Jamie Delano
Jamie Delano | |
---|---|
Born | 1954 Northampton, England |
Nationality | English |
Area(s) | Writer |
Notable works | Captain Britain Hellblazer |
jamiedelano |
Jamie Delano (/ˈdɛlənoʊ/ DEL-ə-noh; born 1954) is an English comic book writer. He was part of the first post-Alan Moore "British Invasion" of writers which started to feature in American comics in the 1980s. He is best known as the first writer of the comic book series Hellblazer , featuring John Constantine.
Biography
[edit ]Jamie Delano wrote all but three of the first forty issues of Hellblazer for DC Comics from 1988 to 1991. Most of his other work has also been for DC/Vertigo.[citation needed ]
Much of Delano's work can be characterised as science fiction, or horror, but often is a blend thereof.[citation needed ]
Subjects in his work include the battle of the sexes (World Without End), imperialism and genocide (Ghostdancing), and environmental and cultural collapse (2020 Visions , Animal Man ).
A. William James is Delano's prose-writing alter ego. His novel Book Thirteen is published under his Lepus Books imprint.[1]
Bibliography
[edit ]Comics work includes:
- Transformers Annual 1986
- Text Story The Mission
- Night Raven :
- Various prose (with illustrations by Alan Davis and Ivan Allen in "The Daredevils 11" "Mighty World of Marvel 7-17" "Savage Sword of Conan 85-92" and "Captain Britain 10, 11 and 12" Marvel UK 1983–1984)
- "House of Cards" (with David Lloyd, Marvel UK, one shot, 1993)
- Captain Britain (with Alan Davis and Noel Davis), in Captain Britain Monthly #1-3,5-12, Marvel UK, 1984, tpb, 1988, ISBN 1-85400-020-9)
- One-Off:
- "Blood Sport" (with David Pugh, in 2000 AD No. 484, 1986)
- "The Ark" (with Dave Wyatt, in 2000 AD No. 504, 1987)
- Tharg's Future Shocks :
- "The Ship that Liked to Dance" (with Barry Kitson, in 2000 AD No. 501, 1986)
- "Fair's Fare" (with Massimo Belardinelli, in 2000 AD No. 501, 1987)
- Batman: Manbat (with John Bolton, DC), Elseworlds Batman miniseries published in 1995
- Doctor Who (with John Ridgway, collected in The World Shapers, Panini Comics, 288 pages, May 2008, ISBN 1-905239-87-4):
- "Time Bomb" (in Doctor Who Magazine #114–116, 1986)
- "The Gift" (with inks by Tim Perkins, in Doctor Who Magazine #123–126, 1987)
- D.R. and Quinch : "DR & Quinch's Agony Page" (with co-author and pencils Alan Davis and inks and colours by Mark Farmer, in 2000 AD #525–534, 1987)
- Hellblazer :
- Hellblazer #1–24, 28–31, 33–40, 84, 250, Annual 1 (with John Ridgway, Richard Piers Rayner, Mark Buckingham, Bryan Talbot, Steve Pugh, Sean Phillips, & others, Vertigo/DC, 1988–2008) collected as:
- Original Sins (collects #1–9, Vertigo, October 1998, ISBN 1-56389-052-6, Titan Books, February 2007, ISBN 1-84576-465-X)[2]
- The Devil You Know (collects #10–13, The Hellblazer Annual and The Horrorist #1–2, Vertigo, May 2007, ISBN 1-4012-1269-7, Titan Books, July 2007, ISBN 1-84576-490-0)[3]
- Rare Cuts (collects No. 11, 25–26 and 35, Vertigo, February 2005, ISBN 1-4012-0240-3, Titan Books, January 2005, ISBN 1-84023-974-3)[4]
- Fear Machine (collects #14–22, 208 pages, Vertigo, June 2008, ISBN 1-4012-1810-5, Titan Books, ISBN 1-84576-880-9)[5]
- Family Man (collects #23–24 and 28–33, 208 pages, November 2008, Titan Books, ISBN 1-84576-978-3, Vertigo, ISBN 1-4012-1964-0)[6]
- The Horrorist (with David Lloyd, Vertigo, 2-issue mini-series, 1995)
- Hellblazer Special: Bad Blood (with Philip Bond & Warren Pleece, Vertigo, 4-issue mini-series, 2000)
- Pandemonium (with Jock, graphic novel, 128 pages, hardcover, Titan Books, March 2010, ISBN 1-84576-865-5, Vertigo, February 2010, ISBN 1-4012-2035-5)
- Hellblazer #1–24, 28–31, 33–40, 84, 250, Annual 1 (with John Ridgway, Richard Piers Rayner, Mark Buckingham, Bryan Talbot, Steve Pugh, Sean Phillips, & others, Vertigo/DC, 1988–2008) collected as:
- Swamp Thing #77 (with Tom Mandrake, Alfredo Alcala, DC, 1988)
- World Without End (with John Higgins, DC, 6-issue limited series, 1990)
- Animal Man #51–79 (with Steve Pugh, Scott Eaton, Graham Higgins, Russel Braun, Tom Sutton, Rafael Kayanan, Will Simpson, Dan Steffan, Fred Harper, Gene Fama, and Peter Snejbjerg. DC, 1992–1994)[7]
- Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight #64 (with Chris Bachalo, Mark Pennington)
- Ghostdancing (with Richard Case, Vertigo, 6-issue limited series, 1995)
- Vertigo Voices: Tainted (with Al Davison, Vertigo, one-shot, 1995)
- Batman/Manbat (with John Bolton, DC, 1996)
- Twisted Metal 2 (one-shot promo comic)
- 2020 Visions (with Frank Quitely (#1–3), Warren Pleece (#4–6), James Romberger (#7–9) & Steve Pugh (#10–12), Vertigo, 12-issue limited series, 1997)
- Shadowman #5–15 (with co-author Dick Foreman (#14–15) and art by Charlie Adlard, Acclaim Comics, 1997)
- Vertigo Vérité: Hell Eternal (with Sean Phillips, Vertigo, one-shot, 1998)
- Cruel and Unusual (with co-author Tom Peyer, pencils by John McCrea and inks by Andrew Chiu, Vertigo, 4-issue mini-series, 1999)
- The Territory (with David Lloyd, Dark Horse, 4-issue mini-series, 1999, tpb, 96 pages, 2006 ISBN 978-1-59307-010-6)
- Legends of the DC Universe #24–25 (with Steve Pugh, DC, 2000)
- Outlaw Nation (with Goran Sudžuka, Vertigo, 19-issue series, 2000–2002, tpb, 456 pages, Image Comics, 2006, ISBN 1-58240-707-X)[8]
- Nevermore: "The Pit and the Pendulum" (with Steve Pugh, graphic novel adaptation, Eye Classics, Self Made Hero, October 2007, ISBN 978-0-9552856-8-4)[9]
- The Lovecraft Anthology 2: "Pickman's Model" (with Steve Pugh, graphic novel adaptation, Self Made Hero, 2012, ISBN 978-1-9068384-3-0)
- Narcopolis (with Jeremy Rock, 4-issue mini-series, Avatar Press, February 2008)[10] [11]
- Rawbone (with Max Fiumara, 4-issue mini-series, Avatar Press, 2009)
- Crossed: Badlands #4–9 (with Leandro Rizzo, Avatar Press, 2012)
Prose work includes:
- Book Thirteen (as A.W. James, Lepus Books, 2012)
- Leepus: Dizzy (as J. Delano, Lepus Books, 2014)
- Leepus: The River (as J. Delano, Lepus Books, 2017)
- Finn of the Islunds (as J. Delano, Lazarus Corporation, 2020)
Notes
[edit ]- ^ Dueben, Alex (22 February 2017). "Jamie Delano Talks Politics, Anger and His World Without End". Comic Book Resources . Retrieved 5 August 2019.
- ^ Original Sins trade details, at DC
- ^ The Devil You Know trade details, at DC
- ^ Rare Cuts trade details, at DC
- ^ Fear Machine trade details, at DC
- ^ Family Man trade details, at DC
- ^ Irvine, Alex (2008). "Animal Man". In Dougall, Alastair (ed.). The Vertigo Encyclopedia. New York: Dorling Kindersley. p. 27. ISBN 0-7566-4122-5. OCLC 213309015.
- ^ Jamie Delano: Earning Outlaw Status Archived 22 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine, Comics Bulletin, 8 September 2000
- ^ : Selfmadehero : Archived 22 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Future Imperfect: Jamie Delano talks Narcopolis Archived 26 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine, Comic Book Resources, 7 November 2007
- ^ Entering Narcopolis I: Jamie Delano Archived 15 May 2009 at the Wayback Machine, Newsarama, 1 March 2008
References
[edit ]- Jamie Delano at the Grand Comics Database
- Jamie Delano at the Comic Book DB (archived from the original)
- Jamie Delano Archived 30 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine at 2000 AD Online
- Jamie Delano at Dark Horse Comics
External links
[edit ]Interviews
[edit ]- Trail Blazers: Interviews with Jamie Delano and Garth Ennis, by David Carroll, Bloodsongs No. 8, 1997
- Dark Horse Comics' 1998 interview about The Territory
- The Comics Interpreter 1999 interview with Jamie Delano
- Tales That Witness Madness: A Brief Talk With Jamie Delano by Helen Braithwaite, Sequential Tart, December 1999
- Jamie Delano: Drug Addled Prophet for The Masses, Popimage, December 1999
- Lewis, A. David. "Interview with Jamie Delano". Popmatters.
- Douresseaux, Leroy (6 December 2007). "Jamie Delano Talks Narcopolis". Comic Book Bin . Retrieved 29 May 2010.
- Matheny, Joseph (23 December 2007). "Jamie Delano's Narcopolis". Alterati. Archived from the original on 16 July 2011. Retrieved 29 May 2010.