Graphic Novel First Steps Part II
As stated in the last post, I’m experimenting with photographic backgrounds with hand drawn characters to produce a graphic novel. For practice and fun I’m putting a recurring strip up on this blog entitled JUSTICE – DETROIT STYLE. I’ll show the tools I use, the process to produce the panels and I will also post the script so you can see how that works.
Here’s the first panel I’m playing with:
I took the photo earlier this week and used Pixelmator for everything. If you have a Mac, Pixelmator is the way to go. Here’s a post about it here: http://stefanstudios84.wordpress.com/blog/ If you don’t have a Mac, you can use GIMP which is open source and free. GIMP is a great tool for creating graphics and manipulating images. If you have Photoshop then you’re all set.
The main character is Rick Justice who appears like a normal guy but takes extreme justice into his own hands. The first story is worked out which will result in about eleven or twelve panels. After that I’m going to make it up as I go along. I’m working on the characters (bad guys, Rick’s girlfriend, victims, etc.) now for the first story and for future installments.
The System – A Detroit Story – Free Download
The System – A Detroit Story – is now part of Kindle Prime and will be a free download on Amazon.com from Friday September 26th through Tuesday September 30th. It’s available here: http://www.amazon.com/System-Detroit-Story—ebook/dp/B005HZKIBE/ref=sr_1_1?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1313788718&sr=1-1
Goodreads Giveaway
A giveaway is running on Goodreads for The System – A Detroit Story. Five paperbacks will be given away which retail for $8.17 on Amazon.com. The giveaway runs until February 11th. All you have to do is click the giveaway button on the side of this page or go here: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/13611266-the-system—a-detroit-story–
Free Download: The Day Detroit Went Dark
To celebrate and help promote The Day Detroit Went Dark audiobook, the Kindle version of The Day Detroit Went Dark will be a free download on Amazon.com starting December 24th through December 28th.
Here’s a few reviews:
As an ex-Detroiter I can assure you that if what happened in the book really did happen, this is about as close to what would happen without use of a crystal ball. Sadly the city of Detroit has been little more than a war zone for the last fifty years and it only gets worse with each passing decade. Mr.Silver has crafted a great and terrifying read. At once gut-wrenching and in some very small ways hopeful. I finished this in less than twenty four hours. Haven’t done that in a long time. Great book.
So nice to be pleasantly surprised when giving a book a chance! Not to say that this was a pleasant book! No. In fact, both the implications AND feasibility of the story is frightening to say the least! The storyline was smooth and non stop. Not lots of flowery filler. Every word necessary to moving the story along. The short length of the story was enough time to get to know and care about thanks to the author’s style.
The audiobook is here: http://www.amazon.com/The-Day-Detroit-Went-Dark/dp/B00HEFDJCK/ref=tmm_aud_title_0?ie=UTF8&qid=1361485307&sr=8-1
The Day Detroit Went Dark is also available on iTunes.
Thanks, everyone for making this book a success and Happy Holidays!
New Thomas Edison: RESURRECTOR Cover
I’ve refreshed the cover for Thomas Edison: RESURRECTOR since I felt it needed a change. Here it is:
I took the photograph inside Edison’s Menlo Park lab at Greenfield Village in Dearborn, Michigan.
Also just got word that The System- A Detroit Story and The Day Detroit Went Dark are ‘headed for retail’ on Audible.com. They should appear on Audible any time now. The covers had to change, since Audible requires square covers (just like CDs) instead of rectangles.
The Day Detroit Went Dark Audiobook
The audiobook production for The Day Detroit Went Dark is complete and approved. We’re very happy the way The Day Detroit Went Dark turned out and it should be available on Audible.com soon.
The System – A Detroit Story – starts production tomorrow.
Winter is Coming to Detroit
Winter is coming to Detroit. I plan on producing another photo essay book entitled Broken City, Big Hearts. It will be about organizations in Detroit that help people survive, especially during the winter.
The entire essay will be shot in grainy black and white. I took these test location shots today.
I’ve begun shooting this month during late fall…
…and plan on shooting and developing the narrative throughout the winter.
Heavy shooting will take place during December, January and February where the chances for surviving in the city hits bottom.
Update: Detroit
In a cascading email that worked its way through the Detroit Police Department, the height, weight and bra size of around twenty female officers was unintentionally circulated throughout the department and ultimately leaked to the Detroit media outlets.
This caused a big brouhaha (or brahaha) throughout the Police Department and Detroit TV and radio stations and the Internet. What was behind the email? The measurements were taken so the female officers could be properly fitted with bulletproof vests.
I’m familiar with cop humor and I’m sure this made the department locker room and watering hole rounds, but it points to a much more serious matter, and it’s not based on sex. Thirty people were shot last weekend in Detroit, and thirty the weekend before that. That’s nothing to laugh about. All humor aside, possessing a properly fitting bulletproof vest can save an officer’s life.
In many areas of Detroit gun violence is out of control. Standing in the line of fire is the risk DPD police officers take every day when they go to work, male or female. I hope their vests fit to a tee.
Bankrupt Detroit
The City of Detroit declared bankruptcy yesterday, the largest municipality in United States history to do so.
Here is a tiny subset of issues that precipitated the filing:
- Detroit has 100,000 creditors
- Detroit has at least 18 billion dollars in accrued obligations
- Detroit experienced a 63% decline from a peak of 1.8 million residents to the current 706,585. To put this in perspective, Detroit has a smaller population than Columbus, Ohio or Austin, Texas.
- Detroit hosts 78,000 abandoned structures.
- More than half of Detroit’s 305,000 properties did not pay their tax bills (2011 statistic)
On the city services level, which directly affects people, Detroiters experience:
- an average police response time of 58 minutes compared to a national average of 11 minutes.
- 8.7% of crimes are solved in Detroit compared to 35.5% statewide. Commit a crime in Detroit and there’s a 91.3% chance you won’t get caught. CRIME PAYS IN DETROIT.
- 40% of Detroit’s street lights don’t work.
- 33% of city ambulances are functional. That’s one out of three.
On the brighter side, the small core of downtown Detroit, emanating from the Renaissance Center is beginning to thrive. Buildings are being purchased, restored and populated with automotive, medical and financial white collar workers. This has little to do with the average citizen of Detroit, with 36% of the population at or below the poverty line and with a 47% literacy rate.
The citizens of Detroit need and deserve the most basic of civil services, those being adequate and reliable:
- police protection and response time
- fire protection and response time
- street lighting
- garbage collection
With the bankruptcy filing these much needed resources can be prioritized and improved. Detroit can move forward from there. As for me, I want to visit the DIA (Detroit Institute of Arts) before the 60,000 paintings, sculptures and other works of art potentially sold off (the Emergency Financial Manager ordered them appraised). More on this later.
The Day Detroit Went Dark
AVAILABLE NOW
Kindle Edition on Amazon.com
Caught in the middle of a fatal car chase and drug fueled gun battle, Clive Bradshaw decides to call it quits, leave the city and live a simpler life with his wife Emily and young daughter Amy. Emily drops him off at the foot of Detroit on his last day of work. Clive steps out of the car and into a city on the verge of collapse, rife with corruption, no city services, overworked and underpaid police and fire departments manned by skeleton crews, fighting a hopeless battle against brazen, uncontrolled crime.
…then the pulses hit…
Everything that produces or relies on electricity is destroyed. The electrical grid, vehicles, aircraft control systems, machinery, communications, computers, refrigeration, water pumping stations, all the systems that support everyday life, gone in an instant. Nothing gets into the city and street gangs rule supreme. Chaos reigns, but it’s all overshadowed by an outbreak of a deadly disease, bubonic plague. The disease threatens not only Detroit but the entire country. The plague must be contained…at all costs.
Follow Clive as he struggles to survive, find Emily and Amy and avoid the plague in The Day Detroit Went Dark.
GET IT HERE ON AMAZON.COM:
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