Paul Wong-Pan Paul Wong-Pan i(11341379 works by)
Gender: Male
The material on this page is available to AustLit subscribers. If you are a subscriber or are from a subscribing organisation, please log in to gain full access. To explore options for subscribing to this unique teaching, research, and publishing resource for Australian culture and storytelling, please contact us or find out more.

Works By

Preview all
1 y separately published work icon Monsters Karen Beilharz , Mike Barry (illustrator), EmmJ (illustrator), Peter Fairfax (illustrator), Kathleen Jennings (illustrator), Greg Lamrock (illustrator), René Pfitzner (illustrator), Nathan Seabolt (illustrator), Belinda Stead (illustrator), Jordan Taia (illustrator), Jemima Trappel (illustrator), Paul Wong-Pan (illustrator), Australia : Hivemindedness Media , 2016 11341432 2016 anthology graphic novel children's fantasy

'“Mummy, I’m scared of MONSTERS!”

'Are you scared of monsters too?

'Is there a monster under your bed, a monster in your closet, or a monster in the corner of your ceiling? (Hang on, that’s just a spider …)

'Maybe the monster isn’t really a monster at all; it’s just misunderstood.

'Or maybe the monster is YOU.

'Prepare to be terrified, provoked, amazed and entertained by these 11 monstrous short comics for children by Karen Beilharz and some of Australia’s best independent comic creators.'

Source: Publisher's blurb.

1 y separately published work icon Eternal Life Karen Beilharz , Paul Wong-Pan (illustrator), Australia : Hivemindedness Media , 2014-2015 11341665 2014 series - author graphic novel science fiction

'Late one night on a remote space station in the backwaters of the universe, a young woman named Bri meets a young man named Dan. Bri is passing through, fleeing from her past and looking forward to a kind of “holiday” from her life. Dan, a resident of the space station, is at a crossroads—torn between his dreams of a more fulfilling life spent helping others and his loyalty to his close-knit missionary family, who, due to the nature of space travel (where passengers do not age in transit while everyone else does), he may never see again should he choose to leave. When circumstances render Bri stranded, Dan’s family takes her in, and their different worlds and worldviews begin to collide. Bri must confront the past she fled from, while in turn, Dan must make a difficult choice about his future.'

Source: Publisher's blurb.

X