Coates, a national correspondent at The Atlantic, and also an alum of HBCU Howard University in the nation’s capital, was offered the opportunity to write an 11 script issue of the first black superhero, Black Panther, which debuted in an issue of Fantastic Four in 1966, in mainstream American comics last year, according to the black college alum. For Coates, who says he “found the tales of comic books to be an escape, another reality where, very often, the weak and mocked could transform their fallibility into fantastic power,” it is like a dream come true.
He writes at The Atlantic:
“Some of the best days of my life were spent poring over the back issues of The Uncanny X-Men and The Amazing Spider-Man. As a child of the crack-riddled West Baltimore of the 1980s, I found the tales of comic books to be an escape, another reality where, very often, the weak and mocked could transform their fallibility into fantastic power. That is the premise behind the wimpy Steve Rogers mutating into Captain America, behind the nerdy Bruce Banner needing only to grow angry to make his enemies take flight, behind the bespectacled Peter Parker being transfigured by a banal spider bite into something more.”
“But comic books provided something beyond escapism,” he added:
“Indeed, aside from hip-hop and Dungeons & Dragons, comics were my earliest influences. In the way that past writers had been shaped by the canon of Fitzgerald, Hemingway, and Wharton, I was formed by the canon of Claremont, DeFalco, and Simonson. Some of this was personal. All of the comics I loved made use of two seemingly dueling forces—fantastic grandiosity and ruthless efficiency. Comic books are absurd. At any moment, the Avengers might include a hero drawn from Norse mythology (Thor), a monstrous realization of our nuclear-age nightmares (the Hulk), a creation of science fiction (Wasp), and an allegory for the experience of minorities in human society (Beast). But the absurdities of comics are, in part, made possible by a cold-eyed approach to sentence-craft.”
Coates goes on to put emphasis on his personal approach to the writing process and how at The Atlantic he tries to make every word count, though, he admits that even he fails at this sometimes.
In addition to writing Black Panther, Coates will also be one of the co-writers for World of Wakanda, according to The Hollywood Reporter, joining “both noted writer and educator Roxane Gay and poet Yona Harvey” with “Gay’s storyline focusing on Ayo and Aneka, two former members of the Black Panther’s bodyguard organization the Dora Milaje, while Harvey’s will center on Zenzi, the revolutionary who started the riot that opened Coates’ own series.”
The much anticipated spinoff series launches later this year.
To date, Coates’ Black Panther No. 1 has sold (an incredible) 253,259 orders in the U.S. alone, making it one of the best-selling comics in 2016, reported The Hollywood Reporter.
Hashtag: Black Excellence.
Coates talks on writing the project, you can check out the video below.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OSTuUs-HVE8