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NBM Publishing
NBMlogo.png
Founded 1976
Founder Terry Nantier
Headquarters location Syracuse, New York, then
Endicott, New York, then
New York City
Imprints Flying Buttress Classics Library
Amerotica
Eurotica
ComicsLit
Official website www.NBMpub.com

NBM Publishing (Nantier Beall Minoustchine Publishing Inc.) is an American publisher of graphic novels. The company specializes in non-superhero comic genres and has translated and published over 150 graphic novels from Europe and Canada, as well as several works by Americans. It publishes materials for all ages, and also publishes mature materials under its Eurotica and Amerotica lines.

Contents

History

Terry Nantier (born 1957) spent his teenage years living in Paris, developing an interest in European comics. Returning to the U.S., Nantier attended the Newhouse School of Communications division of Syracuse University. In 1976, while still a Newhouse student, he founded Flying Buttress Publications, later to incorporate as Nantier, Beall, Minoustchine (NBM Publishing).

The company was among the first to bring the concept of the "graphic novel" to American audiences.[1] Among their first titles was Racket Rumba, a 50-page spoof of the noir-detective genre, written and drawn by the single-name French artist Loro. Nantier followed this with Enki Bilal's The Call of the Stars. The company marketed these works as "graphic albums".[2]

It took until the mid-1980s for the company to find success with such series as Vicente Segrelles's The Mercenary and Hugo Pratt's Corto Maltese. NBM also developed a name for itself in classic reprints by publishing deluxe volumes of Terry and the Pirates. All through the 1990s NBM went on publishing translated versions of European graphic novels, or "Franco-Belgian comics" as they are called in Europe, when the acronym "BD" (for "bande designée") is not used. It wasn't until 1997 that they published their first actual comic books — in the pamphlet, or magazine, format — when they reprinted issues of Hugo Pratt's Corto Maltese in a seven-issue limited series.[3]

In 1986, NBM created the Flying Buttress Classics Library imprint, used to reprint classic newspaper comic strips such as Milt Caniff's Terry and the Pirates, Roy Crane's Wash Tubbs and Captain Easy, and the Tarzan strips done by Hal Foster and Burne Hogarth. Most have been done in hardback, but some were also released in paperback.

In 1991, NBM created the Eurotica erotic comics imprint, following that in 1995 with the Amerotica line.

In 1994, NBM created ComicsLit, its showcase literary imprint; [4][5] in 1995 they introduced ComicsLit Magazine.[6]

To quote from the company's website:

From humble beginnings, NBM has grown to become the second largest indie comics press after Fantagraphics, with close to $3M in yearly retail sales on over 200,000 graphic novels sold a year, plus tens of thousands of comic books and magazines. . . . Ironically considered an 'alternative' publisher in comics simply because it does not publish superheroes, NBM is in fact a general interest publisher in its field. Uninterested in 'niches,' outre margins or otherwise alienated side voices which appeal to just as narrow an audience of fans as superheroes, NBM has always sought as wide an audience as any good novel or movie may reach. Its editorial choices are always motivated by that one single goal. In this, it takes its cue from the large and well-respected European comics scene. . . . It also attracts way more than its fair share of press and media acclaim for its widely recognized very high level of quality.[7]

Distribution

NBM pioneered general bookstore distribution as early as 1980. In 1986, it was the first comics publisher to get a book distributor when it signed with Publishers Group West. In 1988, NMB took over its own distribution, along the way becoming Dark Horse Comics's graphic novels distributor.[7] And in 1994, they officially joined the Association of Comic Store Suppliers.[8]

Titles

Notes

  1. ^ "NBM's History of Firsts," NBM website.
  2. ^ "America's First Graphic Novel Publisher". NBM Publishing official home page. http://www.nbmpub.com/history/about3.html. Retrieved 2006-06-21.  
  3. ^ "News Watch: NBM Leaps into Comic Book Publishing with Corto Maltese," The Comics Journal #194 (March 1997), p. 24-25.
  4. ^ "Newswatch: NBM Launches New ComicsLit Imprint," The Comics Journal #168 (May 1994), p. 39.
  5. ^ "Newswatch: NBM Launches New Format, Hires Publicist," The Comics Journal #175 (March 1995), p. 29.
  6. ^ "Newswatch: NBM Launches ComicsLit Magazine," The Comics Journal #176 (April 1995), p. 32.
  7. ^ a b "About Us," NBM website.
  8. ^ "Newswatch: New Member Added to ACSS," The Comics Journal #171 (September 1994), p. 40.
  9. ^ Alcon picks up 'Cryptozoo', Hollywood Reporter, August 15, 2008

References

External links








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