This Saturday November 11th will see the latest iteration of Brooklyn's best comics show, Comic Arts Brooklyn. Because this year's festival features a new venue and a new programming partner, we thought we'd abuse our email list and borrow some of Gabe Fowler's time to ask about the show. Gabe, who not only runs CAB but also captains one of the country's best comic book stores (that would be Desert Island Comics) took some time away from last-minute prep to talk about the changes. For more information about the show, you can check out the Comic Arts Brooklyn website.

TCJ: Hey Gabe! At the time of this conversation, CAB is only a few days away. How is it going? Do you feel ready for the show? On a scale of 1 to fuck off, how stupid and generic is that question?

Gabe Fowler: There's a lot of changes this year, and I'm very detail-oriented, so it's hard to sleep. But I'm also aware that I'm probably just endlessly fussing about details that nobody will notice, and I hope that most people will just be psyched about the awesome content and enjoy the result. So yeah, we're ready. We're beyond ready.

What was behind making the venue change to Pratt? Will that be the home for CAB going forward?

Pratt approached me about a year ago and said "we want to do a comic festival." Since I've already done a festival for eight years, and have an art-school background myself, it seems like a natural move to leave our scrappy digs at Mt. Carmel Catholic school for a more secular environment. It's nice to work with a group of professors and administrators at Pratt who understand the value of art, rather than the sort of church basement vibe of the old show. The new building we're using at Pratt is also massive, which has allowed me to expand the show. The Activities Resource Center is literally the second-largest room in all of Brooklyn at 42,000 square feet, second only to Barclays Center.

Besides the new space, what kind of changes can we expect out of thenew Comic Arts Brooklyn?

One positive change is availability of lecture halls for talks on Pratt's campus. In the past years we had difficulty hosting talks anywhere near the sales floor, had talks occurring on separate days, and various other complications. This year guests can stroll over to the lectures and back to the sales floor in a matter of minutes, which is awesome. We also have some cool new collaborations happening: painter Steve Keene (most known for Pavement's Wowee Zowee LP cover) will be mass-producing hundreds of comics-inspired paintings live at the show, and will sell them for $10 each at the end. Indie video game makers Babycastles will create a big funky installation in the middle of the sales floor with free playable games. Artist and screenprinter Thomas Toye will be printing our festival shirts live at the show for $10 a pop. Desert Island has been making "comic foregrounds" with artists and those will debut at the show (those are painted wooden façades with wacky colorful characters with a hole where its head should be - you stick your head in there and your friend takes your picture).

Some of CAB's traditional guests expressed a bit of surprise online about the show happening this year--was the announcement later than usual?

I'm surprised that they're surprised! We announced the show in June, I yakked about it on social media until I figured I was annoying everybody, and we had exhibitors applications through August.

How did the FORGE. Art team up come about? What is their role in the show? Are you relinquishing control? Say it ain't so!