Mark Bordiyan wrote:Thank you! I hope there are more people then that! But you don't have to do the comic just to get it published, you can do it just fun!
True, but ultimately, what's the point of writing if it isn't going to be read? I've been making comics since I was seven, but even then I imagined I had an audience reading.
If not a sectret what are you working on? Just wandering!

Well, I don't want to go into too much detail, but I came up with a basis for an entire universe much like ours, but which has a thoroughly logical explanation for super powers and where they come from. I wrote a short story that reads like a creation myth for that universe, explaining how it came to be, how its gods shaped man's reality without even meaning to, and how that resulted in some manifesting special abilities of one sort or another. I don't want to get into more detail than that on the web.
The main title I've been working on as of late (which takes place in that universe and could easily be written as a stand alone series without a whole universe behind it) is centered on a 12 year old girl living in her universe's equivalent of Earth. Things are very similar, but with slight differences. She is an Aedian (roughly similar to being Islamic), living in her universe's version of the U.S., and when Aedian extremists commit a second terrorist attack against her country, Aedians are rounded up and sent to internment camps. This actually nearly happened in real life, by the way. The camps were constructed during the last presidential administration and were set to go if another 9/11 happened.
Anyway, she's sent there and while there develops her own set of super powers (which I won't get into). All her life, she's been told about an avenging prophet in her people's faith that would one day step in when her people were in their darkest moment. Even though she's never had much interest in her faith up until this point (she was an average American girl), the guilt of seeing her zealous father murdered combined with her indignation at how her people have been treated in the camps lead her to believe her new-found powers are proof that she has been chosen by God to become the avenging prophet. She strikes out at her captors and is left to question what she believes in, what morals and values apply in this situation, and above all else, what she is supposed to do with these gifts. It's an exploration of terrorism, our responses to terrorism, and (most importantly) the doubt and uncertainty of adolescence in the midst of a complex and terrifying world. At times, she's the hero in this story, at other times the villain, but always a naive child who is far too young and formerly sheltered to have to take on these issues.
Most of my inspiration in crafting all of this comes from learning about the Japanese American Internment during WWII and from my own observations of confused, frightened, and angry 12 and 13 year olds that I teach everyday in my classroom.
Sorry if I got long-winded, there. Honestly, that's barely scratching the surface of what I've been writing. Can you tell I've gotten a tad bit carried away with it?