top of page
"At the end of the '60s, I was trying to enter the world of comics."
Standard
Customized
More

"Unhappiness in a child accumulates because he sees no end to the dark tunnel. The thirteen weeks of a term might just as well be thirteen years."
Author Name
Personal Development

"We have made many glass vessels... with tubes two cubits long. These were filled with mercury, the open end was closed with the finger, and the tubes were then inverted in a vessel where there was mercury."
Author Name
Personal Development

"Things start out as hopes and end up as habits."
Author Name
Personal Development

"Pakistan has made no mention of ending our tests. We have a missile program, and it is in the national interest whatever we want to do."
Author Name
Personal Development

"One has to look out for engineers - they begin with sewing machines and end up with the atomic bomb."
Author Name
Personal Development

"Be thankful for what you have; you'll end up having more. If you concentrate on what you don't have, you will never, ever have enough."
Author Name
Personal Development

"Towards the end of the eighteenth century the industrial-financial revolution began."
Author Name
Personal Development

"If I'm not moved by what happens at the end of this play, then I've completely failed, and so has the play, and so has our production. And if that's the case then there really isn't any reason to want to do it."
Author Name
Personal Development

"There is light at the end of the tunnel for India, but it's that of an oncoming train which will run them over."
Author Name
Personal Development

"High School is like a spork: it's a crappy spoon and a crappy fork, so in the end it's just plain useless."
Author Name
Personal Development
More

"I have 40 years of unpublished material, the ones they don't pick, and the reason I don't redraw them or use them again is that I like to use my brain every day and come up with new jokes."
Day

"When sadness happens in the middle of work, I separate my personal grief from my train of thought."
Work

"When you're drawing comics, you get very involved in how the story is going to develop and you spend more time daydreaming on that particular subject."
Time

"Eventually I would like to touch all the genres. I would like to do some detective stories, and I want to do a Western. I would want to do humorous Westerns."
Want

"I have always loved horror very much. I used to write stories for DC's House of Mystery. It was one of my first jobs writing for comics, and I loved it."
First

"The reason I love comics more than anything else is that the longest story will be just a few pages. With a novel, it takes so many pages to get to one thing happening."
Love

"Suspense is very important. Even though this is humor and they're short stories, that theory of building suspense is still there."
Humor

"If the gag is complicated, you spend more time thinking about the way you're drawing it."
Time

"My work is so unorthodox that from one panel to the next, the drawings are completely different... totally opposed to the way of working in something like animation, where every drawing has to look like the one before."
Work

"I keep very weird hours. I never know when I'm going to get an idea."
Idea
bottom of page