Professionals.


Pictured: Some preliminary attempts at a quicker drawing style

When I play pool, my “strategy” basically amounts to trying to shoot in whichever of my assigned balls is closest to a pocket. I suck, so managing even that is rare.

Professional pool players, on the other hand, take a lot more into consideration. They don’t consider each shot separately, but think in terms of the whole game. They might start off with a more difficult shot if it will put up in a better position for the shots that follow. At the highest levels of play, there’s a whole other layer of strategy.

It’s similar with comics. An amateur cartoonist might only concern themselves with making a comic that’s interesting and looks good. The professional cartoonist has the added challenge of needing to do all that in a timely manner. The greatest cartoonist in the world wouldn’t be able to make a living at it if their life’s work amounted to one book that was 10% done. If you want to make earn any sort of living as a cartoonist, you need to have books available for sale, which means you need to finish them at a steady pace.

I suspect that if I could manage to put out a book like Tonoharu: Part One at least once a year, and devoted time to marketing them, that I could somehow eke out a living. Right now I’m nowhere near that pace. I spent all of last week drawing a single panel. Granted it was probably the most complicated thing I’ve ever drawn in my life and I think it turned out pretty cool, but still. It might be reasonable to spend a week on the cover, but a single panel in the middle of the book? That’s harder to justify. I literally can’t afford to work as slowly as I have been if I want to make a living as a cartoonist.

It’d be too jarring if I just switched styles in the middle of a story, so even though it’ll take me years of tedious work to finish Tonoharu, I’m going to continue along in the same way. But I’m already thinking about the books that will follow, and how I might adapt my style to allow me to finish pages more quickly. My study of East Asian calligraphy has been helpful towards this goal (for reasons I’ll describe in another blog entry sometime).

Tonoharu: Part Two–Progress Report #3

 

Progress Bar Key
Scripting/Page Layout: Self-explanatory
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.) 

****

It took me a lot longer then I would have liked, but I’m finally halfway done with the artwork for Tonoharu: Part Two! Oh boy!

Not only that, but I’ve also finished up the loose ends for the script & page layout, which had been stalled at about 9/10ths of the way done. So I know the final page count, and know exactly just how much I have left to do. I’ve still got a long way to go yet, but at least I’m over the hump.

If you’re curious, the book will contain 140 pages of comics, making it a whooping 40% longer than the prologue and part one put together.

In the last progress report from way back in December, I promised to show off some artwork for the third progress report, so let’s take a look at that: Continue reading Tonoharu: Part Two–Progress Report #3

Media Roundup: Top Ten Lists

Not much this time around. Just wanted to mention that Tonoharu: Part One made a few top ten lists for 2008, including that of Booklist magazine. (Yes, this is very timely announcement.)

Top Ten Lists
Booklist / Ray Olsen
Unattended Baggage / Marc (No last name listed)
PLAYBACK:stl / Steve Higgins

Reviews
OtakuGeneration Podcast / Review begins roughly 40% into the podcast.
Kliatt / George Galuschak

***
High-Low / Rob Clough wrote a top fifty favorite comics of 2008 list, and even then I still only managed to get an honorable mention. Ah well.

As always, thanks to everyone who took the time to review my work! If you’d like to see all the coverage Tonoharu has received to date (that I’m aware of), check out my press releases/coverage page.

MMAA Show Closes in TWO WEEKS!

Just a quick reminder that Hot Ink: Comic Art in Minnesota, an exhibit at the Minnesota Museum of American Art that includes original art by me and other Minnesota cartoonists, the closes in just TWO WEEKS, on January 4th, 2009.

So if you live in the Twin Cities and haven’t gone yet, now’s the time! More information can be found on the MMAA website.

Tonoharu: Part Two–Progress Report #2

 

Progress Bar Key
Scripting/Page Layout: Self-explanatory
Artwork: The Drawing, Inking, and Computer Work for the comic
Final Edits/Incidentals: Post-Production Edits, Designing the Cover, Preparing for Press, etc.

****
When I wrote the first progress report for Tonoharu: Part Two back in mid-July, I was a quarter of the way through the artwork. I concluded the entry saying I’d update on my progress again when the artwork was halfway done. I estimated/hoped that that update would come in “three or four months”, which would have been in mid-October/November.

So here we are at the end of December. And instead of being halfway done with the artwork, I’m only a little over a third of the way through it. Sigh.

I started a post-grad research scholarship in April of this year, and that, along with other obligations, have placed more demands on my time than I had originally anticipated. So I haven’t been able to put in as many hours into the comic as I had hoped, hence the slower production. Continue reading Tonoharu: Part Two–Progress Report #2

Media Coverage Roundup


Pictured: Morikami-sensei, and Yours Truly

I haven’t done a “Media Coverage Roundup” since August, so I figured it was about time for another one.

My graphic novel Tonoharu: Part One has been out for a while now, and the effects of my initial marketing push have died down. So there hasn’t been a massive amount of coverage since last time. But there still were a few notable pieces:

*** As you probably gathered from the scan at the top of this entry, I was recently covered in a Japanese newspaper. Tokushima Shinbun wrote an article about my comics and Japanese Calligraphy research at Shikoku University. This is the first Japanese coverage I’ve ever gotten (that I’m aware of), so it was fun to see. For those who can read Japanese, the article can be read online here, or a virtually incomprehensible Google Translate English translation can be found here.

*** Tonoharu: Part One was reviewed in the October 2008 issue of the venerable Comics Journal (issue #293). The review doesn’t appear to be online, but if you’d like to pay a little over ten bucks to get your hands on it, here’s the amazon.com link. The review is mixed, but overall is fairly positive. Reviewer Bill Randall begins by saying he wants to buy me a beer, which is how all reviews for Tonoharu should begin.

*** Finally, Brandon & Tim (couldn’t find their last names anywhere) chatted about my book on their podcast Deconstructing Comics. This is, to my knowledge, the first (and so far only) non-text coverage I’ve ever received. I’ve grown accustomed to reading complete stranger’s opinions about my work, but listening to complete strangers talk about it was a little weird/unsettling; more visceral, or something.

They had mixed feelings about the book, and conclude by giving it “two thumbs sideways”. Oh well. Click here for the mp3. They start off discussing a different graphic novel (Alex Robinson’s Too Cool to be Forgotten), so they don’t get into Tonoharu until the 14:30 mark. Continue reading Media Coverage Roundup