“Liberté, Égalité, Anxiété!”
July 14th, 2006 by Steve GerberHappy what’s left of Bastille Day, and apologies for the long absence. I’ve been meaning to post, but my energy’s been at a low ebb recently. Could be the heat. Could be a mood thing. Could have something to do with my health overall. I honestly don’t know.
It’s been a strange couple of weeks.
Much of that time has been spent banging my head against the wall, trying to solve certain story and character problems for the new DC project. The cranial abuse was unnecessary, of course. The answers finally came to me in the shower, when I wasn’t thinking about the work at all. But the agonizing seems to have been worth it. Editor Joey Cavalieri was pleased with the material, Dan DiDio has given it the necessary nod, and I now have the go-ahead to start writing scripts.
One aspect of the project proved especially challenging. It involves a character who, at the most basic conceptual level, is completely at odds with my own beliefs about the origin of the universe and who’s been at the controls ever since. This part of the project was more in the nature of an assignment, something Joey came up with, not something I proposed myself. When he suggested it, I hesitated for about two seconds, then agreed to take it on, precisely *because* of the vexation factor.
Here’s a creative principle I believe in strongly: Every writer, at some point, should require himself or herself to write a sympathetic character whose worldview is diametrically opposed to the writer’s own. And when I say “sympathetic,” I don’t just mean “likeable.” I mean, not a caricature, not a vehicle for ironic comment, not a misguided soul whom the hero sets straight. I mean a three-dimensional character whose actions are guided by deeply-felt principles and with whom readers — and, more importantly, the writer — can identify, in spite of the fact that they may wildly disagree.
It’s a difficult exercise, but also a lot of fun. The first time I attempted it was in a Spider-Man annual back in the ’80s. The character was a refugee from the Castro regime who came to the U.S. in 1980 in the Mariel Boatlift. Like the majority of Cuban-Americans, her politics leaned to the right. She was staunchly anti-Communist and, though her party affiliation was never specified in the story, unapologetically Republican. *And* she was a superheroine.
Anyway…
I still can’t tell you what the new project is, but it can’t remain a secret much longer. We’re shooting for an early ’07 publication date.
It’s been a strange time on a personal level, also, but I’ll save that for the next post.