There are many ways to tell a story – visually, orally  or through text. But even those who have just a casual engagement with  literature would know that the publishing industry has a sacred  dependence on the written word.The emergence of  brightly coloured graphic novels offers a parallel narrative. India's  first widely marketed graphic novel was published only in 2004. While  the readership remains niche, the variety and diversity of themes and  forms being explored by graphic novels have rapidly increased. Pure text  will soon start facing stiff competition from graphic novels, say  publishers.
Ashok Rajagopalan, a graphic novel  artist, says that there is wide degree of acceptance and the form is  being given some prestige now. “A number of Chennai-based publishers  have started experimenting with illustration-based books.”
He  identifies two reasons behind the increasing readership for graphic  novels. “People are getting lazier. So publishers are experimenting with  short visual-based reads. In airport bookstores, for example, you won't  find 60,000-word classics. Secondly, print is slowly going out of  fashion. The medium is changing due to the Internet and devices such as  the Kindle. People are engaging with literature differently.”
He  adds that just like the movie industry is fighting cable TV by giving a  “grander and better experience”, graphic art is about bringing readers  back to books. Lakshmi Priya, faculty at the Department of Fine Arts,  Stella Maris College, says that it is a natural transformation from the  world of text to images as authors explore newer forms of storytelling.
While  there has always been an audience, she says that artists are only now  learning to effectively tell stories visually. “We have always been a  visual culture. Graphic novels have evolved out of the children's  illustration in books such as the Amar Chitra Katha series. The  fascinating aspect of this trend is that the target audience is largely  adult.”
Gita Wolf of Tara Books, which used the  graphic novel medium to popularise tribal art forms, says “We have a  tacit bias towards the written word. It is a hierarchy of communication  that we are familiar with, and accept as a matter of common sense. This  is a pity, because an image has its own language and grammar.”
When  words and images work together well, they don't just say the same thing  in two different ways, she says. They amplify each other, creating an  experience that is altogether distinct. “We've experimented with picture  books not only for children, but for readers of all ages, trying to  widen the experience of literature,” she adds.
Though  Tara books has published a number of award-winning books illustrated by  Patua artists from Bengal and Gond artists from Madhya Pradesh, thereby  giving them recognition, the limiting factor for wider reach seems to  be the cost. Most graphic novels cost between Rs.5,000 to Rs.10,000 per  page to produce. The retail price of the novels ranges from a few  hundreds to a few thousands.
Rakesh Kumar Khanna,  editor of Blaft Publications, says that movie franchising and  encouraging vernacular language graphic artists can change this  scenario. Blaft recently released Tamil Pulp Fiction-II, which has an  entirely illustrated story ‘Karate Kavita'. It was widely popular in the  1970s. “Regional language comics are getting lost sitting in some  libraries. They should be revived,” says Mr.Khanna.
  
 
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