When Will We Be… “Seeing Him”?

seeing him logo in color

Seeing Him, the Webcomic is a project by Kia Crawford (the writer) and myself that was successfully funded on KickStarter.

In the time between the last day of the KickStarter and…today, Kia and I have been working hard to make the comic and send out rewards to our backers.

So, the biggest reason you haven’t heard much news post-KickStarter is because the backers come first.

That, and we’ve been working with Pink Dollar Comics, the host of the comic, to set everything up before it’s launched.

HOWEVER!

Today I have exciting news to share with y’all.

Seeing Him, the Webcomic, will officially be online on June 16th!

seeing him webcomic kate yay

The webcomic will update twice a week on Tuesdays and Thursdays, in full color, on Pink Dollar Comics.

If you have other questions about the comic, leave a comment below and I will answer them to the best of my ability.

Thank you for reading!

You. Are. Awesome.

Johnson & Sir’s First Book: An Update

johnson and sir webcomic

Johnson & Sir are getting their first book soon!

How soon?

Well, I originally said they would be printed and ready by January 31st. I’ve been talking to the folks who will print the book (who are the same folks that printed the book edition of Validation), and I have pretty much everything together.

However, I’m fixing some formatting errors before I send the book off to print. I want this book to look its best, darnit!

But that means the book won’t be available on January 31st.

The latest the book will hit the market is February 13th (and yes, that IS a Friday the 13th. No, I’m not superstitious about it).

You can still pre-order a copy, so I can reserve a book JUST FOR YOU from the printer (because I like you, reader, and you are awesome). It’s $10, and that price includes shipping.



I’ll be taking pre-orders up until February 13th. After that, the print run is going to be small, like less than 25 books, for conventions and online orders.Completely tangential, I remember working with an old editor and he threw out the suggestion of having me print 1000 copies of a book, because depending on the printers, printing large quantities like that actually makes the per-issue cost cheaper.

But I said to him, “What the frick am I going to do with 1000 copies of a book?!”

Because you don’t realize how large of a number 1000 is until you actually see it. I saw what 1000 books looked like (thanks to my time as a former librarian), and…I am still not ready for that kind of commitment.

Hence, why I’m keeping the print run small. Small quantities are much more manageable, and then I’m not overwhelmed by books.

Plus, it makes owning the books for you much more special, knowing that you have one book out of 25, rather than one book out of 1000. It’s a lot more personal.

And I like personal.

Ok, tangent over. Thank you for reading, and I hope you’ll support Johnson & Sir! I’ll see you tomorrow.