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Yeah! by Gilbert Hernández
Yeah! by Gilbert Hernández







Yeah! by Gilbert Hernández

There are just these things that are showing up because of this presence, and they just try to deal with it in a calm way. They accept what’s going on with the extraterrestrial presence, and they react to it emotionally, but they don’t know what’s going on. There’s only so much that they understand about what’s going on. gets more complex and characters are reacting more emotionally. Is there any hint to who Ela is and where people go when they touch the orbs? There’s different people and that’s where my stories come from.Įla is a mysterious being who appears, innocently enough, to be alien. I live in a world that’s always in the neighborhood. That’s just where I’m coming from - I just like it. was there anything in particular that inspired it? Yeah, there’s still regular small-town happenings going on. How would people who are living simple lives react to it. And then most stories would just start in this little beach community - fishing and boating - where there’s an extraterrestrial presence. Sometimes the story would stay in that area, and then some stories would evolve from that - it’s just based on ideas. I would have my point of view or the world’s point of view from my neighborhood. Since I started comics 30 years ago, I always started out my stories - especially if I had writers block or idea block - basically from my neighborhood when I was growing up. Where did the inspiration for the setting of “Twilight Children” come from? Hero Complex caught up with Hernandez to chat about “Twilight Children,” working with Cooke, and his style of storytelling. “Twilight Children” takes the same type of storytelling vibe that “Rockets” displays.









Yeah! by Gilbert Hernández