His life belonged to him, only. His books belonged to the public.
B. Traven: Portrait of a Famous Unknown is a graphic biography that tells the larger-than-life story of the German revolutionary, actor, and writer known as B. Traven (1882-1969). Despite his commercial success as a best-selling writer, Traven managed to keep his identity a secret during his lifetime. It is now generally accepted that Traven was in fact "Ret Marut" (another psudonym), a German stage actor and editor of an anarchist newspaper in Germany called Der Ziegelbrenner (The Brick Burner). As Marut he was a major participant in the short-lived Bavarian council (or soviet) republic of 1919-20. Barely escaping execution, he fled Germany and lived incognito for the remainder of his life. His entire literary work, a great commercial success in its day, combines lively and often humorous storytelling with a radically critical attitude towards capitalism and nationalism. His best-known work is The Treasure of the Sierra Madre, from 1927. This novel was adapted for film in 1948 by John Huston, winning three Oscars.
Golo's stunning artwork and enthralling account of Traven's life begins and ends with his ashes being dropped from a plane over the Lacandon jungle in Chiapas, Mexico, just a quarter-century before the explosive uprising of the Zapatistas seemed to echo his deepest wishes.
What People Are Saying
“By dwelling so effectively on Traven’s years as a revolutionary known as Ret Marut, Golo taught me so much about the Bavarian soviet republic of 1919. For that alone this book would have been very precious and profitable for me.” Raton-Liseur, Babelio.com
“Golo’s B. Traven: Portrait of a Famous Unknown, in a comic art format, provides a new and wonderful way to look at one of the twentieth century’s most mysterious radicals and one of its now-forgotten novelists. We may not have all the answers, but we do know that Traven led a most fascinating life continent to continent, bohemian to revolutionary milieu.” Paul Buhle. retired senior lecturer, Brown University; authorized biographer of C.L.R. James; and editor of more than twenty nonfiction graphic novels
About the Contributors
Guy Nadaud, known as Golo, was born in 1948 in Bayonne, France. He began his artistic career in 1973 as an illustrator for the music magazine Best. In the same year he visited Egypt for the first time and fell in love with Cairo, where he has lived for many years beginning in the 1990s. A prolific cartoonist and comic-book creator, Golo has contributed to many French and Egyptian periodicals, among them Hara-Kiri, Charlie Hebdo, Libération, Cairo Times, L’Association (Cairo), and Charlie Mensuel. In the 1980s his regular collaborator was the late Frank Reichert (“Frank”). His countless comic albums include adaptations of Albert Cossery, travelogues on Taiwan, and a two-volume graphic biography of the Romanian revolutionary vagabond Panaït Istrati.
Born in Manchester, England, Donald Nicholson-Smith (Translator) is a longtime resident of New York City. He has translated many texts of the Situationist International, including Guy Debord’s The Society of the Spectacle and Raoul Vaneigem’s The Revolution of Everyday Life. PM Press has also published his translations of Anselm Jappe’s intellectual biography Guy Debord and Vaneigem’s Letter to My Children and the Children of the World to Come. Translations of poetry include Guillaume Apollinaire’s Letters to Madeleine and the poems of the dissident Moroccan author Abdellatif Laâbi, In Praise of Defeat. Nicholson-Smith has also worked on noir fiction, notably several novels by Jean-Patrick Manchette for New York Review Books. And, among graphic works, Nicole Claveloux’s The Green Hand and Yvan Alagbé’s Yellow Negroes and Other Imaginary Creatures.