What is Gilda And Meek about?
It's about several things at once. It's a story of a Lucky Universe in a Multiverse teeming with Unlucky Ones and how our hero navigates that to her own advantage. It's a funny animal book that bit by bit reveals a huge fantasy and science fiction underpinning, much like Bone. It starts off as an erstwhile comedy until you realize it's actually been a drama the entire time. It's a story that after you read all 90 issues, you'll want to reread them again, as the best reading of The Un-Iverse isn't the first, it's the second. It's a bunch of random and seemingly unrelated characters and stories building and crossing over until they collide in an epic 19-part finale. It's about the antagonistic and loving relationship between the hero Gilda and the kid who looks up to her, Bernadette, and how their feelings for each other prove there is no wrong way to love a person. It's a political satire parodying the ridiculousness of the age we live in made more ridiculous by the fact that real life is crazier than my story's outlandish examples. It's about the fact that evil is uncool and mundane, and it's neat to have heroes to like and root for, and where the heroes are more interesting than the villains. It's about a strong female hero whose gender is irrelevant to the story at hand and is merely a strong hero who happens to be a female. It's about all of these things and none of them at the same time. Mostly, it's a way for me to work through my psychological crap. Which is what I think most writing boils down to for people.
Check it out.
I believe UnComix One-Shots is my most underwhelming Un-Iverse title. But the final issue of it remains one of my very favorites of the entire Un-Iverse.
In the title story, Meek's Chiller Theater "The Curse Of The Pink Gorilla", Meek relates to Bernadette the scariest story known to man.
Stella Stickyfingers scores a ticket to the biggest, secretest, most exclusive Pickpockets' Convention in the world, in hopes of reuniting with her catburglar father. It's all about magic, really.
After Crusty the Crab accidentally causes the Piranha to get injured, both fear Gilda will read him the riot act. Instead Gilda soberly details the harsh reality of psychics and how they work in this Universe to both the Piranha, and the reader.
Finally, a comical gag story about Bill The Blue adjusting to his new prison cellmate (a giant, violent Werewolf named Infinitesimal Microbe) turns weirdly mythological and cosmic by the end of the day. Because that's The Un-Iverse.