Interview: Stephen Robson, Fanfare/Ponent Mon

The British publisher Fanfare/Ponent Mon has built a reputation in the U.S. for publishing the greatest manga you’ve never seen. Their books are well regarded but hard to find in bookstores, so when Publisher’s Weekly’s Kai-Ming Cha picked the Fanfare title The Building Opposite as the best manga of 2006, the reaction from the blogosphere was a resounding “Huh?”

Having been frustrated myself by hearing so many great things about books I could never seem to find, I went directly to the source: Stephen Robson, who pretty much is Fanfare. In a lengthy transatlantic chat via phone and e-mail a few weeks before NYCC, Stephen explained the difference between Fanfare and Ponent Mon, why his books are so expensive, and what it’s like being on the ground floor of the nouvelle manga revolution.

Fanfare is really a labor of love for Robson, who works with a part-time editor and a handful of freelancers. On the other side of the slash is Ponent Mon, a Spanish publisher run by his friend Amiram Reuveni. “We are totally separate,” Robson said. “We are just friends who work closely together.” They met when Reuveni was publishing posters by French and Japanese artists: “He was doing Akira posters before anybody in Europe had heard of Akira, purely as art posters,” Robson said.

Robson had discovered French BDs while bumming around Europe in the 1970s, after graduating from college (fun fact: his degree is in mathematics). A few years ago, Reuveni discovered the work of Nouvelle Manga pioneer Frederic Boilet and suggested that Robson publish the English editions of his work while Ponent Mon handled the Spanish versions. “I said, ‘I’ll give it twelve months and 12,000 euros,’” said Robson, who began working on the books in earnest in January 2004. Boilet introduced the pair to other artists in his circle, and the list began to grow. “If you look at our list, it’s French and Japanese, not just manga,” Robson said. “It’s good storytelling that attracts us with clarity of image.”

Robson has freelancers translate books from Japanese to British English, and then he edits the book before sending it to another freelancer to be Americanized. If a book is originally in French, he may translate it himself; his current project is Tokyo Is My Garden, by Boilet and Benoit Peeters. Even if a book is originally Japanese, Robson may pick up the French edition to check the translation. Recently he hired a part-time editor, which he hopes will speed up production.

Fanfare’s books are distributed to comics stores by Diamond, but Robson initially had trouble getting a bookstore distributor interested in his small catalog. “We didn’t have enough of a backlist, or a forward list, because we were taking a book at a time,” Robson said. “I had to get one book out so I would have enough to buy rights for the second book.” Last year, he signed with Biblio, but shipping costs remain a stumbling block. The books are printed in Spain, and because his print runs are small, Robson has to wait until he has two or three titles in print to make it economical to ship the books to the US.

And that’s why nobody could find The Building Opposite in a bookstore. “The Building Opposite came out through Diamond last summer,” Robson said, so it was available in comics stores. “But I didn’t have another book to ship with it. It is leaving Spain together with The Times of Botchan 3 and the revised version of Yukiko’s Spinach, which has never seen the light of day in Borders because I didn’t have enough of them.”

Robson is grateful for the support he has gotten from the direct market, and he says his books will probably continue to arrive in comics stores first, but he’s getting the hang of book distribution—and he is optimistic that his print runs will increase. “If I could send 2,000 to Biblio and be sure they would sell, I’d ship book by book, but I’m a small publisher,” he said. “I can’t afford to ship pallets of books that are costing me money sitting there.”

This caution is born of sad experience. In the 1980s and 1990s, Robson worked with a company that produced high-quality French BD albums. “Sad to say, I remaindered every single one of them,” he said. “It’s cruel and it’s awful, but they just do not appeal.” Now that he’s on his own, he can’t take that chance. “We’re putting these books together with a lot of love, a lot of care, but also a lot of caution,” Robson said. “One bad flop at the moment, I go ‘Oh great, print 5,000’ and it doesn’t work, and there won’t be a Fanfare/Ponent Mon after that. There has to be a balance between getting it out to consumers and keeping the ship on an even keel.”

Robson starts small, with first printings of 1,500 to 2,000. “It’s difficult to make a pot of gold our of those sort of print runs,” he said, “but it needs that nurturing. To me it’s worth it.” And his efforts are starting to pay off: two of his early titles, Yukiko’s Spinach and Jiro Taniguchi’s The Walking Man, are going back for second printings, and he is beginning to think about increasing his initial runs.

Shipping costs are one reason for the high price tag on Fanfare books, which typically retail for $21.99. Quality is another: the paper is noticeably better than most manga, the print quality is better, the trim size is larger, and the covers are heavier stock. “We’ve got a quality product, we wanted to put it in quality packaging,” said Robson. “I didn’t see any point in putting Japan in a [flimsy] cover.” The third factor is the weakness of the dollar against the euro, which has caused the prices to rise just to keep pace.

Fanfare’s best known book is Japan as Viewed by 17 Creators, a project Robson was in on from close to the beginning. “Japan was instigated by [the publisher] Casterman in France and the Japanese publisher, but they invited various other language publishers in on the project so we were there from day one when it was more or less a Frederic Boilet/Casterman idea,” he said. Usually he prefers to publish books that are already completed, however. “I think you get better work if you let the artist do what they want to do,” he said. “We are not yet in the position to pay an artist for a year while they do a book for us.”

This warm reception is building his confidence for the future as well. “We are stepping up our purchases,” he said. “We’ve pre-purchased rights on a number of titles.” These will include Korea by 12 Creators, a followup to Japan, and Hideo Azuma’s Disappearance Diary. Robson plans to publish 6 to 8 titles in 2007, about double his previous rate.

Robson’s comics career began in 1979, after he bumped into an old friend who happened to be one of the founding partners of Forbidden Planet. “It took me six months to persuade him he needed someone to help him on the wholesale end and another six months to persuade him it was me he needed,” Robson said. One of his first assignments drew on his carpentry rather than his marketing skills: “I was the first person to build a back issue comics box in wood for Forbidden Planet.”

When Forbidden Planet started Titan Books, Robson was the first sales manager. “I’m a good organizer,” he said, “and it was much more fun selling comics and science fiction than baked beans.” Around 1996 Diamond took over the company, and Robson didn’t last long. “I’m not a good corporate American,” he said. So in 1997 he left and formed his own company, Fanfare. Using his contacts from 20 years in the business, he became a middleman between small producers and large companies such as Diamond.

Now Robson runs a warehouse and ships books and toys for four different companies. “It’s still only me and my good lady that is the company,” he says. “Now and again if I have a big container coming in I have a few lads from the village that help me, but on a day to day basis it’s still only her and me who do the whole thing.” The posters, figures, and T-shirts he sells, “the tits and the bums,” as he puts it, pay the rent and allow him to focus on the manga. “It’s the one that will still exist in my dotage,” he said. “It’s what I wanted to do, but publishing drinks money so you have to have something there in order to finance it in its early days.” Robson envisions himself at in his old age, sitting in his garden, sipping soup through a straw, and dictating edits to an assistant.

“When I edit a book I do get completely lost in the pulse of the story and get as close as I can to the feeling the creator must have had,” Robson said. “Some have been difficult and serious, others light and airy. But they have all been a pleasure to be proud of.”

Posted in Interviews | 8 Comments

Why you can’t find Four Shoujo Stories

Today is International Women’s Day, so this seems particularly timely:

MangaBlog was honored with a visit from manga scholar and translator Matt Thorn the other day. He checked out the archives and put this comment in an old post on Four Shoujo Stories. I’m pulling it up here so everyone can read it.

I’m afraid it’ll be a cold day in Hell when Four Shojo Stories is back in print. Now that more than a decade has passed and everyone I knew at Viz has moved on, I suppose there’s no harm in revealing the truth behind the short shelf-life of _Four Shojo Stories_. Anthology paperbacks are all but unheard of in Japan (which is ironic, since almost all the manga magazines are anthologies), and the commonly accepted rationale boils down to “artist ego.” Viz had permission to do all four stories, separately, as comic books, but they never got or asked for permission to put them together in a paperback. When they asked me to write the intro, I asked, in surprise, “They gave you permission to collect these stories?” The editor (now retired) said, “If we ask them, they’ll say no, but if we go ahead and do it, they may complain, but what can they do about it? Pull the book off the shelves?” Well, that’s exactly what they (Shogakukan) did. When the editor in Tokyo responsible for these three artists (and who was later to become my colleague at Seika University!) found out about the book, he popped a gasket. The two top guys at Viz had to go to Tokyo and apologize. (At least they were spared harakiri. (^_^) ) As far as I know, there are a few thousand copies of Four Shojo Stories locked away in a warehouse somewhere in San Francisco. Meanwhile, if you want to get your hands on one of the few that made it into readers’ hands, you can buy a used copy through Bookfinder.com for a mere $60-$155. (^o^) Or you can take the cheaper route and download a scanned torrent at…um, never mind.

This really resonated because I’ve been hearing a lot of talk lately about how particular the Japanese are about rights. That’s why, if you look at promotions that involve online manga, for instance, you’ll see more American and Korean creations than Japanese.

Anyway, if you want to know more, Connie at Slightly Biased Manga beat the odds and found a copy for $7, and she just posted her review. Also, if you haven’t already, check out Matt’s site for lots of background info on shoujo manga, especially the classics.

Posted in Mangablog | 14 Comments

Thursday morning links

The MangaCast gang run their critical eye over this week’s comics. Also, Ed has posted audio of the comics publishing panel at NYCC. And if that’s too heavy for you, check out some doujinshi for uniform fans.

Once again, David Welsh annotates the PWCW bestsellers list.

Several other people have already linked to this think piece on the impact of Asian comics in France, but it’s worth checking out, if you haven’t already, for some interesting background on how Asian comics were introduced to Europe (through Italy!) and why they are so popular.

ComiPress has the Tohan top ten and a link to this article on manga-themed toilet paper.

Manga is great, but is it art? Matt Blind has some thoughts at Comicsnob.

Wendy Pini posts at the Go!Comi blog and includes lots of illustrations from her upcoming webcomic/manga, The Masque of the Red Death. Go!Comi is marking this as adults only, because of some scantily clad males.

Jones discovers Ultimate Muscle. It’s worth a click just to take a look at Hollywood Bowl, and no, I’m not talking about a stadium.

Elae has news of a new shonen adventure series in Germany.

Kids, don’t try this at home: Same Hat has pictures of a woman with a full back tattoo of Midori from Suehiro Maruo’s Mr. Arashi’s Amazing Freak Show.

Pata links to a Nodame Cantabile flash game.

Slam Dunk is getting the live action treatment.

Reviews: Prospero’s Manga checks out vol. 1 of Kedamono Damono and vol. 1 of Pixie Pop, which is better than it looks. Connie is busy at Slightly Biased Manga; just go there and scroll down for reviews of all four volumes of Antique Bakery and vols. 3 and 4 of Cantarella. At PopCultureShock, Katherine Dacey-Tsuei reviews vol. 4 of Yakitate!! Japan. Active Anime’s Holly Ellingwood turns in brief reviews of vol. 12 of Fullmetal Alchemist and vol. 6 of Tsukuyomi Moon Phase, and Christopher Seaman checks out vol. 5 of Millennium World. Julie’s thinking pink today at the Mangamaniaccafe, with reviews of vol. 1 of Pixie Pop and vol. 8 of Harlequin Pink: Heart on Fire. At Comicsnob, Matt Blind reviews vol. 2 of Hayate the Combat Butler.

Posted in Mangablog | Comments Off on Thursday morning links

PR: Changes at RSoM

This year, Tokyopop has changed the format of the Rising Stars of Manga competition. According to this press release, instead of one grand prize winner there will be eight winners in eight different genres. In addition, voting is open now for the People’s Choice Award. More details below.

TOKYOPOP Rising Stars of Manga People’s Choice Online Voting Underway

Talent Competition Offers New Genre-Based Format

TOKYOPOP announces the online voting portion of the Rising Stars of Manga 7 competition. Due to a voluminous flood of participant feedback, we’ve reinstated the People’s Choice Award for this seventh running of TOKYOPOP’s manga talent competition. All manga fans are encouraged to visit the TOKYOPOP website between March 6 and March 12, 2007 to place their vote and choose their next Rising Stars of Manga.

Vote today at : http://www.tokyopop.com/peoples-choice-voting.php

New this year is a genre-based format—gone is the era of the Grand Prize Winner. Eight winners will share equal prizes, taking the top spot in one of eight different genre-based categories: Action, Comedy, Drama, Fantasy, Horror, Mystery, Romance or Sci-Fi. The People’s Choice Award, determined by fans who vote in the coming week on TOKYOPOP’s website, will celebrate one winner not based on genre.

TOKYOPOP is on a mission to identify and develop the artists and writers who will define manga in the years ahead. The Manga Revolution is sweeping the U.S., and a new generation is being inspired by this innovative art form. In the Rising Stars of Manga competition, the top nine entries, as chosen by TOKYOPOP’s editorial staff (and by fans for the online People’s Choice selection), will receive monetary prizes and be published in the seventh Rising Stars of Manga anthology. All the winners will have an exclusive opportunity to pitch a full-length manga story idea to TOKYOPOP executives for possible development.

Complete details about the Rising Stars of Manga competition are available at: http://www.tokyopop.com/C-132/

Posted in Mangablog | Comments Off on PR: Changes at RSoM

PR: New fall titles from Yaoi Press

Below the cut, details on two new titles due out later this year from Yaoi Press.

A Dark Side to Yaoi Press

Las Vegas, NV, March 7, 2007 – Yaoi Press announces Dark Dreams and Dark Prince, two new titles debuting in fall.

Yaoi Press has announced the second title to their new line of art books. Dark Dreams will showcase the work of Italian studio Dany&Dany. The 64 page book will focus on beautiful men and male/male romance. Unlike Yaoi Press’ explicit Yaoi Gothic art book, Dark Dreams will have a 16+ rating. This is the fourth book Yaoi Press will publish by Dany&Dany in 2007.

Yaoi Press has also announced the three volume graphic novel series, Dark Prince. This is the second series to be written by Yaoi Press publisher Yamila Abraham. New artist discovery M. A. Sambre is illustrating the series. Dark Prince is a gothic manga focusing on a prince whose demon lover commands him to murder young men. Dark Prince will run simultaneously with the Yaoi Press’ bestselling Winter Demon series, which is also written by Abraham.

About Yaoi Press
Yaoi is a romantic genre that deals with stories about men in love with men for women readers. Yaoi Press borrowed their theme from Japan where it’s been hugely popular for several decades. Yaoi has gained a strong foothold in the United States.

Yaoi Press was founded in 2004, and has published twenty global yaoi manga graphic novels to date. Yaoi Press titles are distributed by Diamond Book Distributors.

For more information please visit www.yaoipress.com.

Dark Dreams: A Dany&Dany Yaoi Art Book
Size: 8.5”x11”
Pages: 64, b&w
Rating: Mature Readers
ISBN #: 978-1-933664-25-5
Street: December 28, 2007
SRP: $14.95

Dark Prince Volume 1
Size: 5”x7.5”
Pages: 144, b&w
Rating: Mature Readers
ISBN #: 978-1-933664-23-1
Street: October 22, 2007
SRP: $12.95

Posted in Mangablog | Comments Off on PR: New fall titles from Yaoi Press

Crossing over

For two years I was just a blogger.

Now I’m a character as well. Yes, that’s me in the third panel. Click on the strip for a better view (if you dare). I’m on the right-hand side of the masthead, too.

Mom would be so proud! *sniff* And now I’m eligible to check into the Comix Characters Retirement Home when I get old(er) and spend my waning years hanging out with Mr. Mxyplyzyk and the Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers.

Posted in Mangablog | 1 Comment