Graphic novels find toehold - with Bollywood twist
Saturday, 06 February 2010, 17:23 IST
190 and
699 on an average, publishers said.
"It is not the cost but the writer which matters. For example, I like graphic books by American writer Warren Ellis. His books are extremely crass with amazing artwork and a very good storyline. I also like reading Neil Gaiman (of the Sandman) and Terry Pratchett," Abhisekh, a second year student of English Literature at Delhi University, told IANS at the Hachette-India/Little Brown vend at the Book Fair.
The publishing house, which has three popular graphic titles, The Manga Bible (
350), Asterix and Calvin & Hobbes in India, will launch a new graphic series by Stephanie Myers in India.
The Campfire Graphic Books - a Delhi-based graphic novel publishing house set up in 2008 - publishes classics in both English and Hindi and exports its books to Britain and the US.
"Our mission is to put the fun back in reading. Children and young adults prefer to watch television because an average book comprises 500-600 pages. We abridge them to 80 pages. India is learning to appreciate graphic novels," Abhisekh Singh, marketing manager of the Campfire, told IANS.
The publishing house has 40 titles in its kitty.
Graphic novels are read widely by techies.
"Students from IIT mail-order graphic novels because they find it easier to relate to the genre. The response to one of the recent releases, 'Kabul Disco', a graphic novel on Afghanistan, was overwhelming. We printed 5,000 books in the first run," Lipika Bhushan, general manager (marketing), HarperCollins-India, told IANS.
Source: IANS