DDIMAM nominated as a Great Graphic Novel for Teens by ala.org
YALSA (Young Adult Library Services Association), a division of the American Library Association, has nominated my book in the category of Great Graphic Novels For Teens (non-fiction). This is an amazing honour!
TCAF weekend! (May 13-14)
Here’s my schedule at the Toronto Comics Arts Festival this weekend:
Saturday May 13
10:00 AM – Canadian Reading Series: Conundrum Press Spotlight – Conundrum Press is making another big splash this year! Come and join David Collier (Morton), Lorina Mapa (Duran Duran), and James Cadelli (Getting Out of Hope) as they read from their newest Conundrum Press books! Hinton Learning Theatre, Toronto Reference Library
11-12 Lorina Mapa signs Duran Duran, Imelda Marcos, and Me at the Conundrum Table
Sunday May 14
10-11am James Cadelli, Lorina Mapa sign at the Conundrum Table
See you there!
30 minute interview by Joseph Planta of thecommentary.ca
Here is a link to an interview by Joseph Planta, the host of the website thecommentary.ca which since 2004 has featured over a thousand audio interviews with unique and diverse guests from renowned bestselling and prize winning authors, Canadian newsmakers and political figures, internationally known print and broadcast journalists, prominent academics and public intellectuals, as well as noted artists and personalities.
DDIMAM on 49th Shelf’s list of 12 titles that inject global perspective
https://49thshelf.com/Blog/2017/04/17/Writing-the-World
(you have to scroll down on the actual link )
DDIMAM is in Drawn and Quarterly’s Bookstore’s “New and Notable Graphic Novels”
http://211blog.drawnandquarterly.com/2017/04/new-notable-graphic-novels.html
Amazing that I am occupying the same space as a “Love and Rockets” zine!
Review in the Montreal Gazette
http://montrealgazette.com/news/local-news/off-island-gazette/young-hudson-residents-new-book-will-steal-your-heart
Bill Young has written an article about “Duran Duran, Imelda Marcos and Me” in the April 12, 2017 edition of the Montreal Gazette. I hope the book lives up to his glowing praise!
Here is an excerpt:
It is (an) unforeseen accident which shapes the story, and largely defines her life going forward. When she attends her father’s funeral, this return to roots releases a host of memories, both of her early days in the Philippines, and of more recent times.
The result is an extraordinary odyssey, but one I leave for the reader to discover. It is enough to underscore the degree to which her striking illustrations throughout fit impeccably the many tones of the narrative, from the boldest strokes to the most delicate of touches.”
Featured on the CBC’s “How I Wrote It”
An article on the CBC’s “How I Wrote It” by Jane Van Koeverden. I was interviewed by phone and asked a number of interesting, thoughtful questions. Ms. Van Koeverden did a great job putting my random musings together.
“When I was telling my story, I didn’t want our culture to be so different and inaccessible to people in the west reading it. There are a lot of similarities and that’s why I included a lot of the pop culture references. That was very important to me because that was how I grew up. If someone living in the U.S. is reading about a girl in the Philippines, they might have some assumptions of them. But when they read about what she’s going through and find similarities to their own childhood, all of a sudden it breaks that barrier of the “other.” Maybe it will break a few stereotypes of what people think girls growing up in different parts of the world are like.”
Click on this link for the full article:
http://www.cbc.ca/books/2017/04/lorina-mapa-how-i-wrote-my-graphic-memoir.html
Write-Up in Montreal Review of Books
“A vivid revisitation of the recent past and a harrowing omen of days that many young people…may soon face”.
Book Review by the London Free Press
Here’s a review by Dan Brown (a writer, but not that one) of the London Free Press.
“This energetic, enjoyable, easy-to-read tale vibrates with youthful passion as Mapa tells the story of growing up in the Philippines of the 1980s.”
Read more for the full review.
http://www.lfpress.com/2017/03/08/graphic-novel-political-drama-pop-culture-woven-in-memoir