Posted in: Comics | Tagged: Comics, dynamite, entertainment, gail simone, Sergio Davila, Swords of Sorrow
Gail Simone Provides A Writer's Commentary For Swords Of Sorrow #1
Writer Commentary by Gail Simone:
I have never done a writer's commentary before, but I've always enjoyed the little behind-the-scenes sneak peek when others have done it, so this is my attempt. I still want to keep some mystery and surprises, so mostly I am going to comment on oddball things that are completely irrelevant, because that's the fun stuff, after all.
The fun of this book, and the reason I wanted to do it is that it's a mash-up no other company could do. Marvel has superheroes, they don't have the pulp characters. DC doesn't have Miss Fury or Red Sonja or Jane Parker. That makes this really fun, that I can have Dejah Thoris riding on a horse behind Lady Rawhide. That's the stuff I always loved as a kid, and here we get the whole playground. FUN!


A lot of our readers are probably not expecting a lot of half-nekkid wimmin running around, and a bunch of the characters (Miss Fury, Kato, and more) are dressed from head to toe, so we COULD have started with some of them to set the tone.
But I like playing the game on the hardest level, so I thought it'd be cheeky to start off with arguably the most cheesecakey character in the entire story, Jungle Girl.
When I first read about Jungle Girl, she didn't seem to have much compelling to say to me, but reading a little deeper, I started to see her as a teenager, someone going through a difficult time when no one around understands her, and that made her a lot of fun to write.

Also, it was fun to write a filthy sea chanty for Sonja to sing.


Probably the biggest thrill for me is that we got to put the worlds of Burroughs and Howard together for the first time in history and it's LICENSED. That is amazingly coo.
PAGE FIVE: I just have to point out here, what a phenomenal job Sergio Davila is doing on this book. They offered several choices, I had to choose him, he just did an amazing job on Legenderry. And he drew the women as people, not pin-ups.

Also, this was the only time I had to ask for a character to be redrawn, Kato was too busty and was wearing high heels. Sergio was actually relieved, he thought she looked weird that way!

PAGE NINE: We first see the mysterious Traveller, and her assistant, the Courier, who goes around giving out swords like the Lady of The Lake in the King Arthur legend.
PAGE TWELVE: This guy is a complete douchenozzle. Pardon me for slipping into technical jargon.
PAGE SIXTEEN: Part of the fun for me was figuring out which kind of sword each character might have as THEIR sword of sorrow.
PAGE SEVENTEEN: Never let Tharak of the Dirt People drive the Black Beauty.
PAGE EIGHTEEN: In crossover books, my favorite bits are always the cameos. Here we have a bunch!
PAGE NINETEEN: Hate to be meta-textual, but the dinosaur represents greed, thematically, here. Greed that almost ruined the comics industry, and greed that makes a vampire girl look good to nom nom nom.
PAGE TWENTY: My favorite page this issue. Sonja vs. Tars Tarkas. SO FUN.
PAGE TWENTY-TWO: It's funny, I know for a fact that a big part of the audience for Lady Death and the various other CHAOS characters is female, but when I tried to read them originally, I just found them baffling. So, because they are an important part of this story, I went back, and it IS fun to think of them as the ultimate expression of the 'bad girl' craze. A million others disappeared, they're still around, still popular, still weird and mean and strange. Which, again, makes them fun to write.
Don't forget to pick up SWORDS OF SORROW, please, plus the tie-in titles by writers like Marguerite Bennett, G. Willow Wilson, Emma Beeby, Nancy A. Collins, Mikki Kendall, Mairghread Scott, and Leah Moore. Thanks for reading this and may you get your own Sword someday!












