From The Library: Gail Simone

Posted by ElizabethGenco on Thursday, October 19 2006 at 9:36 am

From The Library is a series of interviews with some of my favorite storytellers. For the latest SCHEHERAZADE update, click here. For NIGHTVISIT, click here.

With WOMEN IN REFRIGERATORS, her thoughtful, passionate examination of one of comics’ nastiest plot devices, and YOU’LL ALL BE SORRY,elizabeth genco adam boorman her hard-hitting humor column at CBR, Gail Simone was making a splash in comics well before she started writing them. These days, her work includes runs on DEADPOOL, ACTION COMICS and LEGION, the miniseries KILLER PRINCESSES with Lea Hernandez, Simpsons titles for Bongo Comics, and of course, BIRDS OF PREY, where she continues a long stint as ongoing writer.

Gail is warm, witty, a wickedly good writer, and wise. She has also heartily encouraged my own writing efforts for years. I’m thrilled to have her in the comfy chair and honored to call her a friend.

I remember that when we first started talking, ages ago, I was somehow under the impression that you didn’t have a long and extensive history as a reader of comics. I have no idea where that came from, but there you go. And then one day it hit me: waaait a minute, Gail has read a comic or seven! I’m tellin’ ya, my thought process is a little screwy sometimes.

Anyhoo. Can you tell me a little bit about your history as a comics reader? When did you start reading comics? What were your favorites back in the day?

For me, it was more a matter of reading everything I could get my hands on than comics in particular. But I immediately had a great fondness for comics–I love everything from the tactile sensation to the hidden language artists use to convey movement with static images. I loved kids’ comics, girls’ comics, horror comics, and humor comics especially, but I did have a weird love for the Justice League. I liked how they were friends, how they obviously cared about each other.

The advice I always give to aspiring comics creators is to create, not RE-create, but in some ways, I still work that theme a lot, that the characters care for each other, even if they show it in unorthodox ways.

Bitching about the comics industry is lame and un-fun, so this question isn’t meant to be about that. However, what’s the one thing you would change about the comics biz if you could?

This is one thing I feel I’m fortunate enough to be in a position to be able to do something about, in a small way. I find a lot of readers have lofty goals as fans, about what they’d do if they could turn pro. Then they turn pro, and those goals mostly seem to be firmly back-seated, as it were. For every pro who writes what they said they would if given the chance, there’s another who is taking an easier path.

For me, it’s about diversity. And it’s not merely an issue of fairness, it makes good economic sense. If we have diverse creators, and diverse characters of note, then we are more likely to have a less cloistered readership.

It offends me when I go to a con and see this whirlwind of color, age, gender and orientation reading our books, and there are still dinosaurs saying that the readership is purely male and white and straight. It’s stupid. Every other goddamned media on the planet knows this, that you can’t make that kind of pure generalization anymore because damned if the audience won’t betray your prejudices.

This is one of the things I do really respect about Dan DiDio, is that he knows this, and believes it’s important. So I’m happy that we’re in sync about this. Say what you like, the guy is walking the walk, and we’ve only just started. He knew he’d take shit for it, and he still felt it was important. I think that’s terrific.

There’s a lot more yet to be done. A lot. But we’re trying.

You write a lot of superhero comics. If you could have one superpower, what would it be?

I do, although I hope to branch out more a bit in the next two years. I miss doing humor books, and I love horror, and I have a fantasy book I’d like to try.

And flight, it’s no question. Although Aquaman’s powers would be pretty cool!

Villains or Heroes?

Both, no doubt about it. Love Superman AND love Dr. Psycho. It’s all voices, and voices are what makes writing like heroin for me.

Your rather roundabout (and hella cool!) way of breaking into comics has been much-discussed, so I won’t go there. Instead, tell me about your first job.

My first job? I worked at a pizza place in high school where the boss was creepy. I quit and turned him in to the labor board. I worked at Dairy Queen for a while. I could probably still make a fair dipped cone.

I found your blog recently and was delighted. However, it’s been a while. More updates soon?

Yeah, as dumb as this sounds, one thing I don’t want is to have one of those blogs/message boards/websites that’s nothing but a shrine to myself. I’ve been to a few that…I don’t know, they just make me shake my head. When people start talking about their ‘fans,’ I get a little appalled.

At the same time, I had a few little stories I wanted to tell, and if I simply put them on my message board at comicbookresources, they’d disappear quickly and I’d lose them. So I made a blog, and at first I didn’t even tell anyone…it really was just kind of an inside joke that would amuse only me.

The truth is, I just don’t find myself all that fascinating, and if you want to learn about my writing, the best place is always going to be in the books themselves. So it’s kind of an oddball spot where I will occasionally drop a bit of drabble and if people read it, fine, if not, that’s also okay. But I don’t worry about updating…if it gets updated, it’s because I had some dumb thing to say at that exact moment, rather than because I’m trying to maintain traffic.

I know some writers have created websites not to promote themselves, but as convenient catchalls for information and reader interaction. If I can do that, and not make it a shrine deal, that might happen someday.

(Image copyright 2002-2005 Lea Hernandez; nipped from Wikipedia)

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Category: From the Library

Promo Video for THE CHEMISTRY SET

Posted by ChrisArrant on Wednesday, October 18 2006 at 11:28 am


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Category: Chemistry Set Announcements, Publicity

Stuck @ All The Rage…Tom & Vito interviewed

Posted by Vito Delsante on Wednesday, October 18 2006 at 10:42 am

Since it’s a slow news day today, I figured I’d hip you cats to a little interview that Tom and I did a few weeks ago.

Stuck the Rage

Much thanks to John Voulieris and ATR/Silver Bullet Comics again.  We really do appreciate all the publicity.

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Category: Stuck, Publicity

Chemistry Set Writers’ Roundtable at Blog@Newsarama

Posted by ChrisArrant on Wednesday, October 18 2006 at 9:55 am

As part of our own Neil Kleid’s week-long stint as guest blogger on Blog@Newsarama, he did a Q&A with the writers of THE CHEMISTRY SET. In it, we yammer about the format of webcomics, why we did what we did, and who’s to blame.

THE CHEMITRY SET Writers’ Roundtable at Blog@Newsarama

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Category: Publicity

1 Way Ticket, Chapter 2 Page 11

Posted by ChrisArrant on Wednesday, October 18 2006 at 9:33 am

New to the comic? Read the story so far

1 WAY TICKET page 11
1 Way Ticket is written by Chris Arrant and illustrated by Dan Warner

So… what are you listening to?

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Category: 1 Way Ticket

COME THE DAWN - Page Four

Posted by JamesDougan on Tuesday, October 17 2006 at 1:38 am

What Came Before: One | Two | Three | And now, Page Four:
CTD p4

Hyeondo and Jim had a rockin’ good time at SPX this weekend, along with fellow ChemSetters Kevin Colden and Elizabeth Genco, but we forgot to take pictures. Please send links! (Yali took some, right? Anyway…)

Oh, and please come back next Tuesday, October 24, for Page Five.

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Category: Vulture Gulch and Other Stories, Other Stories

Stuck - Page 17

Posted by Vito Delsante on Monday, October 16 2006 at 10:00 am

Previously in STUCK…

Page 13; Page 14; Page 15; Page 16….

*****

Page 17

*****

Please leave a comment and come back next Monday…

Vito & Tom

*NOTE - As mentioned last week, Tom and I are trying to figure out the best way to show completed chapters, and we hope to have something in the next few weeks. We just might have it ready next week, but we’re still working out the kinks. Until then, you can find Chapter One by clicking here. From there, follow the links. Again, we’re working on this, so please be patient. Thanks.

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Category: Stuck, Chapter 2

Todt Hill, Page 12

Posted by KevinColden on Friday, October 13 2006 at 1:05 am

Todt Hill Page 12

TODT HILL, an adventure strip by Kleid and Colden, updates here every
Friday. Meet Mike Tompkins, our hero, and his room filled with product
placement.

View the Hunt Thus Far

Join the Crew at

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Category: Todt Hill

Scheherazade interlude: night visit, part 1

Posted by ElizabethGenco on Thursday, October 12 2006 at 10:36 am

Well, our best intentions continue to get waylaid by life’s angst. Rather than ride it out empty handed, I’ve decided to share “a little something I had on the hard drive” (you know from those, right?) with you.

NIGHT VISIT is a piece that my husband Leland and I put together for the annual SPX anthology last year. It didn’t make the cut, but I’m incredibly fond of it and it’s probably my personal favorite of all my stories so far. Note that I didn’t say “best.” But it’s my favorite, hands down.

We made a limited number of NIGHT VISIT chapbooks for NYCC 2006. They’re almost gone.

“In the British Isles folk song canon, there are songs known as ‘night visiting songs.’ The esteemed precursors to rocks thrown at the window and midnight serenades, they describe one lover coming to the home of another in the middle of the night and on the sly. Always, the threat of discovery (parents, spouses, etc) looms large, and always, always must the visiting lover depart before the cock crows at dawn.

These songs are often gloomy and sad, but I find them to be terribly romantic. Sure, parting sucks, but who doesn’t like lovers coming through the window?

There’s one more thing I should tell you about night visiting songs, but that would give part of the story away.

I wrote this for my younger self.

-EG”

elizabeth genco leland purvis true love always

elizabeth genco leland purvis true love always

elizabeth genco leland purvis true love always

elizabeth genco + leland purvis == true love always! \m/!

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Category: Scheherazade

The Chemistry Set attends SPX!

Posted by ChrisArrant on Thursday, October 12 2006 at 9:24 am

Members of the online comics collective The Chemistry Set will be attending the Small Press Expo (SPX) this weekend, October 13 th-14th at the Marriott Bethesda North Hotel & Conference Center in Bethesda, MD, just one mile outside the nation’s capital, Washington DC. SPX, now in its tenth year, serves as the preeminent showcase for the exhibition of independent comic books and the discovery of new creative talent.

Kevin Colden (TODT HILL) will be at table C7-8 with “House of Twelve’s Heavy Metal the Movie” and “RED”, a collaboration with fellow ChemSet member Elizabeth Genco (SCHEHEREZADE), who will be attending the show on Saturday, handing out free mini-zines.

Jim Dougan (VULTURE GULCH, COME THE DAWN) will be at table G8 with his comedy graphic novella CRAZY PAPERS and minicomics of recently published material from The Chemistry Set. Jim will be joined throughout the weekend by CRAZY PAPERS artist and GIRLS WITH SLINGSHOTS creator Danielle Corsetto.

Hyeondo Park (COME THE DAWN) will be at table W21 with his fellow School of Visual Arts alums Yali Lin, Pedro Camargo, and others. Hyeondo will be selling NEUROTICA 2, his king-sized not-so-minicomic that features the stories “Homeless Lady”, “Play”, “Seun: Part 1″, and “For Murphy” which was recently spotlighted by Heidi MacDonald at the Publishers Weekly Comics blog, THE BEAT.

All ChemSet members will have fancy new promo material to give you, so make sure to stop by and say hello!

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Category: Chemistry Set Announcements

THE CHEMISTRY SET is a collective of comic creators, exploring what happens when they throw their talents together in the cause of fresh, new, unexpected work. Sometimes we get beautiful synthesis. Sometimes we get explosions. But in every case, we get new comics, delivered every day by talented up-and-coming creators, including three Xeric Award winners.


Always free, and just for you.


Be part of the experiment here on THE CHEMISTRY SET.