Wednesday 21 August 2024

Announcing Episodes by Alex Scott!

Earth’s End is pleased to announce the release of our next book, Episodes by Alex Scott.

 Episodes traverses the rocky landscape of on and offline social interactions, advertising and media in a way that is both darkly humorous and emotionally engaging. Set in a metropolitan city, spanning the mid-90s to early 2020, Episodes follows a diverse group of characters as they struggle to reconcile their messy day-to-day reality with the aspirational fiction of their ever-present screens.

 “This is an epic tale told on a personal level,” says writer and artist Alex Scott.Episodes is for an audience who grew up on a diet of scheduled TV programming and now feeds off a 24-hour cycle of social-media updates and sponsored content.”

 Episodes arrived in our inbox fully formed,” says Earth’s End Publisher Adrian Kinnaird. “It was obvious Alex had a clear personal vision and the execution of the book was very unique and innovative.” For Co-Publisher Damon Keen, a key feature of the book is its use of TV-style subtitles. “Some people find comics difficult to read; not everyone is familiar with the medium's conventions. Episodes solves this problem by presenting itself in a format we are all familiar with from film and television.”

A multidisciplinary artist from Auckland, Alex describes her first graphic novel as the culmination of a childhood spent in thrall of the TV, a degree in scriptwriting, 15 years as a sub-editor, an illustration and painting practice, and nine years as a cartoonist for the New Zealand Listener. “My trajectory hasn’t felt entirely logical, but it’s all fed into the making of Episodes,” she says. “This is an incredibly personal book to me because all the stories developed out of experiences or feelings I’ve had and finally felt ready to share.”

Episodes will be available nationwide from all good bookstores, comic shops and online retail outlets from October 2024.

Ordering Information:

Retailers can order Episodes from our distributor David Bateman Ltd, info@batemanbooks.co.nz
Earth's End Publishing can be contacted at earthsendpublishing@gmail.com

Publishing Details:

Episodes
Alex Scott
Synopsis: A smart-mouthed kid provokes the wrong flatmate, a misguided teen gets schooled by her crush and a former child star struggles to escape his past.
Seductive advertising fantasies collide headfirst with everyday life in this delicately interwoven tale of identity, desire and coming of age − even in adulthood. A thrillingly observed critique of our media-obsessed society.
RRP: $39.99
ISBN: 9780473699406
Format: 240 x 180mm, portrait, 200 pages, full colour, hardback PLC
Publishing date: October 2024

Sunday 18 August 2024

Tsunami wins at the 2024 NZ Book Awards for Children and Young Adults!

Our latest publication, Tsunami by Ned Wenlock was nominated for two awards at this year’s New Zealand Book Awards for Children and Young Adults – and we were ecstatic to see Ned come away with a win for the NZSA Best First Book Award!

The award was presented by Mat Tait, last year’s Margaret Mahy Book of the Year winner for Te Wehenga: The Separation of Ranginui and Papatūānuku. Here is his speech on the category:

The Best First Book category is a measure of the creative health of children's literature in Aotearoa. The quality of this year's 25 eligible books, and the diverse range of voices, subjects, and approaches coming through, point to not only robustness, but vigour and growth. While doing the difficult job of deciding the shortlist of five, judges looked for work of a high technical quality that used that facility to bring something new, exciting, and vital to the form. The title of the category might misleadingly suggest that this is an award for potential, for showcasing talent in its raw, early stages. But while the names may be new, every one of the works gifted to us by our finalists is the result of a lifetime spent finding their voice and honing the skills needed to express it.

And his brief thoughts on Tsunami:

Tsunami displays a sophisticated understanding of the comics form, telling an often-disturbing story of a troubled and bullied boy with skill and a complexity that trusts readers to meet the book's challenges.

Here is the citation for Tsunami’s win:

As a graphic novel Tsunami is exemplary, with the language of comics intrinsic to its understanding and impact. The toy-like characters with their clean simple lines invite readers to identify with them, even as their diagrammatic performance of the story's central tragedy distances readers from them – thus seamlessly reflecting the book's themes of alienation and the need for connection. Tsunami respects the ability of its audience to handle ambiguity, to rise to meet its challenges and to find its rewards, however unsettling the journey may be. This is a book that lingers after the reading, and seems destined to be studied and discussed for a long time to come.

Congratulations again to Ned for the win, and you can find it now at all good bookstores!

Event photographs by Vijay Paul via the NZ Book Awards Trust.