Gilbert Hernandez
Gilbert Hernandez
Gilberto Hernández, usually credited as Gilbert Hernandez and also by the nickname Beto, is an American cartoonist. He is best known for his Palomar/Heartbreak Soup stories in Love and Rockets, an alternative comic book he shared with his brothers Jaime and Mario...
NationalityAmerican
ProfessionArtist
Date of Birth1 February 1957
CountryUnited States of America
best buys comics copies direct everybody food grew markets multiple news sold vital
I grew up when comics were only sold in food markets and news stands, so the direct market is vital to me. The best way to make it stronger is if everybody buys my comics in multiple copies before they buy any others.
american-artist comic menace realistic
Dennis the Menace was probably the most realistic comic book ever done. No space aliens ever invaded!
american-artist grew liked putting stories
We grew out of the superhero comics, but we still liked comics, so we started putting our own experiences in the stories we were doing for our own amusement.
darker explain felt readers
I felt like challenging myself and challenging my readers with something darker and heavier. I don't know how to explain it, because I'm not a political person. I have two political stories, and that's it: 'Human Diastrophism' and 'Poison River.'
bit critics everybody life overly reviewers
Reviewers and critics can be overly cynical. If something the least bit sentimental comes up, they'll often start flying off the handle. But I'm like, 'Wait a minute, you've had those times in your life. Everybody has.'
express truth
When you're young you don't know anything, but you have lot of energy to express yourself. So you make a lot of mistakes and you stumble, but you also get a lot of truth from within.
american-artist school
It wasn't until school that we realised that we were abnormal.
american-artist died filtered minority raised raising saw six woman
Our father died when we were very young, so our mother raised six kids. We saw the world filtered through her eyes, being a minority woman raising six kids.
certain grew insecure
I grew up being really insecure and dumped on, over-feeling certain things in a negative way. So I thought I had something to prove.
burned dense dropping fed readership slowly until
It wasn't until I started to do 'Poison River' that the readership started falling. 'Poison River' started out very slowly and simply, but then it got really dense and complicated. I don't know, I think the readers just got fed up or burned out. They started dropping off.
american-artist everybody felt kids nearly relatives school
I always felt I was living in two worlds. One was the Mexican world, because nearly everybody I knew, relatives and cousins and kids in the neighbourhood, were Mexican. Then school was a different world. It was ethnically mixed.
american-artist book love people response
The response to the characterizations in the book was immediate. People would say, We love these characters. How long have you been doing them?