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News - Politics and Government

Thursday, Aug. 21, 2008

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The candidates' life stories, in words and comics

- Associated Press

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Trading sound bites for word balloons, the presidential race is coming to the world of comic books this fall.

A month before voters cast ­ballots, comic-book biographies of John ­McCain and Barack Obama will hit bookstores and be available for reading on cell phones.

  • on the web

    For more information, go to:

    www.presidentialcomics.com

    www.idwpublishing.com

    www.gocomics.com/presidents

But don't expect Captain America-versus-Superman high jinks or super-villains threatening the electoral process. The books purport to tell McCain and Obama's true life stories, independently researched and illustrated by a team of veteran writers and artists.

IDW Publishing in San Diego, ­better known for stories of robots (The Transformers) and vampires (30 Days of Night), commissioned the books with no input from either campaign.

”We're not doing anything that is sensational here,“ IDW special projects editor Scott Dunbier said. ”We're sticking to the facts.“

Comic-book biographies have been written before — Marvel Comics had a best-seller in 1982 with a biography of Pope John Paul II. And books intended to be read on cell phones have been gaining popularity worldwide this year and last.

Dunbier said the ­company is breaking new ground by getting out fully researched comics on two candidates before ­Election Day. And the non-­traditional story­telling and visuals of comics might reach some voters more effectively than other types of media can.

”We're not in the ­business of doing ­textbooks, but I think ­comic books really do have the great potential to inform and teach,“ he said.

IDW will sell the books through cell phones with the help of Kansas City-based uClick, the digital arm of newspaper feature distributor Universal Press Syndicate.

UClick already sells a service allowing ­customers to view comics over their phones, but the ­presidential comics will be part of a push to begin ­allowing customers to order whole books over their phone, said Jeff Webber, vice ­president of product ­development.

”We'll be looking at how many people ­download to phones versus read them in print, which IDW should find interesting, as well as which (book) gets ­downloaded the most,“ Webber said. ”This is a great opportunity to show people that there are ­comics on the phone.“

Customers can pre-order printed versions of the books, due out Oct. 8, online through IDW.

The McCain book, with art by Stephen ­Thompson, is being written by Andy Helfer, who helped ­develop the books that later ­became the movies Road to ­Perdition and A History of Violence. He also wrote comic-book biographies of Ronald Reagan and Malcolm X.

Obama's biography is being written by ­novelist Jeff Mariotte, who has done comics on Superman, Spider-Man and Star Trek, and artist Tom Morgan.

J. Scott Campbell, who did both covers, said it was inevitable that they would generate controversy. Some online commenters are saying the reddish tinge to the sky behind a smiling McCain looks ominous, while Obama followers are unhappy that their candidate's expression is stern.

”I was really trying to go out of my way to be extra-sensitive to the fact that I didn't want anything like that (bias) to come across,“ Campbell said. ”That wasn't the purpose of the book.“ He said he based his depiction of the candidates on photographs he found on the Internet.

Helfer and Mariotte said they consulted the ­candidates' own books, books by others, news articles and other sources — including a documentary about a disastrous fire aboard the aircraft carrier USS Forrestal in 1967, during the Vietnam War.

Helfer said he ­couldn't help but be moved by McCain's war experience, including being imprisoned by the Vietnamese. But he said he also included less-flattering experiences from McCain's youth as well as political setbacks during his time in Congress.

”My objectivity is in finding support, ­multiple kinds of support, for whatever I state,“ he said, adding that both books will include a full section of annotations. ”I'm trying to create — as much as you can in 28 pages — a portrait of a human being. I think it's a balanced ­portrait of the guy.“

Mariotte said he, too, kept to specific scenes in Obama's life, although he said he sometimes touched on some of the rumors of Obama's past that continue to resonate among his critics.

”I think anyone who reads it will see it's heavy on facts, light on opinion,“ he said. ”I did kind of glance off some of those rumors just to point out this happened and this didn't, but I didn't dwell on those.“

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