Robert Kirkman, Writer of the Undead, Is Reborn as a Partner at Image Comics (original) (raw)

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A panel from Invincible, one of Robert Kirkman’s comics for Image, drawn by Ryan Ottley. Mr. Kirkman will soon be advising on future titles for the company.Credit...Ran Ottley

What do a college-age superhero and a disgraced pope trying to save a saint have in common? They’re both comic book concepts that emerged from the mind of Robert Kirkman.

Mr. Kirkman, who began by self-publishing his comics, is a star on the rise. His books are favorites of fans and critics alike. MTV has announced plans to adapt Invincible, his superhero series. And this week at Comic-Con International in San Diego, Image Comics will announce that Mr. Kirkman is becoming its newest partner. Under the company’s structure, partners profit mainly from their own work but also have a say in what will be published.

“This is kind of a big deal for me,” Mr. Kirkman, 29, said by phone from his base in Richmond, Ky. “Image Comics as a company was founded by comic book creators for comic book creators.”

In 1992, seven top-selling artists who had primarily been working for Marvel Comics decided to form their own company, Image. They had grown frustrated with having little editorial control and limited financial benefit from working on corporate-owned characters.

The founders, including Erik Larsen, Jim Lee and Jim Valentino, were likened to rock stars by Alexander Zalben, a regular reviewer of comics on PulpSecret.com as well as the host of the onstage New York talk show “Comic Book Club.” “You weren’t reading Spawn, you were reading Todd McFarlane’s Spawn and Rob Liefeld’s Youngblood,” Mr. Zalben said in an e-mail message.

Today the company is still “the Marvel-DC alternative, with books like Invincible, but they’re more about offering high-quality comics by up-and-coming creators that offer an alternative to the mainstream,” Mr. Zalben wrote.


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