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World Harvest: a Graphic Novella

Something I have to own up to at the moment is a project that has been burning in me for some time. I’m writing a graphic novella - sort of like a grown up comic book with real plot - titled World Harvest. As a work in progress, it’s only just moving from the conceptual stages into production of the initial frames and text but I’m happy enough with it’s progress to give you the heads up.

World Harvest is a dark grungey story about a man in a prison cell looking back on where we have been. So it’s set in about 2020. How exactly did the hero wind up isolated from the world in a cell for 21 years? For murder, no less. And what has it got to do with the way our culture is being eroded by the State? Did we lose our rights or were they handed over willingly by the population? The war against terrorism has quickly transformed into the war against citizens.

Add to the legal and societal pressures currently impacting us, we’re also moving to a more ubiquitous environment - small computers tapping into our internet enabled things. We’re moving towards improved surveillance, smarter systems, a One Machine World Wide Web that is the new level of reality. None of this is free, friends. We’ve been playing with the social A-Bomb for a while. And that semantic web will take good men and women to keep it on track. Just like we’re currently seeing with copyfight.

I’m not sure how I’ll publish World Harvest but it should wind up at around the novella length (touch wood) considering it’s highly graphic and will be released over a long period. I considered running it as a periodical on it’s own site but maybe that would just be too time consuming. I’d expect the first installment to come out as a PDF download here in the near future. Just out of interest, here’s a sneak mockup of World Harvest’s first screen… it should give you an idea of the mood of the work.

first frame of World Harvest, graphic novella by Steven Clark

And a hat tip to Jin who’s also working hard at Doing at present.

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Stand Up Guy

Steven Clark Steven Clark - the stand up guy on this site

An icon for overweight middle aged bogun-geek web designers. A lego block in a Meccano world. A synergy of tattoos, memories of bare knuckle fist fights, and old episodes of Star Trek. My name is Steven Clark and I'm a highly opinionated web designer with a few good ideas. I'm too old for fist fights.

My Photography Blog

My photography blog Walk a Mile in my Shoes is back up and running. Due to bandwidth issues it's only one image at a time and not full text in the RSS feed. It's licensed under creative commons , meaning not for commercial use and you need to attribute, otherwise drop me a line via the contact form on this site.

My Links Blog

You might also like to check out my links blog over at Nortypig.com to learn more about everything worth mentioning.

My Illustrations

Currently I only have a static page for illustrations but if time allows I'd like to start another illustration blog.

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Currently Reading

Here Comes Everybody by Clay Shirky (cover)

Clay Shirky's Here Comes Everybody: The Power of Organizing without Organizations has been on my bookshelf for the last few months literally screaming to be read. In fact, I'm wondering how I got so sidetracked to have reached the end of the year without having consumed it. The message of the book is an area of my own fascination, the effects that our new technologies have on the way we relate to each other, and how we're now empowered in ways that were historically unheard of (or not even conceived of) not too long ago.

I'm a small town boy who grew up in the seventies, graduating high school in 1979. The world was slower - how did we survive without Wikipedia? Without MSN or Facebook? Nowdays we have flashmobbing and blogging and constant connection.