Your Search Results

      • Trusted Partner
        Fiction
        February 2021

        Basuras (Rubbish)

        by Miguel Ángel Vallejo

        A hard-boiled story set in Bogota, the capital city of Colombia where a homeless man becomes a hero for his community.

      • Fiction
        2019

        Elysium: a jorney to hell

        by Renato Dalmaso

        BRAZIL IN THE SECOND WORLD WAR!   When sent to Italy to fight the troops of Nazifascism, the young Eliseu and his brothers in arms were faced with a country in ruins. All the horror and misery caused by the war become the routine of these Brazilian soldiers, marking their lives forever.

      • Fiction
        June 2020

        A Trip to Asylum

        by Pam Pam LIU

        “Many things had gone that day, including my healthy mind.”In an asylum strangely with no medical staffs,the hero of this story started experiencing different trippy hallucinations. After many chaotic situations caused by other patients,  He started to see the root of his trauma step by step…A trip to asylum" is a fictional story based on Pam Pam's life experiences. Instead of tell the story realistically, Pam Pam choose to drew it with imagination, she hope the readers think and understand more about those uncontrollable symptoms, and also hope they understand that: normal people are not really NORMAL.   *In the process of drama series adaptation.*Winner of Taipei International Book Exhibition in Novel SectionVIDEO

      • Fiction
        September 2021

        ALANDAL

        by J. Philip Ignacio (writer), Alex Niño (illustrator)

        Islas Filipinas, 1774--Sabina, the twelve year old daughter of a Spanish conquistador in exile, gets abducted by Iranun pirates and taken to the island of Jolo. Once there, Sabina discovers her true identity, as the granddaughter of the Sultan of Sulu. There, she meets a mysterious swordsman named Alandal. "Alandal" is an Official Selection of the 1st Philippine International Comics Festival (PICOF2020), and winner of the 2022 National Children's Book Awards (Best Reads), and the 2023 National Book Awards for Best Graphic Novel in English.

      • Graphic novels
        November 2020

        Tales of the City

        by Isabelle Bauthian, Sandrine Revel, based on Armistead Maupin

        A CLASSIC OF GAY LITERATURE THAT HAS BECOME CULT  San Francisco, 28 Barbary Lane, Anna Madrigal runs a boarding house. She welcomes people who have nowhere else to go: the misfits. This matriarch is known for her unending kindness and her superb marijuana crop. The novel starts with the arrival of Mary Ann Singleton, a prude, naive young woman who escaped her dull Ohio hometown for San Francisco. She settles in with her other fellow tenants: Michael « Mouse » a personable young gay man, Brian Hawkins, an inveterate Don Juan and Mona Ramsey, a young hippyish bisexual. Mary Ann finds work as a secretary in an advertising agency run by Mr. Halcyon’s whose family is as colorful as the tenants of Barbary Lane. His wife is a socialite and his daughter is sleeping with the Asian delivery boy because her husband is being unfaithful to her. What she doesn’t realize is that he is with her gynecologist, Jon Fielding! And now in graphic novel for the first time !

      • Fiction
        September 2007

        KIDNAPPED (Graphic Novel)

        by Alan Grant and Cam Kennedy

        About this book: This adaptation of Robert Louis Stevenson’s Kidnapped, a dramatic and epic adventure story about a 17 year-old desperate to secure his inheritance, culminating in a chase from the islands in the west of Scotland to Edinburgh, brings together two creative giants from the world of the Graphic Novel, as the absolute ‘dream team’ – artist Cam Kennedy, and scriptwriter Alan Grant. Cam Kennedy is known internationally for his portrayals of Judge Dredd and Rogue Trooper, Daredevil and Punisher, Spectre, Lobo, Batman, Star Wars: Dark Empire and Star Wars: Dark Empire 2 – the two series that relaunched the Star Wars franchise in comics. Alan Grant’s work includes Judge Dredd, Strontium Dog, Robo-Hunter and Ace Trucking Co., Doomlord, Joe Soap Private Eye, Computer Warrior, The Outsiders, plus Nightbreed and The Last American, Detective Comics, Shadow of the Bat, Lobo, L.E.G.I.O.N ’89, Legends of the Dark Knight, and The Demon. Kidnapped is set in 1751, during the time of the Jacobite rebellion – a tumultuous and tragic period in Scottish history. When David Balfour sets out to find his uncle, he never dreamed his path would lead to such exploits – that he would discover that a fortune was rightfully his – that he would narrowly escape being murdered – that he would be kidnapped, but saved from a life of slavery – and thrown from one escapade to another in the company of the fugitive masterful swordsman Alan Breck Stewart. They meet on the brig Covenant just before they are shipwrecked off the coast of Scotland. After witnessing the murder of Colin Campbell (the notorious ‘Red Fox’) David makes a dramatic and extraordinary flight for his life across Scotland before he can claim his rightful inheritance.

      • Graphic novels

        Hombre

        by Antonio Segura, José Ortiz

        On a planet destroyed by an ecological crisis, a man struggles to survive in the cruel chaos of a new world. Cruel and tender at the same time and with an unforgettable anti-hero, the lawless universe of Hombre, set in a devastated society where the welfare state is just a memory, this work is more topical than ever. On a planet destroyed by an ecological crisis, a man struggles to survive in the cruel chaos of a new world. Cruel and tender at the same time and with an unforgettable anti-hero, the lawless universe of Hombre, set in a devastated society where the welfare state is just a memory, this work is more topical than ever.

      • Graphic novels
        January 2023

        Torpedo 1972 vol 2: That's gotta hurt!

        ¡Con lo que eso duele!

        by Enrique Sánchez Abulí, Eduardo Risso

        The return of one of Spanish comics’ great characters and an icon of the noir genre, 18 years after his previous adventure. Enrique Sánchez Abulí received the Comic Barcelona Grand Prize for his life’s work. Luca Torelli receives an assignment from his old friend Lou: to kill Joe Carter, the cop who is endangering the shop he runs. Torpedo decides to accept the juicy offer and, together with Rascal, embarks on the risky mission with unpredictable consequences. With That's Gott hurt, the new phase of the mythical character created by Enrique Sánchez Abulí continues. He repeats his collaboration with the cartoonist Eduardo Risso.

      • Graphic novels
        November 2022

        Museum

        by Fernando De Felipe

        In 1991, the magazine Comix Internacional started to serialise Museum, a work by Fernando De Felipe depicting a mind-bending tour through the museum of the Compulsive Collector. Thanks to this disturbing guide and host, the visitors to this strange gallery get to hear the macabre tales behind the apparently conventional objects that play a fundamental role in the development of grisly stories sprinkled with dark humour. An inimitable comic, which in 1995 won the award for the best work by a Spanish author at the Barcelona International Comic Fair. Museum is the sixth instalment from the Fernando De Felipe library, which collects the complete works of the Aragonese author in a series of new editions with additional unpublished material. The perfect introduction or a chance to rediscover one of our seminal graphic novel artists.

      • Fiction

        HISTORICAL

        by Selection and editing by Marta Mearin and Juan Francisco Bascuñán Illustrations: Joanna Styrylska-Gałażyn

        Historical is a journey through the lives of 15 women who made history, based on illustrations of them by Polish artist Joanna Styrylska-Gałażyn. These graphic representations are accompanied by texts of diverse literary genres, written especially for this edition by young writers of different nationalities: Chilean, Latin American, Catalan. For each character, a brief biography and a text is included that seeks to connect the reader to the woman being honored, mixing real information with fictitious events: some occur in the future, others explore the most intimate dimension of the protagonist or personify her through poetry. The illustrations and stories that make up this book seek to make visible the importance of women in the immense number of areas from which they have been systematically excluded: science, art, technology, sports, activism and academia, among others. In this way, the book concentrates different aspects of feminist struggles capable of transcending time and space.

      • Fiction
        November 2020

        DOOBIEDOO ASKS

        by Bambi Eloriaga-Amago and Roland Amago

        Doobiedoo asks the funniest questions, but when he asks his parents "What's wrong with me?" — it leads them to discover Doobie has autism. Parenting may be extra challenging, but it also leads to even greater rewards. "Doobiedoo Asks" is an Official Selection of the 1st Philippine International Comics Festival (PICOF2020), and winner of the 2022 National Children's Book Awards (Kids' Choice).

      • Fiction
        January 2016

        Nawung

        Mimosa of Java

        by Galuh Larasati

        "When we are born, our hand fingers tiedly folded, that mean we have a lot of dreams to achieve. When we die our hand lies open, that mean we could not hold anything we have anymore. Feel the joy at any moment of our life now, and remembering our life's destiny, 'Manunggaling kawula lan Gusti', it is the moment when our body and the Great Spirit within our inner self is blended." Nawung, mimosa of Java is the life journey of Javanese young woman inspired by the old Javanese poetic song called macapat, that tells about the circle of life based on Javanese philosophy. The story starts from the song Mas kumambang. It is the story when the baby Nawung is still in her mother's womb. The true love from parents would create the true essence of life of the coming baby. Song of Mijil is when the baby has born on earth. The role of parents is very important in this stage. The influence of her father's simple teaching through the story of wayang (traditional puppet stories), has brought her as a humble and honest Javanese girl. Song of Sinom. It is telling how the teenager Nawung found easy ways to study many things. She shows how she studied English, Japanese, playing guitar, singing, drawing, writing and more, without money. This is the stage when someone is curious and ambitious in learning anything in this life. The song of Asmaradana. It is about her beautiful platonic triangle love story and a moment of her broken heart.  More Javanese songs in the story are telling about how she faces her good times and bad times in her life in reaching the most important goal in life according to the Javanese philosophy. It is Manunggaling kawula lan Gusti, when the body and the Great Spirit within her inner self blended. All of her life lessons and her effort to keep being good to other, to herself and her awareness of her life lead her to her goal in life. "Through this novel, we can learn and comprehend the Javanese philosophy in a personal way. Through the eyes of a child, the writter attempts at internalizing the Javanese wisdom, which she believes, is priceless and timeless. This novel is also a bold effort to open an intercultural dialogue to build civilization which is based on the grand values in Indonesia. Anies Baswedan, Minister of Education and Culture of the Republic Indonesia."

      • Graphic novels
        September 2017

        Shadow

        by B. Morris Allen (author), Uwe Carow (illustrator)

        In the highest room of a dark tower in the hills … evil threatens. A sorcerer schemes, a kingdom trembles, and heroes rise to fight. When the epic deeds are done, what follows? Find out, with graphic novel Shadow by German artist Uwe Carow and American writer B. Morris Allen.

      • Fiction
        December 2019

        Good Friend, Cancer

        by Pam Pam Liu

        When my mother gets cancer for the second time, she asked if I would keep her company through her chemotherapy. And of course, I said yes. But how am I meant to cope with it all? Pam Pam uses a clean but comical style to portray the joys and sorrows of accompanying a loved one through an illness.     Despite the technical and medical wonders of the modern age, cancer remains one of humanity’s biggest enemies. And while we all know the patients themselves suffer, what of their loved ones, who find themselves sudden becoming carers, struggling with negative emotions, drained by the demands upon them? They too face a long physical and emotional battle.   Good Friend, Cancer is a daughter’s first-hand account of her mother’s chemotherapy treatment. Finding herself now responsible for caring for her mother, she worries as she waits in the hospital that maybe her genes mean the same fate is in store for her. And she is also resentful – she has missed out on a change to follow her dreams and travel overseas. And most of all, and most unanswerably: why her?   Graphic novelist Pam Pam’s simple style and plain strokes provide a humorous look at a harsh reality and turn misfortunes into charming tales. Over the course of 18 short comics, Pam Pam examines the traditional roles of a “daughter” and the pressures of being an adult as she portrays truths about family relationships which we all recognize – even if we cannot admit to it.

      • Fiction
        May 2020

        Son of Formosa

        by Yu Peiyun, Zhou Jianxin

        * 2021 Taipei Book Fair Award   The true story of Tsai Kun-lin, born in Qingshui, Taichung, in 1930, as he lives through Japanese rule and the arrival of the Kuomintang. Polite and a good student, Tsai found himself sentenced to ten years in jail for “membership of an illegal organization” after attending a high school book club. This graphic novel recounts his tenacity and determination.     The 1930s, Japanese-ruled Taiwan. A young boy, Tsai Kun-lin grows up, accompanied by picture books and folk tales. But the merciless flames of World War 2 soon arrive – protests, bombing and conscription will change his life forever.   After the war, the young booklover learns a new language and hopes to finally live a life of peace, never expecting his attendance at a high school book club will land him in jail. Transported to the penal colony for political prisoners on Green Island, he loses ten years of his youth to torture, terror, hard labor, and brainwashing.   This series of graphic novels draws on the actual events of Tsai’s life. At Taichung First Senior High School he was a trainee soldier and a good student; years later he was sentenced to ten years in prison for attending a high school book club. On release he worked in publishing and advertising, and founded Prince, a children’s magazine which kept Taiwan’s cartooning tradition alive during martial law. He raised funds to allow a rural little league team to compete in Taipei and, on retirement, became a human rights activist.   Tsai’s life is Taiwan’s recent history writ small. There is darkness, but always a light; hardship, but always the strength to endure. A simple yet graceful style faithfully recreates the historical scenes, with the accurate use of the Chinese, Taiwanese, and Japanese languages bringing those times to life. The warmth and vitality of the storytelling demonstrate that while we cannot control events, we can, as Tsai did, persevere through them.

      • Graphic novels
        December 2020

        Uncle Gorio and Aunt Pulía of Gabriel y Galán

        by Juan Luis Iglesias, José Cruz de Cruz

        Uncle Gorio, originally published on 18 November 1901 in El Adelanto, is one of the few stories written by the poet José María Gabriel y Galán.Juan Luis Iglesias and C. de Cruz, scriptwriter and cartoonist, both from Extremadura, adapt this work representative of Galán's universe to the language of comics with an original approach. Gabriel y Galán becomes the narrator and protagonist of his story by interacting with his own characters, Uncle Gorio and Aunt Pulía, a couple united by love and convenience. An entertaining comic strip that takes place during a literary gathering between Emilia Pardo Bazán, Benito Pérez Galdós and Gabriel y Galán, where we are shown the vision the poet had of his countrymen, between criticism and affection, while the writers reflect on literary art and recall intimate anecdotes.A tribute to José María Gabriel y Galán, the poet of the Castilian and Extremaduran soul, on the 150th anniversary of his birth.

      • Fiction

        The Mysterious Island

        by Claudio Nizzi, Franco Caprioli

        The Mysterious Island is the adventurous story of a group of prisoners of the American Civil War that stole a gas balloon and shipwrecked on a South Pacific island not marked on the maps. The island helps the group in mysterious ways: they survived to the fall from the balloon and found a chest full of necessities, a dog is rescued from a marine beast and they found a sea rescue message. Only two great names of the Italian comics could return to readers the charm of the original work.

      Subscribe to our

      newsletter