Big Numbers (comics)

Big Numbers is an unfinished graphic novel by writer Alan Moore and artist Bill Sienkiewicz. In 1990 Moore's short-lived imprint Mad Love published two of the planned twelve issues. The series was picked up by Kevin Eastman's Tundra Publishing, but the completed third issue did not print, and the remaining issues, whose artwork was to be handled by Sienkiewicz's assistant Al Columbia, were never finished.

Big Numbers
The cover of the first issue of Big Numbers. Art by Bill Sienkiewicz.
Publication information
PublisherMad Love
FormatLimited series
Publication dateApril – August 1990
No. of issues2 (of 12)
Creative team
Written byAlan Moore
Artist(s)Bill Sienkiewicz
Letterer(s)
Editor(s)
  • Debbie Delano
  • Phyllis Moore

The work marks a move, on Moore's part, away from genre fiction, in the wake of the success of Watchmen. Moore weaves mathematics into a narrative of socioeconomic changes wrought by an American corporation's building of a shopping mall in a small, traditional English town, and the effects of the economic policies of the Margaret Thatcher administration in the 1980s.

Publication history

The planned 500-page graphic novel was to be serialised one chapter at a time over twelve issues. The series was printed on high-quality paper in an unusual square format.[1]

The first two issues were produced by Alan Moore's self-publishing company Mad Love, with writing by Moore and artwork by Bill Sienkiewicz. However, the workload for the comic was intense, and Sienkiewicz stalled. By the time he backed out of the series, the third issue was still incomplete and rising overhead crippled the production.[2][3] Kevin Eastman, creator of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, stepped in and attempted to have his company Tundra Publishing publish Big Numbers.[4] Moore and Eastman asked Sienkiewicz' assistant, Al Columbia, to become the series' sole artist and Roxanne Starr to be its letterer. Columbia worked on the fourth issue but, for reasons which remain unclear,[2] destroyed his own artwork and abandoned the project as well.[4][5][6] Big Numbers #3 and #4 were never published, and the series remains unfinished.[4]

In 1999, ten pages of Sienkiewicz's art for Big Numbers #3 were published in the first (and only) issue of the magazine Submedia.[7] In 2009, a photocopy of the complete lettered art for Big Numbers #3 surfaced on eBay. The purchaser contacted Moore, and with his permission published scans of the art on LiveJournal.[8]

History

Moore announced the series as his popularity was at a peak. The success of Watchmen had made him a star writer.[1] Moore wanted to move away from genre fiction; Big Numbers was to have no genre, and deal with themes of shopping and mathematics.[1]

Mad Love ran into a number of difficulties: the proceeds from AARGH! were donated to defending homosexual rights; the production costs of Big Numbers were high; and Moore's polyamorous relationship with wife Phyllis and their lover Debbie Delano fell apart.[1] Kevin Eastman's Tundra Publishing agreed to publish the rest of the series.

Sienkiewicz's detailed artwork was time-consuming to produce.[1] He hired the 19-year-old Al Columbia as an assistant, but the pressures of the project combined with personal issues led him to quit Big Numbers after the second issue's publication. Jon J Muth and Dave McKean were among the names rumoured as replacements. Ultimately the job fell to the inexperienced Columbia. Tundra tried to promote Columbia by publishing his first stand-alone comic book, Dog Head, in 1992, and put out a Columbia-drawn poster for Big Numbers. The pressure turned out to be too much for the young artist, who is said to have destroyed the artwork for the fourth issue in 1992, and was not heard from again until the publication of The Biologic Show in 1994.[9]

Plot

Set in the fictional English town of Hampton,[1] the book explores the socioeconomic changes brought about by globalisation on an insular community, represented by the building of a shopping mall by a large American corporation.[10] Meanwhile, the community also experiences pressure from prime minister Margaret Thatcher's economic policies, including cuts to health care and welfare.[11]

Style and analysis

Each page is laid out in a rigid twelve-panel grid. The all-white speech balloons are circular, rather than the more common shape.[12]

Adaptations

In a 2001 interview Moore indicated that he did not believe Big Numbers could ever be completed as comics.[4] However, he spoke of the possibility of the comic being adapted as a television series by Picture Palace Productions, as he had the whole story mapped out on a sheet of A1 paper, and five episodes written.[4]

An account of the unravelling of the Big Numbers project is included in Eddie Campbell's 2001 graphic novel Alec: How to Be an Artist.[13]

Reception

The first issue sold 65,000 copies, the second 40,000.[1]

References

  1. Liddo 2009, p. 121.
  2. Cronin, Brian (27 September 2007). "Comic Book Urban Legends Revealed No. 122". Comic Book Resources.
  3. Hendrix, Grady (5 March 2009). "Culturebox: Why Watchmen Failed". Slate.com. Archived from the original on 10 March 2009. Retrieved 5 March 2009.
  4. Kavanagh, Barry (17 October 2000). "The Alan Moore Interview: Malcolm McLaren and Big Numbers". Blather.net. Archived from the original on 1 March 2009. Retrieved 6 March 2009.
  5. Wood, Ashley. "(Seeking for) THE TRUE STORY BEHIND BIG NUMBERS´S FALL OUT". Archived from the original on 12 March 2009. Retrieved 9 June 2013.
  6. Young, Robert. "Zero Sum Masterpiece: The Division of Big Numbers (AKA Searching for Al Columbia)", The Comics Interpreter Vol. 2 #3, 2004, 8–18.
  7. "Big Numbers." Submedia 1.1 (1999), p. 54.
  8. Edelman, Scott (26 March 2009). "Lost, never-before-published Alan Moore comic book found". Sci Fi Wire. Archived from the original on 28 March 2009. Retrieved 27 March 2009.
    Ó Méalóid, Pádraig (26 March 2009). "Big Numbers No. 3". LiveJournal. "glycon". Archived from the original on 21 July 2011. Retrieved 27 March 2009.
  9. Gravett 2002, p. .
  10. Liddo 2009, p. 122.
  11. Liddo 2009, p. 123.
  12. Groensteen 2007, p. 74.
  13. Campbell, Eddie. Alec: How to Be an Artist (Marietta, GA: Top Shelf Productions, 2001), 112–116.

Works cited

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