Comic Six: The Splendid Fleeing of Joe Iowa From the Elm County Authorities

Salutations scoundrels, 

“Western” is the word we apply to a wide genre of film and literature. For some, it’s cowboys and vistas, for others it’s shootouts and big hats. Some view it as a historical drama set in a specific time and place, others view it as adventure fiction across a swath of media. 

I’ve operated within the Old West genre for a handful of years now and my opinion on it shifts seemingly monthly. It’s an odd mix of reality and fantasy, something that brushes against magical realism at times. The places and people often strive for authenticity, but the actions around them strain common belief. I’ve written before in my Project 100 reviews: while I see Westerns as a huge umbrella of story-types, there’s a hazy – though apparent – distinction between the stories taking place under the sun at high noon and those that simulate the themes, locales and people of a particular place and time. 

“The Splendid Fleeing of Joe Iowa From the Elm County Authorities” is something cooked up with the latter in mind. As the title indicates, our hero is Joe, a common criminal and deviant, and the concern is getting away from the five-oh scot-free. This is a quick, snappy comic that’s bullish on the drama and intensity. Set in the recent era, the goal was to keep the focus on the “outlaw” but to update the context and setting. I’m very happy with how this story came out, it really scratched an itch. 

My collaborator on the project is the talented Matías De Vincenzo. I absolutely love his approach to the page, a fierce style that’s not afraid to push the limits of stature and anatomy while still executing a script with cinematic clarity. There’s a tension to his line work that’s kinetic and heckin’ interesting, an animated grit that blends extremely well. Matias was a pleasure to work with, and fast too! (Always a welcomed skill in the world of comicking.)

Frankly, I could have penned another twenty pages of this story. As I was scripting, It felt like a feature film at times, a criminal and his speedy horse dramatically evading capture, but alas, here at All-True Outlaw we try our best to adhere to satisfying bursts of quality fiction. 

Per usual, I’ll remind you that you can find us over on Instagram, Bluesky and Facebook. Thanks, always, for the follows, likes and comments.

 

Westward!

~Jamil