So yeah, one of the best things I've read over the past couple of years was Grant Morrison's 12-issue comic series All-Star Superman. It captured everything I loved about the medium of comics and everything I love about writing--Grant Morrison's writing and just the art of writing in general. Morrison just completed an in depth interview on the series, and once again, his words left me in awe, so I'm gonna share some of them:
"What I hope is that people take from it the unlikelihood that a piece of paper, with little ink drawings of figures, with little written words, can make you cry, can make your heart soar, can make you scared, sad, or thrilled. How mental is that ?
"That piece of paper is inert material, the corpse of some tree, pulped and poured, then given new meaning and new life when the real hours and real emotions that the writer and the artist, the colourist, the letter the editor translated onto the physical page, meet with the real hours and emotions of a reader, of all readers at once, across time, generations and distance.
"And think about how that experience, the simple experience of interacting with a paper comic book, along with hundreds of thousands of others across time and space, is an actual doorway onto the beating heart of the imminent, timeless world of "Myth" as defined above. Not just a drawing of it but an actual doorway into timelessness and the immortal world where we are all one together.
"My grief over the loss of my dad can be Superman's grief, can trigger your own grief, for your own dad, for all our dads. The timeless grief that's felt by Muslims and Christians and Agnostics alike. My personal moments of great and romantic love, untainted by the everyday, can become Superman's and may resonate with your own experience of these simple human feelings.
"In the one Mythic moment we're all united, kissing our Lover for the First time, the Last time the Only time, honouring our dear Dad under a blood red sky, against a darkening backdrop, with Mum telling us it'll all be okay in the end.
If we were able to capture even a hint of that place and share it with our readers, that would be good enough for me."
"What I hope is that people take from it the unlikelihood that a piece of paper, with little ink drawings of figures, with little written words, can make you cry, can make your heart soar, can make you scared, sad, or thrilled. How mental is that ?
"That piece of paper is inert material, the corpse of some tree, pulped and poured, then given new meaning and new life when the real hours and real emotions that the writer and the artist, the colourist, the letter the editor translated onto the physical page, meet with the real hours and emotions of a reader, of all readers at once, across time, generations and distance.
"And think about how that experience, the simple experience of interacting with a paper comic book, along with hundreds of thousands of others across time and space, is an actual doorway onto the beating heart of the imminent, timeless world of "Myth" as defined above. Not just a drawing of it but an actual doorway into timelessness and the immortal world where we are all one together.
"My grief over the loss of my dad can be Superman's grief, can trigger your own grief, for your own dad, for all our dads. The timeless grief that's felt by Muslims and Christians and Agnostics alike. My personal moments of great and romantic love, untainted by the everyday, can become Superman's and may resonate with your own experience of these simple human feelings.
"In the one Mythic moment we're all united, kissing our Lover for the First time, the Last time the Only time, honouring our dear Dad under a blood red sky, against a darkening backdrop, with Mum telling us it'll all be okay in the end.
If we were able to capture even a hint of that place and share it with our readers, that would be good enough for me."