Love and Rockets (comics)


Love and Rockets is a comic book series by the Hernandez brothers: Gilbert, Jaime, and Mario. It was one of the first comic books in the alternative comics movement of the 1980s.
The Hernandez brothers produced stories in the series independently of each other. Gilbert and Jaime produced the majority of the material, and tended to focus on particular casts of characters and settings. Those of Gilbert usually focused on a cast of characters in the fictional Central American village of Palomar; the stories often featured magic realist elements. The Locas stories of Jaime centered on a social group in Los Angeles, particularly the Latin-American friends and sometime-lovers Maggie and Hopey.

Publication history

The brothers Gilbert, Jaime, and Mario Hernandez self-published the first issue of Love and Rockets in 1981. In 1982, Fantagraphics Books republished this issue with a color cover. The series was published at magazine size, larger than typical American comic books. Either Gilbert or Jaime, the series' main contributors, would provide the front cover for a given issue, and the other the back; they alternated these duties each issue. The first volume ended with the 50th issue in 1996. The second volume ran for twenty issues from 2001 to 2007 in standard US comic book size. A third series, Love and Rockets: New Stories, which ran for eight issues, began in 2008, published annually in 100-page, graphic novel-sized issues. In 2016, the series returned to its original, magazine-sized format.

Overview

The Hernandez brothers self-published the first issue of Love and Rockets in 1981, but since 1982 it has been published by Fantagraphics Books. The brothers sent a copy of their self-published comic to The Comics Journal, an imprint of Fantagraphics, for a review. Gary Groth was so impressed with it that the company offered them a publishing deal. The magazine temporarily ceased publication in 1996 after the release of issue #50, while Gilbert and Jaime went on to do separate series involving many of the same characters. However, in 2001 "Los Bros Hernandez" revived the series as Love and Rockets Volume 2.
Love and Rockets contains several ongoing serial narratives, the most prominent being Gilbert's Palomar stories and Jaime's Hoppers 13 stories. It also contains one-offs, shorter stories, surrealist jokes, and more.
Palomar tells the story of a fictional village in Latin America and its inhabitants. Its vibrant characters and sometimes-fantastic events are sometimes compared to the magical realism literary style of authors such as Gabriel García Márquez and Jorge Luis Borges. The series is also sometimes referred to as Heartbreak Soup, after the first story set in Palomar.
. Gilbert is in the middle, Jaime is in the green shirt.
Hoppers 13 follows the tangled lives of a group of primarily chicano characters, from their teenage years in the early days of the California punk scene to the present day. Two memorable members of Jaime's cast are Margarita "Maggie" Luisa Chascarrillo and Esperanza "Hopey" Leticia Glass, whose on-again, off-again romance is a focus for many Hoppers 13 storylines. The series is also often called Locas because of the many quirky female characters depicted.
The original runs of Palomar and Locas have each been collected in recent one-volume editions by Fantagraphics, although not all of the stories involving "Locas" and "Palomar" characters are contained in these collections. The original fifty-issue Love and Rockets Volume One has also been reprinted in its entirety in both a fifteen-volume paperback library, and more recently a seven-volume mass-market paperback series by Fantagraphics. In addition, several hardcovers collect edited versions of the series tales.
Many attempts have been made to make L&R into a movie, or series of movies. However, until recently, the movie rights had been held up in litigation for over 15 years. On May 10, 2013 Gilbert Hernandez publicly announced in Toronto, Ontario that a deal had been struck to make a movie out of his "Palomar" story-line and that he was currently writing the script.

Characters

Jaime

This list provides an example of the types of stories that helped Love and Rockets gain critical acclaim.

Jaime

All published at Fantagraphics: Fantagraphics stopped numbering the series after 24. Not included on the list are a trio of books by Gilbert Hernandez depicting the filmography of B movie actress Fritz Martinez, Luba's youngest sister: Chance in Hell, The Troublemakers and Love from the Shadows.
  1. Music for Mechanics by Los Bros Hernandez, October 1985, 152 pages
    Preface by Carter Scholz
  2. Chelo's Burden by Los Bros Hernandez, June 1986, 144 pages
    Preface by Gary Groth
  3. Las Mujeres Perdidas by Los Bros Hernandez, August 1987, 160 pages
  4. Tears from Heaven by Los Bros Hernandez, January 1988, 136 pages
  5. House of Raging Women, by Los Bros Hernandez, September 1988, 136 pages
  6. Duck Feet by Los Bros Hernandez, September 1988, 136 pages
  7. The Death of Speedy by Jaime Hernandez, November 1989, 136 pages
  8. Blood of Palomar by Gilbert Hernandez, December 1989, 128 pages
  9. Flies on the Ceiling by Los Bros Hernandez, October 1991, 128 pages
  10. Love and Rockets X by Gilbert Hernandez, July 1993, 72 pages
  11. Wigwam Bam by Jaime Hernandez, March 1994, 136 pages
  12. Poison River by Gilbert Hernandez, September 1994, 192 pages
  13. Chester Square by Jaime Hernandez, July 1996, 160 pages
  14. Luba Conquers the World by Gilbert Hernandez, December 1996, 136 pages
  15. Hernandez Satyricon by Los Bros Hernandez August 1997, 160 pages
  16. Whoa Nellie! by Jaime Hernandez, June 2000, 80 pages
  17. Fear of Comics by Gilbert Hernandez, October 2000, 120 pages
  18. Locas in Love by Jaime Hernandez, October 2000, 120 pages
  19. Luba in America, by Gilbert Hernandez, 2001, 168 pages
  20. Dicks and Deedees by Jaime Hernandez, June 2003, 96 pages
  21. The Book of Ofelia, by Gilbert Hernandez, December 2005, 256 pages
  22. Ghost of Hoppers by Jaime Hernandez, December 2005, 120 pages
  23. Three Daughters, by Gilbert Hernandez, August 2006, 144 pages
  24. The Education of Hopey Glass, by Jaime Hernandez, April 2008, 128 pages
  25. High Soft Lisp by Gilbert Hernandez, April 2010, 144 pages
  26. God and Science: Return of the Ti-Girls, by Jaime Hernandez, July 2012, 144 pages
  27. Julio's Day by Gilbert Hernandez, April 2013, 112 pages
  28. The Children of Palomar by Gilbert Hernandez, August 2013, 104 pages
  29. The Love Bunglers by Jaime Hernandez, April 2014, 100 pages
  30. Is This How You See Me? by Jaime Hernandez, April 2019, 96 pages
  31. Tonta by Jaime Hernandez, July 2019, 104 pages
  32. Maria M. by Gilbert Hernandez, October 2019, 270 pages

    Omnibus editions

Volume 1 was re-released in smaller "omnibus" style trade paperbacks. Starting in 2010, volume 2's stories began getting re-releases as well. In 2018, the New Stories began being collected among the "omnibus" paperbacks.
  1. Maggie the Mechanic, by Jaime Hernandez, 272 pages
  2. The Girl from H.O.P.P.E.R.S., by Jaime Hernandez, 272 pages
  3. Perla la Loca, by Jaime Hernandez, 288 pages
  4. Heartbreak Soup, by Gilbert Hernandez, 288 pages
  5. Human Diastrophism, by Gilbert Hernandez, 288 pages
  6. Beyond Palomar, by Gilbert Hernandez, 256 pages
  7. Amor Y Cohetes, by Jaime, Gilbert & Mario Hernandez, 280 pages
  8. Penny Century, by Jaime Hernandez, 240 pages
  9. Esperanza, by Jaime Hernandez, 248 pages
  10. Luba and Her family, by Gilbert Hernandez, 312 pages
  11. Ofelia, by Gilbert Hernandez, 256 pages
  12. Comics Dementia, by Gilbert Hernandez, 224 pages
  13. Angels and Magpies, by Jaime Hernandez, 260 pages
  14. Three Sisters, by Gilbert Hernandez, 280 pages

    Hardcovers

Edited segments of both the Palomar and the Maggie stories are available in hardcover format.
  1. Locas: The Maggie and Hopey Stories by Jaime Hernandez
  2. Locas II: Maggie, Hopey, and Ray by Jaime Hernandez
  3. Palomar: The Heartbreak Soup Stories by Gilbert Hernandez
  4. Luba by Gilbert Hernandez

    New stories

The series continues in annual trade paperbacks, entitled Love & Rockets: New Stories. To date, eight exist:
  1. New Stories, volume 1, 112 pages
  2. New Stories, volume 2, 104 pages
  3. New Stories, volume 3, 104 pages
  4. New Stories, volume 4, 104 pages
  5. New Stories, volume 5, 96 pages
  6. New Stories, volume 6, 100 pages
  7. New Stories, volume 7, 100 pages
  8. New Stories, volume 8, 100 pages
In 2012, Jaime Hernandez's individual stories from the first two volumes of New Stories were collected into a single volume, entitled God and Science: Return of the Ti-Girls, which also included about 30 new pages of comics.
In 2014, Jaime Hernandez's stories from volumes 3 and 4 of New Stories were collected into a single volume entitled The Love Bunglers.

Volume IV

In 2016, Fantagraphics began releasing Volume IV of Love and Rockets.

Works cited

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