![]() He has been nominated for the Lambda Literary Award and the Small Press Expo's Ignatz Award. His cartoon story "Weekends Abroad" was included in Houghton Mifflin's Best American Comics 2011. Orner has published comic strips and illustrations in The Washington Post, The Boston Globe, the San Francisco Chronicle, and The New Republic. From 2007 to 2009, Orner lived on a work assignment in Jerusalem, where he began work on a graphic novel to be named Avi & Jihad. In 2000 he moved to California, where he worked briefly as an animator for Disney's Tinker Bell film. In the 1990s, Orner also worked in the office of US Representative Barney Frank. Orner retired the strip in 2005, when it was adapted into a feature film of the same title, which received a limited national cinematic release. It was unusual at the time as "one of the first comics to portray gay men everywhere from the bedroom to the family dining room" The strip was carried by nearly 100 LGBT newspapers and alternative weeklies. The strip debuted in 1990 in Bay Windows, a Boston LGBT newspaper. Orner began creating The Mostly Unfabulous Social Life of Ethan Green in 1989, when he was working as a political cartoonist for the Concord Monitor in New Hampshire. ![]() Cover of The Completely Unfabulous Social Life of Ethan Green ![]()
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