The Complete CORTO MALTESE
To Be Published In English For The First Time
EuroComics,
A New Imprint Edited by Dean Mullaney Will Release the Seminal Series
in the Original Oversized Format with New Translations
San Diego, CA (July 25, 2014) – Long before the term “graphic novel” entered the popular lexicon, the Italian cartoonist Hugo Pratt
pioneered the long-form “drawn literature” story in 1967 when he
introduced Corto Maltese in the epic adventure “The Ballad of the Salty
Sea.”
Pratt set the standard for all adult adventure comics in Europe, and by the mid-1970s Corto was
the continent’s most popular series and Pratt the world’s leading
graphic novelist. “He is one of the true masters of comic art,” says Frank Miller.
Pratt’s books remain best sellers in Europe and are published in a dozen languages yet until now, Corto Maltese has been poorly represented in English.
“We intend to change all that,” says EuroComics editor Dean Mullaney. “Pratt deserves a first-rate American edition and America deserves Corto Maltese.
We’re proud to publish Hugo Pratt as the first graphic novelist in our
EuroComics imprint; we’re similarly pleased to publish him alongside Milton Caniff and Alex Toth, two important artistic influences on Pratt, from our long-standing Library of American Comics line.”
The late Kim Thompson, best known as the Vice President and Co-Publisher of Fantagraphics Books, summed up the Pratt’s historical importance: “Corto Maltese
was the first European strip to advance a mature, artistically serious
sensibility within the traditional adventure format. The elliptical
narrative of the stories, the pervasive sense of destiny and tragedy,
the side trips into the worlds of dreams and magic—all capped off with
the exotic, guarded nature of the hero—combined with Pratt’s hard-won
craft, worldly experience, and scrupulous research to form a work of
breathtaking scope and power.”
EuroComics is working closely with Patrizia Zanotti, Pratt’s long-time collaborator, to present the complete Corto Maltese
in a series of twelve quality trade paperbacks in Pratt’s original
oversized black and white format. They will also feature new
translations from Pratt’s original Italian scripts by Simone Castaldi, Associate Professor of Romance Languages and Literatures at Hofstra (and author of Drawn and Dangerous: Italian Comics of the 1970s and 1980s), and Mullaney.
“At long last, Hugo Pratt’s masterpiece washes up on American shores the
way it was intended to be seen and read, the way fans all over the
world have known and loved it for decades,” said Eisner Award winner Matt Fraction. “I read my first Corto Maltese story when I was ten years old and, ever since, this was the version of Corto I’ve wanted on my shelves. ”
The first of the twelve volumes, Corto Maltese: Under the Sign of Capricorn,
to be published December 2014, collects the first six inter-connected
short stories Pratt created in France in the early 1970s: “The Secret of
Tristan Bantam,” “Rendez-vous in Bahia,” “Sureshot Samba,” “The
Brazilian Eagle,” “So Much for Gentlemen of Fortune,” and “The Seagull’s
Fault.”
The second volume, collecting the subsequent five stories, and will be released Spring 2015.
The series will also be released in a matched set of six original
art-sized limited edition hardcovers, each containing the equivalent of
two of the trade paperbacks.
© Cong S.A., Lausanne - Art © Casterrman Bruxelles
Translation © 2014 Simone Castaldi and Dean Mullaney
Corto Maltese ® & Hugo Pratt TM © Cong S.A., Lausanne.
All rights reserved. |
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IDW’s critically- and fan-acclaimed series are continually moving into
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