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Read an interview of Darrin Bell on the Washington Post's comics blog, Comic Riffs.
Through the eyes of its main characters--Lemont Brown, a young aspiring writer; Susan Garcia, a young woman working in the corporate world; and Clyde, an angry young man who makes the wrong choices in life--Candorville explores issues such as bigotry, poverty, homelessness, biracialism, the culture of victimhood, youth and personal responsibility, along with politics and current events. But in an upbeat way. Honest. Often brutally frank but always evenhanded, Candorville steadily built a loyal following on the Web and in several
African-American newspapers. Syndicated worldwide by The Washington
Post Writers Group in 2003, Candorville was one of few comic strips
to launch in both English and Spanish. There have been two compilation books -- "Thank God for Culture Clash" (2005) and "Another Stereotype Bites the Dust" (2006) -- both from Andrews McMeel Publishing. "We were always minorities in every neighborhood we lived in,
which I think opened my eyes a bit more to the rest of the world," he
says. "I've always had friends who were different from me, so I have a
lot of respect for diversity." About the time Darrin enrolled at
Berkeley in 1993, he developed the concept for a strip called "Lemont
Brown," which evolved into "Candorville." He also collaborates with Theron Heir on the comic strip Rudy
Park, syndicated by United Media. Bell and his wife Laura Bustamante
live in Los Angeles. |
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