DAVE SIM:
Hi
Tim - I think what I'm going to do is just blather -- since this is our
first time doing "after the issue" -- and leave it up to you if you
want to run the whole thing all at once or dribble it out. Issue 2 of The Strange Death Of Alex Raymond took about two and a half months. I hope I get faster but I'm not counting on it.
Cerebus #161 (August 1992) Art by Dave Sim & Gerhard |
DEAD DAVE
Speaking
of my death, I finally got around to phoning Schreiter-Sandrock funeral home a year after the fire at Sandeep's place destroyed the only copy
of my funeral arrangements. Sandeep and I were working regularly
together, so he seemed like the person to leave them with. Now we're
not working together there's no obvious candidate, so I'm going to get
you, Tim, to print it here when you get some space. I mean SPOILER
WARNING! Here it is: the end of Dave Sim's life whether it happens
next week or thirty years from now. Do I think it's actually going to
HAPPEN the way I described it? Mm. No. Probably not. But I would
appreciate it if anyone reading this who is remotely interested would
speak up or cut and paste and e-mail it to Schreiter-Sandrock funeral
home when the time comes. Of course, it's not a funeral that 99.99% of
CEREBUS fans are going to want to BE at -- religious content and all --
so that's going to count against it. People don't speak up about things
they dislike. But, anyway it will be here for as long as AMOC endures.
AFTER DEAD DAVE
I'm working on it,
I'm working on it. Have been for twenty years. At some point I hope to
be able to post that here as well. Rough sketch: I hope to have
Aardvark-Vanaheim cease to exist and all assets converted into a Fund
that will be used to maintain the house in exactly the state it was when
I died. You'll be able to make a reservation to come and see the
house. You hire your own bonded security guard who is right next to you
wherever you go, but you're free to look at whatever you want for
however long you want to pay the security guard. The idea really
started when "J" was here. And I asked him what he wanted to look at.
And he wanted to look at someone's letters for a specific time period.
Okay. Give me the dates. Gave me the dates and I dug out the
correspondence box and went through it and just pulled out the letters
as I came to them.
And I thought, that's a really
CEREBUS kind of thing. Everyone's going to want to see something
different. And they'll be perfectly happy being by themselves in the
house. "What's in here?" Well, the security guard isn't going to know.
He or she is a security guard. They're just there to break your arm if
you look like you're going to steal something or break something.
I
mean, if I die a natural death (koff koff) in my 80s a lot of you will
never live long enough to do that. And by that time, there might only be
8 people on the planet who are remotely interested. But it would be as
if there was an Alex Raymond House or a Stan Drake House. Would I be
interested? Are you kidding me? I can just go through his desk drawers
and read whatever I want as long as I put it back where I found it? And
all I have to do is to hire a security guard for however long?
In
terms of What's Left After Dead Dave, that's the only thing that made
sense to me. No one is going to go to Columbia University and ask to see
Box 1 and Box 2 and Box 3. I just can't picture it. It's CEREBUS.
It's something you have to do on your own and immerse yourself in it.
Anyway,
that's what I'm working on: if I can make it to, say, age 86 there
would probably be enough insurance money to keep the house as it is for a
couple of hundred years. There might only be 6 visitors in those
couple of hundred years, but that's not the point. To me, it's debris
that I'm leaving behind but it was YOU the fans that made it possible.
I didn't turn out the way you wanted me to, but you helped me to turn
out the way I wanted to. So it seems a sensible trade. Here's all my
insurance money and RRSPs and what's left of the bank account and it
will be used to keep the debris intact so any time you want to come and
see it, you're more than welcome.
7 comments:
I think this is a pretty cool idea. Future comics scholars interested in "Cerebus" (however large or small their number) will have access to the primary source material. Great!
-- Damian T. Lloyd, tlb
Hm. "J" asking to look through the letters when he was at the house. Sounds strangely familiar. I think I read some account of that over at the Cerebus Yahoo site, in the documents (letters?) section. I seem to recall that "J" also checked out the rest of the house, according to his account.
Oh, yeah. I meant to say, too, it's a very cool idea. I know for "J", going to the house seemed to be an actual pilgrimage
I hope someday Dave will decide to donate Cerebus and all his correspondence to the Archives of Canada or a university in Kitchener.
Future generations need to know this great work of art.
I'm not sure if this is a good idea or not. It seems a really "Dave" idea. What happens if the house gets broken into? How is he going to pay for a security system for the next couple hundred years? What about heating? Ontario gets pretty cold in the winter. Who will these appointments be made with?
I like the basic concept, that Dave is leaving a sort of 'message in a bottle', having experienced the smallest of small amounts of fame along with the larger amounts of influence and anonymity a comic books writer can expect, and he's got a legacy he is deservedly proud of.
How about freezing the body and a cryogenic display?
We are considering something like this for the CerebusTV Archive.
Psst. "J" was me. And, the house wasn't the coolest part of that visit. Check out the story.
Post a Comment