Sound
Sound
Edited by Budjette Tan & Charis Loke. Published by Difference Engine.
Softcover, 288 pages, Monochrome, 2024.
Traffic. A crunchy snack. An argument. What does sound look like to you?
Difference Engine is proud to present our first comics anthology, SOUND: A Comics Anthology. Writers and illustrators from all around Southeast Asia were challenged to push the boundaries of depicting the unseen through the medium of visuals and words, while telling stories important to them.
Guest editors Budjette Tan and Charis Loke have put together an intriguing list of stories that showcase the creativity of creators across Southeast Asia—both familiar and new names. In a broad range of genres and topics, this collection of stories is an exciting exploration of what the comics medium is capable of.
CREATIVE TEAMS
• Folk (Paolo Chikiamco & Borg Sinaban)
• The Whispers of the Earth (Amahl S. Azwar & Nadiyah Rizki)
• Hokkien for Beginners (Nicolette Lee)
• Bonus Points (Benjamin Chee)
• Voices and Votes (Ruth Chris De Vera & Rafael Romeo Magat)
• ON : OFF (Xie Shi Min, Richard Phua, & Xiao Yan)
• Out of Sight (Jingwei Wong & Soefara Jafney)
• The Cat Who Barks (Bryan Arfiandy)
• Blabber (Bonni Rambatan)
• Softly, Sayang (Sharon Bong & Leong Yi Zhen)
• Road Trip Radio (Cathlyn Vania)
• Signals (Farid Nad)
• A Call (Nadhir Nor)
PRAISE FOR SOUND: A COMICS ANTHOLOGY
“The volume serves well as a showcase of Southeast Asian comics art… but what comes through most cogently is the vitality of the contributors who embrace art as a force for human connection, self-expression, and political action.”
—Publishers Weekly
“Sound as creatures slithering through doors, as the melodious voice of a street vendor, as the smudged words of a speech bubble, as a cat that woofs instead of meows. These writers have used sound in myriad ways, creating stories that make themselves heard.”
—Tania De Rozario, author of And The Walls Come Crumbling Down
“SOUND is a collection of 13 stories by writers and illustrators from all over Southeast Asia. This is a much more revolutionary sentence than it seems at first glance. Because those of us who grew up in this region know the difficulty in finding representation in the media we consume, the happiness when we discover kernels of ourselves in the pages, the frustration and disappointment when we don’t, or worse — when we’re misrepresented instead, our culture mere costumes for others to profit from.
SOUND then is, for this Malaysian author, nothing less than an exhilarating experience. What joy, to see people who look like me and talk like me; what a thrill, to see the details in the backgrounds of not only the stories authored by fellow Malaysians, but others too, a testament to our shared SEA heritage. Here are our delights and our sorrows, our monsters and our mistakes, our families and our love. Some stories are happy, some are sad, and some are mere vignettes of lives that I wish I could see more of, but all have their own heft and weight and the art throughout is satisfyingly gorgeous. SOUND is just a small sample of the huge amount of talent here in Southeast Asia; if you have not heard us before, I hope you will hear us now.”
—Hanna Alkaf, author of The Weight of Our Sky
“An impressive collection of diverse, wildly talented Southeast Asian comics talent. Each and everyone of them has stretched the format of the medium, opening readers’ minds to new concepts of sound.”
—Victor Fernando R. Ocampo, author of The Infinite Library and Other Stories
“It is a known fact in the industry that comics anthologies do not sell well. But they play an important role in showcasing new and not-so-new talents and bringing different writers and artists together. Kudos to Difference Engine and the editors—SOUND is the shot in the arm Southeast Asian comics need.”
—CT Lim, country editor (Singapore) of the International Journal of Comic Art
“This medley of lovingly crafted comics—fantastical, social realist and confessional—have plenty more in common than their unifying theme of sound. They’re also tales of loss, with characters struggling in the midst of broken families, forgotten traditions, failed belief systems and governments. They represent the collective spirit of young Southeast Asia—a generation, caught between a colourful past and an uncertain future, drawing themselves together, finding their voices.”
—Ng Yi-Sheng, author of Lion City