The Spirit was always a kind of template for the mysterious unassailably heroic and noble hero. But he was also kind of goofy and innocent and fallible.
Some artists are smarter than their works. Other artists are equally smarter or smarter, but their work is even more intelligent and meaningful than their articulate opinions and […]
[…] the intellectual poverty of most writing on comics, infected as it is with fannish boosterism and journalistic glibness, the interview form has been the crucial venue for […]
The real excitement of making comics is when your artist first turns in those pages and you begin to see your story breathe and take flight. Those are […]
I wanted to write comics, I just didn’t know how to go about it. I would go to Comic-Con to try to chat up some of the writers […]
An artist cannot afford to “produce a work which conforms only to the creator’s personal aesthetic” if he doesn’t even know how to write or draw properly, or […]
The thing I love about comic books is that its readers are a community. We all read the same books, everywhere. You can be anywhere and anyone – […]
Work your fingers to the bone, and then work some more. And, then when you think comics have ruined your life, you’re starting to get it right.