This week, Jason Aaron gives aspiring writers some simple advice on how to break into comics, points readers in the direction of more industry tips and explains why his first pro work is also his most important.
Full article here.
This week, Jason Aaron gives aspiring writers some simple advice on how to break into comics, points readers in the direction of more industry tips and explains why his first pro work is also his most important.
Full article here.
Aaron sure likes to remember that "We'll keep using you until you start to suck" quote. It is a good one though.
Here's to not sucking.
And realizing that it's better to go to cons to figure out how to write better than publish better.
Anyone who thinks DC is bringing back the Silver Age doesn't know what the Silver Age is.
There is no such word as "persay," it's per se, two words, from the Latin.
jason aaron: the greatest guy in the history of everything.
please, never stop writing this column.
Last edited by Interzone; 09-22-2010 at 04:05 PM. Reason: emphasis!
Jason Aaron is slowly becoming my idol...
Live Comics. Love Comics.
"Don't ever be afraid to be a fan." - Jason Aaron
It's not whether or not you suck that matters, it's whom.
Jason,
The Other Side most definately did not suck. In fact, I've called it the best first published work by a new writer I've ever seen. Even from the first few pages of the first issue it stood out. It speaks volumes about the state of the comics industry that more people haven't been exposed to it. You and Cam deserve so much more.
... and yet here I am arguing on the interwebs.
Thanks for the "Research The Hell Out Of" mention.
That's a point of frustration.... Getting facts straight when you'd rather be writing 10,000 words of wrong.
I feel like I'm learning so so so much from these articles. Thank you so much Mr. Aaron. These are proving to be an invaluable tool and inspiration for someone who wants to be a writer. A few thoughts:
While this is obviously an issue, wouldn't the opposite also be an issue? I know for me personally, I have an incredibly hard time ever believing that anything I write is good. Even though I have numerous friends and family members read my stuff and say it's good, I always find myself writing it off as them being nice, and I keep asking different people, searching for someone who will tell me it's a pile of shit. While you may think I have self-esteem issues (I do), I don't believe they're drastic enough that they can't be overcome. That said, when do you think is a good time to say, "I don't suck?"They seemed to believe they'd already written the next great American novel, and they just wanted to know how to get an agent, how to get in print. They didn't seem to even be entertaining the possibility that maybe their novel just wasn't any good.
Very true. But, I also find that it can be an invaluable exercise to compare yourself to a writer you're reading. Looking at a plot point or line of dialogue and objectively asking yourself whether you could write that well.It's always easy to play that game where you look at some professional writer whose work you don't particularly like and say, "That guy sucks. I can write better than that guy." But it's a lot harder to take a long hard look at your own work and really ask yourself: am I truly good enough?
That paragraph rocked my world. It seems so simple, but it really helps me to think about this. Sometimes, I really do need to not worry about getting discovered. Just about getting good.So if you wanna know how to break into comics, I guess my advice to you is just, "Write." Don't even worry about breaking in until you know you're ready. Focus on your writing. Find that story you were born to tell and work your ass off on it. Read outside your comfort zone. Judge your work harshly. Write and re-write. Always re-write.
Thanks again for the fantastic column.
C.B. Cebulski's twitter just talks about Korean sausage....yeah.
"If I saw something the caliber of my own work on the shelf in a comic book store, would I seriously fork over my own money to read it?"
Yeah, that's the question you've got to ask yourself. And, when you're writing, write a story you would want to read. That's really the best you can do, because you can't please everybody.
To the person who wondered "when do you think is a good time to say, "I don't suck?"
Try submitting your work. That may get you ignored, but it also may get you some honest feedback.
Great stuff, I for one loved the Other Side. It's why I follow his work to this day. Kind of not sure why people who want "something different" so often refuse to support books like that (or Lucifer which I liked quite a bit for the first half of its run)
Bookmarks