Tonoharu: Part Two–Progress Report #5

Progress Bar Key
Story/Artwork: The Story, Drawing, Inking, and Computer Work
Final Edits: Post-Production Edits
Incidentals: Designing the Cover, Preparing for Press, etc.

(More information about Tonoharu can be found here.)

Hurray! The artwork for Tonoharu: Part Two is finally done! The whole book now exists in a complete, readable state! All that’s left now are some final edits and the cover, and then it will be totally done.

For Tonoharu: Part One, the final edits were a real ordeal, and took months of dedicated work. Almost all the panels in the first book underwent significant cosmetic edits (as described here). Thankfully I’ve developed into a more consistent artist since then, so  Part Two won’t require nearly as much of these sorts of changes.

So when will Tonoharu: Part Two be out? I’m thinking fall or winter of this year. Maybe late summer, but probably not. We’ll see how quickly the final edits progress once I really get started on them. Updates on my progress will be posted here in the coming months, so stay tuned.

Next week I’ll post a few new sample panels from the book.

Two Thousand Ten


Image from Tonoharu: Part Two

Happy New Year!

Every year since I first started this blog in 2007, I’ve written a New Year’s entry reflecting on the year that was.

As I looked over last year’s entry in preparation to write this year’s installment, I realized that not much has changed. I’m still working on the second volume of my graphic novel Tonoharu, and still attending Shikoku University on an East Asian calligraphy research scholarship from the Japanese Government.

So this year, rather than write a recap of 2009, I’ve decided to write about the year to come, as it will bring dramatic change to my life. My two-year research scholarship is nearing its end. In about three months time I’ll be packing up my things and returning to the States.

I’ll write a comprehensive reflection on the experience when the time comes, but for this entry I’ll limit my remarks to what it will mean for me financially, as this has been weighing heavily on my mind recently.

When the scholarship ends, with it will go the monthly stipend that has been covering my living expenses since April 2008. The stipend was just barely enough to get by on, but it allowed me to devote myself to my research (and cartooning) without having to worry about shrinking savings accounts or part time jobs.

With the end of the scholarship imminent, financial concerns I have been blissfully ignoring for the past twenty-odd months have returned to the forefront of my mind. I need to decide what I’m going to do once the Japanese Government stops paying my bills. This decision effectively boils down to two alternatives: looking for a “real” job, or continuing my absurd little experiment of trying to profit from my comics.

I’ll admit I’m a dreamer (no reasonable person would even consider trying to make a living as a cartoonist) but I’d like to think I’m not completely out of touch with reality. If my efforts to earn a living as a cartoonist hadn’t produced any meaningful results by now, I’d like to think I’d see the writing on the wall. I’d relegate cartooning to the status of “hobby”, and seek my fortunes elsewhere.

It’s just that there have been so many encouraging signs. I got a $10,000 grant to self-publish Tonoharu: Part One. It was mentioned in the Wall Street Journal and Entertainment Weekly. The first printing sold out in a matter of months. I got the two-year research scholarship thanks in large part to the examples of Tonoharu that accompanied my application. My comics aren’t anywhere near earning me a living wage, but I have made some money off of them. I feel that for a first-time, self published author, I’ve done quite well.

And then there are other comics-related revenue streams that I’ve been meaning to explore, which I never got around to because I was preoccupied with my research. I’d like to try selling original art and foreign publication rights. I’d like to try giving presentations/lectures about my work/Japan/East Asian calligraphy/whatever (some authors say that it’s through presentations, not book sales, that they make most of their money). In the past couple months I’ve applied for a few other art/publication-related grants, so that may bring a few bucks my way.

Also, I never really gave Tonoharu: Part One the marketing push I should’ve given it, since I left for Japan to begin my research on the same month it came out. When Tonoharu: Part Two comes out later this year (in the third or forth quarter, if you’re curious), I hope to give it the sustained marketing push that I should’ve given Part One, and see if that translates into increased sales.

So for the short term at least, I’m going to continue my foolhardy pursuit of a cartooning career. This will mean I’ll have to dip into my savings, which have already been significantly reduced by the stock market crash and breaking my ankle without insurance, but hey. You gotta follow your dreams… er… right?

“Tonoharu: Part Two” Artwork Preview–City Scenes

In creating Tonoharu, one of my main objectives was to faithfully portray Japan as I experienced it during my three year tenure as an assistant English teacher in the JET Program.

Tonoharu: Part One took place almost exclusively in rural areas. In Part Two, city scenes start to pop up for the first time. So I thought for this artwork preview, I’d show a few of those panels:

It was fun to draw different settings from Part One, but at the same time, city scenes are horribly complicated, meaning every panel took that much longer to draw. The above images probably explain better than words why Part Two is taking so long to draw… I’ll finish it eventually…

I’ll probably have another artwork preview when I write the next progress report a few months from now. In the meantime, this entry has artwork from some of Tonoharu: Part Two‘s action scenes.

Tonoharu: Part Two–Progress Report #4

Progress Bar Key
Manuscript/Story: The Story/Script for the comic
Artwork: The Drawing, Inking, and Computer Work for the comic
Final Edits/Incidentals: Post-Production Edits, Designing the Cover, Preparing for Press, etc.

(More information about Tonoharu can be found here.) 

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Hurray! The artwork for Tonoharu: Part Two is now more than 4/5ths done! I’ve rounded third and am heading for home!

After I finish the final 15% of the artwork, there’s still post-production edits and incidentals, but I don’t anticipate them to take as long as for Tonoharu: Part One. For that book, practically every single panel went through significant graphical edits (as outlined in this blog entry), and it took months and months of tedious work.

But I’ve improved my batting average since then, so for Part Two, I’ll probably edit some panels in this manner, but not nearly as many. I’m thinking maybe 25%-50% of the panels will go under the knife (hopefully on the lower end of that). We’ll see how effectively I can curtail my perfectionist instincts.

I’m anticipating a late 2010 release. I’ll keep you posted…

We’ll bring this entry to a close with a couple fun facts about this book:

  • It contains over 40% more pages of comics than the first book. If it had been the same length, I’d already be done with it.
  • When I first started planning Tonoharu, I wanted to do a mid-length graphic novel, just to get my feet wet with longer narratives (the longest comic I had done before that was about 60 pages). I was shooting for 150 pages, or 200 pages TOPS. Flash forward to today, and Tonoharu is now 210 pages, and not even halfway done. Oh well.

I’m promised some more artwork samples from Tonoharu: Part Two with this progress report, and will post those next week. So stay tuned!