I knew that Amazon has been steadily adding features to their website, but I honestly had no idea that they were actually adding mini-interviews with authors to go along with their book pages. When a friend of mine told me this morning that he’d received Charles Burns’ “Black Hole” for Christmas, I looked it up real quick and found that there was a nice little interview to go along with the sales pitch. I kinda like this - hopefully we’ll be seeing more of this sort of marketing in the future.

Amazon.com: Cartoonists are about the only people today who are working like Dickens did: writing serials that appear piece-by-piece in public before the whole work is done. What’s it like to work in public like that, and for as long as a project like this takes?

Charles Burns: There were a number of reasons for serializing Black Hole. First of all, I wanted to put out a traditional comic book– I’d never really worked in that comic pamphlet format before and liked the idea of developing a long story in installments. There’s something very satisfying to me about a comic book as an object and I enjoyed using that format to slowly build my story. Serializing the story also allowed me to focus on shorter, more manageable portions; if I had to face creating a 368-page book all in one big lump, I don’t know if I’d have the perseverance and energy to pull it off.

Amazon.com: One thing that stuns me about this book is how consistent it is from start to finish. From the first frames to the last ones that you drew 10 years later, you held the same tone and style. It feels as though you had a complete vision for the book from the very beginning. Is that so? Or did things develop unexpectedly as you worked on it?

Burns: I guess there’s a consistency in Black Hole because of the way I work. I write and draw very slowly, always carefully examining every little detail to make sure it all fits together the way I want it to. When I started the story, I had it all charted out as far as the basic structure goes, but what made working on it interesting was finding new ways of telling the story that hadn’t occurred to me.

Interviews, Comics