OK here comes the media release ... promotion is just another thing I like to do for worthwhile and creative projects ... like I did for Artful Dodgers Studios recently ... AND THIS IS ONE! A fresh new Australian comic anthology to savour
To be launched by Melbourne food legend Dur-e Dara at
Mr Wilkinson, 295 Lygon Street, East Brunswick
Wednesday December 17 at 7pm
SPECIAL LAUNCH PRICE $20
In sumptuous black and white, bumper comic book
Tango8: Love and Food celebrates two of our greatest obsessions in sizzling style. The eighth issue of the giant Australian romance comics anthology
Tango follows on where the provocative
Tango7: Love and Sedition left off. This banquet of contemporary stories includes new work from talented graphic novelists
Nicki Greenberg (
The Great Gatsby, Allen & Unwin), Bruce Mutard (
The Sacrifice, also Allen & Unwin) and
Mandy Ord (
Rooftops, published by Finlay Lloyd), whose great story on food and fatherly love will ring true for many.
Works from two brilliant cartoonists from
The Age,
Andrew Weldon and
Oslo Davis, are among the 70 very different offerings. These vary from 1 to 18 pages in length, exploring the theme of 'love and food' in hilarious, romantic, creepy, nostalgic and heartfelt ways.
Tango8: Love and Food’s 70 contributors mostly hail from Melbourne, Adelaide and Sydney; four live in New Zealand.
The ongoing
Tango project presents work by established and emerging comic book makers in annual collections from Melbourne-based
Cardigan Comics. These are edited and published by
Bernard Caleo, a fine comic writer and artist himself. Caleo’s collaboration with Angela Savage (
For Natasha) is a highlight of
Tango8: Love and Food, comparing piquant memories of red icy poles at the Brunswick Baths with the swooning joy of breast feeding. (Savage won the Victorian Premier’s Best Unpublished Manuscript by Emerging Author award in 2004 for her book
Thai Died, published by Text Publishing in 2006 as
Behind the Night Bazaar)
Tango8: Love and Food is a rollercoaster ride through the wealth of comic book talent in Australasia. At 242 pages of affordable comic book goodness it’s a great gift for foodies, comic lovers and those hard-to-buy-for teens, twenties and thirty-somethings - as well as the baby boomers who learned to read from Marvel and DC comics and achieved puberty poring over Robert Crumb and
Zap! Cardigan Comics has been kindly supported by Arts Victoria in the publication of
Tango8: Love and Food. The trade paperback sized collection is available at book shops, comic book sellers and at
http://www.cardigancomics.com/ For further information and interviews, contact: Publicist Jen Jewel Brown
Ph 0408 898 338
jenjewelbrown@fastmail.fmPublisher Bernard Caleo Ph (03) 9497 8098
bernard@cardigancomics.com