Hogan's Alley (magazine) explained

Hogan's Alley
Editor:Tom Heintjes
Editor Title:Editor
Founder:Tom Heintjes and Rick Marschall
Frequency:irregularly
Category:Comic art
Publisher:Bull Moose Publishing
Based:Atlanta, Georgia
Country:United States
Language:English

Hogan's Alley is a magazine devoted to comic art, published on an irregular schedule since 1994 by Bull Moose Publishing in Atlanta, Georgia, United States. Subtitled "the magazine of the cartoon arts", it covers comic strips, comic books, cartoons, and animation. Originally planned as a quarterly, the frequency is closer to that of an annual, with 20 issues published in 22 years.

The editor is Tom Heintjes, who also edits three magazines for the Federal Reserve Bank.[1] The magazine was co-founded by Heintjes and Rick Marschall, former editor of Nemo, the Classic Comics Library. The magazine's art director is David Folkman.

Publication history

Interviewed in 2004, Heintjes gave some background on the magazine's origins:

The title

In the 2004 interview, Heintjes discussed the magazine's title — and various sources of confusion about it:

Writers

The scope of the magazine ranges from historical articles to coverage of current comic strips. Contributing writers have included Ron Goulart, R. C. Harvey and Allan Holtz. In issue #12, Holtz examined the early evolution of Sunday comics supplements to the daily comic strip, notably The Importance of Mister Peewee, which ran in Joseph Pulitzer's New York World in 1903-04. In that same issue, R. C. Harvey offered an in-depth profile of cartoonist Dave Breger.

Interview subjects have included Gus Arriola, C. C. Beck and Will Eisner.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 22 June 2011. https://web.archive.org/web/20110622010949/http://scoop.diamondgalleries.com/public/default.asp?t=1&m=1&c=34&s=265&ai=45988&arch=y&ssd=5/22/2004%2012:01:00%20PM. May 22, 2004. Gemstone Publishing. A Walk Through Hogan's Alley. dead. Scoop.