Tag Archives: graphic novels

Sins of the fathers

Book insights from Nimue.

(You can find the Sloth Comics edition over here – https://www.slothcomics.co.uk/sloth-comics-publish-sinners-hopeless-maine-vol-2-by-tom-nimue-brown/)

Early on in the life of this book, the working title was Sins of the Fathers – as that’s very much what’s driving the story. Specifically, the fathers of our main characters.

Salamandra O’Stoat is the daughter of a rather unpleasant occultist called Durosimi who – with more ambition than wisdom – has managed to become a vampire. With the whole vampire/consumption plot under way, Salamandra has the awkward issue of dealing with a problem that has probably been caused by her father.

Owen Davies is the son of Reverenced Davies and we’d be getting into the realm of plot spoilers if I told you too much about his plot line through this book. Fair to say that none of it is easy for Owen as his father does something truly terrible.

If you’re a regular on the blog, you’ll mostly know the fathers from their regular appearances in The Squid and Teapot. here we find their more everyday selves. Reverend Davies tends to be austere and ineffectual, Durosimi is always plotting something but seldom gets what he wants. They’d both be a lot more harmful if they were competent, but thankfully most of the time they are not that effective. In Sinners, they both manage to cause a lot of harm.

The Outland Entertainment kickstarter for Sinners is over here – https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/hopelessmaine/hopeless-maine-1-3-sinners-a-graphic-novel-series

Sinners – some insights from Nimue

Sinners represents the first of my writing on the Hopeless, Maine story. When I came to the project, Tom had already created a few pages in which Owen returned to the island and found a whole situation with consumption, and vampires. This draws on New England folklore that blamed consumption on vampires. I included Tom’s original story fragments in these graphic novels, and managed to weave them into a larger tale.

I’d written all kinds of things prior to Hopeless, Maine, but never a comics script. I had explored radio plays, so I drew primarily on this. Comics call for a really different approach to prose – you can’t have much narration, for a start. If you’re trying to describe scenes and action for an artist, you have to do that in a way that will sit on the page. At the outset, I didn’t have much sense of how anything was going to sit on the page, or how to pace things, or what anything should look like.

By the time these scripts were being translated into book form, I had more idea of how to make the text work. What came out in the Sloth editions was greatly pared down from the first draft. As a younger writer, I tended towards longer and more wandering sentences. Characters were circumspect, their intentions obscure, their speech misleading. I was all about the ambiguity. Frankly there’s only so much of that you can get away with in a comics page. I kept what I could of the flavour, but sometimes I had to cut the script to the bone and focus on getting the story across.

Comics are not my natural habitat. I’m too interested in the inner lives of characters, in thought and feelings, and as a young writer, I wasn’t big on action. As I’ve got older, the amount of action in my stories has increased considerably. Shedding literary pretentions like the dead skins they were, has helped a lot. Having more life experience has helped a lot too. There was such a long time between the first draft and the final script that I changed a lot as a writer along the way.

Initially, I wrote Hopeless (starting with Sinners) as a single script, because it looked like it was going out into the world as a webcomic. Also I had no idea how much script represented a page, or how big a book ought to be. I really had no idea what I was doing. That lead to a later process (when I did know what I was doing) of breaking the story into book length chunks, and then figuring out chapters, and specific pages. It took a lot of work, time, learning and thinking. I went from having no clue as to how a graphic novel works structurally, to having a pretty good idea.

I occasionally have thoughts about doing a small comic on my own – so far I’ve not got beyond three or four beat comic strips, but it might happen.

You can find the kickstarter for the Outland Entertainment hardcover version of Sinners over here – https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/hopelessmaine/hopeless-maine-1-3-sinners-a-graphic-novel-series

There are Survivors

The final book in the graphic novel series is now out, and available from online retailers. In theory you can order it from places that do books and comics as well. You also have a short at getting copies directly from Sloth Comics at events, and anywhere else you see people doing Hopeless things.

If you are the sort of person who doesn’t like to commit to a series until it’s complete, this is your moment! There are books set after the series (as yet unpublished) and a couple set before (published by Outland Entertainment) but the series stands alone.

The story told through the graphic novels follows young experimental occultist Salamandra, as she gets to grips with the implications of having power. The story is about friendship and community, what we might do for each other, and what happens when power over others, and fear of others dominates. I have a lot of things to say about why certain ways of trying to do things just don’t work, and this is pretty explicit in the last book where I go deeper into those power and control themes. 

The graphic novel series was how the Hopeless, Maine project began. It’s been the core of it for many years, and the reason for the other projects. However, my impression at this point is that there are a lot of people who enjoy Hopeless things, including getting to play with the setting. For as long as that continues to be true (and I should clarify that it is Nimue writing this blog) I will keep holding spaces and creating opportunities to do Hopeless things. I’m open to exploring any direction anyone wants to go on. 

If people want more stories, I will write more stories. If anyone else wants to write stories, that would be great. Any and all creative expressions are very welcome, so get in touch if you have something you’d like to share.

News of the survivors

Survivors is the final graphic novel in the Hopeless Maine series. I can now confirm that it has all been handed in to Sloth Comics, the lettering is all done and the process towards getting it on paper is now well under way. As soon as I’m confident about a release date, I’ll post about it here.

The graphic novel series is a complete story arc, which ends at the end. There are survivors, it’s not such an absolute ending that nothing can happen after it. Coming to the end of the graphic novel series doesn’t mean we have to stop writing Hopeless, Maine things. Once this book is out, we’re going to have some shifts in how things are on the island, but it seems likely some of you will want to get in and play with the changes.

There are two novellas set after the graphic novels, and there will be conversations ahead about how best to proceed with those. News when I have any!

Survivors

Survivors is the final graphic novel in the Hopeless, Maine graphic novel series. These books are a complete story arc. So, if you’re the sort of person who doesn’t like committing to an unfinished series, now is a good time to jump in. Also, I know how you feel, I get very frustrated by things that go on long after they should have stopped, and by things that stop long before they’ve actually finished.

This isn’t the last story about life in Hopeless, Maine. There are other things written and we need to figure out how best to get those out into the world. There will also be a steady supply of community sourced nonsense and whimsy here on the blog for as long as there’s anyone finding it entertaining to do that. Feel free to dive in if you want to be part of it, and if you don’t have any other way to get in touch, leave a comment and I’ll email you.

We’re seeing pre-order pages on various book selling sites for Survivors with a release date of the 12th July. How this is going to play out in practice is anyone’s guess, Optimists suffered a few delays, but the theory is good.

Given that two of the three novellas currently on the back burner are set after the graphic novels, it’s going to make more sense to get those moving now. Watch this space! 

Life after graphic novels

Those of you who follow us on Facebook may have noticed that we’re talking a lot there about the last graphic novel. This is Survivors, and we’re getting close to finishing it. Survivors is the last graphic novel in the story arc, and it’s the last Tom/Nimue graphic novel you are going to see. They’re just too time consuming, and we need more time to actually have a life and do other things. 

However, that’s not the final instalment for Hopeless, Maine, and a number of things come next.

We’re still working on making a film. We’ve been set back by the plague era, but not totally thwarted. Expect to see news on that as and when we have any.

We’re going out with live shows. You can find The Ominous Folk of Hopeless Maine at events in the UK. We want to do more events, which will be easier when we’re not also trying to make graphic novels. We’ve got some big ambitions for the performance side in 2023, big enough that we have to start working on that this summer. Please do suggest events we might throw ourselves at – we can go out as folk, steampunk and theatre. We’ve been to a Goblin Masquerade. We’re open to suggestions.

Otherwise, we’re moving into illustrated fiction. Both Sloth Comics and Outland Entertainment have already expressed a willingness to publish books that have more words in them. We’ve got a new story for you, set after the graphic novel series. It’s called Mirage, and Dr Abbey has been our co-creator for this. It’s a standalone novel, (we’ve tested it on the innocent) but it will probably be more amusing for people who already know the story to this point.

So long as we have ideas for stories, we’ll keep doing illustrated novels. We’ll likely have each of these stand alone, because that’s much less stressful for everyone. It’s also really important to us to only bring you new things if we feel like we have something worth sharing. We are not fans of things that are stretched out forever, recycling what few ideas they had in the hopes of milking every last drop from the cash cow!

There are also some not-Hopeless plans being explored, and we’ll point at those from here now and then when it makes sense to do so.

Survivors should be with you in 2023. Mirage should follow that in a smooth sort of way. Meanwhile we try and figure out a happily ever after for the creative team.

Survivors in progress

We’re currently working on Hopeless, Maine – Survivors, which will be the last graphic novel in the series, wrapping up this story line.

It’s probably also the last graphic novel we (specifically Tom and Nimue) do, unless someone other than Tom is overwhelmed by the desire to draw comics pages. It’s such time consuming work.

It isn’t the last Hopeless Maine story, it’s just that we’re moving into other ways of sharing island life. There will be more books and more art.

Here are some pencils in progress. As Tom keeps saying on social media ‘I’m sure there’s nothing to worry about here.’

A future Salamandra

In the summer of 2020, Dr Abbey started drawing Salamandra with green hair. I knew as soon as I saw these interpretations that there was no way Salamandra could have green hair during the graphics novel arc we have planned. Life is dour on Hopeless, colours are muted, and Salamandra has her attention focused on less-fun things.

I wrote the first draft of the graphic novels more than ten years ago. Since then there have been stories set before and during that time frame. Nothing had previously turned up that belonged after the graphic novels.

One of the things that happens with the island, is that pieces of the story turn up all over the place. They don’t come to me – we’ve got a hugely important story from Merry Debonnaire in the next graphic novel. Hopeless is strange and magical in its own ways, and sometimes it happens to people.

I looked at green haired Salamandra and realised that Dr Abbey could see something of what might come next. So earlier this year I sat him down and started asking about that. He had a lot to tell me!

I’ve been in the exciting process of developing those storylines for some months now. It will be a while before any of it makes it out into the world, but I can confirm that while there are two more graphic novels to come out, the story continues beyond the graphic novel arc.

We have to stop doing graphic novels because they are so labour intensive. We’re going to move into illustrated fiction and maybe poke about in light novel form hereafter, because that will be much more sustainable for us. There are some huge changes on the island by the end of the graphic novels. I feel very comfortable making it obvious that Salamandra survives because I am never going to write a story in which the magical girl does not get to grow up and live long and well.

(Green haired Sal by Dr Abbey)

Hopeless, Maine returns to North America with Outland Entertainment

Hello people! (and others)

We can now reveal that Hopeless, Maine is returning to North America with Outland Entertainment! The first two volumes will be printed and released soon, along with illustrated prose novels by Nimue Brown and Keith Errington and the Hopeless, Maine RPG is in development and may well be out at the same time. Here is the press release! 

Cover art – collaboration between Nimue and myself.

Hopeless Plotting

We are indeed, plotting, and at the moment, the plotting looks a bit like this –

At the moment, Tom and I are working on Optimists – the penultimate book in the Hopeless Maine graphic novel series.  Next year we will be making the final book in the series – Survivors. Our plan from this point had been to stop doing graphic novels – Tom has just had his sixtieth birthday, and comics are labour intensive the way he draws them, and the decision was to move into smaller pieces and more illustration.

Note the use of the past tense.

Right now we’re not sure what the plan is, but experiments are under way and I’ll post updates as we have them. Which is likely to be soon, because one of the implications here is that we might be able to work a lot more quickly on some things, while giving Tom time to really dig in with the more elaborate illustrations as we go.

We might be able to have the best of many worlds, with time for the kind of art Tom does, and more of a manga style for Hopeless some of the time, and enough time to tell more stories.

We’ve known for some time now that Doctor Abbey would be more involved with Hopeless Maine as we move forward. We’re still figuring out how that works, and we’re collectively excited about the possibilities.