John Ney Rieberis an Americancomic book writer.
John Ney Rieber | |
---|---|
Nationality | American |
Area(s) | Writer |
Notable works | The Books of Magic Captain America G.I. Joe Tomb Raider |
Career
editJohn Ney Rieber's first professional work in comics was scripting over the finished pages of the graphic novelTell Me, Dark,conceived by his late friend and mentorKarl Edward Wagnerand artistKent Williams.Initially, Williams approached Wagner with five pages of art asking him to write a story around that. Wagner agreed, and the pair signed a contract withDC Comicsto release an 80-page hardcover graphic novel.[1]At the beginning of production, the book's initial editorKaren Bergertook an extended maternity leave. The replacement editors accepted Wagner's script, but as soon as Berger returned, she rejected the script and asked for rewrites, while Williams also changed some narrative elements as he saw fit. One year later, as the changes from all sides kept being made, Rieber, who at the time was working on the 4-issue prestige mini-seriesShadows FallforDisney Comics' failed Touchmark imprint,[2][3]offered to rewrite the story using the finished pages after seeing the struggles that Wagner and Williams were going through:
It's a long story and not at all very fun to talk about, but the upshot of it all was that I ended taking the art that Kent had already done and generated a completely different story around it. DC had been unhappy about what they had gotten from Karl and they had pretty much decided that if they couldn't get revisions they would not publish the book. It meant among other things that Kent would have wasted a year of his life and a lot of beautiful art, so I gave Kent my script and an option of showing it to Karen Berger, if he felt like that was something he wanted to do, and eventually it was something he wanted to do.[4]
After the collapse of Disney Comics,Art Young,Touchmark's Editor-in-Chief, went back to DC Comics and offered everyone he was developing projects with to continue working for DC's new imprintVertigo.[2]Rieber and his collaboratorJohn Van Fleetagreed, andShadows Fallwas released as a 6-issue regular format mini-series from November 1994 to April 1995. Sometime betweenTell Me, DarkandShadows Fall,Rieber was approached by Berger to write an ongoing continuation ofNeil Gaiman'sThe Books of Magicmini-series; despite having every proposal and outline rejected by editorial and even once trying to quit the idea,[4]Rieber was still hired and wrote the book from issue #1 (May 1994) to 50 (July 1998), including various annuals, specials and spin-offs.
Rieber's next major project was aCaptain Americarelaunch for theMarvel Comics'Marvel Knightsimprint, first announced in August 2001.[5]Commenting on the assignment, Rieber said he was hired "accidentally",[6]after then-Marvel Knights editorStuart Moorementioned the book in a conversation, offered Rieber to write some samples and liked them enough to give him the book (despite "looking for a heavy hitter <...> likeFrank MillerorGreg Rucka";[6]in a 2013 interview, Rucka confirmed he wrote some samples for that relaunch but was rejected in favor of Rieber.)[7]In addition to the ongoingCaptain Americaseries, Rieber was supposed to write two mini-series starring the character: the out-of-continuityCaptain America: Ice,which was announced in February 2002 by the artistJae Leeand subsequently integrated into the main book as its third arc,[8][9]and another one, unannounced, which was supposed to bridge the three-month gap between the previous volume and the Marvel Knights one (the writer of the eventual bridging mini-seriesDarko Macanlater confirmed that it was Rieber who was supposed to be the original writer.)[8]
The series itself was plagued by delays and controversy from the very beginning. According to Macan, who received the information from the outgoingCaptain AmericaeditorAndrew Lis,Rieber had to back out of writing the bridging mini-series due to theSeptember 11 attacks,supposedly, to rewrite whatever material he already had to reflect on the event.[8]The first arc, titled "The New Deal" (February to November 2002), had Captain America questioning the American government, with the topic receiving worldwide coverage in the press.[10][11]While Rieber's original outline for the series was supposed to start with "The Extremists", which became the title's second arc,[9]he ended up leaving the assignment halfway into that storyline, with three issues finished out of five planned:
Probably the simplest way that I can describe what happened is thatJoe Quesadahas a very clear vision about what he wants Cap to be, and my Cap just wasn't quite what he was looking for. They liked a lot of my ideas, but some of the approaches that I had to storytelling and structuring things and the weighting of the character just wasn't meshing with his vision. In the end, I was doing lots and lots of rewriters of scripts, and it was slowing things down. We all reached a place where we realized that it might be better if someone else was doing the book. I guess that's the long way of saying that we had creative differences.[12]
To finish both "The Extremists" and "Ice" (which, by the time Rieber left, had only one fully scripted issue), Marvel hiredChuck Austenwho was also rejected at the launch in favor of Rieber but still agreed to bring his plots to a close.[12]
Bibliography
editDC Comics
edit- Tell Me, Dark(withKent Robert Williams,graphic novel,hc, 80 pages, 1992,ISBN1-5638-9032-1;sc, 1992,ISBN1-5638-9088-7)
- The book is scripted by Rieber over pages of Williams' art, which were drawn for an earlier script written byKarl Edward Wagner.
- For more information, see theCareersection.
- Vertigo:
- The Books of Magic:
- Arcana Annual:"Long Walks in Dancing Shoes" (withPeter Gross,1994) collected inThe Books of Faerie(tpb, 144 pages, 1998,ISBN1-5638-9401-7)
- The Books of Magicvol. 2 (withGary Amaro,Peter Gross,Peter Snejbjerg,John Ridgway(#20) andJill Thompson(#42), 1994–1998) collected as:
- Bindings(collects #1–4, tpb, 112 pages, 1995,ISBN1-5638-9187-5)
- Summonings(collects #5–13, tpb, 240 pages, 1996,ISBN1-5638-9265-0)
- Includes "The Lot" short story (art by Gary Amaro) fromVertigo Rave(one-shot,1994)
- Reckonings(collects #14–20, tpb, 224 pages, 1997,ISBN1-5638-9321-5)
- Transformations(collects #21–25, tpb, 128 pages, 1998,ISBN1-5638-9417-3)
- Girl in the Box(collects #26–32, tpb, 192 pages, 1999,ISBN1-5638-9539-0)
- The Burning Girl(collects #33–41, tpb, 192 pages, 2000,ISBN1-5638-9619-2)
- Death After Death(collects #42–50, tpb, 224 pages, 2001,ISBN1-5638-9740-7)
- The Books of Magic Annual:
- The Books of Faerie: Auberon's Tale(tpb, 128 pages, 1999,ISBN1-5638-9502-1) includes:
- "Dark as Day, My Lady, Bright as Night" (withMark Buckingham,in #1, 1997)
- "Horn" (withJamie Tolagson,in #2, 1998)
- "The Kite" (with Peter Gross, co-feature in #3, 1999)
- The Books of Faerie: Auberon's Tale(tpb, 128 pages, 1999,ISBN1-5638-9502-1) includes:
- Hellblazer/The Books of Magic#1–2 (co-written by Rieber andPaul Jenkins,art byPaul Lee,1997–1998)
- Winter's Edge#1: "Thanks for Nothing" (withSteve Parkhouse,anthology, 1998)
- Shadows Fall#1–6 (withJohn Van Fleet,1994–1995)
- Mythos: The Final Tour#1–3 (with Gary Amaro (#1), Peter Snejbjerg (#2) andTeddy Kristiansen+Dean Ormston(#3), 1996–1997)
- Weird War Talesvol. 2 #4: "Salvation" (withDanijel Žeželj,anthology,1997)
- The Trenchcoat Brigade#1–4: "Misery" (with John Ridgway, 1999)
- The Books of Faerie: Molly's Story#1–4 (withHermann MejiaandRyan Kelly(#4), 1999)
- Strange Adventuresvol. 2 #4: "Perfect Stranger" (with Danijel Žeželj, anthology, 2000)
- Sandman Mystery Theatre: Sleep of Reason#1–5 (withEric Nguyen,2007) collected asSandman Mystery Theatre: Sleep of Reason(tpb, 128 pages, 2007,ISBN1-4012-1454-1)
- The Books of Magic:
Other publishers
edit- Ray Bradbury Comics#5: "Picasso Summer" (with John Van Fleet, anthology,Topps,1993) collected inThe Best of Ray Bradbury: The Graphic Novel(tpb, 160 pages,iBooks,2003,ISBN0-7434-7476-7)
- Marvel:
- Wolverine: Killing(with Kent Robert Williams, graphic novel, 48 pages, 1993,ISBN0-7851-0001-6) collected inWolverine: Inner Fury(tpb, 464 pages, 2020,ISBN1-3029-2390-0)
- Captain Americavol. 4 (withJohn Cassaday,Trevor Hairsine(#7–9) andJae Lee(#12); issues #8–9 and 12 are scripted byChuck Austenfrom Rieber's plots,Marvel Knights,2002–2003) collected as:
- The New Deal(collects #1–6, hc, 176 pages, 2003,ISBN0-7851-0978-1;tpb, 2003,ISBN0-7851-1101-8)
- The Extremists(includes #7–9, tpb, 120 pages, 2003,ISBN0-7851-1102-6)
- Ice(includes #12, tpb, 128 pages, 2003,ISBN0-7851-1103-4)
- Marvel Knights: Captain America Volume 1(includes #1–9 and 12, tpb, 408 pages, 2016,ISBN0-7851-9633-1)
- Neil Gaiman's Wheel of Worlds#0 (anthology,Tekno Comix,1995) collected inNeil Gaiman's Teknophage Volume 1(tpb, 232 pages,Super Genius,2015,ISBN1-6299-1277-8)
- The entire issue is plotted by Rieber andNeil Gaiman,with various writers scripting each individual story:
- The framing sequence, "Adam Cain", is written by Rieber and drawn byShea Anton Pensa.
- "Lady Justice"is written byC. J. Hendersonand drawn byMichael Netzer.
- "Mr. Hero"is written byJames Vanceand drawn byTed Slampyak.
- "Teknophage" is written byRick Veitchand drawn byBryan Talbot.
- The entire issue is plotted by Rieber andNeil Gaiman,with various writers scripting each individual story:
- Image:
- Tomb Raider(withRandy Green,Gerardo Sandoval(#24 and 29),Michael Turner(#25),Scott Benefiel(#28),Tony Daniel(#30) andPop Mhan(#31),Top Cow,2002–2003) collected as:
- Tomb Raider Compendium(includes #21–31, tpb, 1,280 pages, 2006,ISBN1-5824-0637-5;hc, 2008,ISBN1-5824-0803-3)
- Tomb Raider Archives Volume 2(includes #21–24 and 26–31, hc, 464 pages,Dark Horse,2017,ISBN1-5067-0352-6)
- 24Seven(series of anthology graphic novels):
- Volume 1:"The Pit" (withChris Brunner,224 pages, 2006,ISBN1-58240-636-7)
- Volume 2:"Cane" (withBen Templesmith,240 pages, 2007,ISBN1-5824-0846-7)
- Comic Book Tattoo:"Winter"(with Ryan Kelly, anthology graphic novel, hc, 480 pages, 2008,ISBN1-58240-965-X;sc, 2008,ISBN1-5824-0964-1)
- Tomb Raider(withRandy Green,Gerardo Sandoval(#24 and 29),Michael Turner(#25),Scott Benefiel(#28),Tony Daniel(#30) andPop Mhan(#31),Top Cow,2002–2003) collected as:
- G.I. Joe(Devil's Due):
- Transformers/G.I. Joe#1–6 (with Jae Lee,Dreamwave,2003) collected asTransformers/G.I. Joe: Tyrants Rise, Heroes are Born(tpb, 168 pages, 2004,ISBN0-9733-8179-5)
- G.I. Joe Reborn(withJoe BennettandJavier Saltares,one-shot, 2004) collected inG.I. Joe Reborn(tpb, 96 pages, 2004,ISBN1-9327-9602-9)
- G.I. Joe Reloaded(with Javier Saltares,Eddy Barrows(#1),Ron Lim(#3),Jason MilletandDarryl Banks(#7), 2004) collected as:
- In the Name of Patriotism(collects #1–6, tpb, 144 pages, 2005,ISBN1-9327-9623-1)
- An Act of Treason(includes #7–9, tpb, 144 pages, 2005,ISBN1-9327-9622-3)
- Army of Two: Dirty Money(withBrandon McKinney,graphic novel, 112 pages,Prima Games,2008,ISBN0-7615-5744-X)
- Unknown 9 ArchivesPreview(with Jae Lee,digital mini-comic,Dark Horse,2018)[13]
References
edit- ^Sinor, Bradley."EXCELLENCE DEMANDED, WHINERS PISS OFF: The Last Interview of Karl Edward Wagner".karledwardwagner.org. Archived fromthe originalon April 8, 2014.
- ^abCronin, Brian (July 1, 2011)."Comic Book Legends Revealed #321".Comic Book Resources.Archived fromthe originalon July 3, 2011.
- ^Klein, Todd (September 12, 2008)."Logos That Never Were: TOUCHMARK".kleinletters.com.Archivedfrom the original on September 28, 2008.
- ^abAndreasen, Henrik (December 1, 1995)."Interview with John Ney Rieber".Serie Journalen. Archived fromthe originalon June 20, 2008.
- ^Weiland, Jonah (August 4, 2001)."CASSADAY, NEY RIEBER TO TAKE ON MARVEL KNIGHTS CAPTAIN AMERICA IN 2002".Comic Book Resources.Archived fromthe originalon January 11, 2002.
- ^abMedinnus, David (October 24, 2002)."Interview with John Ney Rieber".The Star-Spangled Site. Archived fromthe originalon December 19, 2002.
- ^Bell, Josh (November 6, 2013)."Greg Rucka Brings" Lazarus "&" Veil "to Las Vegas".Comic Book Resources.Archived fromthe originalon April 14, 2014.
- ^abcCronin, Brian (April 25, 2014)."Comic Book Legends Revealed #468".Comic Book Resources.Archived fromthe originalon April 27, 2014.
- ^abYarbrough, Beau (October 11, 2002)."RIEBER AND HAIRSINE GET 'EXTREME' IN 'CAPTAIN AMERICA'".Comic Book Resources.Archived fromthe originalon October 21, 2002.
- ^Medved, Michael (April 4, 2003)."Captain America, Traitor?".National Review.Archived fromthe originalon April 4, 2003.
- ^Von Törne, Lars (August 17, 2011)."Zur Hölle mit der Pistole".Der Tagesspiegel.Archivedfrom the original on December 5, 2014.
- ^abBrady, Matt (December 19, 2002)."RIEBER OFF CAP, AUSTEN ON".Newsarama.Archived fromthe originalon February 23, 2003.
- ^"NYCC 2018: Occult Historical Thriller" Unknown 9 Archives "Arrives this Spring".Dark Horse Comics.September 27, 2018.Archivedfrom the original on December 21, 2018.
External links
edit- John Ney Rieberat theGrand Comics Database
- John Ney Rieberat the Comic Book DB (archived fromthe original)