Budget: A portion of $4,300.00 marketing and publicity budget.
Galleys: PDF galleys are available.
National Advertising: Prominent, year-round advertising in The
Comics Reporter, one of the most visited comics-focused
websites.
National Print/Online Media Campaign: We work tirelessly to market
and promote our titles; we have a large media and opinion maker
contact list, to which we send our press releases and select review
copies. We also have a smaller selection of reviewers who receive
hard copies of our titles. This has resulted in reviews, interviews
and coverage in a variety of media outlets including Avoid the
Future, Boing Boing, The Chicago Tribune, Comic Book Resources, The
Comics Beat, The Comics Journal, The Comics Reporter, The Globe and
Mail, Newsarama, Paste Magazine, Publishers Weekly, Quill and
Quire,The National Post, The New York Times, TIME Magazine, VICE
Magazine, The Washington Post and many more.
Online/Social Media Campaign: We have a strong presence on the
Internet with our recently redesigned website (koyamapress.com with
over 4,000 unique visits per month), Facebook
(facebook.com/KoyamaPress with over 4,500 likes), Twitter
(@AnnieKoyama with over 8,700 followers), Flickr
(flickr.com/photos/koyamapress), and Tumblr (koyamapress.tumblr.com
with over 11,000 followers) pages.
Promotion on the Author's Website: Patrick Kyle has established a
strong following online. This is demonstrated by his website/Tumblr
(patrickkyle.com) and his Twitter (@_patrickkyle).
General Tour Info: Koyama Press and Patrick Kyle will be launching
Don't Come in Here at the Toronto Comic Arts Festival (TCAF) a week
long celebration of comics and graphic novels and their creators,
which culminates in a two-day exhibition and vendor fair featuring
hundreds of comics creators from around the world. This year's
festival takes place May 14-15.
Publicity and Promotion in Conjunction with the Author's Speaking
Engagements: Koyama Press has a number of branded items including
tote bags, notebooks, buttons, postcards, stickers, and activity
books that accompany artists at shows and events. These include
items utilizing the art from the book itself.
Patrick Kyle lives and works in Toronto, ON. He is the co-founder and editor of Wowee Zonk, a contemporary comic book anthology featuring up-and-coming international artists. He has been previously nominated for Doug Wright and Ignatz awards for his comic book series Black Mass and Distance Mover. Koyama Press published the latter in book form in 2014. Patrick's illustrations have appeared in The New York Times, Esquire, The Walrus, Transworld Skateboarding Magazine, and Vice Magazine.
L.A. Times Book Prize Finalist "Don't Come In Here, is a science-fiction effort more in the vein of Phillip K Dick than the more fantastic influences he's been drawing from of late. This is a story about paranoia, disconnection, isolation and technology." -- Rob Clough, High-Low "With underlying themes of alienation, isolation and psychological disturbance, adeptly limned in Kyle's unique, almost hieroglyphic style, Don't Come in Here is an eerie, unsettling, and hypnotic experience." -- Rob Kirby "Unsettling yet hypnotic Don't Come in Here is, quite simply, an abstract comics masterpiece." -- Andy Oliver, Broken Frontier "Koyama Press publishes some of the best indie comics, and Patrick Kyle's latest comic is definitely up there...I laughed so much reading this comic. You've got to check it out." -- Emma Lawson, Panels "[Don't Come in Here is] a dream-like and claustrophobic story that exploits and subverts the possibilities of panel-to-panel storytelling to their fullest to create a dizzying, sometimes oppressive and brilliantly bizarre reading experience." -- Andy Oliver, Forbidden Planet International "The straightforward storytelling approach--two borderless panels on each page--juxtaposes with Kyle's inherently bizarre visual style, which renders the simple line drawings of the tenant in his apartment and the surreal events occurring around him equally off-kilter. It amounts to a persuasively peculiar view of a prisoner of domesticity." -- Gordon Flagg, Booklist "If you like absorbing creative work without a specific emotional or intellectual goal, if you like letting the work sit for awhile before a comprehension of what you encountered begins to appear, if you like creative work to function in collaboration with you, to fashion something unique and personal between you and the work itself, then Kyle's concoction is possibly for you, and you will be able to encounter it in a way that's enriching." -- John Seven, The Comics Beat "Don't Come in Here shows off a kind of Brechtian comics-making. Kyle's pieces draw attention to different human dilemmas while also drawing attention to the comics form itself." -- Greg Hunter, The Comics Journal "Kyle is one of those creators who has fully earned the oft-tossed around description of being a genuinely distinctive voice in his field." -- Andy Oliver, Broken Frontier "In this first long-form graphic novel, Kyle captures the strange, disorienting, and sometimes hallucinogenic realities of apartment living--realities we in Vancouver have come to know and love (or at least tolerate)." -- Alice Fleecrackers, SAD Mag "The idiosyncrasies of Kyle's work are explored throughout Don't Come In Here, and readers looking for an abstract comics experience can pick up the graphic novel when it hits stands in the next few weeks." -- Oliver Sava, A.V. Club "Using a kaleidoscope of fluoro colours, Patrick's weird characters flourish in their even weirder surroundings." -- Rebecca Fulleylove, It's Nice That Praise for Distance Mover Silver Medal in the Long form, Single Image and Comic category in the Society of Illustrators Comic and Cartoon Art Annual Competition "Distance Mover is a terrific book, marking Patrick Kyle as a standout among up-and-coming cartoonists." -- Nick Francis Potter, Heavy Feather Review "This is a masterful use of shapes and squiggles to depict the sheer otherness of alien worlds and societies, one that not only alters one's understanding of physics but also of aesthetics." -- Rob Clough, The Comics Journal "Distance Mover...remains a hippy punk comics love letter full of lumpy characters and far-out themes of art, and life, and the world." -- Bryan Munn, Sequential
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