How Comics Are Made: A Visual History from the Drawing Board to the Printed Page
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How Comics Are Made by Glenn Fleishman, designed by Mark Kaufman
How Comics Are Made
A Visual History from the Drawing Board to the Printed Page
By Glenn Fleishman · Foreword by Michael Chabon
Purchase a signed copy from the author (with an optional inscription), or order from a bookstore.
2026 Eisner Award–nominated celebration of the newspaper comic as an art form and object of industrial production, from the 1890s to the 2020s.
My book How Comics Are Made celebrates the evolution of the comic strip: from the Yellow Kid and early syndication through the very latest webcomics. This covers the whole ball of wax of how artists, knowing their newsprint medium, drew their comics and marked drawings up for color reproduction; how printers put that work through the most arcane and impossible-to-believe operations to get them onto paper; and how modern cartoonists produce cartoons for print and online or web-only.
“…no one, before now, has written a history of the comic strip as a technological artifact — not, at least, in such depth, and on such a sound foundation of research.”
— Michael Chabon, author, The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay (and author of the foreword to this book)
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The 288-page book is laden with original cartoon artwork, photographs, scanned newspaper reproductions, and illustrations, some of which have never appeared in print anywhere, while some historic comics appear for the first time ever in any medium in this book.
The gallery below shows you a sampling of pages from the book.
How Comics Are Made relies on my personal collection of printing artifacts backstopped with the help of artists, estates, and institutions that thankfully retained original work and newspaper and printed versions. Key among them is the Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum at the Ohio State University in Columbus, Ohio. You can watch a video I made for a 2022–2023 exhibit at Billy Ireland showing one aspect of the artist-to-newspaper process (it appeared in a 2023–2024 exhibition, too). The Charles M. Schulz Museum and Research Center also provided extensive assistance and material.
As part of the book, I interviewed dozens of cartoonists about the aesthetic and functional choices they made and make to ensure their work remains true to their vision through print and online production, particularly around color. I asked how those who started in the 70s and 80s worked through the great metal and analog to offset and digital switch. For instance, Lynn Johnston (For Better or For Worse) told me she was concerned enough at the start of her career to get the Sunday color just right that she flew to Buffalo, New York, to get a hands-on look at the operations of American Color, the largest firm handling and printing color comics in the country. I spoke as well to comics historians, production artists, colorists, and other people across the industry.
In addition to Johnston, among 40 interviewees are Tom Batiuk (Funky Winkerbean, Crankshaft), John “Derf” Backderf (The City, My Friend Dahmer), Paige Braddock (Jane’s World, Charles M. Schulz Creative Associates Chief Creative Officer), Georgia Dunn (Breaking Cat News), Lex Fajardo (Charles M. Schulz Creative Associates Editorial Director, Kid Beowulf), Bill Griffith (Zippy), Guy Gilchrist (formerly Nancy, Muppets, and many others), Jim Keefe (King Features colorist, Sally Forth artist), Garry Trudeau (Doonesbury), comics historian Brian Walker (writer on Beetle Bailey and Hi & Lois, author of The Comics: The Complete Collection), Bill Watterson (Calvin and Hobbes), and Shena Wolf (cartoonist’s agent; formerly Andrews McMeel Universal).
What’s this all about?
The book covers the entire history of newspaper comics from a unique angle—how they were made and printed. You can find many other books that I can recommend that look at comics through the lens of artist, biography, genre, and subject matter, as well as hundreds of lovingly, painstakingly restored collections, such as the complete Peanuts and Little Nemo Sunday strips.
How Comics Are Made turns to the stories of creation: What did artists’ originals look like and how were they...