Where Every Scroll is a New Adventure
The adventures of Crow-ley and Aziradove, part 8: Plan B.M. (Bird Marriage)
Well, this is about it for the brief little storyline I first thought of when I started drawing these feathery boys. I have another silly idea I’d like to tackle with them, but I’ll work on it definitely with a slower pace, because I really need to focus my attention on other things for now lol See you ‘round with other stuff! ; D
part 1 - part 2 - part 3 - part extra - part 4 - part 5 - part 6 - part 7
I'm so excited to read this! Do you want a queer, racially diverse, plus size friendly, and all around loving adaptation of Nancy Drew in comic form? Check it out! If you don't have a comic shop to hop to you can purchase this comic digitally from Amazon or Comixology!
Dynamite Entertainment has announced a new series, Nancy Drew, by Kelly Thompson and Jenn St-Onge. The teen sleuth’s latest daring adventure debuts in June, with cover variant artwork by the astonishing assemblage of Tula Lotay, Marguerite Sauvage, Annie Wu, and series artist Jenn St-Onge.
In the new series, Nancy Drew is seventeen and good at everything… especially solving crimes. But her totally-in-control-and-obviously-running-perfectly-smooth-(but-not-really) life hits a snag when a mysterious message drags her back to the hometown she left behind. There she’ll have to find out which of her friends are still her friends, which are enemies, and who exactly is trying to kill her…and (hopefully) stop them before they succeed. Nancy, the classic master teen mystery-cracker, will be shown in a way you’ve never seen before, by a creative team with a huge respect for the original tales, and what she could mean for a modern audience.
Kelly Thompson and Jenn St-Onge Plot New Adventures for Nancy Drew #comics Dynamite Entertainment has announced a new series, Nancy Drew, by Kelly Thompson and Jenn St-Onge…
Lesbian version
(ask if you want another version)
Maybe running into a bear isn't that bad
Hey, DC-
You made such a big deal out of creating your first trans masc superhero.
Give him more than f%cking 3 comic appearances.
The way the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints teaches you things, you don’t realize they’re giving you subtle hints to make you think a certain way. Like, “marriage between a man and a woman”, which makes you naturally think; “Oh, there’s no other option.” And so people who end up being LGBTQ+ in the church, even if they were raised in it, become alienated. And looked at strangely. Sometimes they talk about you behind your back depending on the culture in the specific area, but other times it’s just the silent judging. The disapproving looks that you catch out of the corner of your eye. It can be so hard, to think about this religion that seems to have so many wonderful things, that seems so accepting. But if you don’t fit into the specific mold they want you to, you can’t have it. Even if you do everything they ask.
Bit of a personal one for ya 🥀
For those curious as to what religion, I grew up in The Church of Jesus Christ of Later-Day Saints, aka Mormon.
I was IN IT. I'm not exaggerating when I say that religion was apart of my life almost everyday single day up until I left at 23 yrs old.
I sketched this comic a year ago before I came out to my parents. I hadn't yet processed why simply thinking of doing so upset me so much, despite knowing my parents would be supportive.
I did end up telling them soon after sketching this. It went better than I thought it would. They told me all that matters is that I'm happy 😭
I'm almost 30 now. Left the church 5+ yrs ago. It's been wild seeing how 'the world' is, how normal people are. Everyone isn't a degenerate like the Church made non-members seem. There's a lot of de-programing I've had to do and boy does it make me realize how weird I grew up, how odd some of the teachings and mindsets are.
Like I said in the comic, the faith taught me good stuff too ... but I'm glad I left ... I never felt like I truly belonged in it. There was always this part of me that never meshed, no matter how long I'd been in it.
Thank you to anyone who read this far. I could go on and on about this topic but I'll leave it at this. Let me know if this resonated with any of you. I'm curious how common it is.