Garth Ennis Quotes (21 Quotes)


    It would have shown people that I was prepared to do that kind of work, although I find myself in a position now where I don't really need to and I could pick and choose the kind of characters I'd like to do.

    Yeah, Hitman I suppose is most of the time a lighter read than Preacher; it was always going to be.

    You know, I think I did originally have some sort of idea of maybe a Where Eagles Dare kind of mission against impossible odds, but it really sort of died before I had a chance to really go anywhere with it, and then just doing the book was out of the question.

    While Ghost Rider ... Another 'Kev' series from Wildstorm, featuring Carlos Ezquerra's best art in years a third Punisher special, 'The Tyger,' drawn by John Severin 'Nick Fury in World War Two,' six issues by Darick Robertson a four-issue 'JLA Classified' arc featuring Tommy Monaghan, effectively the lost Hitman story a new book from Avatar called 'Wormwood,' starring the Antichrist (he gets a bad rap) 'Back to Brooklyn,' a crime book with Jimmy Palmiotti a new creator-owned ongoing book with Darick Robertson, 'The Boys' a western called 'Trail of Tears'-- a much darker, more brutal book than the one about to come out and just started writing a new limited series for Axel Alonso at Marvel. Very pleased with it so far. Finally, of course, there's the regular 'Punisher' book, which is just about to start a new storyline, 'The Slavers.' Frank Castle, the character I was born to write. Who'da thunk it

    I suppose that Heartland, Unknown Soldier and Pride and Joy represent not a quieter side but more of a serious side to my work, something I've been getting into recently.


    I don't necessarily write everything as automatically assuming it will be collected, there's nothing that says Hitman will be collected, though it might be.

    Most regular superhero books are designed to go on forever; of course, very few of them do, but the point is they are trying to throw mud against the wall and hope it will stick, and most of it slides off.

    There's immense fun to be had as long as you can sort of sneak it past DC. I have been told on occasion that I need to have more respect for these characters.

    With a mini series you can give the story a proper sense of pacing, a proper sense of closure.

    I guess you can stay sort of true to the story; you don't have to artificially bring the character back from whatever doom you've designed for them, you can tell the story, I suppose, honestly.

    As the scripts come in they are sent to the artists, and the artists are either very busy, or ready to start.

    The Ghost Rider's not particularly heroic in this story he has his own agenda and won't let anything get in his way.

    Preacher is a book that somehow allows me time by its settling on it's characters, that sort of modern gothic western feel. You're not likely to see the boat veering too far from that.

    To begin with, this Ghost Rider is tied to previous incarnations primarily through the body he possesses, namely Johnny Blaze. Aside from that, it doesn't really follow any previous series, ... We hit the ground running, no looking back. His sins finally caught up with him, as you'll see in the first issue.

    isn't actually a MAX book, it doesn't mean I don't push my luck whenever and wherever I can. I'm never really trying to outdo myself what I want is to keep coming up with different ideas, not necessarily wilder ones. But you'll see some pretty feisty stuff in this series Kazann gets up to all sorts of horrors, Hell literally breaks loose in Texas and Ruth causes some serious carnage once she gets going. There's the aforementioned Buttview, too.

    I can't really put it in one sentence because although on one hand Preacher is about faith and yes it is also about, I suppose, the search for God, the search for faith and the manipulation and the abuse committed by figures in whom I suppose people have faith.

    I'm sure you're aware, with the time it takes to put these books together, everything can suddenly start coming out at once even though I wrote anything between one and five years ago.

    It's nice to be in a situation where the two books that I write for a sort of regular monthly income are also works that I enjoy immensely, rather than them being some kind of bread and butter, do it because you have to do it.

    If you look at Marvel Comics, there are very few Marvel characters I would like to write.

    Wouldn't want to write the X-Men, and I suppose the X-Men is the ultimate Marvel comic, and I really wouldn't want to go anywhere near it at all, although on the other had I wouldn't mind having a crack at something like the Punisher.

    Hitman does well and it certainly does well enough to survive, but at the same time I don't want to involve the character into the DC Universe even if it meant more sales, to the point where we sort of upset the balance that we have at the moment.


    More Garth Ennis Quotations (Based on Topics)


    Characters - Books - Work & Career - Time - Crime - Balance - Running - God - Chance - Belief & Faith - World - Sales - Hell - Body - Art - Idea - View All Garth Ennis Quotations

    Related Authors


    Niccolo Machiavelli - Thomas Paine - Thomas Kuhn - T. H. White - Paul Davies - Milan Kundera - George Axelrod - Edward Fairfax - Dr. Seuss - Arthur C. Clarke


Authors (by First Name)

A - B - C - D - E - F - G - H - I - J - K - L - M
N - O - P - Q - R - S - T - U - V - W - X - Y - Z

Other Inspiring Sections