I return to the Comics Shenanigans podcast where host Adam Chapman and I take a deep dive into my new novel, Dark Future. We also have an in depth discussion about the just-concluded Spider-Man '94. You can listen right here. Enjoy!
It is interesting thatnon on eever brings up that time you mt Harvey Pekar, and then had an existential crisis.
You recall... You met Pekar and told him how much you enjoyed his work, and appreciated how much detail he put into this fiction city of "Cleveland," and asked him if he would ever explore more of this fantastic realm of his called "O-Hi-O."
He then told you bothe Ohio and Cleveland were real, and when it was confirmed by several people, you started wonder if Oz was real. Could you buy a plain ticket to Shangri-La? Did Atlantis have a tourism board? Is the planet mono looking for incoming immigrants? What of Kansas? Surely Kansas could not be real, right?
You spent about a week and a half catatonic in a mental hospital, until you just decided to assume Harvey Pekar was just a prodict of an over-stresed imagination, that seemed more realsitic that this "Cleveland" beign real.
A Classic New Yorker meets an out-of-towner story.
I assume you based this on the fact that I met Harvey at a con years ago and we had a short correspondence discussing the virtues of (so-called) realistic vs. fantastic fiction. He was an interesting guy, to say the least, and I loved his work.
Hi JM!! i love your work and i’m an astrologer - do you know what time you were born? would love to look at your birth chart !
ReplyDeleteGood question, but I don't have the answer!
DeleteIt is interesting thatnon on eever brings up that time you mt Harvey Pekar, and then had an existential crisis.
ReplyDeleteYou recall...
You met Pekar and told him how much you enjoyed his work, and appreciated how much detail he put into this fiction city of "Cleveland," and asked him if he would ever explore more of this fantastic realm of his called "O-Hi-O."
He then told you bothe Ohio and Cleveland were real, and when it was confirmed by several people, you started wonder if Oz was real. Could you buy a plain ticket to Shangri-La? Did Atlantis have a tourism board? Is the planet mono looking for incoming immigrants? What of Kansas? Surely Kansas could not be real, right?
You spent about a week and a half catatonic in a mental hospital, until you just decided to assume Harvey Pekar was just a prodict of an over-stresed imagination, that seemed more realsitic that this "Cleveland" beign real.
A Classic New Yorker meets an out-of-towner story.
Jack
Accurate, as always!
DeleteI assume you based this on the fact that I met Harvey at a con years ago and we had a short correspondence discussing the virtues of (so-called) realistic vs. fantastic fiction. He was an interesting guy, to say the least, and I loved his work.