives complaints or hate-mail. Nicholas Gurewitch attributes this to people who dislike the comic not wishing to share their feelings with him.[2] The content has been compared to Gary Larson's The Far Side because of PBF's sometimes demented humor.[citation needed]

[edit] Art

The art in PBF varies constantly. While some comics feature simplistic human figures with little more than a mouth and eyes for a face, other strips are extensively colored and meticulously detailed. Sometimes, the artistic style changes within the strip itself. A recurring feature of the strip are simplistically-drawn human figures exhibiting little detail or realism, and heads reminiscent of smiley faces.

[edit] Awards

Gurewitch has received multiple major awards for The Perry Bible Fellowship, such as the Ignatz Award for Outstanding Online Comic in 2005[3] and 2006.[4] The Perry Bible Fellowship has also won the Web Cartoonist's Choice Award for outstanding comic in 2006 and 2007. In total, PBF has received eight Web Cartoonist's Choice Awards in various categories.[5] Most recently, Gurewitch won the 2007 Harvey Award for "Best Online Comics Work."

[edit] Publishing

PBF is updated, irregularly, on Wednesdays (previously on Sundays to correspond with its "Biblical" title). Gurewitch has said that the comic is updated as infrequently as it is because of the labor that the art entails.[citation needed] According to the official website, it appears in 21 newspapers, five magazines and five school papers. These include the Baltimore City Paper Philadelphia City Paper, New York Press, The Chicago Reader, the Metro Times, The Guardian, The Portland Mercury, City Newspaper (in Rochester, NY), and Black & White. PBF also appears in Maxim and ION Magazine.[6] It appeared sporadically in The South End in 2005.

On August 1, 2006, after several months on a temporary site managed by Cheston Gasik, the comic moved to its permanent Internet home at pbfcomics.com.

On February 18, 2008, Nicholas Gurewitch announced he was cutting back on the production of the comic strip, saying "I feel I owe it to myself and the Perry Bible Fellowship not to turn a joyful diversion into a long career."[7]. Previously a weekly strip, it now officially updates monthly.[8]

[edit] Author, Nicholas Gurewitch

Nicholas Gurewitch was born March 9, 1982, in New York, and is currently based in Rochester, New York. He attended Syracuse University, where he studied film and where his comic strip was first published in The Daily Orange. Besides PBF, he worked on developing a program called Daisy Garden Story Time with Comedy Central, though the program was not produced.[9]

[edit] Books

Perry Bible Fellowship comics and an interview with Gurewitch were included in Ted Rall's Attitude 3: The New Subversive Online Cartoonists in July 2006.

A book collection, The Trial of Colonel Sweeto and Other Stories, is currently available for purchase. Even before its release, preorders alone made the book one of the fastest-selling graphic novels on Amazon.com, causing publisher Dark Horse Comics to increase its first print run to 36,000, and print the book domestically to hasten distribution; it has since gone into three printings[10]. Dark Horse Comics also noted the comic's popularity in England, as Diamond UK put in the largest order Dark Horse has ever seen from them.[11]

[edit] References

[edit] External links

[edit] Nicholas Gurewitch