Showing posts with label writing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label writing. Show all posts

Sunday, July 10, 2022

A Chat with Ted Anderson: Meet a Cartoonist Visiting DC for the ALA Annual Meeting

by Mike Rhode

The American Library Association hosts a gigantic meeting each year in downtown Washington. My daughter is a fledgling librarian, and met some cartoonists, including Ted Anderson who gave her his card, and then agreed to do our standard interview. (This is how DC actually works if you're not from around here - people knowing people).

 What type of comic work or cartooning do you do?

 I'm a comics writer! I got my start as one of the writers for the official My Little Pony comics at IDW, then worked on a couple of other licensed books—I was one of the last people to write Adventure Time at BOOM!—before getting to do two creator-owned series at Aftershock, Orphan Age and Moth & Whisper. My first book,
The Spy Who Raised Me, came out from Lerner's Graphic Universe in April 2021, the height (depth?) of the pandemic, and my next book, Side Effects, will be out from Aftershock's Seismic Press in October 2022.

How do you do it? Traditional pen and ink, computer or a combination?

 I'm strictly a writer, and I do everything on the computer. I've written dialogue while in line at Chipotle. In terms of craft, I tend to start with the dialogue and get the pacing of the scene first, then go back and add descriptions and scene-setting. 

When (within a decade is fine) and where were you born?

In the 1980s, in Minneapolis, Minnesota, where I live today.

Why were you in Washington (i.e. attending ALA) ?


I've been a member of the American Library Association for years now, ever since I got my Master's, but this is the first time I've actually attended a conference—ironically, at the request of my publisher! Side Effects is the first book that Aftershock has done an Advance Reader Copy for, and they wanted to debut it at the conference in the hopes of capturing the librarian market. They knew I could talk professional jargon with other librarians and convince them to give the book a try. It was an amazing conference—we came in with 500 ARCs, and they would've all disappeared on that first day if we hadn't held them back!

How do you balance your careers?

It's been relatively smooth so far. I've been a middle school librarian for the past three years, but it hasn't been a teaching position, just checking books in and out. I haven't had to bring any work home, and sometimes it was even light enough for me to get some writing done during the day. However, this fall, I'll be starting a position at a new school that involves teaching. I'm looking forward to it, but it is going to be a bigger time investment. It helps that I do a lot of my work in my head, and write whenever I get a chance in my off-hours.

What is your training and/or education in cartooning?

Not much formal education—there wasn't much in the way of comics education during my K-12 years, and in college, the classes I could find were mostly about analyzing and deconstructing comics rather than creating them. I definitely had an interest in comics at a young age—I got a copy of Scott McCloud's Understanding Comics long before I could fully understand it, and read what interviews with comics creators I could find to figure comics out as an art form. 

Who are your influences?

My early comics were classic kids' comics: Tintin, Asterix, Bone, some Carl Barks and Don Rosa. In high school I got into British invasion writers like Neil Gaiman and Alan Moore, and later into Grant Morrison. But lately, I've been finding that I get the most out of books by a single writer/artist: Mike Mignola, Jason Lutes, or Dylan Horrocks' Hicksville, one of my all-time favorites. I feel that, as a writer, it's very easy for me to neglect the visual aspects of the work, to think of the art as purely illustrative, rather than a vital element of storytelling, so reading a comic by only one creator helps put things in perspective.

What's your new book about?

Hannah is a first-year in college who's experiencing anxiety and depression, so she goes to campus mental health services for help. They start her on therapy and medication, but the meds she takes give her side effects—including superpowers. So in addition to dealing with classes and relationships, she also sometimes shoots lightning bolts out of her fingers or reads her professors' minds. It's a relatively light-hearted book, meant to be an optimistic look at mental health and how we can get better. It's a YA book, appropriate for high-schoolers and up—maybe middle-schoolers, depending on your students.

If you could, what in your career would you do-over or change?

I would've started creating and putting out my work earlier. I wasted many years thinking about the comics I'd like to do, rather than actually doing them. The trick to being an artist is making art: you have to be willing to put your work out into the world, regardless of whether you think it's good or not.

What work are you best-known for?

Probably the work that I broke into comics with: IDW's My Little Pony series. That's definitely the work of mine that's had the biggest print run, at least. 

MLP #21, courtesy GCD

What work are you most proud of?

Honestly, I'm really proud of some of my MLP issues. Licensed work obviously has its drawbacks, but working with limitations—like using established characters, or having strict page limits—can be a great way to sharpen your craft. I did an issue about professional wrestling in the pony universe, which was a wild story—I got to work with Jay Fosgitt on that one, which was a lot of fun. And I did an issue that was kind of a precursor to Side Effects, where Twilight Sparkle goes into Big Mcintosh's mind in order to see how he stays so calm and level-headed—kind of a fantastic look at mental health. 

What would you like to do or work on in the future?

I've got a lot of books for mature readers I'd love to do—not "mature" as in sex and violence, but as in literary, thoughtful fiction. I feel like most comics for adults are either bloody gorefests, surrealist experiments, or memoirs; I don't see a lot that are the equivalent of "literary fiction," for lack of a better term. On the other hand, I've also got some younger-reader books I'd love to do—I've got a superhero book for kids I've been working on for more than a decade. I joke that I'd like to have a book on the shelf for every genre and audience.

What do you do when you're in a rut or have writer's block?

I try to focus on something else. I don't really have a hobby per se; for a while I got into painting 3D-printed objects, but I don't have access to a 3D printer at the moment, so my supply of material is limited. Video games, going to movies, putting together puzzles—anything that activates other parts of my brain is helpful.

What do you think will be the future of your field?

For comics, I think it's rosy: libraries, schools, and booksellers are expanding their collections and expanding access to the medium. Publishers are diversifying and acquiring exciting new talent, and audiences are able to find more and better work than ever. In schools, it's unfortunately grimmer: censorship attacks are increasing at every level, but I think librarians and educators are fighting back and standing up to those who would restrict our reading. As always, there's a question of funding education enough to ensure quality libraries for all students—we have to do a lot with a little, which I think many educators are unfortunately very good at. 

courtesy GCD

What comics do you read regularly or recommend? Do you have a local store?

My local store is Source Comics & Games in St. Paul, which is a fantastic store—they do regular events and have a great space for gaming in addition to a really good selection. As for what I'm reading, I pick up a lot of YA OGNs—I want to keep an eye out for stuff my students would like. I just grabbed Galaxy: the Prettiest Star from DC, and Blue Delliquanti's Across a Sea of Starlight. I've been getting into a couple manga series lately, like Witch Hat Atelier and Toilet-Bound Hanako-kun, and I feel like everybody I know is recommending Spy x Family, so that's next on my list. And I've also been doing a gradual read of the entirety of classic Hellblazer, which was a series I was too young for when it was coming out, but I would've loved it about ten years later. 

What's your favorite thing about DC?

Regrettably, I've only been there twice, so I don't have a lot of experience to draw on, but what I'd love to take advantage of next time is the incredible amount of museums and archives. Just being able to walk down the block and see a different collection of curated materials is a wonderful opportunity. 

Least favorite?

The heat and humidity. I'm from Minneapolis, I'm not made for this biome! 

What monument or museum did you like to visit?

I only had time to visit one museum, but it was an excellent one: the Museum of the American Indian was a fantastic experience. They had fascinating exhibits on native history, media depictions of Native Americans, works by contemporary native artists—I spent hours there. Even the building itself is a wonderful space. Highly recommended. 

How about a favorite local restaurant?

I went to a dinner for authors and employees of Lerner Publishing at Busboys & Poets, and that was an incredible experience. That was by far the best meal I had that weekend—I only wish I'd had the chance to check out the book selection as well.

Do you have a website or blog?

I'm working on it! Right now I've got twitter, like everybody else: twitter.com/tedlyanderson

How has the COVID-19 outbreak affected you, personally and professionally?

Honestly, I endured the lack of social contact pretty well. Cartoonists like to joke about how we're already hermits so we barely noticed everything shutting down, but that was genuinely my experience—I tend to curl up and go into Maximum Introvert Mode when given the chance. It helped that I had a book to work on; having a long-term, large-scale project that I could work on while socially distanced was very helpful. As an educator, however, it was devastating: no school was prepared for distance learning, and our students really suffered. I tried to find ways to make myself useful even while the school was closed, but it was rough going. Even after we came back, students had great difficulty re-acclimating to the school environment, and I think that's going to continue for some time, unfortunately.

 

Saturday, December 19, 2020

Meet a Local Cartoonist: A Chat with Black Cotton writer Patrick Foreman

by Mike Rhode

I'd like to start by apologizing to Patrick Foreman for the late appearance of this interview. He responded quickly to our usual questions, but I dropped the ball and let it slip down my email page. So for bonus content, at the end of this interview, find a link to some other interviews with him about his upcoming Black Cotton comic, as well as the ordering page from Diamond's Previews.

Set in an alternate reality where the social order of “white” and “black” is reversed, an elitist family, the Cottons, are rocked by a tragic shooting that begins to unravel long standing family secrets that could not only destroy the family but also divide the fragile social climate of the world. Elijah Cotton, the modern patriarch of the Cotton family and business mogul of Black Cotton Ventures, tries to manage the public outrage and fallout from his police officer son, Zion Cotton’s, shooting of a young white woman. Meanwhile, Qia Cotton, the only daughter of Eljiah and the CEO of Black Cotton Ventures, attempts to assuage the situation by paying off the victim and her family; Xavier Cotton, the youngest Cotton and sophomore in high school, works on a history project that takes him down a rabbit hole of family history.

What type of comic work or cartooning do you do?

Brian and I are the creators and writers of Black Cotton, a comic book series published by Scout Comics.  Black Cotton is actually my first comic book writing project, while Brian has been writing for years and has several amazing issues coming out. He has a self-published comic called Don’t Ever Blink Chapter 2 on Kickstarter right now and Devil’s Dominion with BlackBox Comics comes out in December.

Overall, we have an amazing Black Cotton team with  art done by Marco Perugini, letters done by Francisco Zamora, and graphic design done by Jerpa Nilsson.

How do you do it? Traditional pen and ink, computer or a combination?

As a team, we do a combination of it all.

When (within a decade is fine) and where were you born?

I was born in the 1970s,  in Crossett, Arkansas, but raised mostly in Virginia Beach.  In Arkansas, I lived in a very small town called Hamburg.  Many may lose their heads on hearing this (lol) - because another famous person who played basketball with Michael Jordan is from there too -- you know him, Scottie Pippen.  He is actually in my yearbook!  Our town was so small -- there was only one school at that time so when I was in kindergarten, he was in High School… Same school, same year book.

Why are you in Virginia now?  What neighborhood or area do you live in?

I got stationed at Quantico, VA back in 2014.  Then I retired after 25 years in the Marine Corps in 2018,  and the wife and I decided to stay here in Virginia.

 What did you do in the Marines?

I was a Career Planner.  So I helped the Marines make mutually beneficial decisions for themselves and their families while doing the same for the Marine Corps Institution.  It's basically the HR section for the Marine Corps. 
 
What is your training and/or education in cartooning?

I’m actually mostly a collector.  I grew up reading comics and from the start I would always buy two copies, one to read and one to put away.  I still enjoy comic books today  --the artwork, masterful storylines.  Brian has been one of the greatest teachers and mentors I have had throughout this process. He was able to take our conversation and layout a roadmap to where we are today.  Much Respect to Brian.

Who are your influences?

Definitely Dwayne McDuffie, Todd McFarlane.

If you could, what in your career would you do-over or change?

I wouldn’t change a thing.  Everything I have gone through thus far has grown me to the person I am today… Led me to my beautiful wife and molded me for the future places before us.  Still learning and still growing – those things will always remain constant.

 What work are you best-known for?

Actually, I am best known for two things: my 2020 award winning gospel song “He’s Able" featuring David Scott and my magazine with Todd Dubose, Returning Citizens Magazine, which is currently viewed by more than 1.2 million Incarcerated Individuals daily across the nation.

What work are you most proud of?

I am most proud of Black Cotton.  Black Cotton is a world changer.   Black Cotton is a comic, yes, but it is also a mindset; it’s a mindset being explored in a comic.  The Black Cotton Mindset.

How did you start to work with Scout Comics?
 
Co-Creator Brian Hawkins has made some great connections throughout his career.  Meeting and becoming good friends with Brendan Deneen, the CEO of Scout Comics, was one of them.   We talked out several options about how to bring Black Cotton to the world and Brian mentioned Scout Comics.  We decided to show it to them and they loved it.  They came back saying they would love for us to join the Scout Family.  It was off and running from that moment forward. 

What would you like to do  or work on in the future?

I would love to see Black Cotton on the TV screen.

What do you do when you're in a rut or have writer's block?

I go play Ultimate Frisbee.  Nothing like a good game of Ultimate Frisbee to get the juices flowing and a great break from the grind.

What do you think will be the future of your field?

I am looking forward to the evolution of comics.  I feel this Covid Era has given many a time to pause and go back to their creative stages.  We were so busy before that we didn’t have true time to just be creative – brainstorm, look at it – step away and come back.  We had hard deadlines to meet.  We have time now.  The question is what are they doing with that time?  These next few years will answer that question.

What's your favorite thing about DC?

The museums.

Least favorite?

Traffic.

 What monument or museum do you like to take visitors to?

The African-American Museum, but start at the bottom first though.  It is a lot to take in just one day.  It really is a two day venture.

Do you have a website or blog?

https://www.scoutcomics.com/
and BlackCottonComic on Facebook & IG.

How has the COVID-19 outbreak affected you, personally and professionally?

I have been blessed during this time.  My wife and I are both retired Marines and both of us work for the federal government too, so with our jobs we were able to switch over to telework fairly easy.  I feel for the nation and cannot wait till we are looking back on this moment in our history.

 Preorder your copy from your LCS using Diamond Code DEC201650 from Scout Comics. https://www.previewsworld.com/Catalog/DEC201650

More interviews:

Interview: Brian Hawkins and Patrick Foreman Talk BLACK COTTON From Scout Comics
By AJ O. Mason
December 5, 2020
https://monkeysfightingrobots.co/interview-new-scout-comics-series-black-cotton/

Two Scout Geeks
Lucky Ep #13 with Patrick Foreman and Brian Hawkins.
https://www.ageofradio.org/twoscoutgeeks/

Interview with Brian Hawkins and Patrick Foreman (Creator of Black Cotton)
Bearded Comic Bro
Dec 16, 2020
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XMIpPMm-jBs

SCOUT COMICS WANTS YOU TO PICK "BLACK COTTON"
That Indy Comics Guy
Nov 28, 2020
https://www.youtube.com/watch?app=desktop&feature=youtu.be&v=lNWDaFENlkE

Tuesday, September 22, 2015

Hang Dai Studios at Baltimore Comic-Con: Vito Delsante speaks

by Mike Rhode
 
Baltimore Comic-Con is one of the best and friendliest of the mid-size superhero focused cons. Under the leadership of Marc Nathan and Brad Tree, it's grown quite a bit in a decade and a half, but still remains enjoyable for all ages and interests. Hang Dai Studios is based in Brooklyn, but as usual will have a big presence at Baltimore. My friend Dean Haspiel (and Hang Dai Studios founder) will be there with the whole studio, a week after he, Christa Cassano and Gregory Benton attended the Small Press Expo. We hope to have interviews with everyone in the studio throughout the week. Our second interview is with writer Vito Delsante.

What type of comic work or cartooning do you do?

I'm predominantly a writer, but I have crossed into lettering and editing in the past few years. I still consider myself a writer, but with added dimensions.

How do you do it? Traditional pen and ink, computer or a combination?

For writing, I still use a notebook and pen almost 65% of the time; the other 35% I'm using some kind of writing program like Google Docs, Pages (on my Mac) or Open Office. For lettering, it's all done on the computer, within Adobe Illustrator, with some forays into Photoshop and InDesign.

When (within a decade is fine) and where were you born?

I was born in 1973 in Staten Island, NY. I can't remember if it was at Staten Island Hospital or St. Vincent's, but I believe it was the former.

What is your training and/or education in cartooning?

Very little. I learned how to write for comics kind of through screenwriting. I took what I learned there and found a... I can't remember if it was a seminar or a newsgroup... but a lesson from Kurt Busiek about writing for comics and applied that to what I new about screenwriting and have been writing pretty much the same since 1996, with a new trick added here and there. Storytelling, which is different than writing, is something I'm still learning.

For lettering, a friend of mine, Andy Schmidt, started an online initiative called Comics Experience and I took their lettering class, which was taught by Dave Sharpe.

Who are your influences?

Mark Waid, definitely. His approach to superheroes is very close to mine, in that we see them as human beings first and build on that. James Ellroy, Donald Westlake/Richard Stark, Ed Brubaker...a lot of crime authors. I'm also influenced by the work of my studio mates and peers. Making comics is a very socially prohibitive field. You do a lot of work on your own. But with the studio, you get to workshop a lot of things. And sometimes, the best idea isn't your own, so a lot of my studio mates' ideas make it into my work. And that's just because they are some of the best in the industry at what they do.

As a writer, why have you joined a studio? Historically in the comics field, studios have been organized around artists who had a pile of equipment and who also could pitch in and work on each others assignments.

It goes back to when I said who my influences are and I said my studio mates. The free exchange of ideas. For art and artists, it's easy to see where something can be fixed, or where an idea can come from for a panel. Writing doesn't work that way. It's all in the head. And writer's block happens. So being able to open up to friends, peers in the industry, is crucial. In the end, we're all storytellers. We're just using different tools (which aren't that different, really) to tell the story.

If you could, what in your career would you do-over or change?

I'd probably start sooner. I floated around for a while, trying to make movies and make it as an actor, and if I knew I could do this back then, I probably would have focused my education almost exclusively in the arts. I'm always lamenting the fact that I'm not "sexy" to a publisher because I'm trying to break in at 42, but doing these things on my own, self publishing or using Kickstarter... there's a lot of freedom that I really enjoy. I don't know what kind of creator I'd be today if I started earlier, so who knows what's best?

What work are you best-known for?

That's a loaded question, because I don't know how well known my work is, but the answer is probably Stray, my creator co-owned superhero book that I do with my friend, Sean Izaakse (published by Action Lab Entertainment).

What work are you most proud of?

It's cliche, but my kids. In the industry, I'd say Stray.

What would you like to do or work on in the future?

Ideally...I would like to move to editorial and maybe to publishing and put out work from creators I believe in. The problem with that is I'm not sure how much creating I would do then, and my brain really is...that whole thing where you can't shut your mind off because you get a new idea? That's a "problem" for me. I really do get piqued often, so I'm not sure how well I'd do as just a publisher. But I'd still like to do it.

What do you do when you're in a rut or have writer's block?

I usually step away from the computer, listen to music, play with my kids...just something that's not writing or not comics. I can't read someone else's comic because then I get really competitive. I have to divorce myself from the entire process.

What do you think will be the future of your field?

I'm terrible at predictions, so I try not to do them. I just hope that whatever the future of comics is, I'm a part of it.

Why are you at the Baltimore Comic-Con this year?

It's one of my favorite shows of the year. I did the show for the first time last year (although I attended twice before) and really fell in love with it. The staff are fantastic and the show is about as perfect as a comic convention gets. It helps that I'm surrounded by heroes and friends alike. This year, I'm pushing Stray and Actionverse, a new mini series I edited for Action Lab.

What other cons do you attend? The Small Press Expo, or others? Any comments about attending them?

New York, Heroes Con, sometimes San Diego, but it's not on my calendar usually. I don't know if I'm becoming misanthropic, but I find that the bigger extravaganzas are less my scene. The smaller ones, ones run by locals or by retailers...those are the ones I gravitate toward because there really is an intimacy that is almost akin to a family reunion.

What's your favorite thing about Baltimore?

The Harbor. It's really quite beautiful at night. I once dated a girl from Baltimore and I remember Charles Street (is that the name?) was a lot of fun, although that may be because of the company I kept and less about the actual places I saw.

Least favorite?

The Ravens. I'm a dyed in the wool Steelers fan (although I'm not currently supporting the team in light of Ben Roethlisberger's continued employment and Michael Vick's hiring). The only reason any one truly hates a city is because of their sports teams.

Do you have a website or blog?

I can be found at vitodelsante.com or incogvito.com. I'm also on Twitter at @incogvito.