Chelsea and Clarence is a dreamy, strange, and playful micro-saga about twins, imagination, collaboration, and the odd little adventures that grow out of a shared fictional world. Built from many brief tales, the book follows the male/female twin duo Chelsea and Clarence through short, curious episodes that combine humour, family feeling, invention, and offbeat charm. It is a deceptively compact book: quick to read, but filled with the kind of thoughtful fun that comes from characters who have been imagined, revisited, revised, and carried forward over many years.
Originally created in Portland, Oregon, in a park with small notebooks, Chelsea and Clarence grew from the idea of a brother-sister twin pair into a loose, imaginative world shaped by PQ Ribber, Stephen Jules Rubin, and the broader Julesworks circle. The result is not a conventional children's novel so much as a collection of linked miniature adventures: part family story, part dreamlike character piece, part affectionate experiment in collaborative storytelling. Other figures from the Jules/Ribber universe appear along the way, suggesting a larger fictional landscape beyond this short volume.
This Black Curtain Books edition is suited to readers and collections interested in unusual children's fiction, twin stories, short linked tales, gentle humour, independent small-press storytelling, and quirky contemporary juvenile literature. Light, odd, affectionate, and imaginative, Chelsea and Clarence offers a brief but memorable visit with two characters whose adventures feel both spontaneous and carefully treasured.
PQ Ribber is one of the creative forces behind Chelsea and Clarence, a short, playful work developed through the Julesworks creative circle in collaboration with Stephen Jules Rubin. The characters Chelsea and Clarence were originally created in Portland, Oregon, with Jules and Yvette Tourangeau, beginning in small notebooks and gradually developing into a pair of imaginative twin protagonists. Over time, Ribber and Rubin expanded and revised the brief tales that became this dreamy micro-saga, with editing assistance from the late Amanda DeAngeles and later guidance connected to the book's release. Ribber's work here emphasizes collaboration, whimsy, brief-form storytelling, and the odd, affectionate logic of a shared fictional universe.