Category: Vérité Magazine
Vérité review
Here’s a review of Vérité magazine at Ripe Mangoes website – https://ripeemangoes.com/2019/11/02/showcase-verite-magazine/ Thank you Luke!
AX manga magazine on VÉRITÉ
The editor of alternative manga magazine AX tweeted about VÉRITÉ!
Correction: Yoshihiro Tatsumi is not published in the magazine. (I hope we will someday!)
インド初のオルタナコミックマガジン「ベリテ」が届きました!インドの作家はプロアマ混合だそうです。また、劇画史研究の元社員浅川(満寛)さんがセレクションしたつげ忠男・辰巳ヨシヒロ・山松ゆうきち・勝又進・常山陽二の各氏の作品も掲載! 劇画に関する論文はホームバーグ・ライアンです。 pic.twitter.com/dc4lgaUQ93
— 青林工藝舎 (@seirinkogeisha) July 13, 2018
VÉRITÉ 01
Indian readers buy on AMAZON.

“The spirit of Japanese magazines GARO and AX can really be felt in this significant new venue for Indian, Japanese and international comics to meet and mingle. You need VÉRITÉ and that’s the truth!” – Paul Gravett, comics journalist and historian
On New Year Day 2018, we announce VÉRITÉ, the new magazine from the people who did the Comix India volumes. As editor, I felt that the kind of comics we want to publish demanded a more specific name. ‘Vérité’, the French word for ‘truth’, seemed just about right since we want to encourage creating comics that express reality in a truthful and unflinching manner, comics that don’t shy away from difficult subjects, comics that don’t merely show off art styles, but those that confront reality head-on.
The first issue of Vérité features Indian, Japanese, an American and a French artist. Indian artists featured are Anpu Varkey, Biboswan Bose, Shaunak Samvatsar, Nandita Basu and Bharath Murthy. Mitsuhiro Asakawa, the Editorial Adviser for the Japanese section, has selected some amazing alternative manga artists: Tadao Tsuge, Susumu Katsumata, Youji Tsuneyama and Yukichi Yamamatsu. Tadao Tsuge is a critically acclaimed artist and one of the key contributors for the 1960s cult manga magazine Garo, who along with his brother Yoshiharu Tsuge revolutionised manga. Tadao’s work in English translation include Trash Market (Drawn & Quarterly) and soon to be released Slum Wolf (New York Review Comics), both translated by manga historian Ryan Holmberg. Ryan’s very perceptive essay on the origins of ‘gekiga’, a late 1950s-60s movement within manga that focussed on adult themes and created a new wave that resulted in magazines like Garo, is also published in this issue. Susumu Katsumata was also a key artist in Garo magazine. His works Red Snow (Drawn & Quarterly) and Fukushima Devil Fish: Anti-nuclear Manga (Breakdown Press) are available in English. Yukichi Yamamatsu’s work has already been published in India. The two-volume Stupid Guy Goes to India was published by Blaft Publications. French comics artist Simon Lamouret (whose award-winning reportage comic Bangalore was published recently) also features, as does American artist Nick Tobier.
– Bharath Murthy, Editor.