On the road
From the drawing board of Danica Novgorodoff
I remember someone saying that there are two kinds of stories – those about leaving home and those about returning home. I don’t know if I agree with that (there must be a million kinds of story), but it does seem like most of my writing is about a journey away from home (then, sometimes, with an inevitable returning).
So it makes sense that a lot of my stories are conceived while or inspired by traveling.
I think and write most creatively while I’m traveling. To loosen ideas, shake words from my brain, I need the culture shock, the changing landscape, the perilous cliff-edge bus rides, the train careening through the night, the language blur, the unease (OK, fear), and maybe even the loneliness of being a stranger and a foreigner. Routine and familiarity lend themselves to discipline; traveling to inspiration.
I first started making comics during a year when I was roaming around Ecuador and south of there. I came to the medium partly because it was, simply, portable.
I love New York, but I get a real travel itch if I stay in one place too long. Last winter, on my allotted vacation time, I took off to Yunnan province of China. A year later, now, a couple of stories set in China have started to creep around my brain, haunting me.
![China China](https://firstsecondbooks.typepad.com/mainblog/images/2007/12/12/china.jpg)
My upcoming (Fall ’08) book from First Second, Slow Storm, is mostly about my home, Kentucky, but one of the characters (Rafi) makes the infamous journey across the U.S./Mexico border.
A lot of the imagery (both narrative and visual) of Rafi's home was inspired by the time I spent in Mexico and South America.
And a lot of the images were drawn from photographs I took then.
So. Go west (or east, or south, or even north), young man.
[UP NEXT WEEK: GRADY KLEIN]
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