17 years later…
It took British writer and author J. K. Rowling 17 years to complete the Harry Potter fantasy series. One would say this is such a long journey. Her work, of course, grabs worldwide attention; she becomes of one the greatest writers living.
Here in Phnom Penh, Em Satya, a Cambodian novelist illustrator, has to wait 17 years to get his a romance comic book published; Bopha Battambang (or Flower of Battambang) is now available in print in Khmer language, as English and French version will be made available soon.
An evening of December 13 I was at a book launch at Meta-House, where some expats and local fellows enjoyed the graphic novel exhibition. It’s great, other than listening to elder Satya the illustrator talked about his long-awaited work, I also met some people I hope to.
In a country where reading is not highly motivated and not really considered as leisure and learning, writers find it hard to have their works marketable. And it’s hard to mention that all the works by present writers are not good enough. Same old thing is: Em Satya’s latest comic book is not published by any independent commercial publisher; rather, it’s supported by Our Books, a local non-profit organisation focused on the development of comic art.
Book and reading promotion and awareness are lacking in Cambodia. While history books and novels are popular amongst our surveyed population, it seems there is little familiarity with Cambodian titles and authors except for bestselling novelists and for a few novels printed during the 1940s-1960s.
Born in 1957 in Takeo province, Em Satya is one of several graphic illustrators in war-torn Cambodia, who can earn a living from his artistic works. His talent paid him to survive during the Khmer Rouge regime. Satya began working on Bopha Battambang in 1990 for his own leisure, and it was at the time that Cambodia were so influenced by Indian culture, specifically movies.
Throughout his career, he is mainly an illustrator. Resigned from his post at Ministry of Education, he has worked for local daily newspaper Raksmey Kampuchea, Cambodge Soir, and Magazine Mom and Mab. In 2000, after recovering from stroke, he started to work again with writer Pal Vannarirak, and later moved to Room to Read.
In 2006-2007 Em Satya completed his major work, Bopha Battambang.
In other part of the world, some top selling books are written on mobile phones. Guess where? It’s Japan. Justin Norrie of Sydney Morning Herald has the story: In Japan, cellular storytelling is all the rage.
December 29th, 2007 at 10:34 am
She’s the great writer! I like Happy Potter so much!
December 31st, 2007 at 0:26 am
We must appreciate his energy and effort for making and bringing this work out to the public. While reading your blog (I like this blog because of their originality in writing is from the author himself), I am thinking about how to encourage people to read books. One thing I have learnt is that reading is a project. In addition to motivation, reading requires skills of selecting which book should be read, why we should read this book (objective), how we can allocate time to read this book,…For a general book, of course, we don need a high level of skills. But I am still wondering whether khmer people who don like reading possess even a lower level of these skills. If not, we should start from how to give them with these skills in addition to the motivation. Availability of books is very important, and the state must encourage/subsidy to ensure that essential books are available for reading by them. I read a report of the Toyota Foundation titled “Publishing in Cambodia,” a number of respondents said that they like reading history books, but when they were asked to list authors of these books, I found only a few names of authors where Troeung Ngea and George Coedes are only two remarkable authors. I am doubtful about this finding, especially on two points: Do they really like reading history books? Do these books sufficiently available for reading? Anyway, reading should be promoted to become a habit acceptable by all in the society.
January 6th, 2008 at 16:45 pm
hi,,, really