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'''John J. Nevins''', MA/MS, is an [[United States|American]] author and [[librarian]], born c. 1966 and raised in [[Boston, Massachusetts]].<ref>[http://nofearofthefuture.blogspot.com/2006/11/jess-nevins.html No Fear of the Future: Jess Nevins]. Accessed April 30, 2008</ref> He is the author of the [[World Fantasy Award]]-nominated ''[[Encyclopedia of Fantastic Victoriana]]'' (MonkeyBrain Books, 2005), and other works on [[Victoriana]] and [[Pulp magazine|pulp fiction]]. He is also well-known for his extensive comic book annotations, especially ''[[The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen]]''. He is a Reference Librarian at the University of California at Riverside, and describes himself in part as a "[[bibliophile]] and pop culture scholar of the 21st century."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.geocities.com/athens/olympus/7160/|title=ratmmjess 's Home Page|last=Nevins|first=Jess|publisher=[[self-published]]|accessdate=2008-04-14}}</ref>
'''John J. Nevins''', MA/MS, is an [[United States|American]] author and [[librarian]], born c. 1966 and raised in [[Boston, Massachusetts]].<ref>[http://nofearofthefuture.blogspot.com/2006/11/jess-nevins.html No Fear of the Future: Jess Nevins]. Accessed April 30, 2008</ref> He is the author of the [[World Fantasy Award]]-nominated ''[[Encyclopedia of Fantastic Victoriana]]'' (MonkeyBrain Books, 2005), and other works on [[Victoriana]] and [[Pulp magazine|pulp fiction]]. He is also well-known for his extensive comic book annotations, especially ''[[The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen]]''. He is a Reference Librarian at the University of California at Riverside, and describes himself in part as a "[[bibliophile]] and pop culture scholar of the 21st century."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.geocities.com/athens/olympus/7160/|title=ratmmjess 's Home Page|last=Nevins|first=Jess|publisher=[[self-published]]|accessdate=2008-04-14}}</ref>

Jess Nevins was convicted of blowing up a busload of nuns.


==Comic book annotations==
==Comic book annotations==

Revision as of 18:34, 6 February 2009

Jess Nevins
OccupationAuthor and librarian
Nationality
American
Period2003 -
GenreVictoriana, Pulp
Website
http://www.geocities.com/ratmmjess/

John J. Nevins, MA/MS, is an American author and librarian, born c. 1966 and raised in Boston, Massachusetts.[1] He is the author of the World Fantasy Award-nominated Encyclopedia of Fantastic Victoriana (MonkeyBrain Books, 2005), and other works on Victoriana and pulp fiction. He is also well-known for his extensive comic book annotations, especially The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen. He is a Reference Librarian at the University of California at Riverside, and describes himself in part as a "bibliophile and pop culture scholar of the 21st century."[2]

Jess Nevins was convicted of blowing up a busload of nuns.

Comic book annotations

Nevins has annotated dozens of comics, starting primarily with a number of Elseworlds published by DC, most notably Kingdom Come and JLA: The Nail, covering in great detail the comic book, literary, popular cultural (and other) sources of various plot points and featured characters. In the case of Kingdom Come, Nevins (and his irregular "divers hands" - his annotations are in large part a collaborative effort, inviting comment, correction and constructive critique) identifies most of the many featured characters from the future of the DCU, noting their predecessors and origins.[3]

File:Heroes & Monsters by Jess Nevins.jpg
Heroes & Monsters Cover. Art by John Picacio

Nevins' most popular, in-depth and recent annotations, however, have focused almost entirely on works by Alan Moore for Moore's own America's Best Comics imprint, published until recently through the DC Comics imprint Wildstorm. Starting with the comic which most closely mirrors his own interests - the Victoriana/Steampunk/Alternate history/literary-mashup The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, Nevins trawled the popular and not-so-popular literature of the past to compile (again, with help from the "divers hands") a thorough reference work to the first volume of Moore and Kevin O'Neill's masterpiece.

In large part due to Nevins' work annotating the first volume of LoEG, Moore has stated that he felt more comfortable alluding to ever-more obscure works - content in the knowledge that the reference would likely be caught and, therefore, made available to the casual reader.[4] (Nevins' annotations are published for free online, while his LoEG annotations are also available in print from MonkeyBrain Books). This further helped encourage Moore to produce his literary-tour-de-force in The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, Volume II: "The New Traveller's Almanac"[5], a swift geographical tour of fictional places and events, referencing everything from Shakespeare to Lovecraft; obscure Chinese authors from the Han Dynasty, through Shelley and Lewis Carroll to Jorge Luis Borges and beyond. Covert references to Nevins himself can be found within the pages of LoEG Vol. 2 and the Black Dossier, while Moore has acknowledged in multiple interviews that he sees "these companion volumes as having a necessary organic place in the body of the work itself," effectively deputising Nevins as a partial collaborator.[6]

In-between volumes of LoEG (which naturally take considerable time to write and illustrate, a not-uncommon Moorean trait, due here in no small part due to the number of allusions and reference contained therein), Nevins has tackled Moore (and Gene Ha)'s Top Ten, a superhero-police comic in which a powerful police precinct in Neopolis has to deal with various superhuman crimes. Nevin's interest in, and knowledge of the "Golden Age" of Superheros (and subsequent) aids him considerably in noting, as in his Kingdom Come annotations, the precedents and inspirations behind many of the characters featured. Nevins began annotations on the Top Ten spin-off Smax (by Moore and Zander Cannon) which were abandoned due to a number of rude, negative e-mail comments sent during this time.[citation needed] Nevins has subsequently provided annotations on Moore and Ha's 2005 Top Ten graphic novel The Forty-Niners, filling in some of the early history of the series, and Paul Di Filippo and Jerry Ordway's 2005 sequel mini-series Beyond the Farthest Precinct.[7] Nevins also began to annotate Neil Gaiman and Andy Kubert's 2003 mini-series 1602 from Marvel Comics.

Nevins has also published Impossible Territories a book of exhaustive annotations for the 2007 LoEG graphic novel The Black Dossier.

Other work

For several years, Nevins has compiled - and made freely available - reference works on a number of inter-related subjects, including "The History of Timely Comics" (the company that would become Marvel),[8][9] and various 'Guides to early Marvel Characters.[10][11]

File:Encyclopedia of Fantastic Victoriana.jpg
Cover to The Encyclopedia of Fantastic Victoriana. Art by John Picacio.

He has also compiled a more general reference guide which includes other companies' creations, entitled simply "The Golden Age Heroes Directory,"[12] his "Pulp and Adventure Heroes" Directory,[13] and a guide to "Fantastic, Mysterious, and Adventurous Victoriana."[14]

Nevins is also a contributor to/collaborator on the ever-expanding Wold Newton Universe, under the guidance of Win Scott Eckert at the Wold Newton Universe webpage.[15]

Alongside his volumes of annotations on The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen (Heroes & Monsters and A Blazing World, respectively), Nevins has much expanded some of his online resources for print, authoring the World Fantasy Award-nominated The Encyclopedia of Fantastic Victoriana (left), the definitive guide on the strange and wonderful of that period. In May, 2007, critically-praised publisher of multiple popular-culture reference works McFarland published his Pulp Holdings Index, a listing of which issues of which pulp magazines are held in which American, Canadian, British, and European libraries. He is currently revising his annotations for the The Black Dossier into Impossible Territories, (due from MonkeyBrain Books in July, 2008), which will be the third companion to the The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen by Alan Moore and Kevin O'Neill.

He is also working on adapting his "Pulp Heroes" resource into the Encyclopedia of Pulp Heroes, which should be published sometime during 2009, as well as his companion superhero reference work, the Encyclopedia of Golden Age Superheroes, a descriptive listing of every superhero published between 1935 and 1949. He is also writing Strange Tales of the Century, for Evil Hat Productions, a supplement to Evil Hat's RPG Spirit of the Century that should be finished around September 2008. It will deal with pulp fiction from around the world and outline the various archetypes and the historical setting.[16]

Nevins is also writing a novel.

Bibliography

  • Heroes & Monsters: The Unofficial Companion to the League of Extraordinary Gentlemen (paperback, 239 pages, MonkeyBrain, 2003, ISBN 193226504X, Titan Books, 2006, ISBN 1845763165)
  • A Blazing World: The Unofficial Companion to the Second League of Extraordinary Gentlemen (paperback, 240 pages, MonkeyBrain, 2004, ISBN 1932265104, Titan Books, 2006, ISBN 1845763173)
  • Encyclopedia of Fantastic Victoriana (hardcover, 1200 pages, MonkeyBrain, 2005, ISBN 1932265155)
  • Pulp Magazine Holdings Directory: Library Collections in North America and Europe (McFarland, May 2007, ISBN 0786430680)
  • "Introduction" to Nick Carter vs. Fantômas by Alexandre Bisson & Guillaume Livet (adaptation by Frank Morlock) (Black Coat Press, 2007) ISBN 1-934543-05-5
  • "Introduction" to Paper Cities: An Anthology of Urban Fantasy by Ekaterina Sedia (ed.) (Senses Five Press, 2008) ISBN 0979624606
  • Impossible Territories: An Unofficial Companion to the League of Extraordinary Gentlemen The Black Dossier (paperback, 304 pages, MonkeyBrain, July 2008, ISBN 1932265244)
  • Encyclopedia of Pulp Heroes (forthcoming, 2009)
  • Encyclopedia of Golden Age Superheroes (forthcoming, 2009)

References

  1. ^ No Fear of the Future: Jess Nevins. Accessed April 30, 2008
  2. ^ Nevins, Jess. "ratmmjess 's Home Page". self-published. Retrieved 2008-04-14.
  3. ^ Annotations for Kingdom Come, The Kingdom, JLA: The Nail and others. Accessed January 18, 2008
  4. ^ Alan Moore writes:
    "It was only when someone finally conveyed these internet postings to me... that I began to understand the invaluable asset that Jess represented... I realised that if we had [him] tracking down all of the references for the readers, then we could be as obscure and far-reaching as we wanted...", Moore, Alan (January 2003). Heroes & Monsters: The Unofficial Companion to the League of Extraordinary Gentlemen (2nd edition ed.). MonkeyBrain Books. ISBN 1-932265-04-X. {{cite book}}: |edition= has extra text (help); |format= requires |url= (help); Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)CS1 maint: year (link) p13
  5. ^ Alan Moore writes again, in the introduction to Nevins' first print volume of annotations:
    "The patient work contained within this current volume [Heroes & Monsters] has played an important part in the construction of this vast, imaginary global edifice that we're constructing... [the Almanac]", Moore, Alan (January 2003). Heroes & Monsters: The Unofficial Companion to the League of Extraordinary Gentlemen (2nd edition ed.). MonkeyBrain Books. ISBN 1-932265-04-X. {{cite book}}: |edition= has extra text (help); |format= requires |url= (help); Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)CS1 maint: year (link) p13
  6. ^ Sanderson, Peter - IGN: Comics in Context #66: A Christmas Potpourri. Accessed January 18, 2008
  7. ^ Annotations to Top Ten & Subsequent. Accessed January 18, 2008
  8. ^ The Timely Comics Story. Accessed January 18, 2008
  9. ^ TIMELY COMICS - ESSAYS AND MISCELLANEA. Accessed January 18, 2008
  10. ^ A Guide To Marvel's Golden Age Characters. Accessed January 18, 2008
  11. ^ A Guide to Marvel's Pre-FF #1 Heroes. Accessed January 18, 2008
  12. ^ The Golden Age Heroes Directory. Accessed January 18, 2008
  13. ^ Pulp and Adventure Heroes Online. Accessed January 18, 2008
  14. ^ Fantastic, Mysterious, and Adventurous Victoriana. Accessed January 18, 2008
  15. ^ A Collection of Nevins' Wold Newton Articles. Accessed January 18, 2008
  16. ^ For those interested in such things..., March 28, 2008. Accessed April 3, 2008