Faith Erin Hicks & Mariko Tamaki Talk Comics, Prose & Everything in Between
Main Art by Faith Erin Hicks & Rosemary Valero-O’Connell/ Faith Erin Hicks Photograph Courtesy of George Baier
Friends With Boys cartoonist Faith Erin Hicks and This One Summer co-creator Mariko Tamaki both had a pretty killer 2018—Hicks wrapped up her lauded Nameless City trilogy, while Tamaki expanded her Marvel reach with a new volume of X-23—but both seem poised to top themselves in 2019.
In February, Hicks will release her first prose novel, Comics Will Break Your Heart, a sweet, funny teen romance inspired in part by some infamous injustices throughout comics history. The title comes from a quote often attributed to Jack Kirby and follows the granddaughter of a famous comic creator who was cheated out of his legacy, as she falls in love with the descendent of the collaborator who defrauded her grandfather. Hicks also illustrated YA superstar Rainbow Rowell’s first original graphic novel, Pumpkinheads, which hits stands in August and follows a pair of “seasonal best friends” throughout their final autumn working together on a Nebraska pumpkin patch.
In addition to her ongoing Marvel Comics work, Tamaki has teamed up with illustrator Rosemary Valero-O’Connell for Laura Dean Keeps Breaking Up With Me, a graphic novel arriving in May. Laura Dean is a swoonworthy tale of young love and learning to deal with toxic relationships, even when the toxic person is really, really cute. Protagonist Freddy thought Laura Dean was her dream girl, but her inability to say no to Laura Dean seems to be costing Freddy her friendships and sanity.
In advance of what’s sure to be a major year for these two multi-talented cartoonists, Paste is thrilled to host a chat between Tamaki and Hicks arranged by their mutual publisher, First Second. Check that out below, and be sure to nab Comics Will Break Your Heart in February, Laura Dean Keeps Breaking Up With Me in May and Pumpkinheads in August.
Comics Will Break Your Heart Cover Art by Faith Erin Hicks
Mariko Tamaki: What is the first thing you know about a story before you write/draw a comic (when it’s your own work and not a collaboration)?
Faith Erin Hicks: Hm, that’s a good question! It varies, actually. For some stories (that I write and draw) I start with a character. Like my graphic novel Friends with Boys, which was about a homeschooled girl going to high school for the first time (it’s a little bit based on my own experience being an ex-homeschooled kid). With other stories, the themes of the story come first, like with my fantasy trilogy The Nameless City. I had all these thoughts about complicated friendships between two kids born on opposite sides of a political conflict that I wanted to get out of my head. With Comics Will Break Your Heart, I think I started with a theme. I was struggling with the idea of art and commerce, and how the two are intrinsically wedded together… or are they? And how art can sometimes be exploitive, and not financially reward the people who actually make it. I put these thoughts and feelings into a story, and eventually that story became Comics Will Break Your Heart.
Is it cheating if I just ask you that question back? Because I’m actually super curious. Where do the stories you write come from? Is there some germ of an idea, or do they come from a character who pops into your mind? Do you draw much from your own life?
Tamaki: Most of the time, it’s character. Skim is the best example, I saw her completely before I had any idea of what the story would be, which is to say, I knew who she was. The goal of This One Summer for me was to move beyond just the single character, I wanted it to be about a kind of community, a world away from the world. Both of those books are inspired by my own childhoods and, obviously, Jillian’s storytelling, insights and experiences make the complete book.
Writing for Marvel and DC Comics it’s a little different, I think because of the timing of these things you have to have a clear idea of what is going to happen in your story. Also, clearly, with Marvel and DC Comics you need to understand your character, which is largely canon, and then your job is “what’s next?”