Mid-July always feels like christmas to me. That is, if Santa was a Trekkie who loved kids’ books. July means Comic-Con and right on its heels comes the SCBWI Summer Conference.
I can’t imagine any two events more saturated with great minds, creative talent, and genuine inspiration. So it was with a huge grin on my face that I walked out onto the expo floor on Wednesday night. And Comic-Con did not disappoint.
There’s an infinite number of ways to amuse yourself at Comic-Con, a point that my friend and fantastic artist Andy Mitchell literally illustrates here.
One of my favorite ‘distractions’ of the long weekend was Quick Draw! It’s a battle of speed and humor pitting 3 artists against each other. This year, it was Sergio Aragones from Mad Magazine, Scott Shaw from Hanna-Barbera, and Floyd Norman from Disney.
Displayed on giant projectors, their hands raced to draw a cross between a armadillo and a dung beetle, or to get a member of the audience to guess a secret word, or to illustrate scenarios. Here’s Sergio Aragones’s answer to “Tragedy strikes Donald Duck.” 
I also got a chance to hear Holly Black, author of Tithe and The Spiderwick Chronicles talk about outlining a novel and “the process of ingreatening it.” She confessed that her original outlines often consist of “insert genius idea here” or “evil is defeated.” It’s lovely to know that fascinating stories can still materialize out of humble beginnings.
She also spoke about how lazy her characters are. Holly Black lamented that, while other writers talk about their characters dictating the story to them, her characters spend the whole book trying to get out of being the protagonist. She quipped that they don’t want to go on a quest, they just wanna go home. Again, I found these confessions from such a great writer very reassuring.
I had other shining moments this weekend. Hearing Ray Bradbury talk about the moon landing, Eoin Colfer and Mary Pearson sharing their author experiences, and literally running into Seth Green. But what struck me most is that Comic-Con is a giant party of people that all love the same things. All kinds of artists gather together to show each other how they make their art and how much that art is appreciated. It’s a place where you can shake your hero’s hand and snap a picture.
![]()
Where you can meet the stars that make your favorite characters leap off the screen. Or imagine what it would be like to be them.
Where the guy who made the homage t-shirt is thanked by the guy on the t-shirt. Here it doesn’t matter if you’re an artist, a collector, a writer, a reader, an actor, or a fan. Because at Comic-Con, everyone is part of the same great story.
Posted in Authors, Books, Illustration, Nifty happenings, SCBWI, Writing
You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Trackback from your own site.
Gotta get myself there next year. Still dreaming of that Indian food we had last year. Some people go for the comics, me, it’s yum, yum in my tum san diego food.
YAY! I love ComicCon! Haven’t been since 2007 but perhaps next year, ROAD TRIP!!!
Great recap!
I will admit that I had some tasty dessert at Yog-art. Coconut+ Mochi+ chocolate frozen goodness = Nomnomnom
When do we get to see a photo of you in the wolf suit? I will not rest until I see it!
That picture will have to wait a week or two… it has one more appearance to make first:) Then there will be pictures galore!
Oooo. Sounds like so much fun and great inspirstion! I am so jealous of all yout conference experiences this summer. Can’t wait to hear about them – live! ; )
That was supposed to be inspiration -I’m clearly going blind.
That’s gotta be as cute as Anya in the bunny suit!! I want to see! Now!!