Trailer Tuesday: Tales from Outer Suburbia

September 29, 2009

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With Tales from Outer Suburbia, Shaun Tan has proven what we have long suspected: that his talent is not confined to illustration. He is as adept with words as he is with images.

Shaun Tan has developed an international reputation as an outstanding and original illustrator. He was born in Fremantle in 1974 and currently lives and works in Melbourne. As a child Shaun enjoyed reading; writing and illustrating poems and stories; and spent a lot of time drawing dinosaurs, robots and space ships. He participated in a special art program at secondary school but since then he has largely taught himself the art of book illustration. At the University of WA  he completed an honours degree in English literature and art history, theory and criticism.

In 1992 Shaun won the International Illustrators of the Future Contest, the first Australian to achieve this award. He has been illustrating young adult fiction and picture books since 1996.

Since winning the 2002 NSW Premier’s Prize for Children’s Books with The Red Tree Shaun Tan has been featured on the 7:30 Report on the ABC and in the Weekend Australian Magazine (June 22-23, 2002), rare publicity for a children’s illustrator or author. From CMIS Author page.

The title Tales from Outer Suburbia appears to be a homage to a much-loved Western Australian collection of short stories, Tom Hungerford’s Stories from Suburban Road. Certainly many of the images in the book are familiar to those who know Perth’s suburbs.

Shaun talks about Tales from Outer Suburbia:

Dig Deeper

The author

Shaun Tan’s website

Interviews and speeches

The Text

Reviews

Awards for Tales from Outer Suburbia

Awards and accolades for Shaun Tan

Picture Books illustrated by Shaun Tan

  • The Viewer, written by Gary Crew, 1997 – Winner, Crichton Award, 1998; Notable Book, CBCA Picture Book of the Year, 1998
  • The Rabbits, written by John Marsden, 1998 – Aurealis Conveners’ Award for Excellence, 1999;  Winner, CBCA Picture Book of the Year, 1999; Spectrum Gold Award for Book Illustration, 1999
  • Memorial, written by Gary Crew, 1999; Honour Book, CBCA Picture Book of the Year, 2000

Picture Books written and illustrated by Shaun Tan

  • The Lost Thing, 1999 – Honour Book, CBCA Picture Book of the Year, 2000; Shortlisted, Young Adult, WA Premier’s Book Awards, 1999
  • The Red Tree, 2001 – Winner, Patricia Wrightson Award, NSW Premier’s Literary Awards; Honour Book, CBCA Picture Book of the Year, 2002; Shortlisted, Children’s Books, WA Premier’s Book Awards, 2001
  • The Arrival, 2006 – multiple awards including Winner, Golden Aurealis Award for Best Short Story, 2006; Winner, Aurealis Award for Best Young Adult Short Story, 2006

Adaptations of Shaun Tan’s works

  • The Red Tree, a play based on Tan’s book of the same name, was commissioned for the Out of the Box Festival of Early Childhood in 2004.
  • The Australian Chamber Orchestra commissioned music in 2008 for The Red Tree, which was performed by Gondwana Voices. The site contains a podcast introduction and video.
  • The Lost Thing is being adapted as an animated short film by Passion Pictures (UK).
  • Sydney band Lo-Tel was inspired by the artwork from The Lost Thing to record an album of the same name, incorporating the art into the cover design.
  • The Lost Thing has also been adapted as a play by the Jigsaw Theatre Company, in Canberra as the main event for the National Gallery of Australia’s Children Festival in 2004. It also inspired the theme for Chookahs! Kids Festival in Melbourne in 2006, where it was performed, and during the festival children participated in many different activities based on concepts from the book.
  • The Arrival was adapted by WA’s Spare Parts Puppet Theatre in July 2006 (before publication of the book) , using digital animation, puppetry and acting.
  • Not so much an adaptation as a collaboration, the book of the exhibition Odditoreum at the Powerhouse Museum, Sydney.

[Mostly From Fiction Focus Special Feature on The Arrival, Vol. 21 (1), 2007.]

Finally, the Lu Rees Archives in Canberra has a guide to research materials on Shaun Tan and his work.

One can only wonder what treat is coming our way next.




YA in the news

September 12, 2009

It’s not often that the national newspaper editorialises about YA fiction. But following last Thursday’s Q & A program on the ABC and the discussion about the forthcoming film of Tomorrow When the War Began, The Australian has commented about political correctness and potential censorship. Here’s the Q & A program if you missed it. And here is a trailer:


Trailers, trailers, we all want trailers

September 3, 2009

There has been a sudden demand on the listservs for sources of book trailers. You’ll have seen our vodpods, of course (35 58 to date. Just scroll down the right hand side of this page to access them).

And there are many on YouTube : a search for YA Book Trailers brings up 104 at present.

Ruth Buchanan’s most excellent blog Skerricks, has some great links and very practical advice (as is her wont) about screening without tears.

Some more links, some of which have come from the replies to recent  OZTLNet requests:

University of Florida’s Digital Book Talk

Kirkus Reviews 2008 Student Competition

Bookscreening

Barnes and Noble Bookfiles

Ford Street Publishing’s YouTube channel

Teresa Schauer’s blog from Pettus HS

Trailerspy (but not all are YA nor necessarily appropriate)

Some competition winners from Toowoomba Public Library

Author interviews from the Screening Room at YA Central, a newish site from Penguin US

And way back when, when this blog was very, very new, we talked about this in the context of making your own. Expanded Books is still going, and the search tips still apply.

There’s a start. Any more we should add, either to the list above or to our vodpods? Let us know.


Have you seen our other ones?

July 30, 2009

…our other blogs of course.

The blogroll widget in the sidebar will link you to other blogs written by CMIS team members. You may like to check out today’s Tech Focus blog post about Book Trailers. While you are looking at the sidebar scroll down to see FF’s VodPod collection of book trailer videos.

Know of a good book trailer video? Let us know and we will add it to our collection so all our blog readers can find it.