The fourth (of five, so far) installment of the Dave Sim's answers to your questions. Thanks for your enthusiasm -- your positive responses -- and Dave's, of course -- keep this going. If you have questions for Dave, please send them to me (jim [o--v--i] at [um.cc.umich.edu]) and I'll pass them along. Be sure to check out the tour dates at the end of this posting. The fifth installment will follow soon. *** Jeff Vogel ([j--og--l] at [jarthur.Claremont.EDU]) -- I find it quite interesting that a person who repeatedly states he is not a feminist creates the most interesting and 3-dimensional characters in comics. Dave Sim -- Although you didn't put it as a question, I've always pointed out to people that the reason my female characters are three-dimensional is because I portray them as human beings; part good and part bad. The last two Feminist Decades gave us characters of the female persuasion who were cardboard cut-outs for the same reason that you would not read Communist or Nazi approved literature in the hopes of finding a rich tapestry documenting the human condition. Dictatorial and rhetorical movements produce dictatorial and rhetorical entertainments. Fortunately we seem to be coming out of that to a degree. Jeff -- What is the most commonly asked question? Dave -- "Why an aardvark?S Jeff -- Could we have a quick summary of the beliefs of the Kevillists? Sometimes they sound very enlightened, sometimes very frightening. Dave -- R...state-owned prostitution, pharmaceutically-assisted miscarriages, ownership of men, guaranteed minimum incomes for women over the age of fifteen and the inalienable right to self- determination within those parameters...S (Astoria, Church & State pg. 622). She accommodates a number of dissenting views and has a few of her own that she doesn't advance publicly, but that pretty much sums it up. Jeff -- Read Sandman? Whaddaya think? Dave -- Sandman is brilliant. If DC would stop treating the artists on the title as after-thoughts and interchangeable cogs in the machinery it would have had the potential to be the best written _and_ drawn title in recent memory. They're doing the same thing they did with Swamp Thing; spoiling the writer shamelessly and treating the artists like crustaceans. Why? No idea. The practice dates back to Jerry Seigel and Joe Schuster evidently. RM ([bn 981] at [cleveland.Freenet.Edu]) -- How do you pronounce "Iest", anyway? "East"? "Yest"? "Yayst"? "Ice-st"? Dave -- Ee-est. Sometimes Ee-yest. The ones from the Lower City tend toward the latter pronunciation. Jeff Hildebrand ([jhildeb 1] at [cc.swarthmore.edu]) -- What is the year at this point in the story line? Unless the snow is out of season I would guess that it is early in the winter of 1415-16 but enough unusual things have happened that it could be as late as 1418. Dave -- As of Cerebus #156, it is, indeed early winter of 1415-16. AS ([ags 10] at [cunixb.cc.columbia.edu]) -- What work did Gerhard do in comic books before Cerebus? Dave -- Gerhard did no work in the comic book field prior to working on Cerebus. The Young Cerebus short story RHis First FifthS in Epic #26 was his first comic book work. Bill Sherman ([s--r--n] at [math.ucla.edu]) -- You promised in a "Swords" intro to reveal more of what really makes Elrod tick, around 175 or so. Is that still in the game plan? (I'm sorry about the incoherent letter I sent [you] a while ago.) Dave -- Oh, hey, Bill. Whus happenin'? Don't worry about the incoherent letter. I get a lot of them. ... [U]h, yeeahh. I hadn't realized I had mentioned anything about that anywhere. We are definitely coming up on that part, but it's a little later in the story; book Four of Mothers & Daughters (RMindsS)...so it's actually in the 190's now. Bill -- The Mind Games have returned. What about Odd Transformations (or any other dream stories)? These achieve a certain lyrical, personal quality which I love. It's a rare opportunity to really see inside Cerebus' head. Dave -- Yes. Once the pace slows down a little bit in M & D (i.e. after Book One) there will be other dream sequences. Bill -- What's with the sudden availability and expansiveness? We haven't heard much from you for a while, and then suddenly a tour, a Comics Interview issue, you're answering letters in Aardvark Comment again, and now this. Has your attitude toward the fans changed or what? Dave -- No, I can't say that my attitude towards the fans has changed. It was a very heavy thing to back into a dispute with Diamond over (as I saw it) my right to sell my work whatever way I wanted to. Having said what I had to say through the whole dispute and then through the process of a Bill of Rights for creators, I really felt it was time to shut up for a while. You can get an awful reputation as an asshole very quickly by always ranting about this and that. I felt very strongly about the creator's rights issues that were coming up, so I wanted to say enough to be heard, but not enough to be written off as a crank. I was reasonably certain that events would bear out what I've been saying and if you check the Newswatch section of the Comics Journal, most of the news items since that time have fallen along familiar patterns. That's the biggest among several reasons for my keeping a low profile. There's also the fact that I like the story to speak for itself. Once you start explaining a story, there is this terrible fear that without the explanation the story won't stand on it's own; you also lock your readers into your own interpretation of what you're doing when it's always better to that they see the story through their own eyes, I think. Also, when I stopped answering the letters on the letters page, I started answering them personally. So, in a way, I was even more expansive than before. It was only since I started the tour that it became apparent that a lot of the readership took my absence personally. They didn't want me to write just to them, they wanted me to talk to everyone again. Bill -- You stopped doing individual issue titles after Church and State ended. Was this to emphasize the unity of the shorter stories (JS and M) (it certainly achieved that) or did you simply tire of the device? Dave -- I didn't much care for the structure of 20 page chapters as a rule; which doing the chapter titles made necessary. The idea of using the alternating text and comics pages in Jaka's Story to pace the whole thing out was an experiment. When I read the whole story in reprint book form, I was pretty happy with the smoothness; the fact that you couldn't tell when one issue ended and the other began. Each of the books of Mothers & Daughters will have a different structure. Book One could best be described as Hell Bent Linear. Bill -- Why did you spell the Roach's name "Artemis" instead of "Artemus"? "Artemis" is/was female. Dave -- Well, yeah. That's the point. Sort of making fun of the feminists who are using male spellings for their names (like Yves). The obvious next step is for them to start calling men by women's names. You know, RMaybe if we give them the names of carers and nurturers they'll stop being evil wicked men and become more...well, more like us perfect beings.S (bat, bat). Rob & Steve Snell ([s w s 1] at [Ra.MsState.Edu]) -- Dave, how do you perceive the role of comic retailers in supporting independent publishers? Dave -- I like to make the distinction between RindependentS and RalternativeS. Right now any bozo (or group of bozos) who want to put out Marvel Comics but not work for Marvel can do so and be called independent. Supporting those books instead of Marvel doesn't change or improve anything, to my way of thinking. Just to give you an idea of the distinction; Cerebus, Hate, Love & Rockets are alternatives. Not just alternatives to Marvel and DC, but alternatives to Dark Horse's movie adaptation manure; alternative to LA Law, the Terminator, Steel Magnolias. Something different that isn't just something to put in between the ads. I mean, Sandman is an alternative under this definition; which makes sense to me; comics is the only medium where is is possible to produce something really idiosyncratic and have it really quite widely disseminated at a very low cost. I don't know if you guys are retailers yourselves, but I can say that the stores that have the most adult clientele and who do the best with the alternatives a) are constantly at war with the Marvel and DC titles; always looking for ways to confine them to a smaller and smaller space and b) are always on the lookout for alternatives, buying from both Capital and Diamond (and any other distributor in the area) as well as other comic book stores (raiding their quarter piles and back issue bins for hard-to-find alternative books). Store owners like that, customers tend to trust and will buy just about anything on their recommendation. You have to know the tastes of your individual customers so you can steer them away from Marvel as they get sick on the endless repetition, onto other titles that they can be interested in. Pick what you like and display it prominently, in quantity and push, push, push it. Simon Arthur (NEUR0MANCER%[MAPLE decnet] at [pine.circa.ufl.edu]) -- How has the use of drugs influenced your work? Would there be a Cerebus without marijuana? Has LSD played any part in the creation of Cerebus? Dave -- Lots and lots. I came late to marijuana and alcohol. Both were important at various times and both have remained central to my life. I haven't smoked any cannabis (apart from a joint at the San Francisco stop on the tour) in the last year or two. If I have it, I smoke it until it's gone. It makes me very anti-social, withdrawn, paranoid. I am sure there would be a Cerebus without marijuana; the book might even have been more coherent without it. Who knows? I would never have believed that I could get through a day without a joint and now weeks go by without me thinking about it. I broke up with my girl-friend in St. Louis on the tour and I had the phone number of a Cerebus fan who wanted to smoke me up and I didn't call him. Unheard of for the old Dave. Actually the whole nature of the story-line hit me simultaneously while I was coming down off of about a week and a half of doing acid. Epiphany big-time. June 1979. I also drew about three quarters of issue eleven on acid; tight pencilling for the first time in my life (Look Ma I'm Jim Starlin!). Can't add much to what McCartney said about it, RIt'll show you doors that you never knew were there.S But that's about it; whether you go through the door, which door you go through or whether you just spend your life standing in the doorway is up to you. *** A reminder of upcoming tour dates (speak to Dave in person!): April 26 Chicago, Hyatt Regency -- Woodfield Road, Schaumburg (MoondogUs in Mt. Prospect on April 24, MoondogUs in Lincoln Park on April 25) May 3 Miami, Park Plaza Hotel -- Palmetto Expressway & NW 103rd St. May 31 Kansas City, Marriott -- Metcalf Ave. in Overland Park June 7 Minneapolis, Marriott Bloomington -- I-495 at Cedar Ave. June 21 Indianapolis, Sheraton -- 7701 East 42nd St. Remember, send your questions to me (jim [o--v--i] at [um.cc.umich.edu]) and I'll pass them along to Dave. jimO