We interviewed lots of comics creatorsĀ at Boston Comic Con this year, including several independent artists creatingĀ exciting work thatĀ should have more eyes on it.Ā Anne Szabla, creator of Bird Boy, still works her day jobĀ and crafts striking artwork at night after working long hours. WeĀ interviewed herĀ about the process of indie creation and herĀ long-term dream ofĀ makingĀ comics herĀ full-time gig.
Here’s the transcript for the video.
***
My name is Anne Szabla, and I’ve been working on a comic called Bird Boy for the last five years now. It is going to be published next year. It is about a little boy who lives in a tribe of very big people, and so to prove himself, he goes into the super-bigĀ forest and meets with all of these gods and beast and crazy creatures, and has all sorts of crazy adventures.
My typical day is, I go to work, and I get really frustrated that I’m not working on my comic! Then I come home full of all sorts of energy to make the comic, and then I just go at it with a crazy fury until two in the morning.
My dream project would probably be to keep working on Bird BoyĀ just as long as I can. Just, as my day job, which has always been the hope. Hopefully, someday I’ll get there.
You can get a hundred good reviews and you’re like, “oh! That’s really cool!” But if you get that one bad review, you’re like, “oh, my day is ruined.” It doesn’t matter how many good reviews you get along with it. I tend toĀ ā I take it into my heart, while I’m working, and I try to go, “Okay, now I’m going to prove them wrong,” by working even harder. It kind of fuels the fire.
I think we should have female characters in every way, every kind of person you could be. A female characterĀ ā a hero, an anti-hero, a villain, or anything like that? There shouldn’t be any limitations on a genre for a female character to be.
***
āPlease make note of The Mary Sue’s general comment policy.ā
Do you follow The Mary Sue on Twitter, Facebook, Tumblr, Pinterest, & Google +?
Published: Aug 12, 2015 01:38 pm