Troy Little

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Troy Little
Xeric
Website
pegamoosepress.com

Troy Little (born 7 March 1973

Xeric[2] and P.E.I. Council of the Arts[3]) and being praised by Dave Sim,[4] Chiaroscuro vol. 1 was released in 2007 by IDW Publishing
.

Biography

Troy Little was born on 7 March 1973 in Prince Edward Island, Canada.[1] In 1994, he graduated from the Interpretive Illustration program of Sheridan College, and spent many years working in animation. After living eight years in Ottawa, he moved back to Prince Edward Island,[3][5] Canada. In the early 2000's he began transitioning out of his job in animation[3][5] to work full time in comics. He's work on licensed titles and also writes and draws his own graphic novels.

In September 2000,

Xeric Grant.[2] The comic was published bi-monthly and ran for seven issues ending prematurely in 2003. Little eventually continued to draw the missing issues #8-10 to conclude the first volume. In 2005, he was awarded a P.E.I. Council of the Arts Grants to enable him to continue work on the series.[3] In late 2005, he had completed his first storyline as the graphic novel Chiaroscuro: Patchwork Book 1 (collecting issues #1-10), and started sending out a 100-copy POD run[3]
to publishers.

In 2007, this first volume of Chiaroscuro received an excellent review by independent comics legend

Cerebus) written on his Blog & Mail.[4] This review brought the book to the attention of Ted Adams, President of IDW Publishing in San Diego.[3][5][7]
IDW published a hardcover edition of the graphic novel in October 2007, and its trade paperback edition in October 2008.

In January 2009, Troy Little released Angora Napkin, a standalone graphic novel from IDW Publishing which was nominated for an

Teletoon's late night program "Teletoon at Night
" for a series which was broadcast on Halloween night, 2010. But the pilot was never picked up. He later created a second Angora Napkin graphic novel, Harvest of Revenge, which was again nominated for an Eisner. He ventured into webcomics with the online serial Angora Napkin: The Golden McGuffin that ran sporadically from 2011 to 2019.

From 2013 to 2014 he wrote and drew the comic book series The Powerpuff Girls, published by IDW and based on the Cartoon Network animated series.

In 2015 Little was brought on by IDW / Top Shelf to adapt the authorized graphic novel version of Hunter S. Thompson's book Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, published in late October / early November by Top Shelf Productions.

During the Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas book tour Little met Kevin Eastman, co-creator of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. In 2017 Eastman tapped Little to help develop his Drawing Blood / Radically Rearranged Ronin Ragdolls series which was successfully Kickstarted in published in 2018. This was followed by a second volume of Ragdolls that he illustrated and co-wrote with Drawing Blood writer David Avallone.

In 2018, Little teamed up with writers

Eisner Award.[11]

Also in 2019, Troy and his wife Brenda Hickey ("My Little Pony", "Aggretsuko") formed their own imprint: Pegamoose Press. Their first book, Hickey's "Halls of the Turnip King" was successfully Kickstarted and published in early 2020. The second book, "Angora Napkin: The Golden McGuffin" was published in the fall of 2020. Troy and Brenda collaborated and published the innovative graphic novella "Butterfly House" which was nominated for a Sequential Award and a Doug Wright Award in 2022.

Little and Zub teamed up again on the Rick & Morty VS Cthulhu mini series from Oni.

Works

  • 2001-2003: Chiaroscuro #1-7 (Meanwhile, Studios)[12]
  • 2004-2005: Chiaroscuro #8-10 (drawn but not published)
  • 2005: Chiaroscuro: Patchwork Book 1 (100-copy POD demo, late 2005, collecting #1-10)
  • 2007: Chiaroscuro HC (IDW Publishing, October 2007 hardcover collecting #1-10)
  • 2008: Chiaroscuro TP (IDW Publishing, October 2008 softcover collecting #1-10)
  • 2009: Angora Napkin (IDW Publishing, graphic novel)
  • 2012: Angora Napkin: Harvest of Revenge (IDW Publishing, graphic novel)
  • 2013: The Powerpuff Girls (IDW Publishing, comic series)
  • 2015: Hunter S. Thompson's Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas (Top Shelf Productions)
  • 2016: "Angora Napkin: Cuddle Core Collection" (IDW Publishing, graphic novel collection)
  • 2018: "Radically Rearranged Ronin Ragdolls" (Kevin Eastman Studios, comic book)
  • 2019: "Rick & Morty VS Dungeons & Dragons" (IDW Publishing, comic series)
  • 2020: "Rick & Morty VS Dungeons & Dragons: Painscape" (Oni Press, comic series)
  • 2020: "Radically Rearranged Ronin Ragdolls Adventures" (Kevin Eastman Studios, comic book)
  • 2020: "Angora Napkin: The Golden McGuffin" (Pegamoose Press, graphic novel)
  • 2022: "Butterfly House" (with Brenda Hickey)(Pegamoose Press, graphic novel)
  • 2022: "Rick & Morty VS Cthulhu" (Oni Press, comic series)

Sources

  • CBC News (2007-09-07). "P.E.I. comic artist signs with major publisher". www.CBC.ca. Archived from the original on 2008-01-18.
  • Journal Pioneer; Jim Brown (2007-11-06). "Little comic book writer poised to hit big time". www.JournalPioneer.com.
  • Troy Little. "About". www.MeanwhileStudios.com.[dead link]
  • Troy Little (October 2002). "Xeric winner speak: Chiaroscuro". www.Xeric Foundation.org. Archived from the original on 2008-01-23.
  • Dave Sim (2007-01-17). "Dave Sim's blogandmail #128 (January 17th, 2007)". Blog & Mail. davesim.blogspot.com. Archived from the original on 2007-04-02. Troy Little sent me a POD version of volume one of his graphic novel magnum opus Chiaroscuro [...] I was really, really impressed with what you have done with Chiaroscuro.
  • Dave Sim (2007-07-12). "Dave Sim's blogandmail #304 (July 12th, 2007)". Blog & Mail. davesim.blogspot.com. Archived from the original on 2007-08-05. I told Larry that I know Ted Adams at IDW reads the Blog & Mail on a regular basis and he actually picked up a couple of titles just because I mentioned them here. CHIAROSCURO was one of them.
  • Xeric Foundation (September 2001). "Comic Book Self-Publishing Grants: September 2001". www.Xeric Foundation.org.

References

  1. ^ a b See Troy Little, "About".
  2. ^ a b See Xeric Foundation (September 2001).
  3. ^ a b c d e f See Journal Pioneer (2007-11-06).
  4. ^ a b See Dave Sim (2007-01-17).
  5. ^ a b c See CBC News (2007-09-07).
  6. ^ See Troy Little (October 2002).
  7. ^ See Dave Sim (2007-07-12).
  8. ^ Mufson, Beckett; Messman, Lauren (2018-04-09). "Rick and Morty Are Going on a 'Dungeons & Dragons' Adventure". Vice. Retrieved 2019-06-14.
  9. ^ Plante, Corey. "'Rick and Morty vs. D&D' Review: Totally Nails the 'D&D' Newb Experience". Inverse. Retrieved 2019-06-14.
  10. ^ "Rick and Morty D&D Chapter 2 Comic Unveiled at D&D Live 2019". www.bleedingcool.com. Retrieved 2019-06-14.
  11. ^ MacDonald, Heidi (2022-05-18). "2022 Eisner Awards Nominations Announced, led by DC and Image". The Beat. Retrieved 2022-05-18.
  12. ^ Single-issue publishing dates per Diamond Comic Distributors's "Shipping This Week" files: #1 on 2001-09-06, #2 on 2002-01-16, #3 on 2002-04-17, #4 on 2002-08-07, #5 on 2003-01-02, #6 on 2003-03-05, #7 on 2003-05-14.

External links

Text interviews
Video interviews