
I just proofed issue #5. Martin is working hard to get the colors done ASAP. The issue looks to be in stores November 7th if all goes well. It's basically over for me. It's weird. I started writing this in 2001. Scribblings in a notebook. I scribbled on and off through 2002. That became the meat of issue #2. I then wrote a draft of the story in earnest in early 2003. 50 pages of script. Summer of 2004 I decided to complete the freaking thing. I did that October 2004. 160 pages of script. Done. Another two years would pass until I got a publishing deal. In that time I lost friends over this project. I gained new friends. And I re-gained others. Without going in to the gory details - I can't begin to describe the trauma that surrounded this project. The same thing happened when I got married. Single friends who knew me as single didn't want me to know me as married. People who knew me a certain way - didn't want to know me as a creative. Weird. Life. Whatever. Done. I am done. It is finished. The trade comes out Decemeber. Mass market - March. I will have a book in Barnes and Noble. Wow. When I was a teenager I would talk all the time about the stories I would write. Though I didn't have the confidence to write them. As I got older, I talked less about wanting to be a writer. In 1990, I spoke at length about writing with Grant Morrison at SDCC 1990. He admonished me to live a little and start writing in my '30s - so I would have something to say. My first published work happens at age 34. I guess I am doing okay by that standard.
In 1986, I met Martin Thomas at a Larry Taylor Con in Houston, Texas. I had him color all my original art pieces I bought. I have Willingham pieces, Rude pieces, Sakai pieces all colored by Martin. He was the best man at my wedding 13 years later. 20 years later he is coloring a story I wrote - making Francesco Francavilla's miraculous line work sing! Amazing how it all works out, eh?
Thank you to Kim, my wife, for supporting me through the ups and downs. And to people like Martin and Shannon Wheeler and Neal Shaffer and Miles Gunter who believe in me and this project and sustained me when things got bad. To Nye Wright, who supported this project early and before it had a publisher. His work on the mini-comic helped get LOM to where it is now. To Sam, Megan and Guus for their interest. To all my new found friends - Mark, Piere, Matty G, Abhay, and the rest of the OTHER LA comics dinner. Jason Shawn Alexander for his early support. And to everyone out there who had a kind word. Special thanks to Ross and Andy at BOOM! I appreciate their sincere interest in my project - even after I bugged them to death to read the whole 160 page manuscript. THANKS GUYS. Thank you for believing in me and this book. And...thanks for the marketing gig. I guess they thought I did SOMETHING right with this thing, eh?
- well we still have issue 5 to go. So I better save some thanks for you the reader and all the reviewers that championed this book. I guess proofing the last issue made me need to say some stuff...
Thanks for stopping by...
Chip