Gail Simone's Blog, page 493
May 1, 2014
Pretty Routinely...
…I get someone who asks me a question here, and then is upset when I don’t give them the answer they want. There are quite a few people who believe any bad news, no matter how goofy, and hate to hear anything positive, just as one example.
Here’s the thing. If you ask a question, I assume you want the truth. The answers I give here are the truth to the best of my knowledge, period. I am quite positive many publishers would prefer I avoid some of these topics altogether and I have gotten warning emails more than once. If I answer a question, it’s going to be from my perspective and experience. You may disagree, but it’ll be the truth as I have experienced it.
The one exception is, I am not going to bag on people just for the hell of it. First, most of them are not on Tumblr to defend themselves or tell their side, and second, I just don’t feel good about it, which should be reason enough for anyone.
I really like the people here, but if you ask a question, you kinda have to be prepared that my own experience and knowledge will be the whole of my answer.
And sometimes we will, hopefully respectfully, disagree.
Fair?
How are your comics' digital sales compared to your print sales? Do your publishers value one over the other?
I am not sure, it’s a little confusing. But print is still way more than digital. Last I heard, digital sales are usually equal to somewhere between 10%-30% of what the print version sells, depending on the book.
The benefit is, though, that the digital version stays available. Almost all the books I have up on digital markets continue selling years after they are no longer on the shelves, with Wonder Woman, Secret Six, and Birds of Prey continuing to sell really well, I am told.
Oh My God
Disney Infinity 2.0.
Marvel figures.
Black Widow.
Rocket Raccoon.
I am doomed.
How am I going to not play this all day every day forever?
wellisntthatshiny:
Anyone who follows me knows that I have a...

Anyone who follows me knows that I have a wee bit of an obsession with a comic series called Secret Six. They know that I am equally in love with Catman and Scandal Savage, that I think Ragdoll is hilarious, and that I love a good team-up of obscure characters that I can learn to love with no preconceived notions of who they are supposed to be.
But what I don’t usually talk about is the real reason why Secret Six, over all of the other books I’ve read, has stuck with me. Why when people ask me for recommendations I tell them to read this book over any other. Why it is that Secret Six is the title that comes out of my mouth rather than Cable & Deadpool or Tim Drake’s run as Robin or any of my other favorites.
It’s because Secret Six was the first book that taught me that I didn’t have to compromise in order to be a comic book fan. I didn’t have to go into a book and grit my teeth and smile through the casual sexism, the white male dominated world where I constantly felt like a woman invading an inherently male space. Oh sure, I absolutely love the early run of Deadpool, but even his most diehard fans have to admit that he isn’t always written as a female friendly character. Tim Drake is a character with whom I identify, but he can sometimes be a sexist asshole and I have to recognize and deal with that.
Secret Six, on the other hand, gives me female characters to love right off the bat. It gives me queer representation that is happier than most straight couples in comic books. Scandal and Kay are fantastically loving and portrayed as a healthy relationship, even when they have fights. And then when Liana comes in, I was dreading the fact that Scandal would end up leaving her for Kay, but I didn’t even have to worry. Instead of having a messy break-up, I got a woman, Scandal, who decided to fight for both of her lovers and a polyamorous relationship that has a lot of hope, rather than criticism.
I have characters that, while not always the best for each other, have deep friendships that draw me in. I have complex plots that raise interesting questions and aren’t thrown together for a cheap laugh or manpain. I have women who are sex workers that are respected and valuable members of the team. I have a nonbinary character who doesn’t give a shit about societal conventions. I have this group of outcasts and misfits who find a family, and yes it is a family because for all that they fight they come back together, and fight for one another the same way my group of friends do in real life.
Secret Six means so much to me because when I read the title, the House of Secrets feels like home to me. I feel like I belong in the comic book community. Like I’m not the outcast forcing my way into a place and demanding a spot, but that there was one already available for me before I even realized where I belonged. There are other books that have done that since (The current Hawkeye and Captain Marvel books come to mind), but Secret Six was the first and for that reason it, and it’s author Gail Simone, will always, always have a special place in my heart.
I don’t know what to say, but I am so very, very grateful to the audience for that book. Thank you for this lovely message.
It’s weird to say as the writer, but I also found a lot of comfort in this team. Few of us have bat-mansions or superfriends. I loved that there was a book out there of odd people who were looked down upon, but supported each other.
Maybe they weren’t exactly heroes, but they certainly meant a lot to a lot of people (including me).
April 30, 2014
Batgirl and Poison Ivy
Batgirl Annual #2
Lovely art!


Batgirl and Poison Ivy
Batgirl Annual #2
Lovely art!
theimancameron:
Alysia is awesome! She improves every issue...

Alysia is awesome! She improves every issue she’s in by a factor of 12 000! (From gailsimone & Robert Gill’s Batgirl Annual #2)
Agreed! :)
MY GOD
Batgirl Annual #2 was amazing. and so emotional.
I love Ivy so much, and it was SO nice to see her written with some depth of character and emotions beyond ‘PLANTS ARE GOOD AND HUMANS ARE BAD’….and the weird….fan service that happened in Harley Quinn…
I have always and will always believe she is…
I am so glad you enjoyed it!
metaneira:
Sometimes I think only Gail Simone truly understands...

Sometimes I think only Gail Simone truly understands the Batman.
(Panel from Secret Six #2 - Unhinged, Part Two: The Way of the Traitor, December 2008. Gail Simone, Nicola Scott, Doug Hazlewood.)
He was hungry!
A Question About Writing
Yesterday, I asked a seemingly innocuous question on Twitter and was completely flooded with responses, many from quite famous and successful writers. I was surprised by the wave of responses, and found it all very interesting.
So I thought I’d ask the question here, as well, for writers of fiction only, please.
What part of the writing process is your favorite? I’m talking about the actual writing, not the aftermath or the effects of it. During your writing of a story, what is your favorite part of doing that work?
Hmmm.
I can’t think of a single character without flaws that I would actually ever want to read about.
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