KOOKIE Magazine #6 – “The Heartsmith”

Hello, all! I have a short, 6-page colour manga/comic out with KOOKIE magazine called “The Heartsmith“, which is available in issue #6 (March 2019). It’s a lovely little all ages story for girls aged 8+, and it’s about heartbreak and the strength between different generations of women. I got sent two copies of KOOKIE, and the colours turned out lovely in print! Buy the magazine here!

The Rooster – by Omar Musa

Hi everyone! It’s been a while I’ve posted, but the good news is that Reuters wrote an article on me and my (feminist) comics on historical queens. It was a good interview too, with many thanks to Michael Taylor. It’s super-gratifying to have my work acknowledged.

The Rooster

This is a poem by Indonesian poet Omar Musa, which I was asked to adapt into comics form by the Cordite Poetry review from a while ago. Here it is, finally, in its full form.

The Adaptation Process

Omar Musa’s poem “The Rooster” is an exploration of masculinity, mostly about the difference between a man’s perception of himself, and of the man’s actual reality. For that reason, I’ve divided the poem into 2 ‘columns’, the left showing the man/rooster as he actually is, and the right hand side showing the man/rooster as how he sees himself.

There are, however, two things that occupy the entire width of the page – neutral scenes of nature, and the parang, which is a reference to death. Since death and nature takes everybody in the end, these things straddle both columns.

A rooster is a common, traditional representation of manhood, so when the rooster (as a symbol) is ultimately killed and discovered to be simple-minded and hollow, the meaning of the poem is quite clear. In a way, I saw the poem as about the de-throning of masculinity. So on the left-hand side, the rooster is depicted as old and mangy, where as in the right-hand side, the rooster clearly sees itself as strong and powerful.

The same applies to the depiction of the man (the narrator) in the story. Since this is an Australian poem, I wanted to work some themes of migrants and displacement into it. On the right-hand side, the image of the man is that of a white, patriarchal kind of figure, meant to represent the “Aussie battler”, which is still a very common depiction of a “typical, Australian male”. On the left hand side is an older, non-white man, which I think is a better representation of the changing face of Australia. However, despite Australia’s racial melting-pot, people still tend to see the “quintessential” Australian male as a “white, blue-collar, fair-dinkum” sort of bloke, which I think is a stereotype that at least needs to be changed, if not torn down.

Last of all, is the ‘blood on the cuffs’ at the end. This as represents a ‘lingering remnant of violence’, which I interprete as a man’s need to defend his idea of himself against those who would attack that idea. A lot of male-on-male violence happens because someone is questioning a man about his ‘manhood’, so I drew blood-trails from the cuffs back to the rooster to the right-hand side of the page. The blood is only red when it’s on the cuffs, because the threat of violence only becomes real when you do violence in real life.

“The Dreaming” is available from Diamond again!

Just a quick post to let everyone know that “The Dreaming: Perfect Collection“, which is the omnibus edition of “The Dreaming“, is now available to be ordered from Diamond comics again. The book never quite went out of print – it just went out of distribution which made it near impossible for any bookstore to order. Now that it’s back in distribution, comic bookstores everywhere can order it through this handy code:

Sketches for “The Dreaming: Perfect Collection” books!

In the last post I made, I mentioned that I’d imported 20 copies of “The Dreaming: Perfect Collection” to sell at Brisbane/Sydney Oz Comic-Con (and later, at Ashfield Con). I managed to sell out all of my copies that month, and as promised, I did sketches for each of these books – 20 in total.

 

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The photo quality isn’t great, unfortunately, but I no longer own any of these books since they’ve been sold, so this problem can’t really be amended. I’ve also totally taken to snapping photos of my drawings on my iPhone and uploading them onto social media, so I guess that questionable photo quality isn’t going away any time soon.

The good news is, there’s a lot more work-in-progress shots of what I do, which I post up on my Facebook Account, but also on the Sydney Comics Guild, a comics club based in Sydney whose members seem to like my WIP drawings a lot (and keep wanting to see more).

 

Fabled Kingdom News: Well, what do you know? Book 2 is done! Everything from the covers to the chapter covers to the table of contents. What ISN’T done is the proof-reading that I’ve hired someone to do – I’m still waiting for the proof-read chapters to come back from the proofreader(s). The good news is that I’ve got Book 1 proof-read too, and all the new corrections for book 1 are now up on Lulu and Amazon. I’ve also tweaked the covers for books 1-2, and I’ll post pictures up when I get book2 printed, which will be after I get the proofread version of it back.