Drawn to Comics Thanks the LGBTQ Comics Creators Who Make It Possible

feature image via shutterstock

Last week I handed Drawn to Comics, the column I’ve been writing weekly, every week, for two and half years, to my best friend Heather. She wrote beautifully about Strangers in Paradise and the power of happy endings for queer characters. It was one of the few things last week that cheered me up. I’m trying to get back to my normal routines after the horrifying and unbearably tragic massacre in Orlando, but it’s hard. I’m struggling to move on and “just” write about comics. I’m struggling to write about anything other than Orlando. So I’m not going to, not really. I’m going to talk about how thankful I am for all the LGBTQ people who are making comics and telling stories and creating heroes and showing the rest of us that anything is possible. If you’re an LGBTQ person, whether you’re out to the whole world or only yourself, I am so thankful for you and the work that you do.

Cover by Stephanie Hans.

From Angela: Queen of Hel, written by Marguerite Bennett, cover by Stephanie Hans.

I’ve said this over and over again, but comics help us reach for the highest heights and see ourselves for who we really are. They help us dream and make goals and find common ground and love ourselves. A comic like Fun Home might be your first introduction to the concept of being butch. Lumberjanes might be the first place you see a trans girl of color. Patsy Walker AKA Hellcat might be the first time you see a character stand up for themselves and say that they’re bisexual out loud. Midnighter might have been the first time you saw a gay man kick ass. Creators like Kate Leth, Marguerite Bennett, Tamra Bonvillain, Brittney Williams, Steve Orlando, Phil Jimenez, Shannon Watters, Brooke Allen, Grace Ellis, Alison Bechdel, Sophie Campbell, Marc Andreyko, Kris Anka, Kevin Wada and Kieron Gillen are creating worlds and heroes and villains and people and they’re giving us hope when they do. They give us hope that our stories deserve to be told, that we deserve to be represented and that we can accomplish our dreams. And those are just some of the comics comics creators from some of the traditional publishers.

The internet, small presses, self-publishing and online fundraising have all helped queer creators thrive in the area of comics. Every year I make a list of queer women and non-binary people who make comics that you can support. Those lists are full of amazing, inspiring, talented and hardworking people who remind us every day that queer people deserve to have our stories told and that we deserve to have happy and fulfilled lives. People like Ariel Ries, Mags Visaggio, Janelle Asselin, Mildred Louis, Cameron Glavin, Anna Archie Bongiovanni, Yao Xiao, Megan Praz, Kylie Wu, Aatmaja Pandya, Cathy G. Johnson, Annie Mok, Blue Delliquanti, Molly Ostertag, Suzanne Walker, Christina Poag, Taneka Stotts, Ens Current, Joamette Gil, Chathi Chavers, Veronica Agarwal, Mira Ongchua, Hazel Newlevant, Melanie Gilman, Aliza Layne, Tillie Walden and Tyalor Robin all deserve our thanks, as do all of the LGBTQ people who make comics that I didn’t name here.

From Agents of the Realm by Mildred Louis.

From Agents of the Realm by Mildred Louis.

When we see stories about us by cis, straight people, we usually see stories where we end up beaten, kicked out of our homes, insulted and murdered. But we don’t need to look to fiction for that; we get so much more than enough of that in our real lives and in our communities and in our families. I live for happy stories about queer people by queer people. That is my favorite thing in the world.

Even when the stories they write or illustrate or color or letter or edit or publish aren’t happy, they’re still important. So often as queer people we’re told that our lives are over once we come out. We’re going to be sad and alone and miserable and unsuccessful for the rest of our lives. But these creators are proving that that couldn’t be farther from the truth. They’re out there in the world creating. They’re out in the world accomplishing their goals and living their dreams.

Closeted or partially closeted LGBTQ people and LGBTQ people who feel invisible because they’re bisexual or for any other reason deserve the same amount of thanks. Your identity is just as valid and real as anyone else’s. You’re a part of this family. Thank you for the work you do.

From Young Avengers written by Kieron Gillen, art by Jamie McKelvie and Matthew Wilson.

From Young Avengers written by Kieron Gillen, art by Jamie McKelvie and Matthew Wilson.

Of course, no one is perfect. I’m not saying we should deify these or any creators; they’re human beings, and that fact is one of the important things in all of this. I want to celebrate their humanity and recognize their humanness. They’re human beings and they’re helping to show those who would dehumanize us that they won’t win. As long as LGBTQ people are creating comics, I’m going to write about them here in Drawn to comics, and don’t worry, this column isn’t going anywhere. LGBTQ people in comics will always be here and we’ll always be vocal. We’ll always be telling stories and making art and publishing books and putting our work out there online even if no one will help us.

New Releases (June 22)

Tomb Raider 2016 #5

Adventures of Supergirl #4

Detective Comics #935

Harley Quinn #29

Harley Quinn Vol 4: A Call to Arms HC

Harley Quinn Vol 3: Kiss Kiss Bang Stab TP

Suicide Squad Most Wanted: Deadshot/Katana #6

Wonder Woman #1

X-Files #3

Bitch Planet #8 (y’all should really check out this one)

Pretty Deadly #10

Gwenpool #3

Mighty Thor #8

Moon Girl and Devil Dinosaur #8

Moon Girl and Devil Dinosaur Vol 1: BFF TP

Scarlet Witch #7

Star Wars The Force Awakens Adaptation #1

Over the Garden Wall Ongoing #3

Princeless: Raven the Pirate Princess #9

Red Sonja #6


Welcome to Drawn to Comics! From diary comics to superheroes, from webcomics to graphic novels – this is where we’ll be taking a look at comics by, featuring and for queer ladies. So whether you love to look at detailed personal accounts of other people’s lives, explore new and creative worlds, or you just love to see hot ladies in spandex, we’ve got something for you.

If you have a comic that you’d like to see me review, you can email me at mey [at] autostraddle [dot] com.

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Mey

Mey Rude is a fat, trans, Latina lesbian living in LA. She's a writer, journalist, and a trans consultant and sensitivity reader. You can follow her on twitter, or go to her website if you want to hire her.

Mey has written 572 articles for us.

5 Comments

  1. I (finally) got my copy of Beyond: the queer sci-fi and fantasy anthology in softcover last week. Glad it went back into print.

    I really like the variety in art styles and the variety in stories.

  2. I read Bitch Planet only in collected volumes so I only have the 1st one, as it is the only one out. So I’m eagerly anticipating the 2nd volume cause you’ve been hyping it so much :)

  3. I’m a little surprised to see no mention of webcomics artists like Chloe (Go Get a Roomie), Yamino and her wife Ash (Sister Claire), and Erica Moen. If you’ve never seen them, check it out! Lovely free webcomics are lovely and free.

  4. Mey, this is beautiful and I’ll heartily second it. I’ve been a comics reader for pretty much my whole life, but it was recommendations (some from Drawn to Comics!) for the work of queer creators that got me into types and genres of comics I’d never thought could interest or include me. My reading life–and my emotional life in general!–is much better for it!

  5. One comic to add to this week (because it wasn’t listed on the normal release lists) is the The Shadow Glass #4. It has some of the most beautiful art I’ve seen in comics recently and also has a lesbian protagonist (as we discovered last issue) so definitely worth checking out.

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