Meet the author behind this exciting story of coming out, first love, and ice skating!
Tillie will be answering five questions at each stop on the blog tour — follow along to learn about her creative process, about what’s involved in competitive ice skating, and more!
Tillie Walden is a cartoonist and illustrator whose earnest and dreamy comics have inspired many, and led to her publishing three books before she graduated school! Now a graduate of the Center for Cartoon Studies, she is living in Berlin and working on comics full time.
“So much of my work is autobiography and even my fiction is full of layers of myself, and it feels like I already give a lot to my audience, to the world in general. And that can lead to this very warped thing, which I’m guilty of doing myself, where when you read a person’s body of work you really feel like you know them. When in reality you know their work, not the person.”
SPINNING, my graphic memoir about my 12 years as a competitive figure skater, comes out in 3 days. It’s the lesbian figure skating story you’ve all been waiting for.
I’m taking a break from social media for the rest of December, so here’s a couple of things before I take off and disappear into my bed:
Have you read my new graphic novel SPINNING yet? It’s about growing up as a gay figure skater. Get it here.
My webcomic On a Sunbeam is coming out in print in Fall 2018. In the meantime, you can read it all here. Don’t worry, the comic will stay free and online even after the book is published.
SPINNING, my graphic memoir about my 12 years as a competitive figure skater, comes out in 3 days. It’s the lesbian figure skating story you’ve all been waiting for.
It was a hard book to make. In it I dive back into my years of competitive figure and synchronized skating. But it’s really more than just a book about skating. The book deals with my coming out, my traumas, and the intricacies of being a young lesbian on the ice.
For those of y’all that don’t know: My next book is coming out in September and it’s called SPINNING. It’s a graphic memoir about my 12 years as a competitive figure skater. Yes, I was an ice skater for much longer than I’ve been making comics. But the book deals with a lot more than just skating; it deals with my coming out, bullying, and all sorts of other stuff (I don’t want to give too much away). And it’s 400 pages long, so it’s a nice long book.
I collected 130~ pages from my various sketchbooks and made a little book! You can download a PDF from gumroad. It has slightly mature content!
https://gumroad.com/l/eAsoj
The following is a guest post from graphic novelist Tillie Walden, creator ofSpinning.
I read comics on and off as a kid, but it wasn’t until I was sixteen that I really discovered them. I liked manga, specifically manga by Osamu Tezuka and Yoshihiro Togashi, and I had grown up reading all the famous graphic memoirs like Blankets by Craig Thompson, Stitches by David Small, and Persepolis by Marjane Satrapi. Because I had always shown an interest in them and also happened to be an artsy kid, my dad signed me up for a two-day workshop with Scott McCloud around the time I had turned sixteen.
We lived in Texas and the workshop was in California. But in my dad’s mind, that barrier didn’t matter. We flew out together, and I showed up way too early at the class, full of nerves and anticipation. I was the youngest in the class. Everyone else there seemed impossibly old, though that’s probably just because anyone who wasn’t in high school seemed old to me at that time.
The class went by so quickly. The first day was full of long conversations about comics and little exercises. The fact that Scott McCloud (a complete celebrity in my mind) was just a few feet away from me, chatting and eating a doughnut, never ceased to be incredible. After the first day we were left with an assignment: draw your life story in 16 panels. The time after that first class is a blur in my memory. I remember running to an art store with my dad in a panic to get pens when the ones I had brought dried out. I remember the evening air and the store closing and running fast through the aisles to find my size 02 micron that I so desperately needed. I almost didn’t finish the comic in time; I was drawing right up until the start of the second day of class.
What I see now when I think about that class is that it was the first instance where I felt a real passion for comics. I had never felt so strongly about something until that moment. The fire I felt inside me screaming that I needed to find a pen so I could keep drawing was unlike anything I’d ever felt before. I cared about finishing that project, and I cared about doing a good job. As a teenager I often felt numb and distant from everything around me, so to feel so awake and connected was a revelation. I left that class and became a cartoonist. We got back to Texas, and I started drawing, and I haven’t stopped since.
I feel so lucky to have had that experience as a teenager. And since I started in comics, there has been a real renaissance of comics for teens. I remember in my class with Scott McCloud he recommended we all pick up Drama by Raina Telgemeier, and that recommendation still holds up. In fact, I recommend all her books. Anything with her name on it is worth buying. Some of my other favorite comics for teens are This One Summer by Mariko and Jillian Tamaki, Anya’s Ghost by Vera Brosgol, and Through the Woods by Emily Carroll.
Spinningby Tillie Walden hits shelves in a bookstore near your om September 12th!