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Wikipedia

Brian Wood (comics)

Brian Wood (born January 29, 1972) is an American writer, illustrator, and graphic designer, known for his work in comic books, television and video games. His noted comic book work includes the series DMZ, Demo, Northlanders, The Massive, Marvel Comics' The X-Men, and Star Wars. His web series work includes adaptations of his own short stories from the comics series The Massive and Conan the Barbarian for Geek & Sundry and YouTube, and his video game work includes three years on staff at Rockstar Games, co-writing 1979 Revolution: Black Friday and story contributions to Aliens: Fireteam Elite. His television work includes pilot scripts for AMC, Amazon Studios, and Sonar Entertainment. He is a contributing writer on HBO Max's DMZ adaptation of his own work.[1]

Brian Wood
Wood at the 2011 Big Apple Convention in Manhattan
Born (1972-01-29) January 29, 1972 (age 52)
EducationThe New School (BFA)
Known forGraphic design, graphic novelist, screenwriter, producer
Notable workDemo, DMZ, Northlanders

Wood's work is well known for sociopolitical commentary, particularly on the topics of media and conflicts,[2][3] climate change, and identity.[4][5][6] Much of his work is about or takes place in New York City.[7][8][9] He's contributed the character of Zula Hendricks to the Aliens franchise,[10] created the character of Shogo Lee, Jubilee's adopted son, to the X-Men/Marvel Universe,[11] and created Nomi Blume for the Ultimate Marvel universe.[12]

Early life edit

Brian Wood was born January 29, 1972, and grew up in the village of Essex Junction, Vermont,[13][14] where he attended Hiawatha Elementary School[14] and Essex High School.[15] He has described his upbringing as "outdoorsy and active, with regular incidents involving neighborhood bullies and trauma at home." He describes a period of heavy drinking before moving to New York City to attend college, stating, "I was ejected into the adult world too early, orphaned and lacking a plan, support, or sound judgement."[16] He is a lifelong stutterer,[17][18] has spoken publicly about seeking therapy to deal with childhood trauma[19] and the loss of his mother to cancer.[20]

He moved to New York City in 1991,[21] describing it as "something of a big leap of faith on my part... it was one of those situations where I had hardly any money, and a single backpack full of clothes. I bought a one-way bus ticket from Burlington, Vermont and kind of burned bridges as I left. I was all-in. Stupid, but committed." He describes working below minimum wage at a skate shop while applying to colleges. "After I hit 21, I got a little bit of money from an inheritance, which paid for my first year of school and a grimy $325/month bedroom on East 3rd Street for a few months," he recounts. He also worked as a bike messenger, which instilled in him a love and a knowledge for New York City that would inform many of his future projects.[22]

After graduating in 1997 from Parsons School of Design with a BFA in illustration, Wood worked a series of design jobs at internet startups, including iVillage, Bigfoot, and Nerve.[23]

Career edit

 
Channel Zero #1 by Brian Wood, 1998

Early work edit

Wood's first professional work in comics was the five-issue limited series Channel Zero, published by Image Comics in 1998, which began as part of his graduation project for Parsons School of Design. Channel Zero is set in a dystopian near-future New York City where the tenets of then-Mayor Rudy Giuliani have grown into a freedom-restricting government initiative called "The Clean Act". The protagonist is Jennie 2.5, a DIY media personality who sets out to stir the complacent population into revolution. Channel Zero was orphaned shortly after Image Comics sold out of the first print run of the collected edition, opting not to return to press, and AiT/Planet Lar acquired it soon afterwards. In 2012 Wood regained the publishing rights and Dark Horse Comics took up the publishing, releasing a "Complete Collection" that included the original graphic novel, the prequel series Channel Zero: Jennie One with Becky Cloonan, his Public Domain design book material, and numerous other extras from the early development of the property.[24][25]

ComicsAlliance has identified Channel Zero as "The Unofficial Bible of Comics Activism,"[26] and noted its "eerie prescience" and "represents an arduous, expressly DIY method of comic book-making that new technology has dramatically changed."[27] Publishers Weekly called it "significant" and "unapologetically experimental," and "Wood is far more interested in trying out a variety of visual techniques than in creating something that is slick and polished. The result is a graphic novel whose form and content could not be more perfectly matched."[28] Bleeding Cool placed Channel Zero within a larger cyberpunk movement.[29]

Following Channel Zero, Wood took a two-year break from comics. In early 2000, comic book writer Warren Ellis offered Wood a co-writing job on Marvel Comics' Generation X, as part of Ellis' Counter-X run. Wood co-wrote issues #63–70 with Ellis and 71–75 on his own, before the series was canceled as part of incoming Editor-in-Chief Joe Quesada's attempts to simplify the X-Men franchise. Wood would not work again with Marvel until 2012.[30]

AiT/Planet Lar and original graphic novels edit

Wood was employed as a staff designer for Rockstar Games, designing for video game franchises such as Grand Theft Auto, Midnight Club, Max Payne, Smuggler's Run and Manhunt.[31] He nonetheless produced a series of original graphic novels, coinciding with a trend within independent comic publishers that favored that format. The first was Couscous Express with artist Brett Weldele, an action romp about food delivery people.[32] This was followed by a trilogy of bike messenger books, The Couriers, The Couriers: Dirtbike Manifesto, and The Couriers: Ballad of Johnny Funwrecker, all drawn by Rob G.[33] Several characters are shared between Couscous Express and The Couriers, and in 2012 all four books were collected together and published by Image Comics.[34] Wood created and wrote the limited series' Pounded for Oni Press and Fight for Tomorrow for DC Comics's imprint Vertigo. He also produced Public Domain and Channel Zero: Jennie One during this time, the first of what will come to be several collaborations with artist Becky Cloonan.[citation needed]

Larry Young's AiT/Planet Lar heavily promoted Wood during this time, including designating the month of January as "Brian Wood Month" to exclusively offer his titles only.[35] Wood also served as AIT's branding designer and overall creative director for a short period of time, and designed covers for Warren Ellis' Come In Alone, Badlands, and Black Heart Billy. In January 2007, Intrepid Pictures optioned the feature film rights to Wood and Rob G.'s graphic novel The Couriers with Javier Grillo-Marxuach set to pen the screenplay.[36]

Demo, Local ,and the single issue format edit

In 2003, Wood partnered with artist Becky Cloonan to create Demo, an anthology series of twelve 'done-in-one' or 'one-shot' stories about young people with superpowers. Although initially inspired by the aborted NYX project, the series was not traditionally superhero and instead compared emerging powers to neurodiverse themes and tragic love stories.[37] The series was well-received, and Wizard, a steadfastly superhero-oriented comics magazine, named Demo its 2004 "Indie of the Year". The series was also nominated for two Eisner Awards in 2005, for "Best Limited Series" and "Best Single Issue" (for #7, "One Shot, Don't Miss"). Thirteen Minutes cites Wood and Demo as " blipping a young artist named Becky Cloonan onto everyone's collective radar screen, and cementing Wood's relationship with this frequent collaborator."[38]

Wood and Cloonan moved Demo from AiT/Planet Lar to Vertigo Comics in 2008,[39] announcing a "Volume 2" of the series, upping the total number of short stories to 18.[40] In 2015, Wood and Cloonan took the publishing rights to Dark Horse Comics, producing the single volume The Complete Demo.[41]

The Demo format proved successful so Wood went on to replicate it, with some changes, for his 12-issue series Local at Oni Press, which launched in 2005 and was drawn by artist Ryan Kelly.[42] NPR named it one of its Best Graphic Novels of the year and called it a "contemporary ballad to the idea of the open road... Megan moves from state to state, dealing with roommates and dead-end jobs and looking for an existence that befits her intelligence and desire for authenticity. She's not a lost cause; she simply chooses, for personal reasons, to drift a while."

 
DMZ Book One by Brian Wood

DMZ, Northlanders, and DC Comics exclusivity edit

Demo was the book with which Wood and Becky Cloonan first gained Vertigo's attention.[43] Editor Will Dennis approached Wood and invited him to pitch, and editor Shelly Bond hired Becky Cloonan to illustrate the series American Virgin.[44] The inspiration for DMZ had come to Wood in early 2003, at a time when the 9-11 incident in New York City and the invasion of Iraq dominated the U.S. national psyche.[45] Wood had just moved to San Francisco from New York City, and the experience of recalling in that political atmosphere the memories and story ideas he had accumulated over a decade living in the city instigated the creation of the artwork that would become the foundation of DMZ.[45][46] Initially developed as Wartime, a five issue black-and-white miniseries, the comic was consciously a project of importance to Wood, representing a return to the perspective of his breakthrough work Channel Zero, a bleak portrayal of youth culture and anti-authoritarian expression in the repressive environment of Giuliani-era New York City. After the "Wartime" title had been disqualified as too close a title to a recent Books Of Magic miniseries, Wood considered a host of alternatives including "Embedded", "No Man's Land" and "The War for New York" before settling on "DMZ".[45]

DMZ launched as a monthly series on August 9, 2005. It ran for seventy-two issues, one of the longest runs in Vertigo history,[47] and was collected in twelve trade paperbacks. A Deluxe Edition of five hardcovers were published in 2014, followed by softcover editions of same in 2016. A two volume compendium set was published in 2020.[48]

In August 2006, DC Comics announced that Wood was signed to an exclusive contract.[49] This was announced at the same time as Wood's second monthly title for Vertigo, the historical series Northlanders.[50] Described as an anthology series that takes a realistic, "street level" looking at Vikings, the series ran for 50 issues before being cancelled due to low sales.[51] It was collected into seven trade paperbacks, and then re-cut into three volumes that presents the stories in a different sequence than originally published.

In 2006, editor Shelly Bond announced Minx, a young adult graphic novel imprint aimed at the teenage girl market.[52] Wood and artist Ryan Kelly produced The New York Four for the imprint.[53] Years later, they would return for The New York Five, published under the Vertigo label. The sequel was nominated for an Eisner award in 2012 for Best New Limited Series.[54] In 2014, Wood and Kelly took the books to Dark Horse Comics and produced the collected edition The New York Four, containing the complete story.[55]

In 2008, Wood was nominated for Best Writer at that year's Eisner Awards, for DMZ, Northlanders, and Local.[56]

During the term of his exclusivity to DC Comics, Wood also wrote DV8 Gods And Monsters for the WildStorm imprint, and a short run on the Supernatural licensed comic. In 2011, Wood was rumored to write the relaunched Supergirl series as part of DC's New 52 initiative,[57] but it did not come to pass. This generated some confusion and commentary, particularly after DC's New 52 website inadvertently leaked Wood's name as the series writer.[58][59] Wood stated, "I don't really know what I can and can't say about it, even now. But to answer at least part of your question, I did not turn down "Supergirl." I would have loved to be the writer on "Supergirl." I have over a year's worth of "Supergirl" story outlines and several scripts sitting right here." Soon after, Wood declined to renew his DC Exclusive.[60]

In 2021, Wood reported that DC Entertainment had renewed the Northlanders publishing agreement.[61]

Outside of the exclusivity, Wood wrote the miniseries Supermarket and the graphic novel The Tourist during this time, for publishers IDW and Image Comics respectively.[62][63]

Return to Marvel and the "all-female" X-Men edit

In late 2011, Bleeding Cool reported that during Fan Expo Canada, Marvel teased a Brian Wood return in 2012, alongside an image of Wolverine's claw marks.[64] CBR later revealed the project as Wolverine & the X-Men: Alpha and Omega, a four issue series with Mark Brooks on art.[65] Wood then took over on the main, "adjective-less" X-Men title starting with #30[66] and wrapping up with #37.[67]

Wood returned in 2013 with the #1 selling relaunch of X-Men with an all-female "A-list" roster: Jubilee, Storm, Rogue, Kitty Pryde, Rachel Grey and Psylocke.[68][69] USA Today quoted Wood as saying, "I feel like as far as the X-Men go, the women are the X-Men. Cyclops and Wolverine are big names, but taken as a whole, the women kind of rule the franchise."[70] The reaction to the title was mostly positive,[71] but some took offense at the lack of male characters,[72] and others at the execution.[73] Journalist Laura Hudson interviewed Wood for Wired Magazine, and quoted him as saying, ""There's too much cheesecake out there that is sold, or at least marketed, as a 'strong female' character or book when it's anything but, it just reinforces the worst opinions of the most sexist fans, and we gain no new ground. We probably lose ground. I'm not approaching this new X-Men as a 'female book,' but I'm writing it as a high action X-Men comic, and with some luck that will nullify some of these poisonous critics who go looking for something to feel angry/uncomfortable/threatened by."[69] The title was included in the Battle of The Atom miniseries.[74] Wood left the series in 2014 with issue #17, saying, "I left the title on my own accord, no drama, no pressure, just moving on,"[75] and writer G. Willow Wilson took over.[76]

Brian Wood and Olivier Coipel created the Shogo Lee, Jubilee's adopted infant son. He appeared as a time-traveling adult hero Sentinel-X in Battle of the Atom.[77]

Concurrent with the X-Men, Wood also took over monthly writing duties on Ultimate Comics: The X-Men with issue #13.[78] He continued until issue #33.[79] He and artist Paco Medina created the mutant Nomi Blume aka Mach Two.[80] His final work for Marvel during this time was to take over writing the Moon Knight reboot Warren Ellis began. He scripted issues #7-12.[81]

Image Comics and Dark Horse edit

Wood returned to Image with three miniseries: Mara with Ming Doyle, Starve with Danijel Žeželj and Black Road with Garry Brown.[82]

The bulk of Wood's post-DC Comics creator-owned work happened at Dark Horse Comics. After exiting his exclusive contract, Wood signed on to write the publisher's long-running Conan the Barbarian title, adapting the well-loved "Queen of the Black Coast" short story with Becky Cloonan on art. The series ran for 25 issues. Wood also launched The Massive, a creator-owned series with artist Garry Brown, depicting a group of environmentalists grappling with an unexplained failing of the earth's ecosystems.[83] After the series conclusion at issue #30,[84] Wood and Brown created the six-issue prequel Ninth Wave. In the environmental novel Apocalyptic Ecology in the Graphic Novel by Clint Jones, he states, "[The Massive] comes closest to representing the complexity of real destruction in the case of a global catastrophe."[85]

In 2013 Wood was approached by Dark Horse to head up a brand new Star Wars monthly title, one that uses the original cast of the 1977 film, a first for the publisher. Star Wars #1 debuted to positive reviews, selling out of its initial print run in 24 hours.[86] Wood wrote the series up until issue #20, when Dark Horse lost the license to Marvel Comics.[87] Wood's run is known for making Princess Leia an X-wing pilot, generating a lot of commentary, positive and negative.[88][89][90][91]

Italian artist Andrea Mutti joined Wood in creating Rebels, a historical comic series set during the American Revolutionary War. Wood noted he found it relevant to modern political times. "The first story arc of Rebels is called 'A Well Regulated Militia,' and believe me, that was very specifically chosen to direct confront how loaded that phrase is these days," he says. "The Green Mountain Boys were America's first militia, and it's important to me to draw a very clear line between that and the guys that show up to Obama rallies with assault rifles on their backs, using that phrase to justify acting out."[92] Publishers Weekly describes the series' main story as follows "by shorter slices of war that cover other concerns within the conflict, including those of women who played a role in combat, Native Americans who had to navigate the battle to ensure their own survival, and black combatants desiring actual independence in a war that focused on white men's freedom."[93] They followed it up in 2017 with a second volume, titled Rebels: These Free and Independent States, dealing with the War of 1812. "We have the great political divide of the day, often boiled down to the contrast between Hamilton's Federalist stance and the more states-oriented Democratic-Republicans that Jefferson and Madison pushed for, manifesting in street rallies and back-of-the-pub arguments. We had the piracy in the Barbary states against American merchant ships, the Quasi-War in the Caribbean, John making a couple friends in the abolitionist movement, and the great lead-up to the War of 1812, America's second war with England."[94]

Wood's final creator-owned project during this time was Briggs Land, a generational crime drama set in an American secessionist community, "the Sopranos as secessionists," Wood said.[95] At the same time as announcing the comic series, the Hollywood Reporter announced the property was in development at AMC TV, with Wood both writing and executive producing.[96] Wood said to Bleeding Cool, "I'm writing both, simultaneously. As a comic, its unfolding a little slower, since the 'container' of a 22-page comic is smaller than an hour-long premium cable show, which requires a hell of a lot of story and there's an expectation to get into the meat of it much quicker. In my head, it's two separate Briggs Lands – the one for comics, which is being done one way, and the TV one, which I'm developing differently."[97] There has been no updates on the live action version of the project since Wood posted an image of a completed script.[98]

That same year, Wood co-wrote the video game 1979 Revolution: Black Friday, with Navid Khonsari.[99]

Aliens: Defiance, Zula Hendricks, and Amanda Ripley edit

Wood has written a number of series for the Aliens franchise, starting with the 12-issue Aliens: Defiance,[100] which introduced the point-of-view character Zula Hendricks,[101][102][103] an ostracized Colonial Marine suffering from injury and under a cloud of suspicion. He saw similarities between Zula and Ellen Ripley character, and strived to make the connection on the page. "I did take a hard look at Ripley, especially the Ripley in the original film, to figure out how one makes a Ripley-esque lead character since one of our goals with this comic is to create a ‘classic’ Alien story in the mold of the original film. Zula is cut from the same cloth as the crew of the Nostromo: blue collar people just looking ahead to the next paycheck dropped into a terrible situation and needing to struggle their way out of it. Ripley does all that, keeps her wits about her, her humanity, and her cool. I want to instill all of that in Zula, even if it's from a different perspective, that of a soldier. A young, passionate, walking-wounded soldier." The series also featured Ellen's daughter, Amanda Ripley, her first media appearance since the Alien: Isolation video game. "A pre-Isolation Amanda Ripley is [Zula's] only friend." Wood said.[104]

Zula Hendricks, created by Wood and artist Tristan Jones, is canon, featured in the 2019 novelization of the video game Alien: Isolation[105] and the novel Alien: Prototype.[101]

In September 2018, Dark Horse announced Aliens: Resistance,[106] written by Wood with art by Robert Carey. Set after Defiance, it features Zula Hendricks and Amanda Ripley continuing the search for Weyland-Yutani black ops experiments on the xenomorph.[107] It was followed by Aliens: Rescue in 2019[108]

A fourth Alien series, Colonial Marines: Rising Threat, was cancelled prior to publication.[109] It was meant to star Olivia Shipp, a character from Alien: Echo,[110] a young adult novel by Mira Grant.[111]

Sword Daughter and DMZ at HBOMax edit

In June 2018, Wood and his Briggs Land collaborator Mack Chater launched a new monthly series, Sword Daughter.[112] Described as a Norse - Samurai Cinema revenge mash-up,[113] the team enlisted José Villarrubia as colorist. Dark Horse described the series as "a raw and violent story that is a testament to the power of redemption and the resiliency of family, and a visually stunning tribute to samurai cinema." There would be a total of nine issues of the series, published in three hardcovers, titled She Brightly Burns, Folded Metal, and Elsbeth Of The Island.[114]

Wood also wrote and co-wrote several licensed comics during the late 2010s, EVE Online: Valkyrie, Terminator: Sector War, Mono, John Carter: The End, Planet of The Apes: Memorial, a short story for Megadeth: Death By Design, and RoboCop: Citizens' Arrest.[115] He oversaw a reboot of Robotech for Titan Comics, writing two volumes of the series before turning the job over to Simon Furman.[116]

In 2014 Warner Horizon were reported to be developing a DMZ television show with producers David Heyman and Andre and Maria Jacquemetton for the Syfy network.[117] In January 2020, a new DMZ deal was announced, this time for HBO Max, with Ava DuVernay directing, Roberto Patino showrunning, and Rosario Dawson in a lead role.[118] On November 19, 2020, Deadline reported that HBO Max has ordered DMZ to series with actors Hoon Lee, Freddie Miyares and Jordan Preston Carter joining the cast and Patino writing all four episodes.[119]

Unrealized projects edit

In 2001, Wood and artist David Choe were commissioned by Marvel to develop the concept of an X-Men series for the publisher's then-upcoming MAX imprint.[120][121] Although the project was shelved at the time, it was later released with a different creative team, while Wood used his ideas to develop the creator-owned series Demo with artist Becky Cloonan.[122]

A catalog entry for Dogs Day End appeared in 2008 from the publisher Top Shelf.[123] Created by Wood with art by Nikki Cook, it never appeared. The catalog described it thusly: "Following up on the time-honored adage "you can't go home again", Dogs Day End details the personal journey of 30-year-old Andrew Maguire, pulled back to the small upstate hometown of his childhood by his mother as she enters the final stages of cancer." Chris Arrant of CBR asked Wood about it in 2010, and he explained, "A bunch of shit went wrong, ranging from schedule problems to my own writing problems, and after a few years I shelved it for a bit, reworked the story, found a new artist, and tried again. And it was at that point I realized that really the only problem was with me, and my inability to write that goddamn story. I think time's just passed it by, to be honest. I love the idea of it, but I just cannot make it work."[124]

In 2012, Bleeding Cool and MTV reported a list of comic book projects Wood described as never making it off the ground.[125][126] There were several DC Comics properties on the list - Green Arrow, Supergirl, Superman Beyond, Rima The Jungle Girl, "Gotham: Neighborhood Rebellion aka Catwoman Year 100", and what he termed "The Re-Imagined Wildstorm Universe." Three creator-owned titles are mentioned: QC, Anthem, and Starve. Starve was published by Image Comics in 2015.[127] That same year, Wood was named as the new writer of Todd McFarlane's "resurrected" Spawn for the #251 relaunch.[128] Shortly after appearing with MacFarlane at New York Comic Con,[129] Wood announced he was no longer employed on the book, issuing this statement: "For the sake of readers and retailers who read the current Image solicits (March 2015), I just want to sent out a little PSA and say that I am not the writer of Spawn #251. I'm actually not the writer of the Spawn title after all. I delivered, to spec, the script for February's Spawn Resurrection #1 special but raised objections to the considerable extent to which my script and the larger plot was being rewritten during production. I was then removed from the job. I'm not trying to complain or spark drama, but I do think that the audience and the retailers laying down money for the book should be aware when there is a creative team change, especially this close to the book's release. I'm sorry to anyone who was looking forward to my work on Spawn – its a bummer for me too."[130] Paul Jenkins replaced Wood.[131]

Awards and nominations edit

Nominations edit

Wins edit

  • 2007 Lucca Comics & Games Grand Jury Best Short Story (Demo's "Emmy")[137]
  • 2007 American Library Association's YALSA Great Graphic Novels for Teens (for Demo)[138]
  • 2008 Eisner Award for Best Writer (for DMZ, Northlanders, Local)[139]
  • 2015 American Library Association's YALSA Great Graphic Novels for Teens (for The Massive)[140]
  • 2015 Sundance Film Festival Official Selection (for 1979 Revolution: Black Friday)[136]
  • 2015 American Library Association's YALSA Great Graphic Novels for Teens (for Mara)[141]
  • 2016 IndieCade Award for Grand Jury Prize Winner (for 1979 Revolution: Black Friday)[136]
  • 2016 Bit Award for Best PC Game Winner (for 1979 Revolution: Black Friday)[136]
  • 2016 Serious Play Award for Best Game Winner (for 1979 Revolution: Black Friday)[136]
  • 2018 Facebook Game of the Year (for 1979 Revolution: Black Friday)[142]

Accusations of sexual misconduct edit

On November 13, 2013, cartoonist Tess Fowler publicly accused Wood of sexual harassment in offering her his hotel room number at a bar encounter during San Diego Comic-Con in 2003.[143] Later that same month, Wood responded to Fowler with an apology, stating in part, "when she declined, that was the conclusion of the matter for me. There was never an exertion of power, no threats, and no revenge... I think the larger issues of abuse in the comics industry are genuine and I share everyone's concerns. I don't want our difference of accounts to take attention away from that industry-wide discussion that needs to happen." Fowler responded in part, "I've forgiven Brian years ago for the following story... I've moved on from what he did. I never asked for a boycott, or blacklisting, as I am being accused. I actually spoke very openly about the opposite. Brian Wood has every right to be a part of comics. To make books and make a living unhindered. I believe that. I also believe his behavior is a symptom of a much bigger disease."[144]

On November 20, Fowler posted a series of tweets detailing a separate, private apology Wood sent her, writing:

"Since Brian discussed it on Twitter I guess it's ok for me to mention it: After reaching out to him I did get a very specific apology.[145] He said it was 'not for publication', and so I didn't because I wanted him to feel safe enuf to go further. I feel it's necessary to openly acknowledge this, for the sake of all the women talking about their own experiences right now. To me, what he accepted ownership of felt genuine."[146][147][148]

On November 25, former DC Comics employee Anne Scherbina stated that, following a rejected pass sometime in 2002, Wood had relayed a rumor to journalist Rich Johnston about her having used a storeroom at DC for sex. Johnston subsequently published the rumor in his Lying in the Gutters column at Comic Book Resources. While Scherbina admitted that Wood had not named her specifically, she also admitted to having invited Wood into the storeroom in question for sex, categorizing that as "a joke."[149] She believes the rumor and that its publication damaged her reputation at DC, saying, "No one talked about it online, or called me a slut or even said anything to me directly. But the suspicion was there. The subject had been raised in the office and now it was in people's minds. My job didn't change, but I was not given any new responsibilities." She posted her emails with Wood, where he said he had no idea he had gotten her in trouble at work. He apologized. Scherbina appeared not to accept it.[150] Rich Johnston later expressed regret for publishing the rumor, offering a private apology.[151]

In August 2019, Laura Hudson accused Wood of "grabbing" her and "forcing" her into a kiss at a bar in 2007.[152][153] When approached by Comics Beat regarding the allegations, Dark Horse issued a statement to The Beat saying, "Effective immediately, Dark Horse will not pursue any new projects with Brian Wood."[154] On August 21, 2020, The Comics Journal reported that following Hudson's employment on the Ava DuVernay-helmed adaptation of Wood's DMZ, she deleted the accusations against Wood.[155]

On June 19, 2020, Fowler posted screenshots of another exchange with Wood on Twitter, writing:[156]

"Brian Wood e-mailed me. It did not end well. I do not take it as a genuine apology. But others might feel differently. And the fact is, technically, this IS an apology (below) which I accepted before it went bad. Take it as you will. I just don't want my situation used to detract from someone else possibly having a healing exchange with a man who wronged them. Was it a genuine apology? That's up to you. I don't feel it was. But YMMV. FYI: The only person who regularly invoked his daughter into public discourse about his behavior was him. I feel I was more than fair in my responses. Judge for yourself but please don't use my name to detract from the accounts and voices of others."[156]

Bibliography edit

Early work edit

  • Junkfoodcity Comics #1–3 (anthology self-published by Wood and Gavin Spielman, 1995–1996)
    • Each issue featured short stories written and drawn by Wood: "Beer Run" (#1), "The Evictor" and "Let's Lynch the Landlord" (#2), "Hyperkarma" (#3)
  • The Daedalus Foundation (as artist, written by Dominic Lopez, one-shot, Big Wednesday Comics, 1995)
  • Channel Zero: The Complete Collection (tpb, 296 pages, Dark Horse, 2012, ISBN 1-5958-2936-9) includes:
    • Hectic (script and art, self-published mini-comic, 1996)
    • Clean (script and art, self-published mini-comic, 1997)
    • Pure #1–2: "Channel Zero 1.0" (script and art, anthology, Oxygen Studios, 1997)
  • Tales of Midnight: "Response" (script and art, anthology one-shot, Blue Silver, 1998)
  • No Justice/No Piece #2: "Cold Transfer" (as artist, written by Michelle Lo, anthology, Head Press, 1998)
  • Astronauts in Trouble: Live from the Moon #1: "Stone, Cold" (as artist, written by Larry Young, co-feature, Gun Dog Comics, 1999)
  • Just 1 Page: Heroes: "Buddy Bradley" (script and art, one-page strip in the anthology one-shot, Comic Festival, 2001)

Image Comics edit

AiT/Planet Lar edit

Marvel Comics edit

DC Comics edit

Dark Horse Comics edit

  • Conan the Barbarian vol. 3 (with Becky Cloonan (#1–3, 7), James Harren (#4–6), Vasilis Lolos (#8–9), Declan Shalvey (#10–12), Mirko Colak (#13–15), Davide Gianfelice (#16–18), Paul Azaceta (#19–21), Riccardo Burchielli (#22–24) and Leandro Fernández (#25), 2012–2014) collected as:
  • The Massive:
    • The Massive (with Kristian Donaldson (#1–3), Garry Brown, Gary Erskine (#10), Declan Shalvey (#11) and Danijel Žeželj (#12, 22–24), 2012–2014) collected as:
    • The Massive: Ninth Wave #1–6 (with Garry Brown, 2015–2016) collected as The Massive: Ninth Wave (hc, 152 pages, 2016, ISBN 1-5067-0091-8; tpb, 2017, ISBN 1-5067-0009-8)
  • Star Wars vol. 3 (with Carlos D'Anda, Ryan Kelly (#7–9), Facundo Percio (#13–14) and Stéphane Créty (#15–18), 2013–2014) collected as:
  • Rebels:
    • Rebels #1–10 (with Andrea Mutti, Matt Woodson (#7), Ariela Kristantina (#8) and Tristan Jones (#10), 2015–2016) collected as Rebels: A Well-Regulated Militia (tpb, 262 pages, 2016, ISBN 1-6165-5908-X)
    • Rebels: These Free and Independent States #1–8 (with Andrea Mutti, Luca Casalanguida (#7) and Joan Urgell (#8), 2017) collected as Rebels: These Free and Independent States (tpb, 208 pages, 2018, ISBN 1-5067-0203-1)
  • Eve: Valkyrie #1–4 (with Eduardo Francisco, 2015–2016) collected as Eve: Valkyrie (hc, 96 pages, 2016, ISBN 1-6165-5767-2)
  • Aliens:
  • Briggs Land:
    • Briggs Land #1–6 (with Mack Chater, 2016–2017) collected as Briggs Land: State of Grace (tpb, 160 pages, 2017, ISBN 1-5067-0059-4)
    • Briggs Land: Lone Wolves (tpb, 160 pages, 2017, ISBN 1-5067-0168-X) collects:
      • Briggs Land: Lone Wolves #1–6 (with Mack Chater, Vanesa del Rey (#4) and Werther Dell'Edera (#5–6), 2017)
      • Free Comic Book Day: Avatar: "The Village" (with Werther Dell'Edera, co-feature in one-shot, 2017)
  • Sword Daughter (with Mack Chater, 2018–2020) collected as:
  • The Terminator: Sector War #1–4 (with Jeff Stokely, 2018–2019) collected as The Terminator: Sector War (tpb, 104 pages, 2019, ISBN 1-5067-0681-9)

Other publishers edit

Cover illustrations edit

References edit

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External links edit

  • Official website
  • Brian Wood at the Grand Comics Database
  • at the Comic Book DB (archived from the original)
  • with Brian Wood at Scripts and Scribes
Preceded by Generation X writer
2000–2001
(with Warren Ellis in 2000)
Succeeded by
Preceded by Conan the Barbarian writer
2012–2014
Succeeded by
Preceded by X-Men writer
2012–2014
Succeeded by
Preceded by Ultimate Comics: X-Men writer
2012–2013
Succeeded by
n/a
Preceded by Star Wars writer
2013–2014
Succeeded by
Jason Aaron
Preceded by
Warren Ellis
Moon Knight writer
2014–2015
Succeeded by

brian, wood, comics, this, biography, living, person, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, adding, reliable, sources, contentious, material, about, living, persons, that, unsourced, poorly, sourced, must, removed, immediately, from, articl. This biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification Please help by adding reliable sources Contentious material about living persons that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately from the article and its talk page especially if potentially libelous Find sources Brian Wood comics news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2010 Learn how and when to remove this message Brian Wood born January 29 1972 is an American writer illustrator and graphic designer known for his work in comic books television and video games His noted comic book work includes the series DMZ Demo Northlanders The Massive Marvel Comics The X Men and Star Wars His web series work includes adaptations of his own short stories from the comics series The Massive and Conan the Barbarian for Geek amp Sundry and YouTube and his video game work includes three years on staff at Rockstar Games co writing 1979 Revolution Black Friday and story contributions to Aliens Fireteam Elite His television work includes pilot scripts for AMC Amazon Studios and Sonar Entertainment He is a contributing writer on HBO Max s DMZ adaptation of his own work 1 Brian WoodWood at the 2011 Big Apple Convention in ManhattanBorn 1972 01 29 January 29 1972 age 52 Essex Junction Vermont U S EducationThe New School BFA Known forGraphic design graphic novelist screenwriter producerNotable workDemo DMZ Northlanders Wood s work is well known for sociopolitical commentary particularly on the topics of media and conflicts 2 3 climate change and identity 4 5 6 Much of his work is about or takes place in New York City 7 8 9 He s contributed the character of Zula Hendricks to the Aliens franchise 10 created the character of Shogo Lee Jubilee s adopted son to the X Men Marvel Universe 11 and created Nomi Blume for the Ultimate Marvel universe 12 Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 Early work 2 2 AiT Planet Lar and original graphic novels 2 3 Demo Local and the single issue format 2 4 DMZ Northlanders and DC Comics exclusivity 2 5 Return to Marvel and the all female X Men 2 6 Image Comics and Dark Horse 2 7 Aliens Defiance Zula Hendricks and Amanda Ripley 2 8 Sword Daughter and DMZ at HBOMax 3 Unrealized projects 4 Awards and nominations 4 1 Nominations 4 2 Wins 5 Accusations of sexual misconduct 6 Bibliography 6 1 Early work 6 2 Image Comics 6 3 AiT Planet Lar 6 4 Marvel Comics 6 5 DC Comics 6 6 Dark Horse Comics 6 7 Other publishers 6 8 Cover illustrations 7 References 8 External linksEarly life editBrian Wood was born January 29 1972 and grew up in the village of Essex Junction Vermont 13 14 where he attended Hiawatha Elementary School 14 and Essex High School 15 He has described his upbringing as outdoorsy and active with regular incidents involving neighborhood bullies and trauma at home He describes a period of heavy drinking before moving to New York City to attend college stating I was ejected into the adult world too early orphaned and lacking a plan support or sound judgement 16 He is a lifelong stutterer 17 18 has spoken publicly about seeking therapy to deal with childhood trauma 19 and the loss of his mother to cancer 20 He moved to New York City in 1991 21 describing it as something of a big leap of faith on my part it was one of those situations where I had hardly any money and a single backpack full of clothes I bought a one way bus ticket from Burlington Vermont and kind of burned bridges as I left I was all in Stupid but committed He describes working below minimum wage at a skate shop while applying to colleges After I hit 21 I got a little bit of money from an inheritance which paid for my first year of school and a grimy 325 month bedroom on East 3rd Street for a few months he recounts He also worked as a bike messenger which instilled in him a love and a knowledge for New York City that would inform many of his future projects 22 After graduating in 1997 from Parsons School of Design with a BFA in illustration Wood worked a series of design jobs at internet startups including iVillage Bigfoot and Nerve 23 Career edit nbsp Channel Zero 1 by Brian Wood 1998 Early work edit Wood s first professional work in comics was the five issue limited series Channel Zero published by Image Comics in 1998 which began as part of his graduation project for Parsons School of Design Channel Zero is set in a dystopian near future New York City where the tenets of then Mayor Rudy Giuliani have grown into a freedom restricting government initiative called The Clean Act The protagonist is Jennie 2 5 a DIY media personality who sets out to stir the complacent population into revolution Channel Zero was orphaned shortly after Image Comics sold out of the first print run of the collected edition opting not to return to press and AiT Planet Lar acquired it soon afterwards In 2012 Wood regained the publishing rights and Dark Horse Comics took up the publishing releasing a Complete Collection that included the original graphic novel the prequel series Channel Zero Jennie One with Becky Cloonan his Public Domain design book material and numerous other extras from the early development of the property 24 25 ComicsAlliance has identified Channel Zero as The Unofficial Bible of Comics Activism 26 and noted its eerie prescience and represents an arduous expressly DIY method of comic book making that new technology has dramatically changed 27 Publishers Weekly called it significant and unapologetically experimental and Wood is far more interested in trying out a variety of visual techniques than in creating something that is slick and polished The result is a graphic novel whose form and content could not be more perfectly matched 28 Bleeding Cool placed Channel Zero within a larger cyberpunk movement 29 Following Channel Zero Wood took a two year break from comics In early 2000 comic book writer Warren Ellis offered Wood a co writing job on Marvel Comics Generation X as part of Ellis Counter X run Wood co wrote issues 63 70 with Ellis and 71 75 on his own before the series was canceled as part of incoming Editor in Chief Joe Quesada s attempts to simplify the X Men franchise Wood would not work again with Marvel until 2012 30 AiT Planet Lar and original graphic novels edit Wood was employed as a staff designer for Rockstar Games designing for video game franchises such as Grand Theft Auto Midnight Club Max Payne Smuggler s Run and Manhunt 31 He nonetheless produced a series of original graphic novels coinciding with a trend within independent comic publishers that favored that format The first was Couscous Express with artist Brett Weldele an action romp about food delivery people 32 This was followed by a trilogy of bike messenger books The Couriers The Couriers Dirtbike Manifesto and The Couriers Ballad of Johnny Funwrecker all drawn by Rob G 33 Several characters are shared between Couscous Express and The Couriers and in 2012 all four books were collected together and published by Image Comics 34 Wood created and wrote the limited series Pounded for Oni Press and Fight for Tomorrow for DC Comics s imprint Vertigo He also produced Public Domain and Channel Zero Jennie One during this time the first of what will come to be several collaborations with artist Becky Cloonan citation needed Larry Young s AiT Planet Lar heavily promoted Wood during this time including designating the month of January as Brian Wood Month to exclusively offer his titles only 35 Wood also served as AIT s branding designer and overall creative director for a short period of time and designed covers for Warren Ellis Come In Alone Badlands and Black Heart Billy In January 2007 Intrepid Pictures optioned the feature film rights to Wood and Rob G s graphic novel The Couriers with Javier Grillo Marxuach set to pen the screenplay 36 Demo Local and the single issue format edit In 2003 Wood partnered with artist Becky Cloonan to create Demo an anthology series of twelve done in one or one shot stories about young people with superpowers Although initially inspired by the aborted NYX project the series was not traditionally superhero and instead compared emerging powers to neurodiverse themes and tragic love stories 37 The series was well received and Wizard a steadfastly superhero oriented comics magazine named Demo its 2004 Indie of the Year The series was also nominated for two Eisner Awards in 2005 for Best Limited Series and Best Single Issue for 7 One Shot Don t Miss Thirteen Minutes cites Wood and Demo as blipping a young artist named Becky Cloonan onto everyone s collective radar screen and cementing Wood s relationship with this frequent collaborator 38 Wood and Cloonan moved Demo from AiT Planet Lar to Vertigo Comics in 2008 39 announcing a Volume 2 of the series upping the total number of short stories to 18 40 In 2015 Wood and Cloonan took the publishing rights to Dark Horse Comics producing the single volume The Complete Demo 41 The Demo format proved successful so Wood went on to replicate it with some changes for his 12 issue series Local at Oni Press which launched in 2005 and was drawn by artist Ryan Kelly 42 NPR named it one of its Best Graphic Novels of the year and called it a contemporary ballad to the idea of the open road Megan moves from state to state dealing with roommates and dead end jobs and looking for an existence that befits her intelligence and desire for authenticity She s not a lost cause she simply chooses for personal reasons to drift a while nbsp DMZ Book One by Brian Wood DMZ Northlanders and DC Comics exclusivity edit Demo was the book with which Wood and Becky Cloonan first gained Vertigo s attention 43 Editor Will Dennis approached Wood and invited him to pitch and editor Shelly Bond hired Becky Cloonan to illustrate the series American Virgin 44 The inspiration for DMZ had come to Wood in early 2003 at a time when the 9 11 incident in New York City and the invasion of Iraq dominated the U S national psyche 45 Wood had just moved to San Francisco from New York City and the experience of recalling in that political atmosphere the memories and story ideas he had accumulated over a decade living in the city instigated the creation of the artwork that would become the foundation of DMZ 45 46 Initially developed as Wartime a five issue black and white miniseries the comic was consciously a project of importance to Wood representing a return to the perspective of his breakthrough work Channel Zero a bleak portrayal of youth culture and anti authoritarian expression in the repressive environment of Giuliani era New York City After the Wartime title had been disqualified as too close a title to a recent Books Of Magic miniseries Wood considered a host of alternatives including Embedded No Man s Land and The War for New York before settling on DMZ 45 DMZ launched as a monthly series on August 9 2005 It ran for seventy two issues one of the longest runs in Vertigo history 47 and was collected in twelve trade paperbacks A Deluxe Edition of five hardcovers were published in 2014 followed by softcover editions of same in 2016 A two volume compendium set was published in 2020 48 In August 2006 DC Comics announced that Wood was signed to an exclusive contract 49 This was announced at the same time as Wood s second monthly title for Vertigo the historical series Northlanders 50 Described as an anthology series that takes a realistic street level looking at Vikings the series ran for 50 issues before being cancelled due to low sales 51 It was collected into seven trade paperbacks and then re cut into three volumes that presents the stories in a different sequence than originally published In 2006 editor Shelly Bond announced Minx a young adult graphic novel imprint aimed at the teenage girl market 52 Wood and artist Ryan Kelly produced The New York Four for the imprint 53 Years later they would return for The New York Five published under the Vertigo label The sequel was nominated for an Eisner award in 2012 for Best New Limited Series 54 In 2014 Wood and Kelly took the books to Dark Horse Comics and produced the collected edition The New York Four containing the complete story 55 In 2008 Wood was nominated for Best Writer at that year s Eisner Awards for DMZ Northlanders and Local 56 During the term of his exclusivity to DC Comics Wood also wrote DV8 Gods And Monsters for the WildStorm imprint and a short run on the Supernatural licensed comic In 2011 Wood was rumored to write the relaunched Supergirl series as part of DC s New 52 initiative 57 but it did not come to pass This generated some confusion and commentary particularly after DC s New 52 website inadvertently leaked Wood s name as the series writer 58 59 Wood stated I don t really know what I can and can t say about it even now But to answer at least part of your question I did not turn down Supergirl I would have loved to be the writer on Supergirl I have over a year s worth of Supergirl story outlines and several scripts sitting right here Soon after Wood declined to renew his DC Exclusive 60 In 2021 Wood reported that DC Entertainment had renewed the Northlanders publishing agreement 61 Outside of the exclusivity Wood wrote the miniseries Supermarket and the graphic novel The Tourist during this time for publishers IDW and Image Comics respectively 62 63 Return to Marvel and the all female X Men edit In late 2011 Bleeding Cool reported that during Fan Expo Canada Marvel teased a Brian Wood return in 2012 alongside an image of Wolverine s claw marks 64 CBR later revealed the project as Wolverine amp the X Men Alpha and Omega a four issue series with Mark Brooks on art 65 Wood then took over on the main adjective less X Men title starting with 30 66 and wrapping up with 37 67 Wood returned in 2013 with the 1 selling relaunch of X Men with an all female A list roster Jubilee Storm Rogue Kitty Pryde Rachel Grey and Psylocke 68 69 USA Today quoted Wood as saying I feel like as far as the X Men go the women are the X Men Cyclops and Wolverine are big names but taken as a whole the women kind of rule the franchise 70 The reaction to the title was mostly positive 71 but some took offense at the lack of male characters 72 and others at the execution 73 Journalist Laura Hudson interviewed Wood for Wired Magazine and quoted him as saying There s too much cheesecake out there that is sold or at least marketed as a strong female character or book when it s anything but it just reinforces the worst opinions of the most sexist fans and we gain no new ground We probably lose ground I m not approaching this new X Men as a female book but I m writing it as a high action X Men comic and with some luck that will nullify some of these poisonous critics who go looking for something to feel angry uncomfortable threatened by 69 The title was included in the Battle of The Atom miniseries 74 Wood left the series in 2014 with issue 17 saying I left the title on my own accord no drama no pressure just moving on 75 and writer G Willow Wilson took over 76 Brian Wood and Olivier Coipel created the Shogo Lee Jubilee s adopted infant son He appeared as a time traveling adult hero Sentinel X in Battle of the Atom 77 Concurrent with the X Men Wood also took over monthly writing duties on Ultimate Comics The X Men with issue 13 78 He continued until issue 33 79 He and artist Paco Medina created the mutant Nomi Blume aka Mach Two 80 His final work for Marvel during this time was to take over writing the Moon Knight reboot Warren Ellis began He scripted issues 7 12 81 Image Comics and Dark Horse edit Wood returned to Image with three miniseries Mara with Ming Doyle Starve with Danijel Zezelj and Black Road with Garry Brown 82 The bulk of Wood s post DC Comics creator owned work happened at Dark Horse Comics After exiting his exclusive contract Wood signed on to write the publisher s long running Conan the Barbarian title adapting the well loved Queen of the Black Coast short story with Becky Cloonan on art The series ran for 25 issues Wood also launched The Massive a creator owned series with artist Garry Brown depicting a group of environmentalists grappling with an unexplained failing of the earth s ecosystems 83 After the series conclusion at issue 30 84 Wood and Brown created the six issue prequel Ninth Wave In the environmental novel Apocalyptic Ecology in the Graphic Novel by Clint Jones he states The Massive comes closest to representing the complexity of real destruction in the case of a global catastrophe 85 In 2013 Wood was approached by Dark Horse to head up a brand new Star Wars monthly title one that uses the original cast of the 1977 film a first for the publisher Star Wars 1 debuted to positive reviews selling out of its initial print run in 24 hours 86 Wood wrote the series up until issue 20 when Dark Horse lost the license to Marvel Comics 87 Wood s run is known for making Princess Leia an X wing pilot generating a lot of commentary positive and negative 88 89 90 91 Italian artist Andrea Mutti joined Wood in creating Rebels a historical comic series set during the American Revolutionary War Wood noted he found it relevant to modern political times The first story arc of Rebels is called A Well Regulated Militia and believe me that was very specifically chosen to direct confront how loaded that phrase is these days he says The Green Mountain Boys were America s first militia and it s important to me to draw a very clear line between that and the guys that show up to Obama rallies with assault rifles on their backs using that phrase to justify acting out 92 Publishers Weekly describes the series main story as follows by shorter slices of war that cover other concerns within the conflict including those of women who played a role in combat Native Americans who had to navigate the battle to ensure their own survival and black combatants desiring actual independence in a war that focused on white men s freedom 93 They followed it up in 2017 with a second volume titled Rebels These Free and Independent States dealing with the War of 1812 We have the great political divide of the day often boiled down to the contrast between Hamilton s Federalist stance and the more states oriented Democratic Republicans that Jefferson and Madison pushed for manifesting in street rallies and back of the pub arguments We had the piracy in the Barbary states against American merchant ships the Quasi War in the Caribbean John making a couple friends in the abolitionist movement and the great lead up to the War of 1812 America s second war with England 94 Wood s final creator owned project during this time was Briggs Land a generational crime drama set in an American secessionist community the Sopranos as secessionists Wood said 95 At the same time as announcing the comic series the Hollywood Reporter announced the property was in development at AMC TV with Wood both writing and executive producing 96 Wood said to Bleeding Cool I m writing both simultaneously As a comic its unfolding a little slower since the container of a 22 page comic is smaller than an hour long premium cable show which requires a hell of a lot of story and there s an expectation to get into the meat of it much quicker In my head it s two separate Briggs Lands the one for comics which is being done one way and the TV one which I m developing differently 97 There has been no updates on the live action version of the project since Wood posted an image of a completed script 98 That same year Wood co wrote the video game 1979 Revolution Black Friday with Navid Khonsari 99 Aliens Defiance Zula Hendricks and Amanda Ripley edit Wood has written a number of series for the Aliens franchise starting with the 12 issue Aliens Defiance 100 which introduced the point of view character Zula Hendricks 101 102 103 an ostracized Colonial Marine suffering from injury and under a cloud of suspicion He saw similarities between Zula and Ellen Ripley character and strived to make the connection on the page I did take a hard look at Ripley especially the Ripley in the original film to figure out how one makes a Ripley esque lead character since one of our goals with this comic is to create a classic Alien story in the mold of the original film Zula is cut from the same cloth as the crew of the Nostromo blue collar people just looking ahead to the next paycheck dropped into a terrible situation and needing to struggle their way out of it Ripley does all that keeps her wits about her her humanity and her cool I want to instill all of that in Zula even if it s from a different perspective that of a soldier A young passionate walking wounded soldier The series also featured Ellen s daughter Amanda Ripley her first media appearance since the Alien Isolation video game A pre Isolation Amanda Ripley is Zula s only friend Wood said 104 Zula Hendricks created by Wood and artist Tristan Jones is canon featured in the 2019 novelization of the video game Alien Isolation 105 and the novel Alien Prototype 101 In September 2018 Dark Horse announced Aliens Resistance 106 written by Wood with art by Robert Carey Set after Defiance it features Zula Hendricks and Amanda Ripley continuing the search for Weyland Yutani black ops experiments on the xenomorph 107 It was followed by Aliens Rescue in 2019 108 A fourth Alien series Colonial Marines Rising Threat was cancelled prior to publication 109 It was meant to star Olivia Shipp a character from Alien Echo 110 a young adult novel by Mira Grant 111 Sword Daughter and DMZ at HBOMax edit In June 2018 Wood and his Briggs Land collaborator Mack Chater launched a new monthly series Sword Daughter 112 Described as a Norse Samurai Cinema revenge mash up 113 the team enlisted Jose Villarrubia as colorist Dark Horse described the series as a raw and violent story that is a testament to the power of redemption and the resiliency of family and a visually stunning tribute to samurai cinema There would be a total of nine issues of the series published in three hardcovers titled She Brightly Burns Folded Metal and Elsbeth Of The Island 114 Wood also wrote and co wrote several licensed comics during the late 2010s EVE Online Valkyrie Terminator Sector War Mono John Carter The End Planet of The Apes Memorial a short story for Megadeth Death By Design and RoboCop Citizens Arrest 115 He oversaw a reboot of Robotech for Titan Comics writing two volumes of the series before turning the job over to Simon Furman 116 In 2014 Warner Horizon were reported to be developing a DMZ television show with producers David Heyman and Andre and Maria Jacquemetton for the Syfy network 117 In January 2020 a new DMZ deal was announced this time for HBO Max with Ava DuVernay directing Roberto Patino showrunning and Rosario Dawson in a lead role 118 On November 19 2020 Deadline reported that HBO Max has ordered DMZ to series with actors Hoon Lee Freddie Miyares and Jordan Preston Carter joining the cast and Patino writing all four episodes 119 Unrealized projects editIn 2001 Wood and artist David Choe were commissioned by Marvel to develop the concept of an X Men series for the publisher s then upcoming MAX imprint 120 121 Although the project was shelved at the time it was later released with a different creative team while Wood used his ideas to develop the creator owned series Demo with artist Becky Cloonan 122 A catalog entry for Dogs Day End appeared in 2008 from the publisher Top Shelf 123 Created by Wood with art by Nikki Cook it never appeared The catalog described it thusly Following up on the time honored adage you can t go home again Dogs Day End details the personal journey of 30 year old Andrew Maguire pulled back to the small upstate hometown of his childhood by his mother as she enters the final stages of cancer Chris Arrant of CBR asked Wood about it in 2010 and he explained A bunch of shit went wrong ranging from schedule problems to my own writing problems and after a few years I shelved it for a bit reworked the story found a new artist and tried again And it was at that point I realized that really the only problem was with me and my inability to write that goddamn story I think time s just passed it by to be honest I love the idea of it but I just cannot make it work 124 In 2012 Bleeding Cool and MTV reported a list of comic book projects Wood described as never making it off the ground 125 126 There were several DC Comics properties on the list Green Arrow Supergirl Superman Beyond Rima The Jungle Girl Gotham Neighborhood Rebellion aka Catwoman Year 100 and what he termed The Re Imagined Wildstorm Universe Three creator owned titles are mentioned QC Anthem and Starve Starve was published by Image Comics in 2015 127 That same year Wood was named as the new writer of Todd McFarlane s resurrected Spawn for the 251 relaunch 128 Shortly after appearing with MacFarlane at New York Comic Con 129 Wood announced he was no longer employed on the book issuing this statement For the sake of readers and retailers who read the current Image solicits March 2015 I just want to sent out a little PSA and say that I am not the writer of Spawn 251 I m actually not the writer of the Spawn title after all I delivered to spec the script for February s Spawn Resurrection 1 special but raised objections to the considerable extent to which my script and the larger plot was being rewritten during production I was then removed from the job I m not trying to complain or spark drama but I do think that the audience and the retailers laying down money for the book should be aware when there is a creative team change especially this close to the book s release I m sorry to anyone who was looking forward to my work on Spawn its a bummer for me too 130 Paul Jenkins replaced Wood 131 Awards and nominations editNominations edit 2004 Eisner Award for Talent Deserving of Wider Recognition 132 2004 Eisner Award for Best Cover Artist for Global Frequency 132 2005 Eisner Award for Best Limited Series and Best Single Issue for Demo 7 133 2009 Harvey Award for Excellence In Presentation for Local 134 2017 Eisner Award for Best Limited Series for Briggs Land 135 2017 Games for Change Awards Best Learning Game Finalist for 1979 Revolution Black Friday 136 Wins edit 2007 Lucca Comics amp Games Grand Jury Best Short Story Demo s Emmy 137 2007 American Library Association s YALSA Great Graphic Novels for Teens for Demo 138 2008 Eisner Award for Best Writer for DMZ Northlanders Local 139 2015 American Library Association s YALSA Great Graphic Novels for Teens for The Massive 140 2015 Sundance Film Festival Official Selection for 1979 Revolution Black Friday 136 2015 American Library Association s YALSA Great Graphic Novels for Teens for Mara 141 2016 IndieCade Award for Grand Jury Prize Winner for 1979 Revolution Black Friday 136 2016 Bit Award for Best PC Game Winner for 1979 Revolution Black Friday 136 2016 Serious Play Award for Best Game Winner for 1979 Revolution Black Friday 136 2018 Facebook Game of the Year for 1979 Revolution Black Friday 142 Accusations of sexual misconduct editThis section may lend undue weight to certain ideas incidents or controversies Please help to create a more balanced presentation Discuss and resolve this issue before removing this message January 2022 On November 13 2013 cartoonist Tess Fowler publicly accused Wood of sexual harassment in offering her his hotel room number at a bar encounter during San Diego Comic Con in 2003 143 Later that same month Wood responded to Fowler with an apology stating in part when she declined that was the conclusion of the matter for me There was never an exertion of power no threats and no revenge I think the larger issues of abuse in the comics industry are genuine and I share everyone s concerns I don t want our difference of accounts to take attention away from that industry wide discussion that needs to happen Fowler responded in part I ve forgiven Brian years ago for the following story I ve moved on from what he did I never asked for a boycott or blacklisting as I am being accused I actually spoke very openly about the opposite Brian Wood has every right to be a part of comics To make books and make a living unhindered I believe that I also believe his behavior is a symptom of a much bigger disease 144 On November 20 Fowler posted a series of tweets detailing a separate private apology Wood sent her writing Since Brian discussed it on Twitter I guess it s ok for me to mention it After reaching out to him I did get a very specific apology 145 He said it was not for publication and so I didn t because I wanted him to feel safe enuf to go further I feel it s necessary to openly acknowledge this for the sake of all the women talking about their own experiences right now To me what he accepted ownership of felt genuine 146 147 148 On November 25 former DC Comics employee Anne Scherbina stated that following a rejected pass sometime in 2002 Wood had relayed a rumor to journalist Rich Johnston about her having used a storeroom at DC for sex Johnston subsequently published the rumor in his Lying in the Gutters column at Comic Book Resources While Scherbina admitted that Wood had not named her specifically she also admitted to having invited Wood into the storeroom in question for sex categorizing that as a joke 149 She believes the rumor and that its publication damaged her reputation at DC saying No one talked about it online or called me a slut or even said anything to me directly But the suspicion was there The subject had been raised in the office and now it was in people s minds My job didn t change but I was not given any new responsibilities She posted her emails with Wood where he said he had no idea he had gotten her in trouble at work He apologized Scherbina appeared not to accept it 150 Rich Johnston later expressed regret for publishing the rumor offering a private apology 151 In August 2019 Laura Hudson accused Wood of grabbing her and forcing her into a kiss at a bar in 2007 152 153 When approached by Comics Beat regarding the allegations Dark Horse issued a statement to The Beat saying Effective immediately Dark Horse will not pursue any new projects with Brian Wood 154 On August 21 2020 The Comics Journal reported that following Hudson s employment on the Ava DuVernay helmed adaptation of Wood s DMZ she deleted the accusations against Wood 155 On June 19 2020 Fowler posted screenshots of another exchange with Wood on Twitter writing 156 Brian Wood e mailed me It did not end well I do not take it as a genuine apology But others might feel differently And the fact is technically this IS an apology below which I accepted before it went bad Take it as you will I just don t want my situation used to detract from someone else possibly having a healing exchange with a man who wronged them Was it a genuine apology That s up to you I don t feel it was But YMMV FYI The only person who regularly invoked his daughter into public discourse about his behavior was him I feel I was more than fair in my responses Judge for yourself but please don t use my name to detract from the accounts and voices of others 156 Bibliography editEarly work edit Junkfoodcity Comics 1 3 anthology self published by Wood and Gavin Spielman 1995 1996 Each issue featured short stories written and drawn by Wood Beer Run 1 The Evictor and Let s Lynch the Landlord 2 Hyperkarma 3 The Daedalus Foundation as artist written by Dominic Lopez one shot Big Wednesday Comics 1995 Channel Zero The Complete Collection tpb 296 pages Dark Horse 2012 ISBN 1 5958 2936 9 includes Hectic script and art self published mini comic 1996 Clean script and art self published mini comic 1997 Pure 1 2 Channel Zero 1 0 script and art anthology Oxygen Studios 1997 Tales of Midnight Response script and art anthology one shot Blue Silver 1998 No Justice No Piece 2 Cold Transfer as artist written by Michelle Lo anthology Head Press 1998 Astronauts in Trouble Live from the Moon 1 Stone Cold as artist written by Larry Young co feature Gun Dog Comics 1999 Just 1 Page Heroes Buddy Bradley script and art one page strip in the anthology one shot Comic Festival 2001 Image Comics edit Channel Zero The Complete Collection tpb 296 pages Dark Horse 2012 ISBN 1 5958 2936 9 includes Channel Zero 1 5 script and art 1998 also collected as Channel Zero tpb 120 pages 1998 ISBN 1 5824 0082 2 Channel Zero Dupe script and art one shot containing the 14 page Channel Zero story previously self published by Wood a new 3 page comic story and a 6 page prose story 1999 Liberty Comics 2 Urban Combat script and art anthology 2009 also collected in CBLDF Presents Liberty hc 216 pages 2014 ISBN 1 6070 6937 7 tpb 2016 ISBN 1 6070 6996 2 The Tourist with Toby Cypress graphic novel 104 pages 2006 ISBN 1 58240 597 2 Mara 1 6 with Ming Doyle 2012 2013 collected as Mara tpb 136 pages 2013 ISBN 1 6070 6810 9 Liberty Annual anthology Liberty Annual 14 Girl Band In Space co written by Wood and his daughter Audrey art by Terry Dodson 2014 Liberty Annual 15 Coming Next Year one page illustration 2015 Starve with Danijel Zezelj 2015 2016 collected as Volume 1 collects 1 5 tpb 120 pages 2016 ISBN 1 6321 5546 X Volume 2 collects 6 10 tpb 120 pages 2016 ISBN 1 6321 5832 9 Black Road 1 10 with Garry Brown 2016 2017 collected as Black Road The Holy North hc 264 pages 2018 ISBN 1 5343 0670 6 AiT Planet Lar edit Channel Zero The Complete Collection tpb 296 pages Dark Horse 2012 ISBN 1 5958 2936 9 includes Public Domain A Channel Zero Designbook collection of sketches and other miscellaneous material 152 pages 2002 ISBN 0 9709 3605 2 Channel Zero Jennie One with Becky Cloonan graphic novel 72 pages 2003 ISBN 1 9320 5107 4 The Couriers The Complete Series tpb 360 pages Image 2012 ISBN 1 6070 6641 6 collects Couscous Express with Brett Weldele graphic novel 88 pages 2001 ISBN 0 9709360 2 8 The Couriers with Rob G series of graphic novels The Couriers sc 88 pages 2003 ISBN 1 932051 06 6 The Couriers Dirtbike Manifesto sc 88 pages 2004 ISBN 1 932051 18 X The Couriers The Ballad of Johnny Funwrecker sc 88 pages 2005 ISBN 1 932051 31 7 Demo with Becky Cloonan Demo 1 12 2003 2004 collected as Demo The Collected Edition tpb 328 pages 2005 ISBN 1 932051 42 2 In 2010 Wood and Cloonan produced a 6 issue sequel limited series published by DC Comics Vertigo imprint Both series were later collected by Dark Horse as Demo tpb 496 pages 2015 ISBN 1 6165 5682 X Demo The Twelve Original Scripts sc 144 pages 2005 ISBN 1 932 05130 9 Marvel Comics edit Generation X with Steve Pugh Ron Lim 68 73 75 and Alan Evans 69 issue 63 is co written by Wood and Warren Ellis issues 64 70 are scripted by Wood from Ellis plots 2000 2001 collected as Counter X Volume 2 collects 63 70 tpb 192 pages 2008 ISBN 0 7851 3305 4 Counter X Generation X Four Days collects 71 75 tpb 160 pages 2013 ISBN 0 785 16730 7 Wolverine and the X Men Alpha and Omega 1 5 with Mark Brooks and Roland Boschi 2012 collected as Wolverine and the X Men Alpha and Omega hc 120 pages 2012 ISBN 0 7851 6400 6 tpb 2013 ISBN 0 7851 6401 4 X Men with David Lopez Roland Boschi vol 3 34 35 Olivier Coipel vol 4 1 3 Terry Dodson vol 4 7 9 Kris Anka vol 4 10 12 Clay Mann vol 4 10 14 Philippe Briones vol 4 13 15 17 and Matteo Buffagni vol 4 15 16 2012 2014 collected as Blank Generation collects vol 3 30 35 tpb 120 pages 2013 ISBN 0 7851 6459 6 Reckless Abandonment includes vol 3 36 37 tpb 136 pages 2013 ISBN 0 7851 6461 8 Primer collects vol 4 1 4 tpb 120 pages 2013 ISBN 0 7851 6800 1 X Men Battle of the Atom includes vol 4 5 6 hc 248 pages 2014 ISBN 0 7851 8906 8 tpb 2014 ISBN 0 7851 8907 6 Also collects an epilogue from X Men Battle of the Atom 2 of 2 written by Wood art by Kris Anka 2013 Muertas collects vol 4 7 12 tpb 136 pages 2014 ISBN 0 7851 6801 X Bloodline collects vol 4 13 17 tpb 120 pages 2014 ISBN 0 7851 8972 6 Ultimate Comics X Men with Paco Medina Reilly Brown 13 14 Carlo Barberi Filipe Andrade 18 1 Mahmud Asrar 24 28 and Alvaro Martinez 29 33 issues 21 22 are co written by Wood and Nathan Edmondson 2012 2013 collected as Ultimate Comics Divided We Fall United We Stand includes 13 18 hc 408 pages 2013 ISBN 0 7851 6781 1 tpb 2013 ISBN 0 785 18416 3 Ultimate Comics X Men by Brian Wood Volume 1 collects 18 1 19 23 tpb 136 pages 2013 ISBN 0 7851 6136 8 Ultimate Comics X Men by Brian Wood Volume 2 collects 24 28 tpb 112 pages 2013 ISBN 0 7851 6720 X Ultimate Comics X Men by Brian Wood Volume 3 collects 29 33 tpb 112 pages 2014 ISBN 0 7851 6721 8 Moon Knight vol 4 7 12 with Greg Smallwood 2014 2015 collected as Moon Knight Dead Will Rise tpb 136 pages 2015 ISBN 0 7851 5409 4 DC Comics edit Vertigo Transmetropolitan I Hate It Here one page illustration text by Warren Ellis one shot 2000 Collected in Transmetropolitan Tales of Human Waste tpb 112 pages 2004 ISBN 1 4012 0244 6 Collected in Absolute Transmetropolitan Volume 1 hc 544 pages 2015 ISBN 1 4012 5430 6 Fight for Tomorrow 1 6 with Denys Cowan 2002 2003 collected as Fight for Tomorrow tpb 144 pages 2008 ISBN 1 4012 1562 9 DMZ with Riccardo Burchielli Kristian Donaldson 11 20 35 36 Nathan Fox 18 19 27 56 Viktor Kalvachev 19 Danijel Zezelj 25 and 58 Nikki Cook 41 Ryan Kelly 42 44 50 Rebekah Isaacs Jim Lee Fabio Moon Lee Bermejo Philip Bond John Paul Leon Eduardo Risso Dave Gibbons 50 Andrea Mutti 55 Cliff Chiang 57 David Lapham 59 and Shawn Martinbrough 60 61 2006 2012 collected as Book One collects 1 12 hc 304 pages 2014 ISBN 1 4012 4300 2 tpb 2016 ISBN 1 4012 6135 3 Book Two collects 13 28 hc 416 pages 2014 ISBN 1 4012 4765 2 tpb 2016 ISBN 1 4012 6357 7 Book Three collects 29 44 hc 392 pages 2015 ISBN 1 4012 5000 9 tpb 2017 ISBN 1 4012 6548 0 Book Four collects 45 59 hc 384 pages 2015 ISBN 1 4012 5411 X tpb 2018 ISBN 1 4012 7463 3 Book Five collects 60 72 hc 296 pages 2015 ISBN 1 4012 5843 3 tpb 2019 ISBN 1 4012 8583 X Compendium One collects 1 36 tpb 804 pages DC Black Label 2020 ISBN 1 7795 0435 7 Compendium Two collects 37 72 tpb 824 pages DC Black Label 2021 ISBN 1 779 51482 4 Northlanders with Davide Gianfelice Dean Ormston 9 10 Ryan Kelly 11 16 Vasilis Lolos 17 Danijel Zezelj 18 19 48 50 Leandro Fernandez 21 28 Fiona Staples 29 Riccardo Burchielli 30 34 Becky Cloonan 35 36 Simon Gane 37 39 Matt Woodson 40 Marian Churchland 41 Paul Azaceta 42 44 and Declan Shalvey 45 47 2008 2012 collected as The Anglo Saxon Saga collects 1 16 18 19 and 41 tpb 464 pages 2016 ISBN 1 40126 3313 The Icelandic Saga collects 20 29 35 36 and 42 50 tpb 296 pages 2016 ISBN 1 4012 6508 1 The European Saga collects 17 21 28 30 34 and 37 40 tpb 424 pages 2017 ISBN 1 4012 7379 3 Demo vol 2 1 6 with Becky Cloonan 2010 collected as Demo Volume 2 tpb 160 pages 2011 ISBN 1 4012 2995 6 Sequel to the 12 issue limited series of the same name published by AiT Planet Lar between 2003 and 2004 Both series were later collected by Dark Horse as Demo tpb 496 pages 2015 ISBN 1 6165 5682 X The Unexpected Americana with Emily Carroll anthology one shot 2011 collected in The Unexpected tpb 160 pages 2013 ISBN 1 4012 4394 0 The New York Four tpb 296 pages Dark Horse 2014 ISBN 1 6165 5605 6 collects The New York Four with Ryan Kelly graphic novel 176 pages Minx 2008 ISBN 1 4012 1154 2 The New York Five 1 4 with Ryan Kelly Vertigo 2010 2011 also collected as The New York Five tpb 144 pages 2011 ISBN 1 4012 3291 4 DV8 Gods and Monsters 1 8 with Rebekah Isaacs Wildstorm 2010 2011 collected as DV8 Gods and Monsters tpb 192 pages 2011 ISBN 1 4012 2973 5 The Lord of the Rings War in the North with Simon Coleby 16 page digital comic available to those who pre ordered the eponymous video game via Toys R Us 2011 Supernatural 1 6 with Grant Bond 2011 2012 collected as Supernatural The Dogs of Edinburgh tpb 144 pages 2012 ISBN 1 4012 3506 9 Dark Horse Comics edit Conan the Barbarian vol 3 with Becky Cloonan 1 3 7 James Harren 4 6 Vasilis Lolos 8 9 Declan Shalvey 10 12 Mirko Colak 13 15 Davide Gianfelice 16 18 Paul Azaceta 19 21 Riccardo Burchielli 22 24 and Leandro Fernandez 25 2012 2014 collected as Conan Queen of the Black Coast collects 1 6 hc 152 pages 2013 ISBN 1 61655 042 2 tpb 2013 ISBN 1 6165 5043 0 Conan The Death collects 7 12 hc 152 pages 2013 ISBN 1 6165 5122 4 tpb 2014 ISBN 1 6165 5123 2 Conan Nightmare of the Shallows collects 13 18 hc 152 pages 2014 ISBN 1 6165 5233 6 tpb 2014 ISBN 1 6165 5385 5 Conan The Song of Belit collects 19 25 hc 176 pages 2014 ISBN 1 6165 5430 4 tpb 2015 ISBN 1 6165 5524 6 Conan Chronicles Horrors Beneath the Stones includes 1 6 tpb 432 pages Marvel 2020 ISBN 1 3029 2327 7 Conan Chronicles The Song of Belit collects 7 25 tpb 448 pages Marvel 2021 ISBN 1 3029 2328 5 The Massive The Massive with Kristian Donaldson 1 3 Garry Brown Gary Erskine 10 Declan Shalvey 11 and Danijel Zezelj 12 22 24 2012 2014 collected as Volume 1 collects 1 15 Library Edition hc 392 pages 2016 ISBN 1 5067 0091 8 Omnibus tpb 2019 ISBN 1 5067 1332 7 Includes the prelude short stories art by Kristian Donaldson from Dark Horse Presents vol 2 8 10 anthology 2012 Volume 2 collects 16 30 Library Edition hc 392 pages 2016 ISBN 1 5067 0092 6 Omnibus tpb 2019 ISBN 1 5067 1333 5 The Massive Ninth Wave 1 6 with Garry Brown 2015 2016 collected as The Massive Ninth Wave hc 152 pages 2016 ISBN 1 5067 0091 8 tpb 2017 ISBN 1 5067 0009 8 Star Wars vol 3 with Carlos D Anda Ryan Kelly 7 9 Facundo Percio 13 14 and Stephane Crety 15 18 2013 2014 collected as In the Shadow of Yavin collects 1 6 tpb 152 pages 2013 ISBN 1 6165 5170 4 Includes The Assassination of Darth Vader short story art by Ryan Odagawa from the Free Comic Book Day Avatar the Last Airbender Star Wars one shot 2013 From the Ruins of Alderaan collects 7 12 tpb 144 pages 2014 ISBN 1 6165 5311 1 Rebel Girl collects 15 18 tpb 96 pages 2014 ISBN 1 6165 5483 5 A Shattered Hope collects 13 14 and 19 20 tpb 112 pages 2014 ISBN 1 6165 5483 5 Star Wars Legends The Rebellion Volume 1 includes 1 12 tpb 504 pages Marvel 2016 ISBN 0 7851 9546 7 Star Wars Legends The Rebellion Volume 2 includes 13 20 tpb 488 pages Marvel 2017 ISBN 1 3029 0696 8 Rebels Rebels 1 10 with Andrea Mutti Matt Woodson 7 Ariela Kristantina 8 and Tristan Jones 10 2015 2016 collected as Rebels A Well Regulated Militia tpb 262 pages 2016 ISBN 1 6165 5908 X Rebels These Free and Independent States 1 8 with Andrea Mutti Luca Casalanguida 7 and Joan Urgell 8 2017 collected as Rebels These Free and Independent States tpb 208 pages 2018 ISBN 1 5067 0203 1 Eve Valkyrie 1 4 with Eduardo Francisco 2015 2016 collected as Eve Valkyrie hc 96 pages 2016 ISBN 1 6165 5767 2 Aliens Aliens Defiance with Tristan Jones Riccardo Burchielli 3 Tony Brescini 4 8 9 Stephen Thompson 7 and 10 and Eduardo Francisco 11 12 2016 2017 collected as Volume 1 collects 1 6 and the Free Comic Book Day 2016 Serenity special tpb 160 pages 2017 ISBN 1 5067 0126 4 Volume 2 collects 7 12 tpb 160 pages 2017 ISBN 1 5067 0168 X Library Edition collects 1 12 and the Free Comic Book Day 2016 Serenity special hc 320 pages 2019 ISBN 1 5067 1458 7 Aliens Resistance 1 4 with Robert Carey 2019 collected as Aliens Resistance tpb 96 pages 2018 ISBN 1 5067 1126 X Aliens Rescue 1 4 with Kieran McKeown 2019 collected as Aliens Rescue tpb 96 pages 2020 ISBN 1 5067 1127 8 Aliens Colonial Marines Rising Threat with Werther Dell Edera 8 issue limited series initially announced for 2019 157 Four issues were solicited 158 159 160 161 before the series was cancelled due to the allegations of sexual misconduct against Wood 162 Briggs Land Briggs Land 1 6 with Mack Chater 2016 2017 collected as Briggs Land State of Grace tpb 160 pages 2017 ISBN 1 5067 0059 4 Briggs Land Lone Wolves tpb 160 pages 2017 ISBN 1 5067 0168 X collects Briggs Land Lone Wolves 1 6 with Mack Chater Vanesa del Rey 4 and Werther Dell Edera 5 6 2017 Free Comic Book Day Avatar The Village with Werther Dell Edera co feature in one shot 2017 Sword Daughter with Mack Chater 2018 2020 collected as She Brightly Burns collects 1 3 hc 96 pages 2018 ISBN 1 5067 0782 3 Folded Metal collects 4 6 hc 96 pages 2019 ISBN 1 5067 0783 1 Elsbeth of the Island collects 7 9 hc 96 pages 2020 ISBN 1 5067 0784 X The Terminator Sector War 1 4 with Jeff Stokely 2018 2019 collected as The Terminator Sector War tpb 104 pages 2019 ISBN 1 5067 0681 9 Other publishers edit Oni Press Pounded 1 3 with Steve Rolston 2002 collected as Pounded tpb 96 pages 2002 ISBN 1 929998 37 6 Local 1 12 with Ryan Kelly 2005 2008 collected as Local hc 384 pages 2008 ISBN 1 934964 00 X Vampirella Harris Vampirella Witchblade with Steve Pugh one shot 2003 collected in Vampirella Witchblade Trilogy tpb 88 pages 2006 ISBN 0 910 69290 4 Vampirella Comics Magazine 8 Kickstart My Heart with Dean Haspiel anthology 2004 Project Superior The Watcher script and art anthology graphic novel 288 pages AdHouse Books 2005 ISBN 0 9721794 8 8 Supermarket 1 4 with Kristian Donaldson IDW Publishing 2006 collected as Supermarket tpb 104 pages 2006 ISBN 1 60010 009 0 Decoy Menagerie Volume 2 Magic Bullets with Martin Montiel Luna anthology graphic novel 162 pages Penny Farthing Press 2006 ISBN 0 9719012 7 9 Dogs Day End with Nikki Cook unreleased graphic novel intended for publication by Top Shelf initially announced for 2008 123 ISBN 1 8918 3059 7 An excerpt from this story was published in Top Shelf 2008 Seasonal Sampler anthology graphic novel 256 pages 2008 ISBN 1 6030 9032 0 Madefire digital motion comics Mono Pacific 1 2 with Sergio Sandoval 2014 The story was first published in print as Mono Pacific 1 2 Titan 2015 Collected in Mono hc 192 pages Titan 2015 ISBN 1 7827 6285 X Planet of the Apes Memorial with Daniel Sampere 5 page mini comic 2016 Rome West 1 12 co written by Wood and Justin Giampaoli art by Andrea Mutti webcomic Stela 2016 collected as Rome West tpb 112 pages Dark Horse 2018 ISBN 1 5067 0499 9 John Carter The End 1 5 co written by Wood and Alex Cox art by Hayden Sherman Dynamite 2017 collected as John Carter The End tpb 120 pages 2017 ISBN 1 5241 0438 8 Robotech vol 3 with Marco Turini issues 5 8 are scripted by Simon Furman from Wood s plots Titan 2017 2008 collected as Volume 1 collects 1 4 tpb 112 pages 2017 ISBN 1 7858 5913 7 Volume 2 collects 5 8 tpb 112 pages 2018 ISBN 1 7858 5914 5 RoboCop Citizens Arrest 1 4 with Jorge Coelho Boom Studios 2018 collected as RoboCop Citizens Arrest tpb 128 pages 2018 ISBN 1 6841 5270 4 Megadeth Death by Design Kingmaker with Marco Perugini anthology graphic novel 350 pages Heavy Metal Media 2019 ISBN 1 94778 412 9 Cover illustrations edit Come In Alone sc AiT PlanetLar 2001 Overtime gn Cyberosia Publishing 2002 Badlands with Vince Giarrano AiT PlanetLar Badlands tpb 2002 Badlands The Unproduced Screenplay sc 2002 Black Heart Billy tpb AiT PlanetLar 2002 Nobody tpb AiT PlanetLar 2002 Global Frequency Wildstorm Global Frequency 1 12 2002 2004 Global Frequency Planet Ablaze tpb 2004 Global Frequency Detonation Radio tpb 2004 Human Target vol 3 4 DC Comics 2010 References edit Brian Wood 2021 Brian Wood s LinkedIn LinkedIn Nurse A 2017 See No Evil Print No Evil The Criminalization of Free Speech in DMZ The Comics Grid Journal of Comics Scholarship 7 10 doi 10 16995 cg 88 Gustines George Gene December 31 2006 The Civil War Has Begun It s on Park Avenue The New York Times Archived from the original on October 8 2008 Retrieved December 13 2021 Gizmodo April 20 2012 Archived from the original on December 12 2021 The Independent Independent co uk June 22 2008 Archived from the original on June 24 2008 Thill Scott Wired Archived from the original on December 20 2016 a href Template Cite magazine html title Template Cite magazine cite magazine a Cite magazine requires magazine help Village Voice July 16 2008 Archived from the original on September 14 2018 Redrawing the New York Comics Relationship Archived from the original on December 12 2021 Gothamist May 13 2010 Archived from the original on December 11 2021 Comic Book Resources October 10 2015 Archived from the original on June 27 2020 Screen Rant Screen Rant March 21 2020 Archived from the original on March 22 2020 Sunu Steve December 11 2012 X POSITION Wood Continues His Ultimate Take on the X Men CBR com Archived from the original on November 12 2020 Retrieved December 13 2021 Kousemaker Kees 2021 Brian Wood Lambiek Comiclopedia Archived from the original on October 13 2021 Retrieved December 11 2021 a b Wood Brian May 17 2016 Rebels A Well Regulated Militia Vol 1 Dark Horse Comics p Foreword ISBN 9781630083489 via Google Books Essex High School Archived from the original on December 11 2021 Bio Brian Wood Archived from the original on July 9 2021 Retrieved June 30 2021 Stuttering for Life Archived from the original on December 8 2014 Wood Brian October 19 2020 Untitled Twitter Archived from the original on October 20 2020 Retrieved December 13 2021 Wood Brian July 21 2021 Untitled Twitter Archived from the original on July 21 2021 Retrieved December 13 2021 Wood Brian November 1 2020 Untitled Twitter Archived from the original on November 1 2020 Retrieved December 13 2021 Comic Vine Archived from the original on February 18 2016 Brian Wood Graphic Novelist May 13 2010 Archived from the original on December 11 2021 LinkedIn Dark Horse Collects The Entirety of Brian Wood s Channel Zero Geeks Of Doom December 18 2011 Channel Zero TPB Archived from the original on January 14 2012 Brian Wood s Channel Zero Is The Unofficial Bible of Comics Activism May 30 2012 Archived from the original on October 11 2013 The Eerie Prescience of Brian Wood s Debut Work Channel Zero December 15 2011 Archived from the original on September 10 2013 Brian Wood Channel Zero Archived from the original on June 12 2012 Cyberpunk s Influence On Brian Wood s Channel Zero And The Couriers August 2014 Archived from the original on November 12 2020 Johnston Rich August 27 2011 Brian Wood At Marvel In 2012 Possibly Wolverine Bleeding Cool Archived from the original on January 26 2021 Retrieved December 13 2021 Manning Shaun August 4 2003 WWC Brian Wood One on One CBR com Couscous Express Archived from the original on December 11 2021 Coruiers March 18 2015 Archived from the original on October 3 2016 The Couriers Archived from the original on December 11 2021 January is Brian Wood month at AiT PlanetLar September 17 2001 Archived from the original on December 10 2021 Kit Borys January 22 2007 Couriers delivers to Intrepid Pics The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved June 28 2020 An Interview with Brian Wood July 2010 Archived from the original on January 10 2011 Top 10 Brian Wood Comics Archived from the original on December 10 2021 Brian Wood Talks Demo at Vertigo May 9 2008 Archived from the original on January 28 2021 Demo Vol 2 March 9 2012 Archived from the original on April 1 2019 Talking With Brian Wood And Becky Cloonan About The Complete Demo January 23 2015 Archived from the original on June 26 2020 Updates December 19 2006 Brian Wood s LiveJournal Archived from the original on July 1 2012 Retrieved December 24 2006 Demo ing with Brian Wood February 2010 Archived from the original on November 15 2018 The Comics Reporter The Comics Reporter Retrieved December 13 2021 a b c Giampaoli Justin April 2011 Introductory Interview Live from the DMZ Archived from the original on February 15 2012 Retrieved February 16 2012 Richards Dave November 9 2005 The War at Home Wood and Burchielli talk DMZ Comic Book Resources Archived from the original on April 11 2009 Retrieved February 16 2012 Brian Wood Heads Back to College January 6 2011 Archived from the original on October 20 2020 DC Comics Archived from the original on August 12 2020 WW Chicago 06 Brian Wood Announces DC Exclusive New Vertigo Ongoing Newsarama Archived from the original on November 19 2006 Retrieved September 10 2006 Brian Wood Talks Northlanders October 16 2007 Archived from the original on December 10 2021 DC Cancels Northlanders June 7 2011 Archived from the original on October 26 2020 Gustines George Gene November 25 2006 NY Times The New York Times Archived from the original on December 10 2021 The New York Four July 8 2008 Archived from the original on November 16 2016 Eisner The Washington Post Archived from the original on April 7 2012 Dark Horse to Republish Archived from the original on June 16 2014 2008 Eisner Noms April 14 2008 Archived from the original on September 24 2016 Brian Wood Bids DC Comics Adieu Comic Book Resources August 17 2011 Retrieved May 26 2017 DC Reboot July 2011 Archived from the original on July 19 2014 Bleeding Cool June 3 2011 Archived from the original on January 25 2021 Brian Wood Bids Adieu August 17 2011 Archived from the original on February 11 2017 Brian Wood Archived from the original on November 9 2021 CBR March 29 2006 Archived from the original on December 11 2021 AICN Archived from the original on August 14 2020 Bleeding cool August 27 2011 CBR November 2011 Archived from the original on August 18 2019 Comics Blend June 14 2012 Archived from the original on June 18 2012 iFanboy Archived from the original on October 15 2012 Entertainment Weekly Entertainment Weekly Archived from the original on June 9 2015 a b Hudson Laura Wired Archived from the original on August 6 2014 a href Template Cite magazine html title Template Cite magazine cite magazine a Cite magazine requires magazine help USA Today USA Today Archived from the original on January 15 2013 Comics Alliance June 4 2013 Archived from the original on June 27 2013 The Mary Sue January 15 2013 Archived from the original on January 16 2013 Middle Spaces April 15 2014 Archived from the original on September 1 2017 Screen Rant Screen Rant June 24 2020 Archived from the original on July 27 2020 Women Write About Comics May 9 2014 Archived from the original on July 19 2020 Comic Book Resources January 6 2015 Archived from the original on December 12 2021 Comic Book Resources June 11 2021 Archived from the original on December 12 2021 Bleeding Cool March 18 2012 Archived from the original on December 12 2021 Comic Book Resources November 12 2013 Archived from the original on November 12 2020 League of Comic Geeks Archived from the original on December 12 2021 Comic Book Resources June 13 2014 Archived from the original on December 15 2016 Johnston Rich January 8 2015 Brian Wood s Starve With Danijel Zezelj And Dave Johnson And Black Road With Garry Brown Announced At Image Expo Bleeding Cool Retrieved May 26 2017 CBR July 22 2011 Archived from the original on October 16 2016 IGN June 12 2012 Archived from the original on June 18 2012 Jones Clint 2020 Apocalyptic Ecology in the Graphic Novel Jefferson MacFarland pp 127 142 Dark Horse Comics Archived from the original on January 15 2013 kotaku January 3 2014 Archived from the original on January 4 2014 Knox Kelly Wired Archived from the original on January 15 2016 a href Template Cite magazine html title Template Cite magazine cite magazine a Cite magazine requires magazine help The Mary Sue January 4 2013 Archived from the original on January 6 2013 Games Radar January 9 2013 Archived from the original on April 20 2021 USA Today USA Today Archived from the original on January 12 2013 CBR July 16 2014 Archived from the original on November 11 2020 Publishers Weekly Archived from the original on December 10 2021 CBR February 27 2017 Archived from the original on April 28 2017 FreakSugar August 17 2016 Archived from the original on August 18 2016 Hollywood Reporter The Hollywood Reporter May 3 2016 Archived from the original on December 11 2021 Bleeding Cool November 16 2016 Archived from the original on January 25 2021 Brian Wood Writer Archived from the original on December 24 2021 Crew United Archived from the original on December 12 2021 NYCC Wood amp Jones Alien Defiance Pits Wounded Warrior Against New Xenomorph Threat CBR com October 10 2015 Archived from the original on September 18 2017 Retrieved June 27 2020 a b Spry Jeff October 24 2019 READ EXCLUSIVE EXCERPT FROM TIM WAGGONER S GRIPPING NEW ALIEN PROTOTYPE NOVEL SyFy Wire Archived from the original on October 29 2019 Retrieved June 27 2020 Johnson Jim April 27 2016 Aliens Defiance 1 CBR com Archived from the original on August 30 2016 Retrieved June 27 2020 Wrapping Wednesday Micro Reviews for the Week of 4 27 16 Multiversity Comics May 2 2016 Archived from the original on July 2 2017 Retrieved June 27 2020 Comics Beat March 31 2016 Archived from the original on March 31 2016 Kade Leigh January 21 2019 Ripley and Hendricks team up for Alien Resistance for Dark Horse REVIEW Bleeding Cool Archived from the original on June 27 2020 Retrieved June 27 2020 Estrella Ernie September 28 2018 EXCLUSIVE AMANDA RIPLEY CONTINUES THE RESISTANCE IN DARK HORSE COMICS SEQUEL TO ALIENS DEFIANCE Syfy Archived from the original on September 22 2021 Retrieved June 8 2018 Multiversity September 28 2018 Archived from the original on October 1 2018 Estrella Ernie February 20 2019 EXCLUSIVE DARK HORSE ANNOUNCES ALIENS RESCUE THE NEXT CHAPTER IN THE AMANDA RIPLEY SAGA Syfy Retrieved February 20 2019 Bleeding Cool August 31 2019 Archived from the original on July 2 2020 Macmillan Books Archived from the original on December 12 2021 Freak Sugar July 24 2019 Archived from the original on September 12 2019 Foxe Steve March 15 2018 Exclusive Brian Wood amp Mack Chater Reunite for Sword Daughter a Samurai Inspired Viking Revenge Saga Paste Retrieved June 8 2018 Tripwire UK September 19 2018 Archived from the original on December 12 2021 Penguin Random House Archived from the original on March 4 2020 Brian Wood Biblio Archived from the original on December 12 2021 Nerdist Archived from the original on August 8 2020 Deadline February 5 2014 Archived from the original on January 21 2015 Ramnos Dino Ray January 22 2020 Rosario Dawson To Star In HBO Max Pilot DMZ From Ava DuVernay Deadline Retrieved June 28 2020 White Peter November 19 2020 DMZ HBO Max Hands Series Order To Ava DuVernay amp Roberto Patino s Futuristic Civil War Drama Based On DC Comic Deadline Retrieved December 21 2020 Raymond Nate March 8 2001 WHAT COULD HAVE BEEN NYX Sugar Bombs Archived from the original on April 17 2001 Cronin Brian May 20 2016 Comic Book Urban Legends Revealed 576 Comic Book Resources Archived from the original on May 23 2016 Cronin Brian March 11 2016 Comic Book Urban Legends Revealed 566 Comic Book Resources Archived from the original on May 16 2016 a b Future Releases Top Shelf Archived from the original on July 10 2007 Chris Arrant September 1 2010 Brian Wood talks DMZ Northlanders the return of Jennie 2 5 and more CBR com Archived from the original on January 26 2021 Nine of Brian Wood Projects December 13 2012 Archived from the original on January 25 2021 MTV MTV Archived from the original on December 12 2021 Starve Archived from the original on September 17 2015 Comics Beat October 9 2014 Archived from the original on October 11 2014 Forbidden Planet February 4 2015 Archived from the original on December 12 2021 Bleeding Cool December 19 2014 Archived from the original on October 21 2020 CBR March 11 2015 Archived from the original on November 8 2020 a b 2004 Eisner Award Nominees Announced CBR com April 8 2004 Archived from the original on September 20 2016 Retrieved December 13 2021 2005 Eisner Nomination Announced CBR com April 14 2005 Archived from the original on December 11 2021 Retrieved December 13 2021 DC October 12 2009 Archived from the original on August 5 2020 Eisner Watch 2017 Inside Dark Horse s 13 nominations The Beat June 14 2017 Archived from the original on April 18 2021 Retrieved December 13 2021 a b c d e 1979 Revolution Black Friday Games For Change Archived from the original on December 11 2021 Retrieved December 13 2021 DoubleShot Archived from the original on December 11 2021 CBR January 25 2007 Archived from the original on December 14 2021 2008 Eisner Nominations Announced CBR com April 14 2008 Archived from the original on December 11 2021 Retrieved December 13 2021 Dark Horse Comics Archived from the original on February 9 2014 American Library Association February 6 2015 Archived from the original on February 8 2015 Games Industry January 2 2018 Archived from the original on January 2 2018 Johnston Rich November 16 2013 The Shaming Of Sexual Harassment By Social Media Bleeding Cool Retrieved August 30 2019 Ching Albert November 15 2013 Brian Wood Responds to Misconduct Allegations CBR com Archived from the original on April 16 2018 Retrieved January 12 2020 Fowler Tess November 20 2013 untitled Twitter Archived from the original on September 16 2015 Retrieved December 13 2021 Fowler Tess November 20 2013 untitled Twitter Archived from the original on December 13 2021 Retrieved December 13 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Fowler Tess November 20 2013 untitled Twitter Archived from the original on September 16 2015 Retrieved September 16 2015 Fowler Tess November 20 2013 untitled Twitter Archived from the original on September 16 2015 Retrieved December 13 2021 Anne Scherbina November 25 2013 I AM NOT THE OTHER WOMAN I AM ANOTHER VOICE Luthorville Archived from the original on December 4 2021 Retrieved December 7 2021 Bleeding Cool November 20 2013 Archived from the original on December 11 2021 Berlatsky Noah November 20 2013 How to Dismantle the Comic Books Boys Club The Atlantic Archived from the original on November 23 2013 Retrieved December 7 2021 Damore Meagan August 30 2019 Brian Wood Accused of Predatory Behavior by ComicsAlliance Founder CBR com Archived from the original on August 30 2019 Retrieved June 27 2020 Johnston Rich August 30 2019 Laura Hudson Talks About Brian Wood Sexual Harassment and Tess Fowler Bleeding Cool Archived from the original on June 27 2020 Retrieved June 27 2020 Nolan Liam August 30 2019 Dark Horse Cancels Brian Wood Aliens Series After Misconduct Accusations CBR com Retrieved November 29 2020 Khosla Abhay August 21 2020 The 2020 Report Day Seven Finale III QUESTION NUMBER THREE WHAT DO WE WANT The Comics Journal Retrieved August 28 2020 a b TessFowler June 19 2020 Brian Wood e mailed me It did not end well I do not take it as a genuine apology Tweet Archived from the original on June 19 2020 Retrieved December 7 2021 via Twitter Cavanaugh Patrick June 13 2019 Dark Horse Announces All New Alien Series Focusing on the Colonial Marines Comicbook com Archived from the original on June 13 2019 DARK HORSE COMICS SEPTEMBER 2019 SOLICITATIONS First Comics News June 20 2019 Archived from the original on June 21 2019 DARK HORSE COMICS OCTOBER 2019 SOLICITATIONS First Comics News July 23 2019 Archived from the original on July 24 2019 DARK HORSE COMICS NOVEMBER 2019 SOLICITATIONS First Comics News August 21 2019 Archived from the original on August 21 2019 ALIENS COLONIAL MARINES RISING THREAT 4 Golden Apple Comics Archived from the original on September 29 2020 Johnston Rich August 31 2019 Dark Horse Cancels Brian Wood s Aliens Colonial Marines Rising Threat Over New Allegations Bleeding Cool Archived from the original on August 31 2019 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Brian Wood Official website Brian Wood at the Grand Comics Database Brian Wood at the Comic Book DB archived from the original Q amp A Interview with Brian Wood at Scripts and Scribes Preceded byJay Faerber Generation X writer2000 2001 with Warren Ellis in 2000 Succeeded byChristina Strain Preceded byRoland J Green Conan the Barbarian writer2012 2014 Succeeded byJason Aaron Preceded byVictor Gischler X Men writer2012 2014 Succeeded byMarc Guggenheim Preceded byNick Spencer Ultimate Comics X Men writer2012 2013 Succeeded byn a Preceded byJohn OstranderJan Duursema Star Wars writer2013 2014 Succeeded byJason Aaron Preceded byWarren Ellis Moon Knight writer2014 2015 Succeeded byCullen Bunn Retrieved from https en 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