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Killadelphia is a new title from Image comics featuring vampires in modern-day Philadelphia and looks to be quite a promising story. The series has an extremely talented creative pool responsible for each issue.

However, we are going to narrow our focus on Rodney Barnes, who is the mind behind the comic. You may very well recognize his name from other projects. He was the executive producer and head writer of the first iteration of The Boondocks on Adult Swim. His other executive producer credits include Hulu’s adaptation of Marvel’s The Runaways and American Gods on Starz. He’s worked with comedy giants such as Damon Waynes and Chris Rock. He also has an extensive career as a writer, having written for television and comics. Some of his comic highlights include Marvel’s Falcon, the Marvel Star Wars miniseries Lando: Double Or Nothing, and his most current project, Killadelphia, for Image Comics.

Rodney Barnes was kind enough to answer a few questions about Killadelphia. Please enjoy, and keep an eye out for our coverage of the series over the coming months.

Interview

Haunted MTL: How did the original concept for Killadelphia come about?

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Rodney Barnes: Iā€™ve been carrying the idea around in my head since I was 8 years old. Influenced by a lot of tv, films, and books Iā€™d read really early in life.

How does one make a comic scary? What are the strengths of the medium for horror creators?

I can only speak to what scares me. And itā€™s pretty simple, give me a scenario thatā€™s psychologically relatable then add a complementary genre/horror element.

The cover to issue #1 of Killadelphia.

What horror media have you seen or read that has influenced your work on Killadelphia?

I love Stephen King so much because most of his stories begin with a relatable construct; family, a relationship gone wrong, addiction, fear of death, etc.

The title of Killadelphia seems like it may be in reference to some of the assumptions made about the troubled and violent history of West Philadelphia; how deep do you intend for your story to dive into such assumptions?

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The name and an aspect of the theme is some of the hardships the area faces, but the political history of the area matters as much.

Killadelphia is a moody, modern take on the vampire, and distinctly American.

Horror has had a history of social awareness but within the last few years there has been a commercial boom of horror projects that tackle themes and characters that represent non-white communities; are you approaching Killadelphia as part of an effort towards representation?

Social awareness from a macro level for sure. There are themes within the narrative that addresses the struggle we have as human beings to connect and treat each other humanely. But hopefully not at the expense of the story before us. John Carpenter and George Romero have been huge influences so I try really hard not to be preachy or make what could be fun feel like medicine.

Do you think a project like Killadelphia would have been possible 10 years ago?

No. Folks like Jordan Peele and others opened a door that Iā€™m eternally grateful for.

More Killadelphia on the way

Haunted MTL would like to thank Rodney Barnes for taking time out of his busy schedule to answer some of our questions. You can follow Killadelphia by buying issues at your local comic shop or buying directly from Image Comics.

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Rodney Barnes can be found on Twitter. You can also find more information about his work on his official website.

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Interviews

An interview with creator of Kaidankai, Linda Gould

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I was fortunate enough to interview Linda Gould about her beautifully eerie podcast, Kaidankai. I hope that you all enjoy getting to know her and her creepy work as much as I did.

Your recent collection is called Unpleasantville, a collection of stories from a singularly creepy town. What inspired this project?

Linda Gould

One of the only poems I related to when in high school was Spoon River Anthology (SPA). For those who don’t know it, SPA, it is a collection of poems about life in a small town as told by the ghosts of the residents in that town. The poems were based on real people, and the anthology burst the bubble on the idea that country life was idyllic. I loved itsĀ irreverence and was captivated by the ideaĀ that ghost stories, which I always loved, could be literary, taught in high school AP English classes!Ā For the Kaidankai, I asked listeners and contributors to pick their favorite poem and read it for me. Then, I did a special presentation of their readings for the podcast. Many people had never heard of SPA and were so happy to find it. So many people, way more than I expected, sent in their readings, and they were just awesome.Ā 
That made me wonder what a modern version would look like. Since the Kaidankai audience and contributors are all around the world, I couldn’t pick one place without excluding someone, so I made up a name and a few landmarks that anyone, anywhere could relate to and sent it out to see what would happen.Ā 

Unpleasantville is a shared world, with many writers telling their own stories. What was it like, working with so many writers in this shared space?

Well, that describes the Kaidankai podcast in general. People from Asian countries, Australia, North America and throughout Europe contribute. Sometimes, before I reject a story, I have to read it a couple of times to make sure that it isn’t just a different storytelling technique that I don’t understand or relate to. I force myself to explain to myself why a story isn’t a good fit. I’m not sure that I would take that approach if all the stories came from Western writers.

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Of course, Unpleasantville is only part of your overall show, Kaidankai. What can you tell us about the show? Where did the name, Kaidankai, come from?Ā 

First, I have to tell you how much I love this podcast. The podcast started August 1st 2021 and was initially going to last only for 100 days in order to tell 100 stories. I live in Japan and in the last several centuries, people would go on pilgrimages to famous shrines during the month of August. Pilgrims from all over Japan would meet, and to pass the time, they would tell ghost stories, just like we do in the west around campfires. In Japan, they lit candles, 100, and as each ghost story was told, a candle was blown out. So, as the night progressed, as the candles were blown out one-by-one, it got darker and the stories became scarier. Imagine being in a deep forest or at a pilgrims inn inside a deep, dark forest. Imagine all the creaks, howls, screeches and mysterious sounds that surround you as the candles become fewer and fewer and how those sounds get closer and closer. It raises the hair on the back of your neck and gives you chills. And THAT was the purpose of kaidankai–to cool people off during Japan’s crazy hot and humid summers while entertaining people at the same time. 

That is the basic outline of the Japanese storytelling tradition called kaidankai. Some might have heard of it as hyakumonogatarikaidankai because I think there was an anime made around it. A lot of the Japanese scary woodblock prints come from the stories told at that time, and the tradition of telling ghost stories in August holds true to this day, although in a different iteration. And the podcast was meant to be just another iteration of that. I was going to upload one podcast a day for 100 days, then start deleting them one-by-one after about a month. BUT, when it was supposed to end, people wrote me and said how much they would miss it, that they didn’t want it to end. So, I changed it to a weekly podcast. A few people asked to have their stories removed as originally planned, but most are still in the archives.

Most of your episodes are quite short, averaging from eight to twenty episodes. Was it an intentional choice to focus on such short form horror, or just a coincidence?Ā 

A little of both. Some people have sent in longer stories and, if I like them, I’ll read them on the podcast. But, I really wanted to stick with the short story format because I wanted to keep the feeling of people just sitting around a campfire or in a candlelit room telling their ghost stories. If anyone talks too long at a campfire, people get restless and tune out. And, I think if people are listening in the car or while cooking dinner, they want something that they can complete.

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Your podcast has over 150 episodes. This is an impressive amount of spooky work. What can you tell us about creating that many episodes?Ā 

Well, like anything, the more you do it, the better it gets, lol. If you listen to the early episodes, they areĀ definitely not as good as the later ones, mainly because the mic got a lot better. My readings have also improved, because a few of the earlier episodes had a professional reader, Michael Rhys, so I could learn from listening to him.Ā Other people have read some of the stories, too (not just the Spoon River Anthology project) and it is really nice to have a diversity of voices, I think, but others have told me not to have different readers because the sound quality varies and it dilutes the branding of the show. I’m not really sure what to think of that. I mean, definitely, the sound quality varies, but unless the sound is just awful, inĀ which case I wouldn’t upload it, I like the authenticity of it.Ā 
It’s a surprising amount of work, especially at first. You need to research the best way to do an intro andĀ outdoĀ (I didn’t), the best equipment to make quality sound (I didn’t) and how to promote it (I didn’t). I’m amazed when I look at how I just barreled into this with very little planning that people keptĀ listening. But that attests to the need to have good stories, which is the most important thing.Ā 

Many horror podcasts drop off soon after creation. Whatā€™s helped you keep at this so long? I’ve been so lucky that writers from around the world have trusted me with their work. I can’t accept all the submissions, but I do read them all (like I said, sometimes more than once). At several times during the podcast, I’ve mentioned how much I love the diversity found in the stories featured on the Kaidankai, and that is 100% true. I love that there are ghost and vampire and monster stories, that some are cute and some or gruesome, that they include folktales and horror from around the world, and that they are presented as poems and prose. You never know what you will get when you tune into the Kaidankai, just like you don’t know what you will get when you sit around a campfire telling stories. For some people, maybe they don’t like that one day will be horror and the next day an atmospheric poem about a haunted forest. But I do, and the Kaidankai seems to be filling a niche for others, too. So, as long as people want to share their stories and listeners for those stories, I plan to keep it going.

After your Unpleasantville collection, whatā€™s next for Kaidankai?Ā 

My dream is to have artists listen to a story and feel inspired to create something based on that story. I’m working on a YouTube channel right now that would feature a few of my favorite stories from the archive. I hope to have it up in time for October and Halloween. It might have to have the logo run through the whole reading like most YouTube videos have, but my dream would be to have an artwork of some sort  as the visual element that relates to a particular story instead of the general logo. There are so many amazing artists in the horror/ghost/supernatural genre, just like there are so many writers. It would be great to be able to showcase a visual element to the stories, too.

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Aside from your podcast, are there any other projects youā€™re working on?Ā 

There is White Enso, which is an online journal that features artwork of any kind that is inspired by Japan. WE’ve had quilts, poetry, photography, short stories, etc. And I’m always trying to write and finish my collection of short stories. I call myself an on-again-off-again writer because I’ll work so intensely for a few months on my writing, then will get involved in something else and not write a word for a year.

Is there anything you wish I would have asked you about, that I didnā€™t think to?

If there is one thing I would want people to come away with when they listen to the podcast it is the universal appeal of ghost and supernatural stories. People from all over the world write such stories, and there are similarities as well as differences in how they are told. People who have a poetic mind can write the most beautiful, atmospheric stories about ghosts or monsters, and on the other end of the spectrum is someone who writes slasher stories. But there is something in all of us that embraces the mysterious, and when you tune in to listen to the Kaidankai stories, they aren’t really going to scare you, they aren’t for the most part, horror, but they will entertain you and remind you that the mysterious can connect us no matter where we are in the world.

Where can we find you online?Ā 

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This link will take you to the stories, the podcast links and how to submit.

https://www.whiteenso.com/kaidankai-ghost-stories.html

(If you liked this post, you can check out another interview I did here.)

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Interviews

A Haunted MTL exclusive interview with Andy Thierfelder, creator of Tapes From Beyond

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Author and voice actor Andy Thierfelder sat down with me to answer some questions about his audio drama, Tapes From Beyond.

To read my review of Tapes From Beyond, click here.

So, where did the name, tapes from beyond come from?

Itā€™s kind of funny, I donā€™t love the name for the show, but in the storyline Lena would be the one coming up with the name and she would have wanted something recognizable, spooky sounding, and with the word Tapes in it so people kind of knew what they were getting into. 

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How did you cast Jac and Lena? 

The actress who plays Lena is my wife, and the actress who plays Jac is a friend of mine. I am pretty lucky that I have a large group of talented and nerdy friends who are into theater and LARPing (myself included), so I have never been short on actors for my various projects.

The story of poor Jac and her family was tragic. How do you think theyā€™re doing after all of this? 

Yeah there have been some rough times in the Fedik household, but I think by the end of the series theyā€™re in a better place than they have been in a very long time. Nothing can erase the tragedies theyā€™ve experienced but their constant source of misery (The Tapes) has finally been resolved, allowing them to start the healing process in earnest. 

What made you decide to make this story into a podcast, instead of a book or other medium?

Funny enough this story was inspired by the Silent Hill video game series. I never thought of it as a game, but as a lover of the series I always wondered what story I would tell in that universe. The story grew into its own thing from there but the idea of someone getting spooky tapes in the mail was always part of it. With the tapes being such an integral part of it, it naturally led me to a podcast/audio drama.

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I loved that the tapes were out of order. It made me feel a bit like a conspiracy theorist. What inspired that?

Thanks! There were a couple things that went into that decision. Firstly I thought thematically it made sense, there is a great deal of mystery behind the tapes and their arrival and this just added another layer to that. Secondly I always wanted the story to be interactive with the audience to a degree. The Trapped Manā€™s story was set in stone, but how much Jac and Lena discovered was very much left up in the air. It was important to me that there was a mystery for the audience to solve and finding the order of the tapes seemed like a fun one for them to do! 

Tapes brings up an issue that I’ve struggled with, both as a true crime fan and podcaster myself. True crime and supernatural stories are often the stories of real people. What do you think of the morality of this? Do you think that it’s an invasion of privacy against people who have already suffered? Or do you think it’s part of our sympathetic nature as humans and shows our level of compassion for our fellow man?

Thatā€™s a hard question indeed. As with all things in life I think there are a lot of shades of gray to the issue and itā€™s mostly on a case by case basis. Thereā€™s something to be said about how their stories can act as a cautionary tale, but on the other hand I think if I knew the subject or the subjects next of kin were uncomfortable with the story being out there I would have a hard time watching/listening to it. I think it puts a lot more pressure on the content creators to make sure they are handling the subject matter delicately and with the proper care and respect it deserves. 

As a follow to that, was this a question that we as readers were supposed to be asking ourselves?

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In a roundabout way yes. I wanted people to think about how trauma permeates beyond the survivor who experienced it. I wanted to show how these tapes affected far more than just Jac, and how even though she hadnā€™t gotten one in a while, they were still opening new wounds for her and her family. I didnā€™t set out to specifically commentate on the morality of true crime storytelling, but I did want people to think about how a single traumatic experience often causes a butterfly effect throughout a person’s entire life as well as the lives of their friends and families. 

Tapes from beyond cover

Did you get a lot of real fan feedback with theories? Was any of the fan feedback in the show real?

All of the fan feedback was real. Some of it came from friends of mine who would ask me legitimate questions about the show but most of it was from strangers and none of it was planted. I was prepared to end the series with Tape J, but thankfully people solved enough of the mysteries in the show to trigger the final few episodes! There was a while there after Tape J when I was nervous that people werenā€™t going to solve the mystery of the order of the tapes, or the mystery about the movie the Trapped Man mentioned and I almost had a friend of mine make a fake review video of the series to drum up interest, but then I discovered fans had created a discord channel to try and solve the show and I figured at that point it was only a matter of time. In general I was floored by the fan response to the show, someone in a Russian speaking country actually did make an hour and thirty nine minute review video of it…although they hated the ending. 

What do you think the town is? Is it sentient, or do you think itā€™s a Bermuda Triangle sort of situation?

I think itā€™s best left for the listener to decide, but of the different theories discussed in the show Jacā€™s Momā€™s theory in Tape K is my favorite.

While listening to this show, it occurred to me that we don’t know for sure that Jac ever came back from the town. All of her interactions with the fans afterward were second-hand, either from her father or her co-host, Lena. Are we to suspect that maybe Jac isn’t as okay as we might like to believe?

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No, Jac made it back safe and sound. That was an unfortunate happenstance of the actress who plays her not being available to record that final episode. I went back and forth for a while about the best way to end it without her involvement. I donā€™t mind entirely that it leaves people with a little bit of a lingering question but that was not my intention. There is enough ambiguity throughout the whole series that I wanted this question to be firmly answered haha. 

What have you been working on since the release of Tapes? Can we expect a follow-up?

Iā€™ve been working on my next feature length screenplay and Iā€™ve been hard at work on my next audio drama! It will not be related to Tapes From Beyond but it is also a found footage horror story. In the way that Tapes From Beyond is a love song to Silent Hill, my next project is a love song to one of my other favorite horror settings, the TTRPG universe of Vampire: The Masquerade. I have lofty ambitions of releasing the first episode by Halloween but it might end up being a little later than that.

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Horror in graphic novels

Interview: ‘Sink’ Writer John Lees

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Weā€™re very excited at Haunted MTL to reach out to the horror community and spotlight creative and talented folks where we find them. We love to add toĀ our interview seriesĀ when we can, and Haunted MTL is fortunate to have a fantastic interview this week with writer John Lees, the mind behind one of our favorite comics, Sink – one of the more beloved series reviewed by our very own comic obsessed David Davis.

John Lees talks to us about the origins of Sink, his influences on the comic, and even provides valuable insight to anyone wanting to create comics themselves.

Sink Writer John Lees Interview

Haunted MTL: How didĀ SinkĀ first come to mind? Was this a concept that was developing for a while, or did it hit you suddenly?

John Lees: I think itā€™s a combination of both. The general idea ofĀ SinkĀ is something I had in my head as wanting to do long before I did it.Ā ScalpedĀ is one of my all-time favourite comics, and I had this idea of wanting to do my own take on a heavily location-driven crime saga, but mine would be set in Glasgow, and have more of a horror twist.Ā I wasnā€™t sure if it would be something Iā€™d eventually do with Iain Laurie, after weā€™d worked onĀ And Then Emily Was GoneĀ together, or what exact form it would take, so it was kinda in the back-burner in my brain for a couple of years. But once I made the decision I wanted to do it, it fell into place really quickly. Mr. Dig, Florence Kilcolm, Si McKirdie, the Dickheads, Busman Boab, the blue van clownsā€¦ Sinkhill took shape so quickly and so clearly in the way that happens with the stories you know are going to be special.Ā 

HMTL: How soon had you figured out Mr.Ā Dig’sĀ identity and story arc through the first two volumes? In a lot of ways, his story ends up feeling central to many of the themes expressed over the course of the first two volumes. Was this something intended from the start or discovered on the way?

JL: Oh, I knew Mr. Digā€™s identity from the moment I first wrote him. If you look back to his first appearance inĀ Sink #1, Mr. Dig says, ā€œFuck off back to where you came fromā€ to Allan. When I wrote that, it was with the thought that heā€™d have the same line thrown at him by some racist asshole at a later point in the series, which we see happen inĀ Sink #8. And having studied teaching English to speakers of other languages in the past, Iā€™d previously done language profiles on how Kurdish speakers adapt to speaking English and some common recurring mistakes, hence why Mr. Dig drops definite and indefinite articles like ā€œaā€ or ā€œtheā€ in his speech, something else which was part of his dialogue from the very beginning. As far as more overarching themes, the idea ofĀ SinkĀ being a world where the protagonists are largely the kind of people who donā€™t get to be heroes in these types of stories is something that came together partly by design and partly by happy accident.Ā 

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HMTL: How did you get Alex Cormack involved with the project? Was it something along the lines of,Ā “hey, man, want to draw this hyper-violent crime book?ā€

John Lees' Sink #1 Cover
Mr. Dig debuts early in the run.

JL: Iā€™d already worked with Alex before. Weā€™d done a short together, then had worked together at greater length onĀ Oxymoron: The Loveliest NightmareĀ for ComixTribe. I was (and still am) continually in awe of his art, and on top of that, heā€™s just such a lovely guy, we immediately got on. And so, after we finished withĀ Oxymoron, weā€™d been talking about how we should try working on something else together, something of our own rather than playing in someone elseā€™s sandbox. And weā€™d thrown around a couple of ideas, but nothing was really clicking. And I had thisĀ SinkĀ idea in my back pocket, but like I said, Iā€™m thinking maybe this is an Iain book, maybe itā€™s just a bunch of loosely connected one-shots we release at Scottish conventions (which is where the anthology format idea originated, I believe). But then something clicked where I thought, hang on, why couldnā€™t this be an ALEX book? And that instantly changed the dynamics at play, I started imagining it less as pure psychological horror (though there are certainly still elements of that in there!) than as this genre-mashup with pulp crime and bombastic action elements, and really pushing the gore-drenched aesthetic ofĀ OxymoronĀ to new levels. And thankfully, when I then said to Alex, ā€œHey, man, want to draw this hyper-violent crime book?ā€, he was instantly down for the idea!

HMTL: How has the reception toĀ SinkĀ been in Glasgow among locals? What elements do they recognize in Sinkhill?

JL: Whenever Iā€™ve hadĀ SinkĀ on sale at Scottish shows, the reception has been really positive. In my experience, Scottish comic readers have been really supportive of Scottish indie creators, all the more so when the stories themselves are Scottish. And so, readers have enjoyed all the Glasgow elements. That was a balance I was hoping to pull off while writingĀ Sink. I wanted it to be somewhat universal, where readers from anywhere could enjoy it, but if youā€™re someone whoā€™s from Glasgow, who recognizes some of the landmarks or local in-jokes, then youā€™ll have another level of appreciation for the comic.Ā 

HMTL: Do you feelĀ SinkĀ is a good introduction to yourĀ body of work, or would you steer readers to a different book, likeĀ And Then Emily Was Gone?

Sink #4 by John Lees

JL: I think any of my comics is a good introduction to my body of work, as I want people to spend money on all of them! And the cool thing is, Iā€™ve had readers sayĀ MountainheadĀ was their first introduction to me, thatĀ HotellĀ was their first introduction, thatĀ The Crimson CageĀ was their first introduction, and then my older stuff is there waiting for them to discover. ButĀ SinkĀ is a comic thatā€™s particularly close to my heart. Itā€™s a twisted love letter to my home city of Glasgow, and because of the broad range of tones, it manages to capture a wide variety of things I enjoy writing: horror, comedy, stories with heart and emotion, even some almost superhero-type stuff.Ā 

HMTL: The horror and crime angle ofĀ SinkĀ is quite interesting. What drives you to write about horrific crimes?

JL: Ha! That question makes me sound disturbed! Iā€™ve always been a fan of horror, as a reader and as a viewer, which I guess translates into also enjoying writing it. But Iā€™d also say that I enjoy the challenge of getting into the mindsets of characters in the most extreme of situations. I think it might have been David Lynch, or maybe someone writing about David Lynch, that used the phrase ā€œthe twilight zone between crime and horrorā€ when talking aboutĀ Blue Velvet. The idea of this phrase is that, what might from one perspective be a crime procedural could be a horror from another perspective, if youā€™re grounded and right in there with the person experiencing that crime. I think itā€™s down to the empathy, and how much you want the readers to feel for the characters these horrific crimes are happening to.

HMTL: One element ofĀ SinkĀ is that you really establish a consistent sense of place. A horrible place, but well developed. As a writer howĀ do you establish a setting in such detail?

Sink #7 by John Lees

JL: Sinkhill is a fictional district within Glasgow, but Glasgow itself is a real city. And I think it helps, in my head, being able to know the actual city so well, and for me to be able to picture a particular road junction, and imagine, ā€œOkay, if you take a left here, that takes you into Sinkhill.ā€ It makes the place feel almost real. And it probably helps that there are shadows of various real place that form the genetic make-up of Sinkhill. I mean, itā€™s a running joke between me and Alex that, for being a place that ultimately is likely not much bigger than a few blocks, there are so many varied landmarks to be found here. What the heck would a map of Sinkhill look like?! But the more stories we tell in this world, the more lived-in this location becomes, and the more weā€™re able to pluck familiar locales from past stories and recycle them for new ones, just adding to that feel that this is all taking place in the same setting and these tales are all connected.Ā 

HMTL: When putting together the setting and the stories, do you have a system in place for keeping everything mapped out? A story bible? A wiki?

JL: Iā€™ll plan out issues, and Iā€™ll broadly map out plans for each volume. But in terms of big picture mythology, I donā€™t have anything so sophisticated as an official story bible. Maybe I should! I largely keep it all in my head, and I do sometimes worry about forgetting a plot point from an earlier issue, or re-using a character name!

HMTL: When it comes to inspiration for certain stories you mention a few, but I am curious how that works. For example, do you have a rough idea in mind, which reminds you of a movie and you watch it to help shape your approach? Or is it something where you watch or read something and think ‘how can this become aĀ SinkĀ story?ā€™

Sink #3 by John Lees

JL: It varies. I think there are two types ofĀ SinkĀ Tale. There are lore tales, where Iā€™m putting in the work to add to the tapestry and build on the larger overarching mystery connecting the main players of the series. Then there are the standalone tales, the little one-shot vignettes of life in Sinkhill. With the lore tales, maybe Iā€™m approaching with the mindset of ā€œI need this character to get from point A to point B to enter the next phase of their arc, how can I get them there?ā€ And with the standalone tales, often it can be me building on fragments – a character, say, or a scenario – which in itself might not have been able to sustain a full series, but when inserted into the world ofĀ Sink, becomes more fully realised. Like, withĀ Sink #10, Iā€™d had the idea of a twisted romantic comedy about a couple doing BDSM who end up in a mad home invasion scenario, but thatā€™s not a series, itā€™s a sketch. Putting Kieran and Louise into Sinkhill, though, and you can then feed it into the wider mythology, and it becomes more substantial, and now thatā€™s probably my favourite issue of the series so far.Ā 

HMTL: Kieran and Louise’s story was absolutely hilarious and an interesting way to end the second volume, especially given the catharsis and culmination of the end of the two-parter “Graphite Green.” Was the placement of “Bedbug” afterward purposeful?

JL: The placement was absolutely intentional. My thinking was, ā€œGraphite Greenā€ was our biggestĀ SinkĀ story yet, this epic two-part saga that was action-packed and climactic in its own right, while also setting up some major big picture stuff for down the line. And so, I figured it would be nice to then wrap up the volume with a little palette cleanser, something more light and fun, at least byĀ SinkĀ standards. I also liked the idea of each volume having a ā€œhappy ending,ā€ comparatively speaking, of course. And underneath all the violence and butt toys, I think the story of Kieran and Louise is quite sweet and wholesome, and hopefully, if weā€™ve done our jobs, youā€™re invested in them on a human level and are happy to see them not just survive, but for their relationship to blossom.

HMTL: Can you tell us a little bit about ComixTribe? Did you help establish the publisher or were you brought in to work with them withĀ Emily?

Sink #9 by John Lees

JL: I didnā€™t establish the publisher. Itā€™s run by the great Tyler James. But I have been around with them since the beginning. My first ever comic, a superhero story calledĀ The Standard, was edited by my original comics mentor, Steven Forbes. He was working with Tyler on the formation of ComixTribe back at the time, this would be going back to 2011, and had suggested to me that we bringĀ The StandardĀ into the ComixTribe fold to be part of the fledgling publisherā€™s launch line-up. And Iā€™ve worked with them ever since. They publishedĀ And Then Emily Was Gone, and now theyā€™re publishingĀ Sink.Ā 

HMTL: WithĀ DigĀ #1 on the way, it is clear that you have more stories to tell about Sinkhill and its residents. Is there anything lined up afterĀ Dig? Another volume ofĀ Sink?

JL: Oh, we definitely want to do more. Over the last couple of years, I actually wrote out the entirety of both Volumes 3 and 4! The original plan had been for Alex and I to take a year off ofĀ SinkĀ after the release of Volume 2 in 2019, doĀ The Crimson CageĀ in 2020, then come back forĀ SinkĀ Volume 3 in 2021. But then the pandemic happened, andĀ The Crimson CageĀ got pushed back to launching in December 2021, making it mostly a 2022 book. And that in turn impacted onĀ Sink, meaning thatĀ DigĀ was pushed back to early 2022 andĀ SinkĀ Volume 3 to mid-2022. But with the global paper shortage and other factors,Ā DigĀ ended up being moved back to mid 2022, and Volume 3 is now looking like late 2022, or maybe early 2023. But we definitely still have more stories that we want to tell, and we will get them to you as soon as weā€™re able!Ā 

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HMTL: For people who want to create their own comics, what three suggestions do you have to help them get started orĀ move forward in theirĀ careers?

JL: Suggestion 1: finish something. I think one of the biggest early pitfalls you see a lot of writers going through is that they become serial first issue writers, where theyā€™ll write something, then get stuck or bored, so they start a new idea. Iā€™m not able to do it so often now, but in the past, I would frequently have the entirety of a comic series written before a publisher had picked it up or before art had even begun. Because, especially early on, I think finishing is a VITAL skill. The beginning of a story is exciting and full of possibility, sure. But itā€™s getting through that middle, muddling through the process of figuring how all the component parts of your narrative click into place, where you really start building your plotting muscles. And writing THE END at the bottom of your final script will give you such a boost, such a feeling of achievement and a confirmation that you CAN tell a story in full. On a related note, so I guess this would be suggestion 1A, hold off on redrafting a script until youā€™ve finished your first draft. Itā€™s so easy to get yourself stuck in a rut by not being happy with a scene youā€™ve written, and going back to tinker with it, and the script never gets done. Write out the script first, even if your brain is telling you that youā€™re writing garbage, just to get it down on the page, have something concrete to work with. Then, one you have a full script, you can get to going back and refining it and making it better.Ā 

Sink #10 by John Lees

Suggestion 2: find a peer review group. Something that has helped me immeasurably over the years is being a founding member, and later the leader, of the Glasgow League of Writers, a writerā€™s circle for comics where we meet monthly and review each otherā€™s comic scripts. Over the years, Iā€™ve been a part of that group, and a couple of other peer review groups. Writing is a lonely pursuit, often done in a vacuum, and we can get too close to our own stuff, not being able to see stuff thatā€™s wrong. If you can gather a community of like-minded creative people you trust – be it online or in person – to share your work with, not only will you improve as a writer (both in terms of the advice you get from them, and in the advice you give in turn making you think more critically), but youā€™ll also gain a community. And even if getting to the point of actually getting your comic made is some way away, knowing youā€™re writing for an audience can give you that added drive and motivation to create.

Suggestion 3: donā€™t be afraid of failure. Making comics can be a frustrating, demoralising process, full of setbacks. I have spent YEARS getting rejections, and still get some rejections now. And the rejections are actually an improvement to the years before that where my queries to editors were just outright ignored. Iā€™ve seen so many promising creators get told ā€œNoā€ for one pitch, and it just breaks their spirit, and they lose all confidence in making comics. And that makes me sad. Just because your comic canā€™t find a publisher doesnā€™t mean that it sucks. It might just mean that itā€™s not to the tastes of one particular editor, the time isnā€™t right, the market isnā€™t right, or maybe just that youā€™re not selling your idea the right way yet. That doesnā€™t mean your story isnā€™t worth telling, or that you donā€™t have other stories worth telling. Donā€™t be discouraged. Making comics is a marathon, not a sprint. And the good news is, there are more ways than ever to get your stories out there, with or without a publisher.Ā 

Want to learn more about John Lees?

If you want to keep up with what John Lees is working on you can follow him on Twitter and Instagram, and check out more of his work at his official website. You can also purchase comics directly from him via his online shop.

We also wish to extend a very special thank you to John Lees for taking the time to chat with us. Haunted MTL absolutely loves to interview creators in the horror space, so if you are a horror fan who does horror-centric crafting, please contact usĀ via TwitterĀ and share your work. Weā€™re always looking to spotlight the craftiest members of the horror scene.

Want more of the world of Sink? (Sponsored)

Do you want to continue exploring the world of Sink? Why not pick up the Kindle edition of Mr. Dig using our sponsored link? Support John Lees and Haunted MTL with one purchase.

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