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Starfire's Rebel Log
date posted: Apr 02, 2007 2:05 PM  |  updated: Apr 02, 2007 2:07 PM
Writing Comics = Really Really Hard
Hmmmm... been a bit longer since I posted here than I thought. I will try and change that since I am quite active in the online Star Wars CCG scene (which is a different kind of experience than the offline one) and so I will try and post more updates as to my activities there.

But in the meantime, I want to talk about comic books--writing comics to be specific.

I remember reading a comment from Mike Stackpole several years back that writing the Star Wars: X-Wing comics was the first time he ever considered writing a "job". Eventually he even needed to get outside help from a writer at Dark Horse because he was having so many issues. And he's right.

I am the writer on a comic book project. Now I have written all kinds of things in my career so far: magazine articles, press releases, web content, screenplays, prose, this blog.. none of those are like a comic book script. I remember first thinking that writing a comic was going to be a perfect blend of screenwriting and prose writing. Yeah, in theory. By the time I was halfway done with the script for the first issue, I was numb. Because by then I realised that unlike screenplays, you have to imagine X number of scenes per page. And it can't be a random X number because you have to have enough panels to explain the story, while at the same time you only have between twenty and twenty-four pages (depending on the publisher) so you can't have too few panels either or the story won't progress.

I have a difficult time writing prose because often I have a kick-### story in my head and I want to get it down usually faster than my pencil can write (or my fingers can type). Mastering prose is not at all necessary for a comic book script, but you still have to know how to be descriptive (yuck!) and write straight on a line--meaning you can't go off on tangents like you can in prose. If you don't have enough description then there is a good chance that the penciler is going to return something that you will not be happy with. And if you don't pace and progress the story, then you will have a comic that is either rushed or laggy, and both of those are bad.

There is not much room for failure when writing a comic book script. If this is a path you intend to walk, be VERY prepared. And read a ton of comic books before you start.

And oh yeah: writing comic books rocks!