
It’s 1949 Los Angeles, and Kevin Yamagata, a Japanese American comic book author, is drawing his bestselling character, Billy Bat: a quick-witted detective who is, unsurprisingly, a cartoon bat. Everything is going well for Kevin until he discovers an unfortunate truth: He may have unintentionally plagiarized his beloved character from a drawing he once saw in Japan. Devastated by the news, Kevin returns to war-torn Japan to find the drawing’s original artist . . . but the character’s origins turn out to be far older and more perplexing than he had ever imagined.
(Source: Kana)
Note: Won the Max und Moritz Prize for "Best international Comic" in 2014.
It’s 1949 Los Angeles, and Kevin Yamagata, a Japanese American comic book author, is drawing his bestselling character, Billy Bat: a quick-witted detective who is, unsurprisingly, a cartoon bat. Everything is going well for Kevin until he discovers an unfortunate truth: He may have unintentionally plagiarized his beloved character from a drawing he once saw in Japan. Devastated by the news, Kevin returns to war-torn Japan to find the drawing’s original artist . . . but the character’s origins turn out to be far older and more perplexing than he had ever imagined.
(Source: Kana)
Note: Won the Max und Moritz Prize for "Best international Comic" in 2014.
Naoki Urasawa's Message to the World - perplexing and marvelous.
peak fucking fiction
Autoria e como a arte nos influência
Billy Bat is a gripping manga mixing mystery and history, with great characters and twists galore!
Creating An Art In The Face Of Apocalypse
An Urasawa's classic: The role of art and humanity's sole wish brilliantly expressed
a poster for humanity