Zitat des Tages von Alison Bechdel:
I just met someone who read Gone With the Wind 62 times for exactly that same reason. She couldn't bear that it wasn't real. She wanted to live in it.
I probably read Harriet the Spy about 70,000 times.
Watching everyone root through their psyche, it just delights me. Especially R. Crumb's stuff.
Autobiographical comics, I love them. I love them.
It's a hard thing to age a character because you can't really suddenly give someone gray hair.
Even drawing gray hair at all is difficult to render in black and white.
Nancy Drew was always changing her outfits. I despised girls' clothing, I couldn't wait to get home from school and get out of it. The last thing I wanted to read was minute descriptions of Nancy's frocks.
It's definitely part of it, that the men were having fun and doing the interesting things but also, I don't know, I'm just thinking more about gender and how maybe in some way I am more of a boy than a girl.
I love Jules Feiffer. I didn't discover him until I was a little older.
I'm pretty illiterate when it comes to comics history.
But mostly, it's a book about my relationship with my father.
When I grew up, I studied karate for years. I got pretty strong, but eventually I had to acknowledge that I really didn't like fighting at all, so I quit.
That's all true, but there was something else going on for me as a kid, something about my gender identity that I haven't figured out yet. And that's one of the things I'm hoping to dissect and investigate in this memoir project.
People really want to think that these things really happened. I don't know why that important, but I know that when I finish reading a novel or something, I want to know how much of that really happened to this author.
I get a lot of mail from men who really identify with Stuart, you know, Sparrow's boyfriend. I love that. Even though I used to say I wanted men to read the strip even though there weren't any men in it, so they'd be forced to identify with the women.
One of them is already having some menopausal symptoms. I'm working on that. I'm giving them all little lines under the eyes, trying to sort of make them age gracefully.
I started to get bored with that stuff about only drawing men and I've taken it out of the slideshow.
Partly I resented being perceived as weak because I was a girl.
When I was growing up in the 1960s, there was starting to be more books geared towards young adults.
Sometimes I wish the writing and drawing were more integrated.
I just have this sort of entrepreneurial spirit and I work really hard at promoting myself.
The satiric ethos of Mad was a much bigger childhood influence.
But I read comic books. I read things like Richie Rich and Little Lulu.
My mother is, my father certainly was. They were kind of the local intelligentsia in the town where I grew up.
Well, I'm always working on my comic strip and trying to, you know, keep cranking that out.
Yeah, I read Judy Blume. My mother didn't like that, but I read it anyhow.
I never really read superhero stuff as a kid.
For some reason writing and drawing are very separate processes for me.
Writing this book feels like a completely different activity from writing my comic strip because it's about real life. I feel like I'm using a part of my brain that's been dormant until now.
Mostly it was Mad magazine. And I did read a lot of - I had a subscription when I was little, but I also had access to some old collections, the little paperbacks of the really good stuff.
And partly, the worst thing you could do in my family was need something from someone. So physical strength represented an avenue of self-sufficiency to me.
I hope that I can get people to read it without having to change it. Especially now that the strip has more different kinds of characters. It's really not all lesbians any more.