What I have written-and how I came to write it-is most powerfully what I am.
I know the world expects me to have superpowers, and it'll be quite a disappointment. But I just play myself.
The only advice anybody can give is, if you wanna be a writer, keep writing. And read all you can, read everything.
I do know that people enjoy reading a comic book and saving it and collecting the comics. And sharing them and trading them with friends. That may be something you can't do as easily with digital comics.
I'm just somebody who tries to write things that entertain people. And if I can do it in a way that makes them prefer to emulate the good guy than the bad guy, I'm happy.
I never thought that Spider-Man would become the world wide icon that he is. I just hoped the books would sell and I'd keep my job.
Comic books themselves are getting more literate. And there are people who are screenwriters and television writers and novelists who are writing for the comics, for some reason, they love doing it and some of the art work in the comics, I mean it rivals anything you'll see hanging on the walls of museums, they're illustrations more than drawings and all the people are discovering this and they're turning on to it.
Anybody can be nobody, but it takes a man to be somebody.
The further in you go, the bigger it gets.
You can't rely just on talent to win.
Woo the muse of the odd.