Mental Carpentry
Warlord of Mars #4 is in stores! And everyone who bothered to give it a review (thank you) seemed to really like it (thank you!). I sort of wish Dejah Thoris, the female lead, were a little more... covered up now that I see her in print.
Oh well! Another five hundred years in purgatory, I guess.
Another amazing set of covers for this one; you can see ’em all right here. One of the best things about this series, for my fanboy mind, is all the fantastic new art. It's wonderful to see the takes contemporary artists have on Barsoom.
Haven't posted in a while; been busy writing (of all things), and I had a bad case of impetigo. The antibiotics made everything taste like rusty sheet metal. Or what I assume rusty sheet metal tastes like. Every week, a new MMA-induced injury. But I love it!
To make up for the gap, I updated "Breaking and Entering" for the first time in a long time. Two new articles, a dire warning, and some advice about writing in general. Hope it's useful!
Calling Carlos
One of the best things about writing comics is the many fantastic artists I get to work with. Case in point: Dynamite paired me with Carlos Rafael for the Dejah Thoris series debuting in March.
Just saw the first batch of pages for Issue 1, and they look absolutely stunning. Carlos's drawing of Valian, a character from the series, is exactly how I imagined him. It's rare for an artist's version of a character to match my mental image so perfectly.
I can't actually share these pages, of course, or Dynamite would hunt me down and eviscerate me with a sugar spoon sharpened to a dull edge on dog poop-smeared concrete. But I can show Carlos's concepts for some of the main characters. Click for bigger versions, sort of NSFW:
I love his take on Dejah Thoris. Carlos is from Brazil, and to me Dejah looks very Brazilian. His Mors Kajak and Tardos Mors, Dejah's father and grandfather, are equally Brazilliant, like they're ready to jump into a cage with Wanderlei Silva (as soon as they both get haircuts).
I've been trying to hunt Carlos down, but I haven't had any success, aside from the link above (here it is again) to a little bio page and some of his art. So all I know about him, aside from his prodigious talent, is that he looks kind of like Lyoto Machida, and he lives in Rio.
I did find a video of Carlos, in which he speaks entirely in Portuguese. One can only guess at the torrent of wisdom spilling from his mouth.
And that's all I know, sadly. Sometimes – a lot of times – artists working in far-flung hemispheres will work through a studio that acts as a sole intermediary between the publisher and the artist. That's the case for Carlos, it seems.
Carlos! If you're reading this, know you've got a fan for life in me. It's an honor and a pleasure to work on Dejah Thoris with such a talented chap. I only hope your studio realizes what a gem they have. Either way, you're going to be a great success.
Christmas Comes Early on Mars
Warlord of Mars #3 hits stores today, with another round of fantastic covers. I love Joe Jusko's depiction of the white apes of Mars – we'll see the apes in this issue. And, as usual,
J. Scott Campbell leaves nothing to be desired. Or to the imagination. See the first five pages, and pencil sketches of the covers, right here.
This is the first issue with interior art by Filipino maestro, Lui Antonio. It's not the first time Lui and I have worked together, and I hope it's not the last. He did a fantastic job bringing the weird, wild technology and architecture of Barsoom to life. We're not gonna see Dejah Thoris, the main female character, just yet – but hang on! Lui's depictions of her in Issue 4 will drop your jaw into your lap.
Speaking of Filipino artists, I just read one of the best comics I've come across in a long time – Elmer, written and drawn by Lui's fellow countryman, Gerry Alanguilan. Elmer's about... talking chickens. Seriously. It's riotously funny but surprisingly poignant at the same time. Very thoughtful. More like a novel than a comic. I cannot recommend it highly enough.
Happy non-denominational holiday solstice event period to one and all!
Dejah Thoris Gets Hers
My foray into MMA continues – learned how to "shoot" (charge in for a takedown) last night. Tried to learn, anyway. Also figured out how to block a strike. The hard way. There's no teacher like pain! I literally got the snot beaten out of me. It was gross.
But enough about that! Dynamite just announced a new series I'm writing, an original Warlord of Mars story starring Dejah Thoris. Dejah's the female lead from the Edgar Rice Burroughs Mars novels. I think it's safe to say she's a little passive in the original novels, so it's great being able to put her in the driver's seat.
The title is Colossus of Mars, and it's set 400 years before John Carter arrives – Martians live forever, unless they're killed. The story's about how Helium, Dejah Thoris's kingdom, came to be the greatest on Mars. It begins with Dejah about to be married off to a powerful warlord's son... but the wedding doesn't go as planned. More than that, I dare not say. You'll just have to read it.
As usual, Dynamite's providing, well, dynamite front covers for the series (not to mention he interior art). Check out the official press release at CBR for all the images, including one by the great Joe Jusko not shown here. I'm especially fond of Arthur Adams's cover, for his depiction of a Martian pistol. I've always imagined Martian firearms looking sort of... "piratey", like high tech arquebuses. Arthur did a great Wild West take on it. I'm sold. Hope you are, too!
Joe Jusko
My tailbone got whacked pretty bad a few days ago during a session of submission grappling. I stumbled across Joe Jusko's front cover for Warlord of Mars #5 whilst dickering around online today, and it took my mind off the pain for a few minutes.
It's a tribute to the Saturday Evening Post, of course, but I really love the modern details – the shoes of the kid in the foreground, the cut of his jeans, even his hair. This cover reminds me that everything I love about American culture is still very much with us. Edgar Rice Burroughs is still with us, and it's such an incredible honor to be able to share his Mars novels with the world in the adaptation I'm doing with Dynamite.
All Joe's covers for Warlord of Mars are absolute treasures. They make me feel like I'm ten years old again, secretly reading beat-up old copies of Heavy Metal. Art like this is why I got into science fiction and fantasy in the first place.
If #5 doesn't sell a million copies and Joe doesn't win two dozen Eisners, I'll be very upset.
Arvid Nelson (me!) is a comic book writer, responsible for Rex Mundi and Zero Killer, among other things. I live in Northampton, Massachusetts with my lovely wife. more...Coming Up
- Jun. 20: Warlord of Mars #18
- Jun. 27: Lord of the Jungle #5
- Jul. 11: Warlord of Mars #19
- Jul. 18: Lord of the Jungle #6
- Aug. 15: Warlord of Mars #20
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