“It was an ugly birth of an ugly book”: Evan Dorkin on the Disgusting Fan Archetypes in The Eltingville Club
Evan Dorkin knows comic timing. As an artist, his style is immediately recognizable, equally suited to over-the-top slapstick and minutely observed facial obsessions. As a writer, he veer between the bombastic and cartoonish, or delve into a more complex psyche with insight and empathy. In the ‘90s, his comics Milk and Cheese and Dork approached humor from all sides, from riffing on pop-culture tropes to haunting explorations of Dorkin’s own demons. More recently, he’s collaborated with artist Jill Thompson on the multiple Eisner-winning series Beasts of Burden, which revolves around a group of animals barking and screeching up against supernatural threats.
This month brings the final—and second—issue of The Eltingville Club, in which Dorkin brings closure to four of his longstanding characters, a group of science fiction and comics obsessives whose dedication to fandom often heads in disquieting directions. (The characters also starred in an Adult Swim pilot as well as Dork.) This closing issue features a litany of great comic moments, as well as a number of scenes in which Dorkin addresses the ugliness, insecurity and sexism found just below the surface in some sects of fandom. Paste spoke with Dorkin about the evolution of these characters, his take on the changes to the comics industry over the last decade or two, and much more. An edited version of our conversation follows.
Paste: What were your feelings when you first looked at the new issue?
Evan Dorkin: I was working, so I put them aside and kept working. It didn’t really register that I was done with it. I finished up these pages a few months ago. I’ve had this in my head for a long time. Comics is not the most cathartic medium. I guess writing isn’t, either. You finish something up, and then you go downstairs and do the dishes. It’s not like acting, or a huge premiere of a movie, or you sing the last song and get off the stage to applause. It’s pretty dull in that regard.
Paste: The first issue came out about a year ago. Was the second issue mostly written by then, or were there some things that you had to figure out between issues?
Dorkin: It was figured out, on the whole. I would have liked another two pages. I would like to have extended the ending, had a few more quiet moments. I pretty much did what I meant to do. I don’t know if it works as well as issue one. I think issue one might have baked better than issue two. But I’m curious to see what people will say who read it. I know what I tried to do with it. Some of the thematic stuff going on in there was that it doesn’t end with fandom. Some of these types of people end up in the media, in comics, in film, in positions of power, or a small amount of power. And with the small amount of power, there is no responsibility, when it comes to people like this. And it’s one of the reasons that there’s material that still is up the alley of people with these attitudes.
At the same time, I also wanted it to be about people who grow up and remain fans. There is a light at the end of the tunnel for one of the characters. I knew that was something I planned. There are allusions to some stories in there that I wanted to do back in 2000, but then we did the animated pilot and I started to get really sick of the characters. I realized that I didn’t want to do too many more stories with them. I use them as plot material and motivational material for the characters here and there. It was the art, and me just having flop sweat. It took me a very, very long time to get this stupid thing done. My wife said, “It’s not a graphic novel, it’s just a comic.” And she didn’t mean by “just a comic” what some people mean. I took it way too seriously, and I got way too worked up over it. It might one be of the reasons why I’m not crazy about it. Who the hell knows?
The Eltingville Club #2 Interiors by Evan Dorkin
Paste: I remember reading the one where they watch the Twilight Zone marathon, and that was very bleak, along with the humor; this one seems even bleaker, while still being very funny. Was there a sense of trying to top what you’d done before with this issue?
Dorkin: I think the situation is, as I’m satirizing the worst aspects of fandom as I see it, fandom has gotten worse. I’m 50-years-old; I’ve been doing this for decades, and I was a fan before that. I worked in a comic store for six years, off and on. It’s probably social media. You knew there were complete assholes out there—not just idiots, not just geeks, not just harmless doofuses like Revenge of the Nerds, who had social skill problems—but actually mean people, real bastards. Some of whom end up in the industry and make life miserable for other fans later on, who have the ability to break windows in fans’ houses by killing off characters and acting like a jerk and getting paid for it. Comics, especially—this is where you get your employees. They basically come from fandom. There’s not a lot of money, and there’s not a lot of prestige, despite the higher profile of comics in some ways, with movies and the Internet and Comic Con.
It’s always been a bleak strip. It’s never been a happy strip. It’s an ugly mirror. Some of it’s based on my life. A lot of it’s based on things I’ve seen, and a lot of it’s exaggeration. It’s satire. It’s scary when I do something that I think is really horrible and then I read about something that’s even worse. Every day, there’s somebody doing something awful in fandom. And a lot of the times, it’s somebody from one of the companies or it’s a creator saying some dumb shit about women or transgender people. This is the audience, and the bizarre opinions that some people have… This attitude that comics or movies or gaming is just for them-it’s so myopic. It’s tunnel vision. The idea that you can’t even put yourself in another person’s place and understand the rampant misogyny of the world. Not just this. And how angry and hateful so many people are. People getting doxxed, people getting death threats.
The whole thing started because of hate mail. And hate mail was the extent of it, pretty much. My former publisher at Slave Labor Graphics, Dan Vado, was writing The Justice League, and he got all of this hate mail for killing a character off. Not only is this a fictional character, and there are people getting more upset about a fictional character than all of the people who died in the world that day and are not coming back. And the characters always come back. These are all copyrighted fictional kids’ characters. There’s no reason to get fucking worked up like that, and sending death threats or fighting with people online. Maybe they’re a little tired of seeing women get used as big-breasted pawns in comics plots and raped willy nilly because that’s a great way to make the male hero cry.