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New Award Celebrates the Best in Graphic Fiction

31 May 2013

This summer, the Edinburgh International Book Festival has promised to focus on comics like never before. The programme will be announced in three weeks’ time – in the meantime, we’re keeping shtum – but we can report another exciting development.

To coincide with the festival’s programme of graphic novel events, “Stripped”, Graphic Scotland has announced a brand new graphic novel prize. The inaugural 9th Art Award will be given to the best English language graphic novel published between May 2012 and July 2013, and will be presented at a ceremony held during the festival.

The prize will be judged by Paul Gravett, Hannah McGill, Adrian Searle, Mary Talbot and Chair of Graphic Scotland John McShane.

Keep up-to-date with what’s happening at the festival by following @StrippedFest and @edbookfest. Updates on the 9th Art Prize will be posted by @9thArtAward.

Glyn Dillon to Speak at the London Literature Festival, Sunday 26th May

22 May 2013

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This Sunday, The Nao of Brown creator Glyn Dillon will be talking Brit comics with Stephen Collins (The Gigantic Beard That Was Evil) and Mary Talbot (Dotter of her Father’s Eyes) in a discussion chaired by graphic novel expert Paul Gravett. The event, which takes place in the South Bank Centre’s Purcell Room at 2pm, forms part of The London Literature Festival. The three creators will discuss the recent British graphic novel renaissance, and the past and future of the form.

For more details, and to purchase tickets for the event, visit the South Bank Centre’s website.

From Classic to Graphic: SelfMadeHeroes discuss adaptations at BD & Comics Passion

20 May 2013

In SelfMadeHero’s most popular blog post ever, Rob Davis discussed how he approached the adaptation of Don Quixote into a graphic novel. When he told people he was going to adapt Cervantes’ 1,000-page classic into graphic form, most people questioned his sanity: ‘You must be mad,’ they said. His blog post revealed why he felt compelled to adapt it, and how he went about doing it.

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On Sunday 2nd June, the world of adaption is the focus of a panel discussion at the Institut Français’ BD & Comics Passion event in London.  Creators Mark Stafford, I. N. J. Culbard and David Zane Mairowitz will discuss the process of turning a literary classic into a graphic novel. What are the difficulties involved in adaptations?  How can the graphic format enhance the original text? How does an artist or writer capture the spirit of the original? The three creators will reveal their approach to adapting a trio of very different stories.

Artist Mark Stafford has tackled Victor Hugo’s The Man Who Laughs (with David Hine), a satirical tale of 18th century Britain that also inspired the creation of The Joker; I. N. J. Culbard has taken on the challenge of H.P Lovecraft’s weird fiction, including The Shadow Out of Time; and writer David Zane Mairowitz has explored the Kafkaesque with adaptations of The Trial and The Castle.

The discussion will be chaired by Resonance FM’s graphic novel expert, Alex Fitch.

‘From Classic to Graphic’ takes place on Sunday 2nd June at the Institut Français in London, 3.30-4.30pm.

The British Invasion Continues

24 April 2013

Ahead of our trip to MoCCA Arts Festival in New York, Publishers Weekly talked of SelfMadeHero being at the vanguard of a ‘new British Invasion’. But as creators Glyn Dillon, Rob Davis, JAKe and Robert Sellers signed, sketched and talked their way through a weekend in New York, it became clear that this invasion, while very real, is being fought on a civilised, gentlemanly front. In fact, it wasn’t just the originality and brilliance of their work that caught the attention of critics, but the ‘niceness’ of their character. As Timothy Callahan of Comic Book Resources said,

[SelfMadeHero] were clearly conspiring to present the most impressive trio of books-sharing-one-table while the artists sat back confidently and pretended to be super-nice and friendly, but were surely secretly plotting some kind of cricket match or something. Those guys were too nice, if you know what I mean.

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After charming the locals at SelfMadeHero’s pre-MoCCA Spring Party at Bergen Street Comics, it was down to the business of signing and selling books. MoCCA had a great atmosphere this year, and it was really good to see such energy and enthusiasm among the punters, artists and professionals in attendance. It was great, too, to see such passion for the British graphic novel scene. On the Sunday, SelfMadeHero’s four creators took part in a panel event on the subject, which was hosted by The Comic News Insider’s Jimmy Aquino. (There’s a great report of what they had to say over at The Beat.)

But it’s not only the work of our British creators that’s gaining such popularity in North America; our fiction and non-fiction in translation, which also attracted a lot of attention at MoCCA, is also winning acclaim. The week after the festival, when Comic Con International announced the nominations for the Eisner Awards 2013, we were delighted to hear that A Chinese Life by Li Kunwu and P. Ôtié had received two nominations (in the ‘Best U.S. Edition of International Material – Asia’ and ‘Best Reality-Based Work’ categories) and Fernando Trueba and Javier Mariscal had received a nomination in the ‘Best Adaptation from Another Medium’ category for Chico & Rita. Many congratulations to them – and fingers crossed for the win!

You can listen to Jimmy Aquino’s MoCCA recap on The Comic News Insider here.

New Release: The Man Who Laughs by Mark Stafford and David Hine

18 April 2013

Today sees the release of Mark Stafford and David Hine’s much-anticipated adaptation of Victor Hugo’s The Man Who Laughs.

Less well-known – and read – than Les Misérables and Notre-Dame de Paris, The Man Who Laughs follows the story of Gwynplaine, the two-year-old heir to a rebel lord, who is abducted upon the orders of a vindictive monarch, who has him mutilated (to produce a permanent, grisly smile), then abandoned.

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Hugo’s novel is an impassioned, outrageous and bizarre book. As David Hine writes in his afterword to the adaptation, it is also the inspiration behind The Joker in Batman, and has ‘left an indelible mark upon modern popular culture’. In this superb graphic adaptation, The Man Who Laughs has found an ideal new form.

Here’s what David Hine has to say about adapting the book:

When Heath Ledger’s Joker says “Let’s put a smile on that face” in the movie The Dark Knight it’s a twisted version of Victor Hugo’s Gwynplaine who is speaking. In 1940, when Jerry Robinson, Bob Kane and Bill Finger were working on the first issue of the Batman comic, they saw a poster featuring Conrad Veidt in the 1928 movie of The Man Who Laughs and that image inspired them to create the Joker as Batman’s nemesis. In 2011, I wrote an issue of Batman and Robin for DC Comics featuring a crazy Frenchman who mutilates his own son in a perverted homage to Victor Hugo.

The story was a tip of the hat to the man who inspired the Clown Prince of Crime, but like most people outside of France, I hadn’t actually read L’Homme Qui Rit. It is nowhere near as popular as Les Misérables or Notre-Dame de Paris. When I finally managed to track down a copy of the book I soon realised why. Written in the latter part of Hugo’s career, when he was living in exile in the Channel Islands, it is rambling and crammed with repetitive details of the workings of the British aristocracy and political system. But as I struggled through the more turgid passages I became entranced by the story that lay at the heart of the book – a story of love and humanity and the struggle against the workings of fate and a corrupt society. I found myself visualizing episodes and imagining them as scenes in a comic book: the Comprachicos sinking beneath the waves as they beg forgiveness for their sins, Gwynplaine struggling through the snow with the baby Dea in his arms, the first glimpse of his mutilated features, the fearful depths of Southwark Jail, the gothic maze of Gwynplaine’s own castle.

There aren’t many artists who could capture the grotesque aspects of the story and also convey the humanity of the characters and the black humour and irony of Hugo’s prose. I worked with Mark Stafford once before on a story for SelfMadeHero’s Lovecraft Anthology: Volume I and I knew he was the perfect artist to draw this book. I just had to convince him to spend a year adapting a long and near-unreadable 19th-century tome into a gripping graphic novel for a 21st-century audience. Miraculously, Mark became as enthusiastic as I was and I couldn’t be happier with our collaboration.

This passage is an extract from David Hine’s afterword to The Man Who Laughs, which is available now.