Tag Archives: The Waters

13 Ways of Looking at The Waters 13: The Spider from the Darkness

Whew! That’s a wrap on the black and white pages. I still have the colored pages (front and back cover, inside and outside) to finish, but they’re well underway. Hopefully by the time you see this, they’ll be done as well.

“The Spider from the Darkness” is the story I wrote to replace the second Lorena story, meaning I wrote it well after I wrote the others. However, it was the first page I finished when I started illustrating the comic. I love the water lily and the heart and the spider and the semi-feral girl and the butterflies and even that silly asymmetrical sun, which shouldn’t work, but somehow does.

If all goes well, I hope this comic will be available in print at some point in the near future, and, if possible, I hope I’ll be able to bring it to some nice conference–ALA’s 2026 gathering in Chicago would be my preference–where I can discuss it with other Bonnie Jo Campbell scholars and perhaps entice new readers to The Waters.

13 Ways of Looking at The Waters 12: The Girl Who Came to Land

If you are among the chosen few who read my unpublished novel The Girl Who Followed Her Own Counsel you might see some parallels between this story and one of the Little Red Riding Hood variants in that novel. The point is: either you grow up or you die. There’s no option where you stay a kid forever no matter what your family does to keep you there. If you keep living, you’re always going to become an adult, and, sad as it is, your grandparents are always going to decline as you rise.

I had what one might call a prolonged childhood, by choice, in which I was able to keep a youthful outlook on everything until I was about 35. Adulthood never really suited me, though, and I’m happy to move on to my crone phase. I’m happy to be a witch. I was never cut out to be a grown up.

Perhaps not coincidentally, my grandmother lived to 96 and only passed away about a year ago, when I was 49. Now I’m grandmother-aged myself. You can’t stop the progression of time. You can’t stop your children from growing up.

13 Ways of Looking at The Waters 8: Princess and Lindworm or the Three Sisters, page 2

I made the lindworm intentionally simple after drawing the 52 thousand scales on the dragon. She’s a little derpy but I love her.

This story took the longest to write, and is 1 of only 2 that I actually remember writing. All the others were generated in an intense flow state, basically a trance of pulling archetypes from the collective unconscious. But I had to think more deliberately to write the poems.

13 Ways of Looking at the Waters 7: The Ghost

Of all the amusing little details I managed to get right in this comic, this page probably contains 2 of my favorites. On the first pass, I drew the ghost in a classical ghost shroud style, which looked…really dumb. Making him a glowing, translucent guy worked out much more elegantly.

But probably my favorite image in this entire comic book is the top one, of the devil being so incredibly offended and the guy with his hobo outfit and “hey, what did I do?” expression. But devil practically clutching his pearls like, “Dude? Your own stepdaughter? Really? No. Gross,” will be cracking me up for the rest of my life.

13 Ways of Looking at the Waters 6: The Giant and the Elf

For whatever reason, this was the easiest page to draw. It was the second one I completed, but the the first one that I was completely satisfied with. Their clothes are perfect, their expressions are perfect, the image in my mind completely matched the image on the page. You really believe these guys could be in love.

13 Ways of Looking at the Waters 5: The Autumn Prince and the Summer Queen, page 3

This is the page that gave me the most trouble of the book, because I desperately wanted to draw a magical ice bridge and none of my attempts look magical, or icy. Eventually I spend 3 days drawing 60-odd individual snowflakes in stupid detail that probably won’t even be visible in print and I’m satisfied with the result.

13 Ways of Looking at the Waters 5: The Autumn Prince and the Summer Queen, page 2

I originally had bigger plans for this page, but I scaled them back once I got the main details. It was saying pretty much what I wanted it to say, but something did seem to be missing on both sides. On the Summer Queen’s side, I realized it had to be her losing her crown, but on the Autumn Prince’s side I couldn’t figure it out. I mean, it could have been some bits of hay? But that is not very interesting.

But I took a page from my very early vision of the comic and dashed out this funny little crow, who I love. Obviously there are crows aplenty in the Autumn Kingdom. And they also think it’s weird that people make so much trouble for themselves by not saying what they mean.

But also, let’s face it: Titus and Rose did NOT belong together. That’s the point of this story. You can love someone as much as it possible to love anyone. That doesn’t mean you’re the least bit compatible or share the same goals or even see each other clearly.

13 Ways of Looking at The Waters 5: The Autumn Prince and the Summer Queen, page 1

I haven’t said anything about the illuminated initial caps yet. I drew most of them before I drew the illustrations. Some of them I had a very clear vision and others I just sort of made it up as I went. I always knew that the first comic would start “Once upon a time,” and the initial cap would have a little farm scene with a barn inside.

This one also was very clear in my mind. I actually have that same garden swing, which The Man built for me in the backyard. I could not get it right. The arms and legs and bodies weren’t sitting properly in the swing no matter how many times I drew it. I made the made model with me for a reference pic. Then it was easier to adjust.

13 Ways of Looking at The Waters 4: The Healer’s Daughter, page 2

Spent a very long time drawing that dragon’s scales. The Fox assured me they are perfect but they don’t look perfect to me but anyway they are done and that’s pretty close to perfect from where I sit.

That small king is a real creep so I drew him creeping.

Women, don’t betray your own principles for some guy.