Template:Short description Template:For Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox publisher SelfMadeHero is an independent publishing house which specialises in adapting works of literature, as well as producing ground-breaking original fiction in the graphic novel medium.
SelfMadeHero's books are distributed in the UK by Abrams & Chronicle Books and in the U.S. by Abrams Books.
History
SelfMadeHero was founded in February 2007 by Emma Hayley, and launched with two lines: Manga Shakespeare,[1][2] featuring works based on the Bard but with different settings – mainly Japan in the past and future, and Eye Classics, which are adaptations of great classic works, such as those of Poe and Kafka.
In 2008 Emma Hayley was named UK Young Publishing Entrepreneur of the Year as part of the British Book Awards.
In 2009 SelfMadeHero expanded to include graphic adaptations of Sherlock Holmes, including Hound of the Baskervilles and A Study in Scarlet, and later several works by H.P. Lovecraft, including the anthology LOVECRAFT by I.N.J. Culbard. It also began publishing the Graphic Biography series with Johnny Cash: I See a Darkness, which has further expanded to tell the fascinating life stories of era-defining pop-culture icons such as Hunter S. Thompson and Nick Cave.
Since 2010 SelfMadeHero has been publishing original material, notably Glyn Dillon's The Nao of Brown, The Motherless Oven trilogy by Rob Davis. In 2011 the company received the Kitschies Black Tentacle award.[3]
Graphic Anthology Programme (GAP) and Catalyst
With support from Arts Council England SelfMadeHero launched the Graphic Anthology Programme (GAP) in February 2021.[4] The GAP was a free, public programme that eventually selected 7 applicants for “an intensive 12 weeks of comics mentoring and masterclasses.”[5] This resulted in the anthology Catalyst being published in October 2021, which featured 11 short stories, including the works produced by the 7 chosen GAP participants.[6] The Cartoon Museum also hosted a temporary digital exhibition promoting Catalyst in 2022, titled Catalyst – the Online Exhibition,[7] and Arts Council England also host an online exhibition titled Comics as a catalyst for change.[8]
As well as its central theme of "catalyst", the GAP and the published anthology have both received recognition and praise for the diversity of the creators involved.[9]
2023 First Graphic Novel Award
In June 2023, entries opened for the 2023 First Graphic Novel Award.[10] The award was originally founded by Myriad Editions in 2012, and is now described as :
[...]a partnership between the Cartoon Museum, the publisher SelfMadeHero, and independent graphic novel editor Corinne Pearlman, former Creative Director at Myriad Editions, with thanks to generous support from the Authors’ Licensing and Collecting Society (ALCS) and The bks Agency, sponsors of the £500 prize for the winning entry.[11]
Entries are set to close in September 2023, with the winner to be announced in December. Among the judges is SelfMadeHero founder Emma Hayley. SelfMadeHero are also offering a publishing contract as one of the two prizes awarded to the winning author or team, the other being the £500 bursary donated by The bks Agency.[12]
Bibliography
Manga Shakespeare
The adaptations of Shakespeare's plays were made by Richard Appignanesi (who previously worked on Icon Books' Introducing... series), with the art created by UK-based manga artists who came to prominence via Tokyopop's Rising Stars of Manga (United Kingdom & Ireland) competition, their work for Sweatdrop Studios or London manga collective Umisen Yamisen.
Of SelfMadeHero's two initial lines, it was Manga Shakespeare and its first two titles (Hamlet and Romeo and Juliet, which were published simultaneously in January 2007) that contributed most to establishing the company.[13][14] This foundation later allowed SelfMadeHero to branch out into other genres and lines.
Title | Artist | Released | ISBN | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|
Hamlet | Emma Vieceli | February 2007 | [1][2] | |
Romeo and Juliet | Sonia Leong | |||
The Tempest | Paul Duffield | September 2007 | ||
Richard III | Patrick Warren | |||
A Midsummer Night's Dream | Kate Brown | February 2008 | ||
Julius Caesar | Mustashrik | June 2008 | ||
Macbeth | Robert Deas | |||
As You Like It | Chie Kutsuwada | January 2009 | ||
Othello | Ryuta Osada | |||
Henry VIII | Patrick Warren | May 2009 | ||
King Lear | ILYA | |||
Much Ado About Nothing | Emma Vieceli | |||
The Merchant of Venice | Faye Yong | September 2009 | ||
Twelfth Night | Nana Li |
Eye Classics
The creators are drawn from a British comic background (in particular Nevermore) but also include screenwriters and more traditional artists.
Title | Author | Adaptation | Artist | Released | ISBN | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nevermore (anthology) | Edgar Allan Poe | various | October 2007 | [15] | ||
The Master and Margarita | Mikhail Bulgakov | Andrzej Klimowski | Danusia Schejbal | May 2008 | ||
The Trial | Franz Kafka | David Zane Mairowitz | Chantal Montellier | March 2008 | ||
The Picture of Dorian Gray | Oscar Wilde | Ian Edginton | I. N. J. Culbard | September 2008 | ||
At the Mountains of Madness | H. P. Lovecraft | I. N. J. Culbard | October 2010 | |||
The Castle | Franz Kafka | David Zane Mairowitz, | Jaromir99 | November 2013 | ||
The Shadow Out of Time | H. P. Lovecraft | I. N. J. Culbard | ||||
The Man Who Laughs | Victor Hugo | David Hine | Mark Stafford |
Crime Classics
The Crime Classics line began with a set of four adaptations of the Arthur Conan Doyle stories, adapted by Ian Edginton, with art by I. N. J. Culbard:
Title | Author | Artist | Released | ISBN | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
The Hound of the Baskervilles | Ian Edginton | I. N. J. Culbard | May 2009 | ||
A Study in Scarlet | [16] | ||||
The Sign of the Four | September 2009 | ||||
The Valley of Fear |
Rachel Cooke reviewed A Study in Scarlet for The Observer and concluded:
Graphic Biography
Title | Author | Artist | Released | ISBN | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Johnny Cash: I See a Darkness | Reinhard Kleist | October 2009 | [17] | ||
Gonzo: A Graphic Biography of Hunter S. Thompson | Will Bingley | Antony Hope-Smith | October 2010 | Template:Isbn | [18] |
Kiki de Montparnasse | José-Louis Bocquet | Catel Muller | February 2011 | Template:Isbn | [19] |
Baby's in Black: The Story of Astrid Kirchherr & Stuart Sutcliffe | Arne Bellstorf | March 2011 | Template:Isbn | [20] | |
Castro | Reinhard Kleist | July 2011 | Template:Isbn | [21] | |
Hellraisers | Robert Sellers | JAKe | October 2011 | Template:Isbn | [22] |
A Chinese Life | Li Kunwu & Philippe Ôtié | Li Kunwu | July 2012 | [23] | |
The Boxer | Reinhard Kleist | March 2014 | [24] | ||
An Olympic Dream: The Story of Samia Yusuf Omar | Reinhard Kleist | March 2016 | Template:Isbn | [25] | |
Agatha: The Real Life of Agatha Christie | Anne Martinetti & Guillaume Lebeau | Alexandre Franc | May 2016 | [26] | |
The Trial of Roger Casement | Fionnuala Doran | September 2016 | Template:Isbn | [27] | |
Haddon Hall: When David Invented Bowie | Néjib | February 2017 | Template:Isbn | [28] | |
Nick Cave: Mercy on Me | Reinhard Kleist | September 2017 | [29] | ||
Guantánamo Kid: The True Story of Mohammed El-Gharani | Jérôme Tubiana | Alexandre Franc | March 2019 | Template:Isbn | [30] |
Isadora | Julie Birmant | Clément Oubrerie | September 2019 | Template:Isbn | [31] |
Mozart in Paris | Frantz Duchazeau | September 2019 | Template:Isbn | [32] | |
Zátopek | Jan Novák | Jaromír 99 | October 2020 | Template:Isbn | [33] |
Buñuel: In the Labyrinth of the Turtles | Fermín Solís | April 2021 | Template:Isbn | [34] | |
Orwell | Pierre Christin | Sébastien Verdier | May 2021 | Template:Isbn | [35] |
Knock Out! | Reinhard Kleist | July 2021 | Template:Isbn | [36] | |
Alice Guy: First Lady of Film | José-Louis Bocquet | Catel Muller | July 2022 | [37] |
Awards and nominations
Year | Award | Category | Book | Creator(s) | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2011 | Kitschies | The Black Tentacle[3] | N/A | N/A | Won |
2013 | Angoulême International Comics Festival | Special Jury Prize [38] | The Nao of Brown | Glyn Dillon | Won |
2015 | British Comic Awards | Best Book [39] | The Motherless Oven | Rob Davis | Won |
2016 | Eisner Award | Best Graphic Album [40] | Ruins | Peter Kuper | Won |
2020 | Angoulême International Comics Festival | SNCF Polar Prize 2020 [41] | Tumult | John Harris Dunning & Michael Kennedy | Nominated |
2020 | Excelsior Award | Excelsior Award Black[42] | Guantánamo Kid: The True Story of Mohammed El-Gharani | Jérôme Tubiana & Alexandre Franc | Won |
See also
- Classical Comics, another new British company producing graphic novel adaptations of great works, including some of the same Shakespeare plays
- Classics Illustrated, a similar venture from the 1940s to 1960s
- Pendulum Press, a similar venture from the 1970s
- Marvel Classics Comics, a similar venture from 1976 to 1978
- Marvel Illustrated, Marvel Comics imprint adapting classic literature
- Graphic Classics
- The Manga Bible, an adaptation by Siku
Notes
References
External links
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Manga Hamlet by The Bard?, BBC Radio Cambs, March 9, 2007
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Shakespeare gets comic treatment, BBC, May 11, 2007
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- ↑ Review of Nevermore, The Guardian, November 17, 2007
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- ↑ Johnny Cash: I See a Darkness by Reinhard Kleist, The Guardian, October 24, 2009
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- ↑ A Chinese Life by Li Kunwu & Philippe Ôtié, The Guardian, October 12, 2012
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- ↑ Nick Cave: Mercy on Me by Reinhard Kleist, The Guardian, September 21, 2017
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