New for June 2016

Hot Dog Taste Test
by Lisa Hanawalt
Summer officially begins now, with the release of Lisa Hanawalt's Hot Dog Taste Test!
This flexi-like hardcover volume delivers 180 pages of Ms.
Hanawalt's full color comics mayhem. Nothing is spared: shopping,
cooking, eating, farting -- it's all here! Along with birds, corporate
iconography, horses, picnics, travel and more. In addition to comics,
there are reproductions of sculptures, photographs, watercolors and
hybrid combintations of all of the above. It's a crazy hodgepodge of
energetic, sillly and highly satiric humor.
retail price - $22.99
copacetic price -
$20.00
Sir Alfred
by Tim Hensley
Hold onto your hats, Sir Alfred
(apocryphally listed as "No. 3") is a comics fetishist's dream. This
is a beautifully printed, massively sized -- 10" x 13" -- full color
comic book designed to look like a golden age National Periodical
Publication (only bigger!), that has been painstakingly produced in a
limited, signed & numbered edtion of 1000 copies. It includes a
giclée print and a letterpressed coaster (who will be the first to dare
to actually employ this item in its designed capacity?), and comes
pre-packaed in a mylar sleeve. And it's about the life and career of
that painstaking perfectionsist, Alfred Hitchcock, making for a perfect
match! So, put on your smoking jacket, pour yourself a cognac, and
enjoy!
retail price - $25.00
copacetic price -
$25.00

Frontier #12: Kelly Kwang
by Kelly Kwang
Youth in Decline sez: ""Who Were the
Space Youth Cadets?" Left in cosmic loneliness, they burned brightly
until the void became too immense and they coalesced into its infinity.
Earth forgot, but they did exist, and this is my proof. This fascinating issue features a mix of illustration, comics,
apparel, murals, and photography to tell the story of the SYC. 32
pages, Full-color and B+W. <> Kelly K is an illustrator and cartoonist who spends half her time
in Toronto and the other half on the net. She roots 4the universe and
is rooting 4u too." Brandon Graham fans might want to check this out...
retail price - $8.00
copacetic price -
$7.25

Dream Tube
by Rebekka Dunlop
Ms. Dunlop has delivered a great batch of
all new comics here in Dream Tube, and publisher, Youth in Decline has
put them all together in a thoughful and aesthetically pleasing package
that perfectly suits her work. Midnight blue ink on heavy
cream/off-white newsprint is just the right call here and lends the
comics an inviting feel. Those readers who feel at home with the works
of Michael DeForge, Patrick Kyle, Jillian Tamaki, Sam Alden, et al are
likely to welcome the work they find in the 114 pages of comics
presented here.
retail price - $12.95
copacetic price -
$12.00
Low Light
by Tristan Wright
The level of artistry achieved in
32-page, magazine-size, black & white comic book from the
previously-unkown-to-us comics maker Tristan Wright knocked our socks
off when we first opened it up. While the story itself has a strong
Miyazaki flavor, the artwork created to convey it put us in mind of the
glory days of French science fiction and fantasy comics of the 1970s,
with, of course, Moebius at its center. We are confident that anyone
reading this will join us in looking forward to seeing what comes next
from this talent. And you won't have to wait as long as, as we
received this several months ago, but then sold out here at the shop
before managing to post it here. Now that we have received a restock
that we can offer here, online Copacetic customers have a chance to
glom onto a copy themselves. In the meantime, anyone and everyone that
feels intrigued by our comments can do themselves the favor of taking
the time to check out the very generous batch of comics Mr. Wright has
posted online HERE (the first post, "Late Night Special", presents the first 12 pages of Low Light #1).
retail price - $8.00
copacetic price -
$8.00

Some Towers
by Vincent Fritz
Coming to Copacetic from Germany, and employing a format of extreme verticality -- 4" x 12" -- Some Towers
lives up to its name. It presents 32 pages, each with its own strip
stack, each made up of four square panels. Printed on eight different
colors of heavy paper stock, Fritz pays with sequence and series in
this bit of formal funnies.
retail price - $6.00
copacetic price -
$6.00
The Beauty Theorem
by Benjamin Urkowitz
Funky and fascinating, Benjamin Urkowitz's The Beauty Theorem
is a horizontally formatted two-color risograph comic book that forges
its own, unique visual language to negotiate a rapprochement between
categories that are often at odds -- or at least have difficulties
working in coördinating between each other: aesthetics and
mathematics, on the one hand, and scientific bodies and government
finance on the other. Quite an ambitious agenda for a 36-page,
handmade, self-published, small batch (limited to 200 copies, so don't
snooze on this one) comic book! Urkowitz rises to the challenge by
producing some highly original comics that appear to stand as a career
high, from the Copacetic vantage point.
retail price - $5.00
copacetic price -
$5.00

Homegoing
by Yaa Gyasi
Homegoing starts out in 18th century
Ghana and follows two half sisters and their descendents to the new
world and through the centuries and up to the present day in this
widely heralded novel that is sure to be one of the major works of
2016. Here links to just three of the many glowing reviews this work
has already garnered in
The New York Times
The Wall Street Journal
NPR
retail price - $26.95
copacetic price -
$22.75
Items
from our June 2016 listings may now be purchased online at our
eCommerce site, HERE.
New for May 2016
Highbone Theater
by Joe Daly
Imagine, if you will, a very Charles
Burnsian narrative in which dream and reality, imagination and
perception, delusion and conception, fiction, fantasy and rumination
are all inextricably bound together into an irreducible mass. Then
imagine it featuring a cast that centers on Arnold Schwarzenegger-esque Freak
Brothers rendered in the manner of Burns imitating Fletcher Hanks, with
the setting -- landscapes and dreamscapes -- courtesy of Jim Woodring.
Then imagine that the protagonist works with Reid Fleming,
only at a paper factory instead of an industrial dairy, and that here
Reid Fleming is, in addition to being an over-the-top renegade, an
off-the-rails paranoid delusional conspiracy theorist. All the while
keeping in mind the entire time that this story is set -- at least
those parts that can be construed to take place within the physical
realm -- in South Africa, yet is somehow related to the events of 9/11,
and that the artwork switches back and forth between black and white
and full color, as called for by the narrative. Now you have some idea
what to expect in the 570 pages of Highbone Theater, the latest and greatest work by the creator of Dungeon Quest and The Red Monkey Double Happiness Book, and more. Anyone looking to escape their lives and plunge into a fully formed
-- and completely outrageous -- comics universe need look no further.
retail price - $34.99
copacetic price -
$29.75
Disquiet
by Noah Van Sciver
More Noah Van Sciver! Here's the second
book collection -- the first in hardcover! -- of Noah Van Sciver's
short work. After a two-page intro, Disquiet gets off to a great start
with Noah's mini-masterpiece, "The Lizard Laughed", originally
publiahsed as a riso mini by Oily Comics. It then goes on to collect a
varietry of works that had previously appeared in Blammo, along with
"The Death of Elijah Lovejoy", which appears here in color for the
first time, as does "Untitled" which had previously seen the light of
day only in a small run mini, and a few other short pieces as well.
The two color works that close out the volume, "Night Shift" and
"About the Artist" were both new to us here at Copacetic. 136 pages
in all. Debossed cover!
Le Poulet du Dimanche
by Sylvie Fontaine
French comics creator, Sylvie Fontaine is
a seasoned veteran of the form, but is not widely known in the English
speaking world. Le Poulet du Dimanche
(which translates as "Sunday Chicken," and presumably has a French
colloquial meaning that is lost in translation) could go a ways in
helping to rectify this situation, as all the work herein collected are
wordless pantomime comics in which no translation is necessary (the
sole exception to this is the introduction by Jean Giraud [better known
as Moebius]). And these are great comics, exhibiting a strong
synthetic streak, as Fontaine's work incorporates the likes of Marc
Bell, Jean Debuffet, Fiona Smyth, Jim Woodring, and Moebius himself --
especially in some of the lengthy series of transformation comics,
which is one of this volume's highlights -- along with that of many
others. This is not to say her work is derivative. It takes what it
needs from its influences and welds them to her own æsthetic, using
each as called for. Her work ranges from delicate to detailed to bold
to ruddily expressionistic -- sometimes all in a single piece! This
full-size 120 page French-flapped (but of course!) edition is an
entertaining collection of engrossing comics as well as an excellent
introduction to Ms. Fontaine's work. Check it out!
retail price - $19.99
copacetic price -
$17.77

The End of a Fence
by Roman Muradov
Roman Muradov hits a career high with this smart little book. The End of a Fence
is the first long form book in the new kuš! mono series, and gets it
off to a great start! We actually first got this in a few months back,
but sold out (twice!) in the shop before finally getting a restock that
we could list here. Take a moment now to take advantage of the magic
of the internet by clicking HERE
for a nice preview. | Format A6 (10cm x 15 cm / 4" x 6"), 100
pages, full-color, perfect bound, printed on FSC certified paper. |
retail price - $12.00
copacetic price -
$12.00
Boy's Club
by Matt Furie
The long dry spell has ended. Matt
Furie's pæan to roomfulls of young men out of their minds on drugshas
at last been collected into this compact softcover edition. Keeping
the dimensions of the original comic books in which these stories
originally appeared, this Fantagraphics edition prints the strips in a
multicolored series of monochrome pages, the color changes between
which serve to demarcate their divisions. The opening intro and
closing outro pages are printed in green; the first section (which we
are thinking corresponds to the first issue of the series, but can no
longer recall -- anyone know for sure?) is printed in blue; the second
in a mustard sienna; and the third in plum mahogany (no black &
white here!). 176 pages of non-stop stoner-funnies in all. In comics
lineage, the Boy's Club comics are more or less the link between the Ben Jones / Paper Rad BJ and tha Dogs-era work and Simon Hanselmann's Megg, Mogg & Owl strips that are defining our present disaffection (but you already knew that).
retail price - $19.99
copacetic price -
$17.77
Momento!
by Matias San Juan
The hype line at the top of this comic
book lays it right out: "stories for the (now old) 90s kid in all of
us." Anyone pining for another shot of those finely crafted, pen &
ink comics that probe the youth counter culture while prodding
society's underbelly and occasionally broaching taboo subjects will
find six doses here in the 34 pages of Momento!
Fans of the early Clowes in particular (which is actually from the
'80s) will find their buttons being pushed here in stories like "Barry!
My Imaginary Friend" and "Night of the Roamer". The heavy satire of
"Bitrilin's Dream" and "A Hungry Artist" may put readers in mind of the
repressed anger of the first few issues of Ivan Brunetti's Schizo.
As the issue comes to a close, things veer towards the Peter Bagge
worldview, becoming increasingly cynical and jaded in the encroaching
darkness of "Switcheroo" and the finale, "The World Passed You By."
All of this is not to say, however, that the comics here are lacking in
originality. San Juan certainly has his own personal vision -- hey, he
lives and works in Buenos Aires, so he is definitely drawing on
different life experiences than the aforementioned americanos del Norte
-- and in Momento! it springs upon those us who are
encountering it here for the first time already fully formed. Thanks
should go out to the fine folks at Kilgore for bringing these fine
comics across the equator!
retail price - $5.00
copacetic price -
$5.00
Follow the Leader #1
by Jonas McLuggage
Jonas's long-in-the-works online comics series, Follow the Leader
at last sees the light of day as an actual, honest-to-gosh comic book,
and it's a real beaut! 36 pages of knock-your-socks off drawing and
coloring power this strange tale that puts an all-new twist on the kids
vs. the powers-that-be theme. Only 200 signed and numbered copies
printed. Don't miss this destined-to-be-a-collectors'-item,
Made-in-Pittsburgh comic book! These won't be around forever...
retail price - $8.00
copacetic price -
$8.00
Grixly #35
by Nate McDonough
The new Grixly has arrived! This time
around Nate delivers "The Batman Strikes!" "Cooking with Grixly," "Dogs
of the Future," "Grixly on a Trip," "The Pizza Dumpster," and plenty
more besides. There's a lot stuffed into this issue's 24 pages. All
for a mere $2.75. Grixly -- Your Best Comics Value™.
retail price - $2.75
copacetic price -
$2.75
Donald Duck: "Terror of the Beagle Boys"
by Carl Barks
The
latest volume in The Carl Barks
Library has arrived. This time around we have three full length
Donald
Duck clasic adventures. First up is "Dangerous Disguise",
which is
notable for featuring characters -- all, intriguingly, spies, with most
of the "screen time" devoted to one femme fatale -- that are rendered
as a normative human figure, while all around her are ducks; a rarity
with Barks. Next up is "No Such Varmit", a classic travel
adventure
story that riffs on the Loch Ness monster myth. And then we have
"In
Old California", another unique tale in the Barks ouevre, in which
Donald and his nephews travel back in time to 1848, courtesy of some
"herbs" given to them by an indian medicine man. Barks packs a
lot
into this story: wealth, class, ethnicity, gender roles, and of
course, good and evil, right and wrong, and their relations to beauty
and ugliness. This story features Barks's only employment of
cameo
insets that we can think of. It also has some of his most packed
compositions, both within individual panels and through individual
pages; you really feel him struggling to pack it all into the 28 pages
allotted. It is also unique (so far) to The Carl Barks Library in
that
it is the first full length tale to be colored by someone other than
series colorist Rich Tommaso. "In Old California!" was colored by
Joseph Robert Cowles -- to good effect, we should make clear -- and it
stands out for its relatively subdued hues of generally darker tones
than what readers have become accustomed to with Tommaso. Then,
we have a batch of eleven classic ten-pagers, including the
title track, the most significant of which is that keystone of Barksian
economics that has been dubbed, "A Financial Fable." Here Barks
explicitly lays out a central pillar of what he has as Uncle Scrooge's
underlying understanding cum philosophy of money as labor and thrift as
the means of its preservation and extension. While this is of course
and of necessity a greatly simplified (and hugely reductive) take on a
highly complex subject, for a ten-page story originally created for a
ten cent comic book, it stands alone in its presentation of the
function of money in a capitalist society. Wrapping things up we
have an eight-pager featuring Grandma Duck,
Daisy Duck, Gus Goose and Black Pete (!) in a rare cross-over from the
Mickey Mouse universe wherein he is normally found. This story was
additionally unusual in that it was originally published in an issue of
Walt Disney's Comics & Stories that already had a Barks ten-pager,
giving those lucky 1951 readers the rare treat of getting two Barks
stories in one issue. This volume concludes with the now
traditional assembly of story notes, cover reporductions and
bibiliographical details. Recommended!
retail price - $29.99
copacetic price -
$25.00
Barnaby, Volume Three: 1946-1947
by Crockett Johnson
The oft' delayed and long awaited third volume of Crockett Johnson's classic one-of-a-kind strip has finally
arrived! Between these covers is collected all the strips
published from 1 January 1946 through 31 December 1947by Also on
hand are a forward by Jeff Smith, an essay by Nathalie op de Beeck,
"Notes on a Haunted Childhood," an afterword, "Escape Artist?" by
Philip Nel – who also contributed notes to historically dated allusions
that are peppered throughout the strips – and, finally, early
comics histgorian, Coulton Waugh's appreciation of Barnaby
that originally appeared in The Comics, which was published in 1947.
retail price - $39.99
copacetic price -
$33.99
The Jazz of Physics
by Stephon Alexander
The first book by Brown University physics professor, Stephon Alexander, The Jazz of Physics has
one of the most alluring sub-titles in memory: The Secret Link Between
Music and the Structure of the Universe. Hard to top, right? It
certainly worked on us here at Copacetic. This book has also received
accolades from the likes of Brian Eno and Jaron Lanier. Here's a page on The Creators Project
that includes an interview with Alexander and experimental music
producer, Rioux, the official video that arose of their chance
collaboration and an embedded TED Talk by ALexander, for anyone who's
interested in learning more and/or getting a head start on the topics
contained in The Jazz of Physics.
retail price - $27.50
copacetic price -
$24.75

Listen, Liberal!
by Thomas Frank
retail price - $27.00
copacetic price -
$23.75

The Sympathizer
by Viet Thanh Nguyen
The winner of this year's Pulitzer Prize for Fiction
has also garnered many other accolades boldly confronts the multiple
and conflicting strands of history that continue to define the legacies
of Vietnam and the Vietnam War.
Reviewed at The New York Times, The Guardian UK, and around the world.
retail price - $16.00
copacetic price -
$14.44
Items
from our May 2016 listings may now be purchased online at our
eCommerce site, HERE.
New for April 2016
Kramers Ergot #9
edited by Sammy Harkham
Featuring the work of John Pham, Lale Westvind, Noel Freibert, Julia
Gfrörer, Dash Shaw, Anya Davidson, Patrick Kyle, Marc Bell, Antoine
Cosse, Gabrielle Bell, Alex Schubert, Archer Prewitt, Ben Jones and
many more, the ninth volume in this epoch-making anthology harkens back
to the look, feel and heft of the fourth, which was the volume that put
Kramers on the map, and is still the sentimental favorite at Copacetic. Here we have a
highly informed selection of 288 pages of comics that draws on
Harkham's knowledge of and connections with the contemporary comics
making community. The work he has assembled here displays a full
spectrum of the amazing variety of what the form is capable of
expressing. Miss at your own peril!
retail price - $45.00
copacetic price -
$38.25

Megg & Mogg in Amsterdam
by Simon Hanselmann
The wait is over! The latest from Simon
Hanselmann has arrived. More mayhem from Megg and Mogg (and Owl and
Werewolf Jones and assorted innocent bystanders) are back in this 160
page full color hardcover that collects several dozen strips including St. Owl's Bay, all of his Vice.com strips to date, and new, previously unpublished strips created especailly for this volume.
retail price - $19.99
copacetic price -
$15.75

Mary Wept Over the Feet of Jesus
by Chester Brown
Chester heads off into the desert of
scriptural interpretation... There is definitely some solid comics
storytelling going on here in Chester's (anti-)Reader's Digest
condensations of Old Testament tales that lead into his speculative
riffs on the Gospels. Drawn & Quarterly has put together an
attractive hardcover edition that shows off Chester's four-panel grid
to good effect. That said, an inordinate portion of the book is
devoted to notes that defend the positions that are taken here,
revealing the book as being intended as a polemic, which is
unfortunate. Anyone limiting their reading to the comics alone, will
get an engaging read along with a morsel or two of food for thought.
Anyone who dives into the notes will find themselves in the world of
self-justifying scriptural interpretation, which is best left alone,
should one like to maintain a copacetic mien. Hree's hoping that
Chester has worked it out of his system with this and that we can look
forward to some less self-justifying fare in the future.
retail price - $21.95
copacetic price -
$18.75

5,000 km per second
by Manuele Fior
Winner of both the grand prize at the Lucca Comics Festival and the award for best album at the Angoulême Comics Festival -- in 2010 and 2011 -- respectively, 5,000 km per second
at long last makes its English language debut in this hardcover edition
from Fantagraphics. Fior is an accomplished watercolorist who here
employs a finely nuanced color palette in telling the story of a
complex young love that is also the story of growing up as if follows
its protagonists' across the years and across the continent of Europe
and into Egypt in a series of gradual shifts and abrupt jumps.
retail price - $22.99
copacetic price -
$20.00

Peplum
by Blutch
The second volume in the New York
Review's just launched line of comics also happens to be only the
second work by the major league Bande Dessinée creator, Blutch to be
translated into English and pubished in North America. In Peplum,
Blutch uses comics to take on a raft of ideas, notions, dreams and
conceits that have acreted around the historical memory of ancient Rome
and weaves them together in a pen and ink tapestry that brings with it
a host of fresh perspectives.
retail price - $24.99
copacetic price -
$21.75
The Ukrainian and Russian Notebooks
by Igort
This 364 page work records Igort's visits
to the Ukraine and Russia itowards the end of the first decade of the
21st Century, but the bulk of the work is devoted to retelling the
tales of those he meets of their experiences in these countires during
the 20th. More than one octegenarian is able to recall the horrifying
days of the Stalin's enforced starvations during the 1930s as well as
the equally barbaric incursions and depredations of the Nazis during
the Second World War. Hearing these stories, one has to marvel that
their tellers were able to survive that which they recount. There is
much more on hand here than this, of course, but it is those tales
which are so outside of the experience of those who lived their lives
here in the New World of the Americas that burn themselves strongest
into the mind's eye. Igort, who will be known to many a Copacetic
customer for his masterful work in Baobab,
which was a part of the Ignatz line of graphic albums that he himself
presided over, stretches out here and employs a wide range of
expressive drawing, portraiture, illustration, and, of course, comics
in recounting these many tales. We highly recommend this work to
anyone ready, willing and able to learn more of how life was lived in
the Old World on the other side of the Iron Curtain, even before the
curtain had been drawn as well as after it had been taken down.
retail price - $28.00
copacetic price -
$25.00

Panther
by Brecht Evens
More luscious watercolor comics from the master. Evens spreads
out in this massive horizontally formatted hardcover. Panther is a visually dazzling tour de force! Check out the first few rows on this Google image page to get an idea of what you're in for.
retail price - $26.95
copacetic price -
$23.75

Pascin
by Joann Sfar
This comics bio of the Bulgarian emigre painter, Jules Pascin,
who became a key member of the vital early 20th century
Montparnassian art scene in Paris has at long last been translated into
English and published in North America. An ideal subject for Joann
Sfar, who shows a great deal of affection for his subject in each of
this hardcover's 186 pages; seeing him as a precursor figure to his own
career in present day Paris, perhaps?
retail price - $24.95
copacetic price -
$21.75

Don't Come In Here
by Patrick Kyle
Patrick Kyle provides fair warning: Don't Come In Here
is a challenge to received notions of normative perception in the form
of 264 pages of comics which delineate an absurd com(a)partmentalized
alienation. The chronicle of an isolated existence in which the
protagonist is immersed in a feedback loop of computer-mediated
consciousness that renders the reality of his(?) surroundings
indeterminate. We can be sure that it is happening, just not
what, exactly. Perhaps we never have been, perhaps we've been kidding
ourselves all along, and only now are beginning to realize this...
retail price - $14.99
copacetic price -
$13.75
After Nothing Comes
by Aidan Koch
After Nothing Comes collects
several of Ms. Koch's out-of-print, self-published zines. Koyama Press
has striven to capture the look and feel of the originals within the
limitations of a standard collection. The rrepresentation of each zine
reproduces the tone of the original paper stock to provide readers with
the next-best-thing to getting their hands on the zines themselves
(which, at this point, would be no mean feat). Originally published
between 2008 and 2014, these six works, taken together, provide an
excellent introduction to her work. Koch is concerned with evoking
specific states of mind and visually connecting / correlating them with
their triggers. In some cases, the trigger is an absence -- or loss --
making its visual representation a special kind challenge. It is, on
the evidence of her work published here and elsewhere, apparently the
kind of challenge that appeals to Koch and one that fits well with her
spare, occasionally elegaic style. Precise pencil drawings mix with
flowing ink washes and the occasional frenetic bit of brushwork and all
gradually tends towards a grappling with emptiness and how to represent
emotional balance in spatial compositions indicating a temporality that
is struggling against a current flowing from the future.
retail price - $20.00
copacetic price -
$16.75

From Now On
by Malachi Ward
Finally -- a one-stop collection of Malachi Ward comics has arrived! From Now On
collects a lucky 13 of Ward's short pieces -- ten that originally
appeared in a wide array of anthologies, along with three new stories
appearing here for the first time (to the best of our knowledge). 140
pages of far out science fiction comics in black & white and full
color fill this this nicely printed, reasonably priced, full size
softcover edition.
retail price - $14.99
copacetic price -
$12.75
The Complete Peanuts, Volume 25: 1999-2000
by Charles Schulz
Here it is: the final (>sob!<)
Peanuts strips by Charles M. Schulz, the last of which, the final
Sunday page, originally appeared on the same day as Schulz's obituary,
as he passed on from this world (and doubtless onto the Sphere of True
Comics) the day before its publication. The editors cleverly filled
out what would have otherwise been a slim volume by bookending the
conclusion of Peanuts with the complete collection of Schulz's
precursor strip to Peanuts, L'il Folks.
And, to top it all off, this volume is introduced by none other than
the President of the United States of America, Barack Obama! A fitting
finale.
retail price - $29.99
copacetic price -
$25.00
Items
from our April 2016 listings may now be purchased online at our
eCommerce site, HERE.
Want to keep going? There's tons
more great stuff here, most of which is still in stock. Check out
our New Arrivals Archives:
1Q 2016: January - March, New Arrivals
4Q
2015: October - December, New Arrivals
3Q 2015: July - September, New Arrivals
2Q
2015: April - June, New Arrivals
1Q 2015: January - March, New Arrivals
4Q
2014: October - December, New Arrivals
3Q 2014: July - September, New Arrivals
2Q
2014: April - June, New Arrivals
1Q 2014: January - March, New Arrivals
4Q
2013: October - December, New Arrivals
3Q 2013: July - September, New Arrivals
2Q 2013: April - June, New Arrivals
1Q 2013: January - March, New Arrivals
4Q
2012: October - December, New Arrivals
3Q
2012: July - September, New Arrivals
2Q
2012: April - June, New Arrivals
1Q 2012: January - March, New Arrivals
4Q
2011: October - December, New Arrivals
3Q
2011: July - September, New Arrivals
2Q
2011: April - June, New Arrivals
1Q 2011: January - March, New Arrivals
4Q
2010: October - December, New Arrivals
3Q 2010: July - September, New Arrivals
2Q 2010: April - June, New Arrivals
1Q 2010: January - March, New Arrivals
4Q
2009: October - December, New Arrivals
3Q 2009: July - September, New Arrivals
2Q 2009: April - June, New Arrivals
1Q 2009: January - March, New Arrivals
4Q 2008:
October - December, New Arrivals
3Q 2008: July
- September, New Arrivals
2Q 2008: April - June, New Arrivals
1Q 2008: January - March, New Arrivals
4Q
2007: October - December, New Arrivals
3Q 2007: July - September, New Arrivals
2Q 2007: April - June, New Arrivals
1Q 2007:
January - March, New Arrivals
4Q
2006: October - December, New Arrivals
3Q 2006: July - September, New Arrivals
2Q 2006: April - June, New Arrivals
1Q 2006:
January - March, New Arrivals
4Q 2005: October - December, New Arrivals
3Q 2005: July - September, New Arrivals
2Q 2005: April - June, New Arrivals
1Q 2005: January - March, New Arrivals
4Q
2004: October - December, New Arrivals
3Q 2004: July
- September, New Arrivals
2Q 2004:
April - June, New Arrivals
1Q 2004: January - March, New Arrivals
4Q
2003: October - December, New Arrivals
3Q 2003: July - September, New Arrivals
2Q 2003: April - June, New Arrivals
1Q 2003: January - March, New Arrivals
2002:
January - December New Arrivals
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updated 30 June 2016