Author Interview: Ken Mora Graphic Novelist
JMR- Welcome to the Books Delight, Ken. Tell our
readers where you live, what you do for fun and what does the perfect day look
like?
KM- Hi
Jeanie. First thank you for this interview and your review of Caravaggio: A Light Before The Darkness on GoodReads.com.
I’m a
writer living in West Los Angeles, California. My perfect day would be starting
with a strong cup of coffee and a good stare into space. Then getting elbow-deep in philosophical
media (I’m a huge fan of Closer To Truth, and podcasts like Things You Missed
In History, and 99% Invisible), I also like swimming, eating a satisfyingly
large meal, playing poker and relaxing with my adorable wife and our dogs.
JMR-What’s your favorite historical time period?
Why?
KM-
Wow, there are just SO many, but currently I’m exploring the turn of the 20th
Century. That time’s explosive insights into Quantum Mechanics and General
Relativity, and its titans of mathematics and physics. This era interests me
because these giant personalities forcefully advocated for their view of how
the universe works. However, unlike in the arenas of politics and religion,
these egos could ultimately be persuaded by testable scientific argument.
JMR-Who is your favorite historical figure? Why? If
you could ask them one question, what would it be?
KM- Taking
a step away from both Caravaggio’s Baroque era or the 20th Century, I would
have to say Isaac Newton. Newton had a paradoxical metaphysical obsession at
the same time he was pioneering the foundations of our mathematical and
practical understanding of reality. I would ask “Did you have a vision for
providing the tools for esoteric discovery as well as material exploration?”
JMR- Ken, I read and reviewed your graphic novel
earlier this year. How does telling history through this medium differ from
writing a novel? What advantages/disadvantages are there?
KM-
Truly a picture is worth a thousand words, so the challenge of visual story
telling is not to repeat what is seen on the page, but to add to it in a way
that entertains on every page. Matching the pace of story development and
revelation is a key component, and balancing the sparseness of dialog with
informative action, much like screenwriting, is an entirely engrossing
balancing act.
JMR- What does the reader gain/ loose in the
telling of history through pictures vs. words?
KM-
Again, like screenwriting, your window into character is overwhelmingly
informed by their actions. We are (largely) not privy to their thoughts except
in how they physically interact with people and the world. Among direct actions
on the page, all irony, paradox, and interpersonal subtleties are only
discernible via expression, posture, and dynamic action, with considerable aid
of composition and color. So you gain a greater contextual vision of character,
and lose the deep dive into that character’s self awareness.
JMR- Is history told this way more interpretive?
Does each reader see something different?
KM-
That’s a great philosophical question. While as a pure study guide, visual
story telling falls short on deep-dive information, it’s supremely incisive
(done well) in conveying how a character lives and is involved in his or her
culture. Both writer and reader are more free of the ordering of information
that strict prose can impose. In visual storytelling, you can plumb greater
depths of tone, motion, and composition when describing your characters world.
How do environments mold and restrict character actions and responses. How does
the creator exploit visual opportunities to enhance the experience of the
reader? The answers determine how each reader interprets and builds their
vision of the storyline. The challenge is to guide that chain of subjective
experience toward the thematic goal for which you are aiming.
JMR- Ken, tell us about your book, Caravaggio: A
Light Before the Darkness.
KM- In
my late-in-life return to education I earned my Bachelor’s Degree at USC’s
Roski School of Fine Arts. There, my study of painting techniques led me to be
enthralled by the works of Caravaggio. He’s described by many in the movie
industry as the world’s “first cinematographer.” Then on exploring his choice
of derelicts as models for saints and the holy family, I understood the harried
artist yearning for compassionate acceptance. An acceptance that his society,
and he himself, could not grant. I found huge fault in the shallow
characterization of his volatile personal history, portrayed as the hallmarks
of a mere ‘dark and brooding artist.’ A stigmatization, as I discovered, that was
established when his first biographies were penned by his rivals for Church
patronage.
JMR-What
projects do you have in the pipeline?
KM- I
have three (which I would advise against for any fledgling Graphic
Storytellers). The next in queue is Caged Birds, two issues of which are available on Comixology under my
own imprint Bella Fe Media, as well as the Markosia Enterprises version, where
I will continue the series through its projected sixth issue conclusion. It’s a
European cinema inspired “psycho-melodrama” of two women of different races and
classes who struggle against sexism in their disparate worlds to somehow come
together on their own terms.
JMR- Tell our readers how to find you on social
media and the web.
KM- https://BellaFeMedia.com or https://KenMora.com
are active, I have a GoodReads author page at
https://www.goodreads.com/ken_mora and my social media handle for Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter are
all @BellaFeMedia
JMR- What question were you hoping I’d ask but
didn’t?
KM-
These are all great questions, and the only thing I would add, as advice to
fellow authors, would be the question: “What do you think are the value of
competitions, reviews and critiques for a writer just starting to grow their
fanbase?”
First,
I would say that critique in development is crucial to the honing of a work of
literature. Few are the creators that can distance themselves from the
challenges of clarity, consistency of theme, and credibility of character,
without previewing an audience’s reaction to early drafts.
Next,
once published, reviews are important because they allow prospective readers to
separate ‘signal from noise’ in a crowded and competitive market. Reviews allow
a creator’s audience to find them.
Lastly,
placements in judged competitions are crucial guides to a writer’s future
growth. I’ve been very successful in the arena of screenplay competitions, and
those have strengthened this adaptation of Caravaggio: A Light Before The Darkness going
in to Graphic Novel competitions. I’ve been honored with a win at the Screencraft Cinematic Book Award, and
finalist placements in the Wishing
Shelf Independent Book Awards, National Indie Excellence Awards, and the Eric Hoffer Award for Independent Publishing so
far, and those accolades give me confidence to continue to create.
JMR- Thank you, Ken, for an erudite and informative chat. It's been a pleasure. Readers, I know you'll be interested in seeing Ken's book, so I've added an Amazon link below. Check it out!
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