Troy Brownfield

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Troy Brownfield
Born (1973-09-01) September 1, 1973 (age 48)
Terre Haute, IN
Area(s)Writer
Notable works
Sparkshooter, Blood Queen, Prince Dracula, Inhabited

Troy Brownfield is a comic book writer, journalist, and college professor from Indiana. He has an extensive list of credits, but became widely known to the online community as a columnist for Newsarama and the creator/editor of ShotgunReviews.com.[1] As of June 2018, he is a Staff Writer for The Saturday Evening Post.

Journalism Background[]

Brownfield attended Indiana State University, where he eventually earned a master's degree in English with a focus in Creative Writing. While an undergraduate student, Brownfield wrote a number of items for ISU's Indiana Statesman, including a catch-all column called "My Opinion, Not Yours". This background led to Brownfield's invitation to join the now-defunct ComicKingdom.com; while working with that site, Brownfield created his "Shotgun Reviews" column, so-named because it covered a wide area of ideas and approaches with the overriding element of satirical humor.

In 1999, Brownfield created ShotgunReviews.com, a site intended to give young writers a place to sharpen their work. The site covers several facets of entertainment, and has featured a variety of long-running columns. Among the featured contributors have been Shawn Delaney (site webmaster and Music Editor), Jonathan Birdsong (Lyrical Lounge section editor), Russell Ray (wrestling columnist and one-time Managing Editor), L.I. Rapkin (Senior Writer), The Rev. OJ Flow (comic columnist), Corey Henson (wrestling columnist), Eric Barker (film critic), Matt McConnell (anime critic), Ian King (feature writer), and many more (including numerous members of Birdsong's hip-hop review crew). Brownfield closed the final version of the site in 2012 after a thirteen-year run to focus on his comics writing.

Around 1999, Brownfield, who worked a day job in publishing, began aggressively pursuing print work. His articles have appeared in sources like Wired,[2] The Indianapolis Star, Indianapolis Monthly, INTake Weekly, Street Miami magazine, Savant online, Comicon.com's The Pulse, Nuvo Newsweekly magazine, and more. He has also written nearly 100 features and reviews for Newtype USA magazine alone.

Brownfield eventually began contributing regularly to Newsarama. He formerly edited and co-wrote the Best Shots review feature, as well as the columns "Your Manga Minute" and "Super-Articulate". He remained a frequent columnist through 2011.[3] In 2004, Brownfield accepted an appointment to the position of Assistant Professor in the Department of English, Journalism, and Languages at Saint Mary-of-the-Woods College, where he taught journalism, English, communications and film.[4] He left the college at the close of the 2010-2011 school year. He taught in central Indiana until 2018, when he joined the writing staff of the Indianapolis-based Saturday Evening Post.[5] He also writes the Super-Articulate column for Graphic Policy.

Comics and more[]

In July 2006, Brownfield was announced as one of the first writing talents on board with the freshly minted Fangoria Comics, an offshoot imprint of the popular horror magazine. He was announced as an Associate Editor for the line. He stayed with the line when they departed to become The Scream Factory, and again through their relationship with Fangoria Graphix. As of 2010, The Scream Factory again operates on its own, with Brownfield still Associate Editor. It was announced in February 2010 that Brownfield would be writing "Tales from Wonderland: The White Knight" for Zenescope.[6] In November 2010, Brownfield and former Newsarama editor Matt Brady were announced as the writers of Dynamite's Buck Rogers Annual #1, due in February 2011.[7] Brownfield and Brady co-wrote a story for the Batman 80 Page Giant 2011, released in August. In November, Brownfield announced that he and artist Sarah Vaughn would launch a webcomic, Sparkshooter, in February 2012; Enkaru (Encar Robles) drew #3-13, Kate Frizzell drew #14-15, and Malik O. Smith drew #16.[8] Brownfield was announced as the new regular writer for "Grimm Fairy Tales Myths & Legends" by Zenescope Entertainment Executive Editor Raven Gregory in early summer 2012; Brownfield's first issue, #18, appeared in July. In February 2014, Brownfield was announced as the writer for a new ongoing series from Dynamite Entertainment, The Blood Queen, beginning in June. In May 2014, Dynamite Entertainment published an eBook by Brownfield, a novel titled ; the paperback version became available in July 2014.[9] He was the Editor-in-Chief of Imminent Press. [10] Brownfield published a horror short story collection, INHABITED, in 2019.

In addition to his journalism work, Brownfield has a strong reputation for providing live music events. Beginning when he was 19, Brownfield became the first student to independently organize a music festival on the campus of Indiana State.[citation needed] Some six festivals and 30+ smaller shows later, he decided to give that side of the business a rest.

Brownfield continued to work with and manage bands like Samsell. After moving to Indianapolis in the late '90s, he organized several shows for promotional packages and charity work. The ShotgunReviews.com site sponsored many of these endeavors. After the dissolution of Samsell, Brownfield has retired from promotion for the time being.

Comics[]

Blue Moon Comics[]

Title Date Notes
serial in web & print comic 2000 Writer (art by Bryan Heyboer)

Shotgun Press (at ShotgunReviews.com)[]

Title Date Notes
webcomic (2 issues) 2000 Writer (art by Jon Hueber with )
webcomic (2 installments) 2000 Writer (art by Tim Laitas and Matt Ross)

Fangoria Comics[]

Title Date Notes
Bump #1-4 2007 Associate Editor, mini-series
Robert Kurtzman's Beneath The Valley of The Rage #1-4 2007 Associate Editor, mini-series
Dee Snider's Strangeland: Seven Sins #1-4 2007 Associate Editor, mini-series
#1-2 2007 Associate Editor, mini-series; series not completed
Death Walks the Streets #0-3 2008-2010 Associate Editor, mini-series

Zenescope Entertainment[]

Title Date Notes
#1 2010 Writer, one-shot
#18-25 2012-2013 Writer, co-plotter with Raven Gregory, Ralph Tedesco & Joe Brusha
Grimm Fairy Tales (comics) #83-84 2013 Writer[11]
#1-3 2013 Writer
Grimm Fairy Tales (comics) #89-91 2013 Writer
#3-5 2014 Writer
#1-4 2014 Writer
#1-3 2015 Writer
#1-5 Unreleased Writer
2015 Writer
2016 Writer
2016 Co-Writer
2016 Writer
2017 Writer
2017 Writer

Dynamite Entertainment[]

Title Date Notes
#1 2011 Co-writer (with Matt Brady), one-shot
#1-6 2014 Writer, ongoing
Annual #1 2014 Writer
#1-4 2015 Writer, mini-series
2017 Writer; collects all the prior Blood Queen material

DC Comics[]

Title Date Notes
#1 2011 Co-writer of one story (with Matt Brady)

Sparkshooter[]

Title Date Notes
webcomic 2012-present Writer (#1-2 art by Sarah Vaughn and Ben Olson; #3-13 art by Enkaru; #14-15 art by Kate Frizzell; #16 art by Malik O. Smith)
webcomic 2013-present Writer (art by Ben Olson)

House 137[]

Title Date Notes
Zombie[SIDE] anthology 2017 Writer, "It Takes a Village" (art by Yonami)
Midnight Witch: Neverending Nights anthology 2017 Writer, "Epilogue" (art by Kewber Baal)
2019 Contributing Writer

Imminent Press[]

Title Date Notes
Terminal anthology series #1 2018 Editor-in-Chief
Terminal anthology series #2 2018 Editor-in-Chief
Terminal anthology series #3 2019 Editor-in-Chief
Terminal anthology series #4 2019 Editor-in-Chief

Novels and Collections[]

  • (2014, Dynamite Entertainment; co-credit given to Bram Stoker)
  • Inhabited (2019)

References[]

  1. ^ "About Shotgun Reviews". Shotgun Reviews. Shotgun Reviews. Archived from the original on 2008-06-20. Retrieved 2008-10-20.
  2. ^ ((https://www.wired.com/entertainment/hollywood/multimedia/2008/02/st_best))
  3. ^ "View profile: Troy Brownfield". Newsarama.com. Imaginova Corporation. Archived from the original on 2007-10-29. Retrieved 2008-10-20.
  4. ^ "Business, Art, and Media Faculty". Saint Mary of the Woods College. Archived from the original on 2007-09-29. Retrieved 2008-10-20.
  5. ^ (https://www.linkedin.com/in/troy-brownfield-a992786/)
  6. ^ http://www.newsarama.com/comics/zenescope-may-2010-solicitations-100226.html
  7. ^ http://www.newsarama.com/comics/dynamite-february-2011-solicitations-101118.html
  8. ^ http://www.sparkshooter.com
  9. ^ http://troybrownfield.tumblr.com/post/86527903641/as-promised-prince-dracula-a-novel-by-me
  10. ^ http://imminent.online/
  11. ^ "Brownfield's GRIMM Outlook at Zenescope Continues". Newsarama. Retrieved 2012-12-18.

External links[]

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