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Live Sketching & Comics

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The Pros and Cons…

…of using graphic journalism to cover human trafficking in Nepal. From the prologue to the book.

Vultures

Latest comic – delayed by petrol shortages and my local man with a scanner changing his loadshedding hours. Click here to start the story from the beginning.

We’re Not Doing Press Interviews Any More

The comic continues with the first whiff of anti-journalism wariness. Hit “previous” twice to read from the beginning (the graphic novel started this week, a few months into my stay in Kathmandu). Want to support the project? Pre-order the ebook ($30), paperback ($50) or hardback ($100) via paypal (my recipient ID is “dan [a t] archcomix [d o t ] com”, or click the “buy print” button to order the original of today’s comic, or a digital print delivered straight to your door.

A Night at the Circus (Kathmandu)

Episode 2 of the prologue to my graphic novel on human trafficking in Nepal. Hit the “previous” button to read yesterday’s strip.

No Home For You Here

Voila the first tier from the prologue of my current graphic novel/comic/graphic journalism project/whatever you want to call it. To read the rest you’ll need to pay per view, or be a Kickstarter backer. How? By paypaling me a mere $5, that’s how. Click on the button in the right sidebar for more info. And dhanyabad (nepali for thanks) for your support.

If it’s textual titillation you’re after, then scroll down to read my blog about living in Kathmandu which lives under the pretty pictures, below.

Circus Kathmandu Poster

No strictly a comic, but technically it still tells the story of the courageous performers of circus kathmandu, who are now using their skills to support themselves (financially and physically, arf arf) after surviving terrible abuse at the hands of traffickers in indian circuses. This is the fruit of a partnership with Freedom Matters, who have provided an annotated guide of sorts to the poster here. Big thanks to the crew Philip, Ali, Ferg, Ashlee, Felipe and Tess for their amazing work, and really looking forward to seeing the show. Not to mention Leslie from the Didi project for the introduction!

For realtime verbiage and news of my exploits in Nepal, scroll down to the “news” section. More updates coming soon. As ever, if you like what you see and want to help out with putting dhal bhaat in front of me of an evening, you can access the behind the scenes production blog of my nepal graphic novel (accessible via the “Nepal Extras” link above) by paypaling me a mere $5.

Well and Truly Loadshedded, Preview of first pages, BBC piece

I’m typing this by candlelight in the midst of daily load shedding as my inverter (battery backup when the main power goes out) squeals in disgust when I even look at my desk lamp. It’s headlights and candles all the way, which was romantic at first, but the novelty’s well and truly worn off after only a few days. Ysee, when I moved into my new place in Kathmandu, I thought I had it made: large lounge/work area, big separate bedroom, hot water HOT WATER I tell you…of course it’s the little things you don’t notice on the first walkaround that get you. Like the fact that the flat is flanked by a ironmongers, who fire up their welders late into the night, ironically providing the only bursts of actual light in the entire neighbourhood , albeit like a pissed up firefly. There was I thinking I’d stumbled across enlightenment while meditating in the dark…With all this power outage jiggerypokery (up to 14 hours a day, though apparently the PM’s pulled strings to bring it down to a miniscule 12 hrs now, which will mean 18 hours of darkness once he finally sashays out of power) I find myself rationing the minutes on the computer’s battery life, juggling the russian roulette of wifi connection, which is not ideal when skyping into a conference call with a potential funder, let me tell you, and slowly realizing that perhaps this is the universe’s way of telling me to stop drawing pages after 10. Or at least, stop starting to draw my daily page after 10pm. Speaking of which, new coloured artwork is now up over at Freedom Matters, an anti-trafficking NGO I’m partnering with who are the pioneers behind Circus Kathmandu, which takes kids who were trafficked into the circus in India and gives them training from an international cast of big top performers from Columbia and the UK among others. UK folks they’re coming to London in March – details on the FM blog via the link above.

I’ve also spent the last week pasting several different translations into my new comic due out for the BBC very soon – so any Urdu, Arabic, Kyrgyz, Uzbek, Ukranian, Persian or, of course, Nepali readers will be able to check it out in their native tongue. Funny how some languages take 5 lines to say what another says in say, 3. In case you were wondering, Ukranian is the most space-friendly of the contenders, and Persian proved most greedy in the caption-box-filling stakes.

I was going to close by saying at least the beauty of the blackout is the quiet stillness that comes from everyone being off the streets, but right on cue some entrepreneurial spirit has just started his midnight shift next door. Cue the accompanying chorus of stray dogs.

 

Nepal Project Updates

I’m now a few months into my Nepal project (for more, click the links below), which has seen me moving around the country interviewing survivors of human trafficking. The highly flattering picture above is with an interviewee who was tricked into selling his kidney, only to then be short-changed and left with permanent health defects. I’m posting pages from my graphic novel in progress on the Nepal Extras page, though you’ll have to pay a princely $5 for access – all proceeds go towards the Daal Bhaat (rice and lentils in Nepali) fund/living expenses while I’m out here until May.

New Interactive Comic on Cybersecurity at Stanford’s Center for International Security and Cooperation

A brief interlude away from the Nepal trafficking project to share my latest interactive piece done for Stanford University’s CISAC. Wondering what the difference is between a worm, a backdoor and a trojan? Or why you should break that habit of naked skype conference calls? ThenĀ read the comic here. Roll over the red dots when you hover over the pages to call up interactive markers housing audio, video and hyperlinks.

Sketches from the Border

Last week I was in Mahendranagar, way out on the far western border of India and Nepal. The above sketches were done “live” by the Maiti Nepal outpost, where Maiti staff watch for suspicious looking folks who they think might be attempting to traffick girls across the open border. Just as I arrived, one of these very cases happened right in front of me – the young boy and the girl had two very different stories and it reeked of foul play. For more sketches from my recent trip, or a glimpse at my graphic novel in process on human trafficking in Nepal, click on the button in the right hand sidebar (it’s $5 for access, payable via Paypal).

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