The United States Department of Nerds Podcast

🎙️ USDN Podcast Interview — John McGuire: In Our Dreams Awake #3 | Dreampunk Indie Comic Kickstarter

Welcome back to the United States Department of Nerds Podcast, where we’re for the people, by the people, and of the people.

In this episode, The Chairman sits down with John McGuire, writer of In Our Dreams Awake #3 — a haunting, genre-bending dreampunk comic where two worlds collide: one ruled by magic, and one consumed by cyberpunk decay.

It’s a story that explores dreams, dual realities, and identity, asking the question: What if you could never be sure which world was real?

🌙 Episode Highlights
  • The origin and meaning of In Our Dreams Awake
  • Building dual worlds of fantasy and cyberpunk
  • Writing the emotional core of Jason Byron’s fractured reality
  • Defining “dreampunk” and how it differs from cyberpunk
  • John’s creative process and collaborations with Egg Embry
  • Lessons from running Kickstarter comic campaigns
  • How dreams influence art and storytelling
  • A special Halloween bonus on weird dreams and creative inspiration
🚀 Support the Kickstarter

In Our Dreams Awake #3 is live now on Kickstarter!

👉 https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/ioda/in-our-dreams-awake-3-a-dreampunk-comic

Back the project, grab exclusive rewards, and help bring this dreampunk vision to life!

🧠 About the Guest

John McGuire is the writer behind In Our Dreams Awake, The Gilded Age, Hollow Empire, and The Dark That Follows. A lifelong storyteller of speculative fiction, he blends sci-fi, fantasy, and philosophical mystery to explore the border between reality and imagination.

💀 About the Series

In Our Dreams Awake follows Jason Byron, a man trapped between two worlds — one mystical, one mechanical. As both realities begin to collapse, Jason must uncover which life is real… and which is only a dream.
Blending fantasy, cyberpunk, and surrealism, it’s a must-read for fans of Inception, Sandman, and Blade Runner.

🎧 Available Now:
📺 Watch the full video here on YouTube
🎙️ Listen on all podcast platforms — just search USDN Podcast

#InOurDreamsAwake #JohnMcGuire #USDNPodcast #IndieComics #KickstarterComics #HorrorFantasy #Dreampunk #CyberpunkComics #FantasyComics #ComicBookInterview #GraphicNovel #ComicKickstarter #IndieComicInterview #ComicBookCreators #PodcastInterview #IndieComicPodcast #SpeculativeFiction #Dreamscape #CreativeWriting #HalloweenPodcast

What is The United States Department of Nerds Podcast?

USDN podcast is run by the USDN_Chairman and the Council of Nerds. We strive to bring you the all the latest news and rumors from the World of Nerds and consolidate it right here at USDN. USDN is for the people, by the people and of the people.

You are listening to the USDN on the

DFPN.

Thanks for watching!

What is up everybody and welcome to the

United States Department of Nerds where we

are for the people, by the people,

and of the people.

And joining me tonight is a man who

wants to live in your dreams just like

Freddy Krueger.

We got John McGuire with his Kickstarter

in our dreams awake.

Number three, John,

how are you doing tonight?

I'm doing awesome.

Thanks for having me on.

So, John,

let's get down to the nitty-gritty.

You have a book that, honestly, to me,

it's like two stories in one,

but it's the same story told two different

ways, and it's cool as shit.

Am I grasping the concept with that there?

Yeah, absolutely.

So basically,

In Our Dreams Awake is the story of

Jason Byron,

who is a painter in a fantasy world

where magic has taken over or has beaten

out technology.

And when he goes to sleep at night,

he wakes up and Jason Byron is a

gangster in a futuristic cyberpunk world.

and each time he goes to bed there

he wakes back up in the fantasy world

and so as he and the reader we're

not sure which world is the real one

which world is the actual dream world he

has a love in both uh one is

a woman named laura who's his wife in

the fantasy world and in the future world

it's a fish alien woman named femal in

so um

there are things in each that he both

you know he loves but there's also tension

that's happening and the hope is you know

from the beginning of the story to the

end we'll see as his world starts

spiraling a bit those worlds start

colliding into each other and then it

really becomes you know you have to make

a choice you know what's the what's the

world you want to live in um and

so that that's kind of it in a

longish nutshell

No, that's terrific.

And it's such a cool concept that I

personally have never seen done before.

So you really gave us something

Different.

So I got to ask,

so how did you come up with this

idea of the parallel dreams?

Because it's like the dude never sleeps.

He goes to sleep and he's immediately

awake in another, you know, world.

So which is real and which is the

dream?

But how did you come up with that?

Because it's really cool.

Yeah.

So this project's actually over a decade

old.

The co-writer and myself,

the co-writer's name's Egg Embry.

He we do a lot of like,

you know, ideas swapping and emails,

you know,

throughout the day at our day jobs or

whatever.

And I hit upon this idea of,

you know,

this guy who goes to sleep in one

world and wakes up in another and that.

And he's always looking at like,

how do we actually do the product?

And his thought was, well, what if.

we take that idea and we actually have

two art teams and you write one of

the dreams and I write the other dream.

And that way,

not only does the art show, hey,

something very different,

this is a different world,

this is a different feel,

but then also our writing styles are not

the same.

So he's gonna have a slightly different

voice, but at the same time,

we're editing each other,

we're smoothing things out to make sure

it's not completely crazy.

um but also trying to surprise each other

a little bit too you know when we

were writing our stuff so it kind of

echoes back i think a tiny bit to

you know like the old uh flip books

you know what marvel or dc might have

done back in the day where you get

one story with one one story with the

other and the other the other aspect of

that and one of the reasons it seemed

like a good idea at the time was

if for some reason an artist couldn't you

know finish this stuff or you know

disappeared on us or whatever it would

only impact half the book and then

potentially we could you know uh go get

somebody else to either finish the story

or or uh you know kind of start

fresh and we wouldn't get too far behind

now that's such a dope concept and you're

writing the uh the magic version of the

book right correct yeah i write the the

fantasy version and then egg is writing

the cyberpunk side

So I wish Egg was here with us

because I really want to know his purpose

of using the word Keith.

Well,

I actually I can tell you the story

behind that.

So we we role play online once a

week, kind of D&D style games or whatever.

Yeah, of course.

And one of our friends,

we actually did this one in person,

but one of our friends was

kind of not paying attention to what the

rest of the table was doing.

And for some reason,

he just started calling him Keith in the

middle of the game.

He's like, Keith, Keith, you know,

like pay attention.

That's not the guy's name,

but that's what he started saying.

And we also got a big kick out

of that.

We just started laughing about that.

And, um,

For some reason, he decided,

you know what, instead of cussing,

maybe he was channeling a little bit of

like Legion of Superheroes or Star

Galactica or something.

But he was like,

I'm going to make that kind of the

cuss word is Keith, just to say,

you know.

No, I mean, after about this,

about midway through the second book is

when I really picked up like, oh, dude,

he just turned to Keith off.

I'm like, oh,

I'm grasping the concept now.

I'm like, dude, I love that concept.

And the fact that it's born within an

inside joke amongst a group of friends

playing D&D is even better.

Right.

Because we all have a teeth in our

life.

And that's exactly right.

Like, you know, you just go, oh, yeah,

I get this.

And when I was reading the script the

first time that popped up, I went, oh,

I see what you did there.

OK, I got you.

No, that's probably the dopest concept.

Have you done Comic-Cons with the book yet

and had people come up to you and

go, dude, what the hell is Keith?

haven't had the keith aspect uh yet um

because normally you know they're taking

it home to read um i think i

think when my wife read it the first

time she kind of went like what is

what is this and so i explained a

little bit a little bit and she's like

okay and then you know she did the

eye roll like she normally does to say

you know at any of our stupid stuff

that we do but

um i have obviously done a few of

the the cons and and free comic book

day and those type things uh to try

to get the book out there um so

yeah that's that's really cool man i love

that kind of stuff and that that's

probably what the most heartfelt like just

what's the word i'm looking for here um

just something like an inside joke that

makes it mainstream into something else,

you know?

Right.

Right.

I think there's a word for it.

The word escapes me right now,

but that to me is just like one

of those, like, yeah, that's really cool.

And it's something that you have with

amongst your friends.

Yeah, absolutely.

So I know you said this book has

been a decade in the making.

Was there a specific film or book or

maybe a moment that kind of like made

you grasp this and like come up with

this concept?

Um, you know, I don't, the very,

what's so funny is I have our old

emails and it just was,

I think it was me spitballing, you know,

these ideas and this one kind of hits,

uh, where, you know,

sometimes on these email chains,

you'll go, what about this thing?

And the other person kind of go,

doesn't really respond to it.

You know, maybe they'll say, oh,

that sounds interesting.

And then we move on to something else.

And this one clearly grabbed egg and was

like, oh, we could do this, this, this.

As far as like shows or movies,

when I mentioned it to some other friends,

they pointed out there's a Twilight Zone

episode.

And I wish I could remember the name

offhand,

but it's where he's in a the main

characters in a courtroom.

And the courtroom kind of does a groundhog

effect.

They were like,

he goes to sleep at night and then

he wakes back up in that the courtroom

and everybody's in different place.

Like, you know,

the judge is one of the other actors

and whatever, which I'd never seen it.

But then I was like, oh, yeah,

that is kind of similar.

But I'm sure everything you could probably

trace everything back to just my love of

like Groundhog Day in general.

I think that's everybody really from a

certain generation of youth that grew up

in the eighties.

And that's just one of those movies that

it would come on what every Thanksgiving

or something like that.

And it's just like,

It's one of those I'll watch on repeat,

like Christmas Carol or Christmas story,

you know, where you'll shoot your eye out.

You know,

it's like it becomes one of those things

where it's like a must watch.

If it's on TV,

you stop what you're doing.

I'm watching this.

Don't bother me for the next hour and

forty five minutes.

Exactly.

There was one other thing that came out.

So after we kind of come up with

this idea,

there was a TV show called Awake that

literally was this idea.

I mean, in a lot of ways,

it's just instead it was a cop.

And it was,

I guess it was more maybe a sliding

doors type effect, you know,

but it was when he went to sleep

in one world,

he woke up in the other one.

And we actually briefly, I mean,

we talked about that show a lot.

We actually briefly even considered like,

we should do a podcast about that show.

And then it got canceled probably,

you know,

after the half season that it did never

went anywhere.

But yeah,

so it was definitely one of those things

where, what is it?

like when you start seeing other things

that are maybe similar or that kind of

feed into what you're doing, it's like,

I feel like I'm on the right track

with this, you know,

like you don't want to be,

you don't want everybody to be doing it,

but it's like,

it's nice when you see like, Oh,

somebody is doing something a little

similar,

which means I'm not crazy that this might

be a story.

Somebody might want to read, you know?

yeah no it's definitely one of those and

i gotta point out the art i love

the two different styles of art for each

story um i love that concept and the

covers on for all these books to be

fair absolutely phenomenal like it matches

with what's going on in the story nicely

like it it

this is spot on.

So whoever, who did your art and your,

your covers and stuff like that,

definitely they picked up the vibe of the

story and everything fits together really

nicely in the book.

So yeah.

Yeah.

You know,

the fantasy was done by Edgar Salazar and

we actually, I mean,

these pages are kind of towards that

beginning of that decade.

He did a lot of his work,

but fantasy story was pretty much done by,

you know a decade ago um and he's

now moved on to do marvel and dc

projects um he's done some like into the

spider verse and i want to say uh

the dynamite book that was with the public

domain heroes i can't think of the name

i think it was superpowers or whatever he

did a lot of that stuff and then

the cyberpunk uh side of things is roland

uh calnis and uh he we saw his

art i i

you know,

I do the thing where I go onto

Reddit or I go into some of the

Facebook book groups and, you know,

just I'll save posts from artists where

I'm like, Ooh, that's a cool style.

Right.

And when I came across his,

I immediately forwarded it on the egg.

And I was like, this,

I think this is the guy for your,

your side of the story.

So I'm going to be honest, the, um,

the dream punk, you know,

very like side of the book,

the egg is right.

And reminds me of a lot.

The artwork reminds me of a lot of,

uh,

early vertigo constantine yeah i can see

that definitely and just early vertigo in

general like that darker stuff they did

and um i was like i felt like

i was going back a little bit to

the old school vertigo days with the

sandman and constantine oh yeah i was like

oh i love this part of it but

then the um the fantasy side the magic

side of it reminded me a lot of

uh earlier conan

Okay, yeah, yeah.

The colors and the way the characters are

drawn and that kind of stuff.

So I was like,

and I love both of those things,

the older Conan.

The new stuff is good.

Don't get me wrong.

The reboot of Conan that's currently going

on,

This is great stuff.

The stories are really good from what I

hear.

I just, I don't know.

I'm such a fan of the old Conan

that it's hard for me to pick up

the new Conan.

Unlike with Hellblazer,

I've been such a huge fan of John

Constantine for so long that I don't care

what generation it is.

I pick it up and read it.

Sure.

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

It's just one of those characters for me

that he's one of my characters.

You know what I'm saying?

No, absolutely.

I feel like

My character like that is The Flash,

and it's Wally West specifically,

The Flash.

He's such a huge...

You can just about ask anybody who's a

Flash guy, and it's Wally West.

Like you said, it's kind of that...

what you were reading kind of when you

were in, you know, teenager or whatever.

Um, and I went back and, you know,

and I don't have his team Titans

appearances necessarily,

but I have from issue one that Mike

Barron, you know,

started that series post crisis, you know,

all the way up now to whatever issue

they currently are on in the nine hundreds

or whatever.

Um,

Um, and so, you know,

but I totally get that.

It's like rain or shine.

I, every month, if that book comes out,

I'm going to be getting it.

And, uh, you know,

I'm on board and I might mean I

have to suffer through some, you know,

subpar stories occasionally, but you know,

that's my guy.

And it's like, so for me,

I'm a big image guy.

Okay.

I love indie comics and well,

I can't even really say image is an

indie no more.

but i love what they do over there

they're they're um creator owned they do a

lot of stuff with the creators and that

kind of stuff and produces some fantastic

fantastic stories and then you know george

james tinian huge fan of whatever he's

writing i don't care what it is the

dude could just write whatever and i'm

gonna read it because it's got his name

on it and

can only think of a couple of things

like and that was his earlier stuff where

he was writing superheroes that i was just

kind of like this was me but then

you get into like the department of truth

of something that's killing the children

um he's writing exquisite corpses right

now um the deviant you know and you're

just like

These are phenomenal stains.

So for me, it's like,

ninety percent of my pulls

Oh, yeah.

And then Kickstarters and pure indies.

You know,

I read a lot of what y'all are

doing out there.

Sure, sure.

No,

I'm definitely like something's killing

the children is amazing.

I'm still I'm like two trades in so

far.

So I'm still kind of catching up to

that.

You're in that great arc right now,

though,

that that arc right there in the beginning

was.

I don't want to say call it my

favorite arc, but.

But it's definitely up there toward the

top of the arcs that they have done.

Okay, that's good to know.

That's good to know.

I'm glad to hear that.

They just released today,

or tomorrow actually.

Tomorrow's Wednesday, right?

Mm-hmm.

What's it called?

Their new spinoff series.

What's it called?

I think it's a muster hunter walks into

a bar or something like that.

Okay.

It, you know,

it's focusing back on the main character

again, which is really cool,

but I'm excited about that because it's,

it's new stories from something that's

killing the children.

Yeah, absolutely.

That's all.

So,

and then it's been off house of slaughter.

Like I,

I have everything from one through

wherever we're at right now.

I don't miss a copy of it.

Yeah.

Yeah.

And I, you know, I think that's the,

I mean, as a collector and everything,

it's one thing to, you know,

collect comics,

but it's like when you're into something,

when you're into a story or creator or

whatever, that's like, I don't know,

picking up that new comic on Wednesday is

like the best feeling when that you,

especially if you didn't know it was like,

you,

you kind of forgot it was supposed to

be coming out and you go to your

box or whatever.

And you're like, Ooh,

Okay,

I know it goes to the top of

my list, right?

It's funny you say it like that because

I literally – this part of my life

revolves around comic books and being in

the know, watching the FOCs.

I do all that stuff.

But even when I go in on Wednesday

to pick up my bots,

I'm still like –

it's like christmas i mean i know what

i got i know in the back of

my head i know what i got yeah

but it's like at the same time i'm

like there's always a surprise in there my

where my comic book shop will he's like

hey this one came in from ignition press

which to me ignition press is another one

okay is that's kind of like jumping onto

the screen again and they're putting out

some really great stuff right now

He's like,

check out this one from Ignition.

And I'm like, ooh, I missed this one.

I didn't see they announced this one was

coming out this week.

I thought it was like next month.

But hey, if it's coming out today,

I'll take it.

And they're doing a lot of really good

stuff right now.

Ani Press,

although they're losing Rick and Morty in

December.

Boom Studios is always phenomenal.

Dynamite,

what they're doing with the reboot of the

old classic stuff and what they're doing

with like Thundercats and that kind of

stuff.

I just saw an ad for they're doing

Sundar the Barbarian next, I think.

Yeah.

Yep.

Dynamite.

Yep.

Yeah.

You saw the same one I did.

I think they announced it yesterday.

Yeah.

I was like, wait, what?

Because it was one of those images that

popped up and I'm like,

what exactly am I?

Oh, okay.

oh that was me yesterday that was it

i had that same i'm like oh they're

doing thunder yeah and i was like i'm

talking to myself because nobody's at my

house my wife's at work or whatever and

it's just me i'm just like oh right

i'm like thank god i'm home alone

I can always blame talking to the cats.

Listen, Courtney,

I was telling the cats about Fundar.

They needed to know.

I was just looking around.

I was like, wait, did you see mine?

Because I got three around here somewhere.

One of mine is asleep in the chair

beside me.

Mine are downstairs probably.

We just had dinner a little bit ago,

so they're probably down there licking the

counters or the kitchen table or

something.

Oh, yeah, yeah, absolutely.

Somebody dropped a little sauce somewhere.

Right.

Another good one,

one of the smaller companies.

I really like Mad Cave.

I read the Nottingham, you know,

all those.

And then I just picked up Dark Pyramid.

Dark Pyramid, yep.

They got a few other ones that are

really good.

I like it because here's what a lot

of people,

they love DC and they love Marvel.

I personally, on the other hand,

I want the blood.

i want the gore i want the spooky

and the scary and the just scary the

pants off me when i turn the page

right and you don't get that with dc

or marvel but image will do it oh

yeah mad cave will do it ignition press

boom studios dynamite all these other guys

they will well not so much dynamite

dynamite's really been focused they really

got their grips in on the um

The reboots with Space Ghost and

Thundercats and that kind of stuff.

And that's their niche.

And they are absolutely killing that game

over there.

So shout out to them that they're doing

what they're doing over there.

But yeah, Mad Cave.

They just did Pop Kill as well.

Oh, yeah.

Did you do Pop Kill?

No.

It's out on a trade paperback.

Check that one out.

I'm writing it down.

I also have the spot as well.

What's that one?

The keen spot, the keen spot.

All right.

Yup.

It's another,

you're just spending my money now.

You know that, right?

It's what I do.

Cause I, that's me every Wednesday.

I'll, I'll try a sampling.

I don't, I don't do DC.

Oh, I picked up.

I'll be picking up one DC book tomorrow.

Cause then the cat woman will be on

the cover of the absolute series.

Okay.

I'll pick that up just because I want

that.

There's one book by one artist who did

a cover for it.

And I just want his one cover.

Okay.

Fair.

That'll be my one DC book.

Unless, you know,

Zatanna has a new cover coming out or

something.

Then I'll get Zatanna because I love

justice league dark.

And yeah,

That's basically it for me,

unless it's a vertigo or something.

Yeah, fair enough.

But let's get back to you, man.

This is all about you.

So we see a love triangle of sorts

between Laura and FEMA.

So what's the emotional core of this story

for you?

Is it about love, identity,

Jason's sanity?

I think for me...

there's so many times in our lives,

it's kind of that path not taken.

It's the what if moments.

And I think this is obviously in a

kind of over dramatic form with the two

different worlds,

but it really is that like the grass

is the grass greener on the other side

type situation.

And at the, but at the core,

I do feel like it is a love

story.

It's about, you know,

how far are you willing to go for

the people that you love and how far

are they willing to go for you?

And what happens when you make mistakes

that may have impacts to them, you know,

throughout the story.

And it really hits home in issue three.

yeah well issue three is really you know

the first two issues it's a very hard

divide you know the first issue has the

first twelve pages or so are the fantasy

dream and then we switch to the cyberpunk

dream and then in issue two it's flipped

so we have the cyberpunk dream but issue

three is really where i think what i

said earlier where those those worlds are

starting to spiral in and and collide with

each other and so we cut from cyberpunk

to fantasy and back

Multiple times throughout the story to

show that maybe his sanity is being

tested.

Maybe the decisions he's made up to this

point weren't the best decisions.

He's kind of losing control in his world.

I love what y'all did in number three,

to be fair.

Anybody out there thinking about it,

number three hits it.

Like, it's, like,

you really start to see Jason,

I don't want to say losing his shit,

but he's on the verge of losing his

shit, it feels like, to some degree.

And, I mean, in my eyes,

he had this really lovely lady in the

fantasy world.

This alien...

fish girl in the, in the,

the dream pump world or the cyber world.

And it's like two very different things

really.

Yeah.

even though it's like this world's falling

apart.

Now this world's falling apart.

And you're like, damn, Jason, like you're,

you're in the shit right now.

Yeah.

You really just need to hold on as

tight as you can because this,

the world's going to buck you from it.

Almost, you know, look for, I can already,

I already know is going to be like

this really awesome, like,

twist in turns of,

and hopefully you do it like you did

number three, where you're like, oh,

you're here.

Yeah.

Something happens dramatic here and it's

like, bloop,

he slips back into the other world.

And yeah, that's exactly, you know,

basically the moment between two and three

and the moment that happens early in issue

three is really these catalysts for,

the more frenetic, you know,

changing of scenes, changing of worlds to,

to kind of, you know,

hopefully for the reader,

they start feeling that too,

where it's not, oh,

I'm going to get a huge block of

this.

It's like,

I'm going to get two or three pages

and then we're flipping and then I get

two or three pages and then we flip

again, you know, and it's like,

i really like that to be fair because

you're like as i'm turning the page well

i'm not turning the page as i'm scrolling

the page of this and almost like are

we going to be in the fantasy world

are we going to still be in the

cyber world and it's like oh we're still

in cyber and then all of a sudden

it's like the next scroll down it's like

something dramatic happened here so we're

right back into the fantasy world again

and i'm just like

I'm like, dude,

they are fucking killing it on this one.

Pardon my four-letter words there,

but he's killing it on this one.

No, we appreciate it for sure.

That's what...

What you're saying is what we were hoping

to convey.

So that helps to know that it did

convey that.

You absolutely nailed it on number three.

And the first two, like I said,

they set a perfect stage for what I

feel is going to be this really great

number four when y'all get ready to do

it.

So in number three is setting up a

perfect stage for like this big hell storm

of stuff that's going to happen in number

four.

Yeah, I almost want, you know,

like you saying that is like,

I want to say things and they are

all in part four.

And I'm like, no, no, no spoiling.

So let's dig into these two realities

because they're very different.

to jason i mean it's basically the same

story playing out for him in just two

different types of realities so in this

fantasy world we got the magi ruling tech

has been forbidden what really inspired

like that set for y'all to go with

that type of setting versus something else

yeah so i think um one of the

so one of the previous projects i worked

on

kind of in between all this was a

steampunk uh story called the gilded age

uh that i you know uh did four

issues of and we did a trade now

all that and so i think in my

mind i always kind of wanted to since

this technically predates that i always

wanted to kind of write something that was

a little more on that steampunk

you know technology magic slash uh world

and so which is a great genre by

the way yeah i don't think we get

enough steampunk in our lives no i would

agree on that for sure and i think

that that helped you know once we figured

out that that was the setting we wanted

then it helped us to figure out what

the world was and what did it mean

that if if tech was you know forbidden

or whatever how

how could we incite the incident,

so to speak, right?

What is the thing that's driving him?

And in the first issue,

we come to find out that it's this

telescope,

which is a piece of forbidden tech that

he has.

When you think about it,

you don't think of a telescope as tech.

Mm-hmm.

So it's one of those weird things where

I'm like, a telescope?

Then I'm like, well,

I guess in that time... Right, yeah.

And I think the way it's laid out

is at one point, this world,

the fantasy world,

was at one point technologically advanced.

Sure, yeah.

And then the ruling class of the Magi

kind of reverted it back and banned all

technology and that kind of stuff.

That's why they're more...

it looks more medieval times.

Yeah.

Yeah.

Which again would have been one of those

times where technology was going to start

coming back again.

Yeah, no, that's exactly right.

It, in my mind,

it's almost like if you had Da Vinci's

stuff, uh,

But then somebody put a stop to it

immediately.

Yes.

So you would have a few things that

might be buried in some hole in the

ground, so to speak.

But for the most part,

that's where advancement of tech kind of

ended.

And then they started going backwards a

little bit.

Yeah.

no it's really cool and we'll flip it

on the other side now so in the

cyberpunk world you got flooded cities

guild aliens this neon rebellion where we

got talking cats and that kind of stuff

which is really cool love that concept

because i know the cats were your idea

well so how did you visualize that

contrast because it is a drastic contrast

but there's that one you know tie in

line in there with not just jason but

the spaceship

Yes.

So that was the I don't you know,

I wish I remembered, you know,

who came up with that part of the

idea is what does he see in the

telescope?

But once it was said out loud,

he's going to see a spaceship that's kind

of from the future stuff that it just

crystallizes like, oh,

that's that's great.

Like that's the first moment of these two

worlds kind of starting to bleed a little

bit together as far as the cats.

that's all egg actually and what's weird

is he's really he's not a cat guy

he's not an animal guy really but what

happened is is for issue one when we

did the kickstarter for that one of our

uh reward levels was get drawn into a

comic and uh a backer reached out to

us and said listen i don't want to

appear in the comic but if you could

draw a couple of my cats into the

comic

And at that point, Egg went, well,

wait a second.

Why not just make them a part,

not just background characters?

We're going to make them legit like some

of the bad guys.

Dude, that to me,

as soon as I seen that,

I was like,

and I knew you were a cat guy.

I mean, I read your bio and all.

I do my due diligence for people out

there.

I read and find out what people do

and what their things are.

I read up on you.

Mm-hmm.

But I was like, dude, Talking Cats,

I love it already.

I'm sold.

Yeah.

Well, all he had to say was that.

And I was like, yeah, I'm down.

Let's do that.

That sounds great, man.

And I think it's, again,

it's one of those happy accidents,

I feel like,

when an idea is presented between one of

us.

And then you just go, Oh yeah,

that's the thing.

Like that was,

I don't want to say the missing piece,

but maybe the missing piece of this part

of the story, you know,

Bob Ross taught us anything.

It's nothing but happy little mistakes.

Exactly.

Exactly.

But yet, you know,

the other aspect of the cyberpunk side of

things was this is weirdly again,

because the project has taken so long to

get out there and

we had a very different artist originally

and he did, you know, I don't know.

He might've done total pages worth of art

and then fell off the face of the

earth.

Like we could not find them,

could not get ahold of him, anything.

So we can't really use that work.

I've heard of that happening to people.

Yeah.

And so at that point it was a

little, it was less cyberpunk.

It was probably just more futuristic,

you know?

And when we going back to Roland's,

when we saw his art,

it just crystallized that this is the mood

this is the the what you said earlier

like grit like gritty vertigo kind of

inspired feel to things still have that

neon um you know i i do love

how the neon is just kind of like

random yeah yeah and it's no real like

contrast to anything it's just random and

i love that about the neon that appears

it's almost like it's just all black and

then there's like these random neons

sprinkled in i love that concept that's

how he did that yeah yeah he he

died i mean it's just one of those

things we kept getting pages and we were

like oh okay wow which again you know

as a writer

it can be kind of a lonely time

to just be sitting at your desk and

not do, you know, not,

you're just churning out words or whatever

you don't really know.

But when artists send you pages, I mean,

we talked about Christmas day with like

your new comic day,

but when artists page comes in and it's

just like, wow,

like you kind of have to sit back

and go, that is amazing.

Cause like,

you know, at the end of the day,

I'm writing words on a page and somebody

else is having to interpret that and make

it come to that next level.

You know,

who's doing the lettering for y'all?

Are y'all doing your own lettering or is

that the artist doing your lettering as

well?

No, actually it's a guy named Alex Lugo,

who is a perfect shout them out, man.

Letters don't get enough love.

No, I love what Alex has done.

He actually helps also format the book for

publication and everything as well.

So he's kind of a jack of all

trades.

He's an artist on the side.

I think he said when I talked to

him last, he's like,

just let me know when issue four is

ready to go and I'll get started on

that.

And he's going to start working on some

of his own stuff too.

But yeah, he was one of those...

i've done some minor lettering you know on

like very indie stuff i eggs done some

minor but to get alex brings like a

level of professionalism that just ties

everything together in a great way i think

you know like and it really say lettering

can make or break a good comic book

and if you're looking at a comic book

and you flip the page and it's just

a whole bunch of words barfed up on

a page with no rhyme or reason

you're going to put that comic book down

and go, I'm not reading all that.

I have no, I like,

what is even this?

Yes.

Yes.

I think too, it,

it helps sometimes just the flow,

you know, like again, you're writing,

I'm writing, you know, character dialogue,

character dialogue,

the way he is able to place it

on the page is,

Especially those pages where we probably

maybe had too much dialogue on a

particular page, right?

And he somehow,

through magic or witchcraft or something,

has figured out how to actually do it.

An experienced letter will make or break

your comic book.

And I tell people this all the time.

Because you don't want to misplace a word

box.

Because you could hide details that are

relevant to a...

a scene.

And you don't want to do that.

Because what happens later is when you get

to another page,

and they reference something back to that

other page into like,

I don't remember seeing that.

And if you're like me,

when I read a comic book,

I read the comic book,

I study the page,

I look at the details,

I want to see if there's an Easter

egg or something hidden within these

pages.

Because some artists like to fuck with us

like that they'll hide stuff.

Sure.

And then they'll call it back.

they'll make a reference to it and you're

like was that oh it was what he

was talking about okay i'm tracking what

they're picking they're putting down now

so that can again make or break a

good comic book yeah no you're absolutely

right on that we're lucky to have uh

alex uh

helping put our words on the page in

a readable way.

No, everything meshes so well together.

And it's one of those,

it makes it enjoyable to read because it

should be a fine balance of words and

art and stuff going on.

And he's nailed it.

Well, I'll have to pass that along.

He'll be happy.

I'm an egg to let them know that

they've in this cover for three with the

Magi on the cover.

Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.

I don't know who did that cover,

but that cover is amazing.

I love that cover.

So that's Jose Garcia.

And again, it goes back to that,

you know,

as we're doing these Kickstarters,

as I'm looking for project artists and

stuff, you know, a flag,

you

you know, certain posts,

whether it's on blue sky or Facebook or

whatever.

And he's one I'd flagged at one point

is like, maybe, you know, and he was,

I mean, he did this one.

It's taken a minute to this issue to

get out,

but I think he did this one over

a year ago.

And, um,

It was one of those things I think

he was running a sale, you know,

on like a cover piece.

And he had, you know,

X number of spots.

And so I immediately DM'd him.

I was like, hey, you have a spot.

I'm down, man.

I got real money.

He did a phenomenal cover for y'all.

So shout out to him because that was

a phenomenal cover.

As soon as I seen the cover,

I was like, that's the art I'm using.

I already knew.

As soon as I seen that cover,

I was like, I'm going with that one.

That cover is amazing.

I love the other cover too,

but just something about how the Magi look

on that cover really sets the tone.

Yeah, yeah, definitely.

I love the idea because, you know,

it's that weird thing, too.

It's like what, you know, he's like, well,

what do you want me to draw?

And it's like, well, I guess, you know,

maybe the bad guys, you know,

like we haven't really we focused on Jason

with issue one, you know,

with the flip the world, you know,

the two worlds.

And then we had.

the homage to uh the flash of two

worlds for the fantasy cover for issue two

and i was like we haven't really focused

on the bad guys yet and he just

again i got those pages or got those

initial sketches and i was like oh this

is this is cool man he absolutely nailed

the vibe of the entire book with the

villains and that's another thing villains

don't get enough love on covers

I agree.

I agree.

I think sometimes we get so focused on

who the protagonist is,

we forget that without our antagonist,

we don't have a story, right?

I will say this.

DC currently has the Absolute thing going

on,

and they're releasing their villains

currently.

Those covers are some amazing covers.

So they're putting some focus on the

villains for once.

Yeah.

And the Absolute Joker in that series is

going to be...

He reminds me of the,

I don't know if you were ever into

Image Comics and Spawn.

Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.

But the Violator.

Oh, yeah.

The actual Violator.

Yeah.

That is what the absolute Joker reminds me

of.

Oh, yeah.

It's the Violator in Violator form.

All those early Image books,

I was on board with all of them.

I've got boxes upstairs that are just...

you know saying multiple issues you know i

don't know maybe fifty issues worth of

spawn at least savage dragon i never

stopped collecting spawn i have gone back

and i quit collecting for a very long

time and i thought spawn fell off the

map because at the time image was a

pure indie thing they had young blood

savage dragon spawn and then i came back

to comic books many years later and it's

like

holy shit, spawn's still a thing.

And I got the trade paperbacks because I'm

like,

there's no way I'm going to go back

and pay prices for, you know.

And then ever since, I've been like,

every week, if there's a new spawn,

I don't care if it's gunslinger spawn or

what.

I just always loved that universe.

Yeah.

No, McFarlane, I mean,

he created something that was, again,

different from anything else that was on

the stands at the time.

You know, and it was...

I mean,

obviously his art is what it is.

I mean, it's amazing in and of itself,

but just, yeah, those, those early days,

it really, all those, it was so,

there was such an excitement, you know,

there was a fever for all that.

And it was unique.

Yeah.

It didn't follow the rules of normal

superheroes.

Yes.

So that's why,

why it always stuck with me, I guess,

but yeah,

So personal question.

Okay.

Which world would you rather live in?

The mythical world or the mechanical

world?

So we got your magi or your aliens.

Which one are you going with if you

got to pick?

Yeah, I don't know.

I feel like it's so rough in the

future world.

that just a day-to-day survival is going

to be just difficult to do,

I probably would opt for the fantasy

because while I don't really have any

natural farming or whatever skills in my

real life,

I might be able to get by with

some trade or whatever.

But hey, in the cyberpunk world,

you get to talk to your cat.

That is true.

So, I mean,

you got to really think about that one.

Yeah.

Although my cats would just be like, hey,

give me another snack.

Right.

It's dinner time.

I just fed you.

No, it's dinner time.

Really?

Yeah.

So maybe not.

I probably would go with the fantasy world

because that would be the entire

conversations at all points with my cats.

Right.

Exactly.

I basically have those conversations

anyway, you know.

yeah so I gotta ask though as a

writer between you and egg how did you

keep both these worlds distinct but

connected you know as a from a theme

standpoint you know oh I think that all

starts like early on I you know I

don't want to say a pure outlining type

thing but we definitely talked about the

story we talked about the kind of story

we wanted to tell what we were I

mean we had

so many talks, whether it was, you know,

at dinners or,

or whatever about this project before.

So is egg a neighbor with you as

well?

Like, uh, well, he lives low.

He lives in the Atlanta area as well.

We actually went to high school together.

So I've known him for forever.

And, um, he, he does a lot, uh,

he doesn't really do a lot of comic

related things.

I basically dragged him back into it,

but he does a lot of role playing

related articles and zines and stuff like

that.

So, but yeah, yeah, we just,

we talked about,

we talked about the story for a long

time before I think we,

either of us put any words down on

the page and then it was just,

you know,

writing the script and then sending it,

you know,

kind of doing the script swap of like,

this is what I'm thinking.

And then just kind of doing an edit

where we,

It wasn't a grammar edit or anything.

It was really a story edit.

It's like, hey, if you're doing this,

then maybe we need to introduce this into

my story.

Or, hey, does this work for this?

To try to, again,

they need to be separate,

but they do need to have that slow

come together as well.

Yeah.

And so hopefully we manage that through

that process.

Y'all absolutely nailed it,

whatever the process was.

Because it's like I said in the beginning,

it's two separate stories telling almost

the same as that story that are starting

to collide or collapse onto each other

because Jason is either losing his mind

or...

Yeah, basically he's just losing his mind.

Fair, yes, fair.

But I really enjoy, because like I said,

it's different and I always enjoy the

different.

Yeah, yeah.

And the other thing with that is,

I said earlier that the writing can be

kind of a lonely thing if you let

it,

but when you're collaborating with a

co-writer,

you get those cool moments where

you almost want to one up each other,

you know,

he sends me something and I'm like,

Oh crap,

I got to step my game up now

to like show him so that when he

opens the next email, he goes, Oh crap,

I got to, you know, do the thing.

So there's a little bit of that like

gamesmanship going on too,

where it's just like,

you want to surprise them.

You want to, you know,

give them something to react to and go,

yeah, that's, that's a cool thread.

Let's make sure we pay that off somewhere.

I like it.

I like it.

So for,

I know there's two separate artists as

well, one doing one side,

one doing the other side.

How is that working between you and Egg?

Are you and Egg both working with your

respective artists?

Or do you just send them like, hey,

here's my words, make it work?

I know some people who do that,

who prefer that.

Yeah, so the fantasy stuff,

it was kind of a... Again,

because that was written a while back as

far as the core pages,

and then the dialogue's been updated as

time has gone on.

And so it was a little bit of

a learning process, I think,

with myself and Edgar, where...

In theory, as a writer,

I want to write to the artist's strengths.

If the artist can't draw a horse,

I don't need to put horses in this

comic.

Luckily,

Edgar is pretty strong at everything.

He drew a horse.

I've seen it.

It was really damn good.

It wasn't even that.

I think as the parts of the issues

went along, it was...

hey, I don't want to, like,

it was still scripted, you know,

more DC style, you would say,

but there was definitely pages where I'm

like, here's kind of the beats, you know,

here's the big moments,

but you can kind of put them however

you need, you feel is best,

whether if it's a fight or if it's,

you know,

some more physical thing that's- A

struggle or something like that.

Because I think sometimes as writers,

it's like,

we think panel one to panel two to

panel three,

whereas the artist can be like, well, no,

this is more of a dance.

Like, I don't need gutters.

I don't need, you know, I don't need,

or maybe we can break a panel and

have him, you know,

punch through the gutter or something like

that.

And so I, at least on my part,

that was very much, again,

was learning how to do that,

but hopefully, you know, each issue,

you know,

you learn a little bit more of like,

what their strengths is,

what your strengths are and just play off

of each other.

As far as, you know, egg goes,

I think as much as anything,

like I said earlier,

he really adapted the story to that style

that Roland's was,

was showing to try to lean in as

hard as he could to Roland's strengths on

that stuff.

And, you know, and I think again,

you know, with the, with his dialogue,

obviously we talked about the Keith thing,

but,

just some of the mannerisms,

some of the way that Mike talks where

it's almost in some weird riddle of sorts

at times.

He was trying to do something, I think,

and I think he succeeds,

that's a little non-standard anyway,

to really make,

maybe to make you as a reader feel

It could be jarring,

but I hope in a good way,

you know, like bring you into that world.

He really did.

Where I really connected was the Keith

thing and the way he used the word

parliament.

Oh, yeah.

It's very rare that I talk words to,

you know, the writer or the writers.

But I really like the way he used

certain words for one thing or it's the

same thing, but yet different.

You know, like the word parliament.

I come here to parliament with you.

And I was like, oh,

I see what he did there.

And like I said,

I think I was midway through issue two

or maybe into early part of issue three

when I was like, oh,

Keith is he just didn't want to use

curse words, which is really cool.

And he's using the word Keith to denote

the F word.

Right.

And I was like, again,

that's a really cool piece of what he

just did.

And it works.

Yeah, absolutely.

Because you don't know what this dystopian

society has.

Maybe you can't say the actual curse words

there without getting the morale police or

something.

Who knows?

And that leaves it to your imagination as

the reader,

which I thought was another one of those

really cool pieces where you may not have

thought about it as the writer,

but as the reader,

I can interpret it that way, right?

Sure, absolutely.

Yeah.

No,

I think it works really well with what

it does.

And to give that, like you said,

it's using words in a slightly different

way or.

Parliament is something that we don't

really use in everyday language very

often.

So I think he definitely leaned into that

as well to say, okay,

if this is a futuristic world,

they wouldn't necessarily exactly talk the

way we talk.

And you can tell this world has been

through this shit and has been going

through this shit for quite some time

since the arrival of these aliens.

So some of these people may have never...

been educated.

Yeah, absolutely.

Maybe that stuff went away as they were

coming up.

So the way they use words may be

different than their true intentions

because they just never learned how to say

that word or what that real meaning of

that word was.

Yep.

So, nah,

he absolutely nailed that aspect of that

world.

But we're going to... Yeah,

let's dive into this part of it.

So...

There's a lot of what's the word I'm

looking for here.

I lost my words.

Um,

the emotional core of this story,

the search for identity, meaning,

reality fractures.

And so Jason is struggling between these

two worlds.

Do you see this as a reflection of

a creative life where writers live in like

imagination and half in reality?

Like, how did like, does that make sense?

No question.

I think it's a hundred,

you're a hundred percent on, on track,

man.

Like the,

I think that... So, you know,

on my little bio or whatever,

I say that I'm a civil engineer by

day and a writer at night.

And that kind of dualism, I think,

is my life.

There's the right brain, left brain,

kind of warring with each other at times.

My dad, you know,

was an engineer that went into banking and

whatever.

And my mom was a nurse,

but also was a teacher.

But she's the more artistic one.

So, like...

you know, even with them,

you can kind of see, okay,

that's where I get that.

That's where I get this.

Um,

and I also think there's so many times

in our lives where, you know,

I have a, you know,

some of my friends are very much,

they want to like worry about the past

they didn't take or the choices they

didn't make.

And, um,

I do that, too.

You know, I think we all do that.

Oh, absolutely.

And I think this story is maybe it's

some weird therapy session in a very odd

way to like try to work through those

things of can I be both, you know,

and is it OK if I'm if I

want to be one more than the other?

Right.

Like if I want to live in one

world more than the other.

Right.

Absolutely.

I literally

almost on a daily basis,

few times a day,

just go wish I was like,

I just want to quit my job and

interview comic book artists for the rest

of my life.

And I would be the happiest man in

the world.

Yeah.

And that's my internal struggle.

And I love my day job.

Yeah.

Yeah.

And that's,

I think that's the other thing I always

tell people, you know,

I probably like eighty five to ninety

percent of what I do, you know,

at the day job.

But yeah, I mean,

if if money was not a factor and

all that stuff,

I would love to be a writer,

you know,

full time and do that thing that that

would be sitting right here at this desk

creating content.

Yeah, exactly.

So I I think at its core,

it's really born out of that.

You know, am I on the right?

Excuse me.

Am I on the right track?

and you know is this what I'm supposed

to be doing um and just trying to

just you know kind of figure things out

as best I can and I think maybe

I hope maybe that's what egg saw when

he saw that initial email you know without

me specifically saying it maybe that's

what grabbed him because I feel like he

has the same thoughts and ideas you know

that that duality of

I got to go work to pay the

bills and do the thing.

But like,

what I'd really love to do is this

other thing, you know, right here.

No, I think that as a,

from a creative standpoint,

no matter what that creative is,

whether it's writing comic books,

drawing comic books,

sitting here as a podcaster,

interviewing guys about comic books.

I think it's,

we're all in that same boat.

And yeah,

Dude, that hits very close to home,

and you nailed it perfectly.

So, yes, absolutely.

So staying within kind of this realm of

philosophical shit right now,

we're dropping some.

We're getting deep in it.

That's right.

So Jason is struggling between these two

worlds.

Wait, no, that's not the one.

It's the next one.

So the philosophical undertone.

I knew I was setting myself up for

the next question,

and I just went to the wrong one.

So what is real?

And how do you balance those heavy ideas

without losing the story's momentum,

which I can go ahead and tell you,

you haven't lost the momentum.

I think you're nailing it perfectly,

but kind of like you're on issue three,

dropping tomorrow on Kickstarter.

How do you not lose the story between

the two?

You know what I'm saying?

Yeah.

What is actually real?

I mean, I know y'all know,

but I don't want to know until the

next part.

So I think that's the core of, again,

as we were developing a story,

as we were trying to figure out,

you're building on this thing of,

and at first, Ignore Myself, I think,

had an idea of which is the real

world, right?

And it didn't, I think at the beginning,

it doesn't necessarily matter which is the

real world initially.

yeah it's as time goes on and these

things these uh these dreams start to

become nightmares that him making a choice

is is the the ultimate um i think

uh piece of the puzzle right and that

we make our own realities at the end

of the day as people and so

you can live in a dream world and

you can, you know, uh,

ignore your day to day stuff,

or you can like try to figure out

a way to make it all work within

your, the life you've chosen.

And I,

so I think that's part of it is

just trying to be true to that idea

of how do we get,

how do you live a life that, um,

just you're doing what you're wanting to

do.

at the same time you're providing for your

family, you're, you're, you're, you know,

with your, you know,

you're able to have friends and all that

good stuff.

And by the same token, you know,

obviously we've put these in these

fantastical situations to try to,

you know,

I think the best sci-fi is always ones

that like you can,

go down to the board,

down to the core and go, Oh,

this is a story about this, you know,

like, yeah,

they're on a distant planet and they're

fighting whatever monster or whatever,

but like really this story is about this.

And I think for us,

that was what we were trying to get

back to it at every point was like,

this story is about choices and uh living

your life to the best that you can

and choosing the life that you want to

live at the end of the day not

having that life thrust upon you and i

think that core line hopefully runs

through the first three issues and when

the fourth issue does come out that it

you know it kind of wraps up a

bow on everything to say

you know, these are the choices he made,

but he made those choices.

Yeah, no,

that's a perfect segue actually into what

I'm about to ask you is that,

do you think readers are meant to choose

which world is real or is ambiguity part

of that message?

I think I hope that like,

there's at least some thought in their

head of like,

I think this might be the real world

or this might be the real world.

Um,

The only thing is I hope they don't

get too caught up in that aspect of

things, you know,

where if they're not right at the end

of the day in their choice,

they don't let that go.

Well, you know, I had it as,

you know,

option A and it was option B.

And so I feel like I'm let down

by the ending.

You know what I mean?

And you know what?

And this is how I took it is.

I want the surprise at the end of

the book.

You know what I'm saying?

Yeah.

So for me,

I'm going to be happy either way.

I mean, in my head, I'm like,

now that I've read issue three,

I kind of want it to be this

other way,

but I wouldn't be mad if it was

this way because he ended things kind of

like the way he wanted to.

So I'm like, but at the same time,

I'm like,

I really just want that surprise at the

end of the stick, you know?

Yeah.

Yeah.

Yeah.

Sure.

Yeah.

So, and again,

I take comic books differently than some

people.

Some people take the stuff literal and

they're straight like, well,

it should have been this.

Right, yeah.

Tell me, make me happy.

You know what I'm saying?

At the end of the day.

So,

let's jump into the actual Kickstarter

campaign itself.

In Our Dreams Await number three goes live

tomorrow.

I'm guessing around lunchtime.

Yeah, that's right.

Right around lunchtime.

Perfect.

So for returning backers,

what can they expect from this issue?

I mean, I know what they can expect,

but let's hear it from your mouth.

So, you know,

like we've been talking about,

this is really the...

Between issue two and issue three is kind

of the moment everything flips.

And that world,

those two worlds that we've started to get

to know and we've seen like the struggles

that he's having,

this is where literally the dream is

starting to become nightmare.

And...

Now,

you've just got to hold on tight to

whatever world he can grasp onto, Jason,

as that thing continues to spiral out of

control and those two worlds keep bleeding

into each other.

And so that's really what issue three is

going to offer.

And hopefully now it's just, you know,

we're on the roller coaster ride and we're

just hanging on.

know i'm on it i am i'm not

gonna i am on that roller coaster in

the front seat because it like the way

everything's starting to collapse into

each other now is like truly a roller

coaster because you you're like now you're

on the end of your seat going i

need these dudes to do number four kind

of quickly because i want to know

you know what i'm saying absolutely and i

hope that some of it was when people

who come back to this project will go

this feel the same way about it because

i was definitely on board like number

three if one and two if people felt

that was kind of slow number three they're

in for a damn roller coaster so and

you know the oh i'm sorry go ahead

no no go ahead you were gonna all

i was gonna say was is you know

the other thing is is and as you

know issue three is done

Right.

So like when we launch tomorrow,

when the campaign's over, you know,

the next day or whatever,

they're going to get digital copies out.

So this isn't a case where you got

to wait for, you know,

months and months and months for us to

finish the thing.

And, you know, even issue four,

we're ninety percent through that, really.

I mean,

you only have a couple of pages left.

So, you know,

we're really we're really excited

to kind of get this story out there.

And I, you know, my hope is,

is that if you were on board for

the first two issues,

obviously I want you to come back.

My hope is,

is that through this and through talking

to people like you who are gracious enough

to have me on that,

like a few other people will pick up

the book and, you know, and go, wow.

Okay.

Yeah.

I want to see where this goes.

I want to see how this ends.

What's the story, you know,

what's the full story.

so i always like to ask whenever i

have people on and they're like this is

your third book of this series is this

a good starting point for people or would

you recommend going back when this kicks

off to get one and two as well

and then enjoy number three yeah i sadly

that's probably the one downside is i do

think you need to get one two and

three together um

You know, and, you know,

the the nice thing is if you're not

one hundred percent sure as far as

physical and you don't want to spend,

you know, for that reward level,

you will have a digital level.

That's a catch up level.

So, you know,

you can definitely be literally the next

question.

Do you have a catch up level for

people?

Yeah.

We definitely do because I know just as

a backer of other Kickstarters that I'll

discover issue three and then I'm like,

oh, well, this looks cool.

I want to read what happened before to

get the full story because I think it

would be very odd, I think,

if you picked up issue three and just

read it cold.

It would be the weirdest thing ever,

I think.

Yeah, I think people would...

That's where I was about to say,

people are going to be like,

what the hell is this?

But no, it would definitely be a trip.

But I would tell you,

number three is a fun trip if that's

what they decided to do.

Yeah, yeah.

So what kind of rewards or exclusives are

you going to be offering on this campaign?

Are you bringing something new to the

table?

Or are you just going to, hey,

we got the digitals and you got the

books, which is cool.

yeah at the core that's kind of where

we don't have a lot of extra flashy

stuff um yeah we obviously have the the

two covers we have the fantasy cover and

then we have the cyberpunk cover that's uh

inspired by a six million dollar man uh

style phenomenal covers but i will say the

fantasy cover won me on this one

Yeah,

we have obviously catch ups where you can

get we still have some copies of the

variant covers from issues one and two.

And then probably the biggest one is just

we have the drawn in a comic.

So that's really when I say issue four

is ninety percent done.

That's kind of the last ten percent that

in the lettering.

Yeah.

To get done.

And so if you have that, you know,

if you wanted to be in the comic,

if you want to put your cat in

the comic as well, you know,

there is that opportunity.

Right.

To do it.

So, yeah.

One last shot.

Yeah, exactly.

So, yeah, we try to, you know,

and I'm still frustrated.

even though this is the third issue and

I've done a couple other Kickstarters,

this is each time I'm trying to figure

out the sweet spots of things.

Right.

And what I'm always looking at other

people's Kickstarters, you know,

they say steal like an artist.

It's like, Oh, they did this thing.

Oh,

I'm going to make a note about that.

You know, does this apply to this?

So,

but you don't want to dig yourself too

whole into a hole too big because at

the end of the day,

you do too much,

your bottom line is going to suffer.

And you want to have enough equity going

forward.

That way, when you do number four,

it's not as stressful on the pocketbook.

Yes, absolutely.

Although I will say, you know, this one,

we're,

we're just looking initially for five

hundred dollars.

Obviously we want more,

but that's the cover of the print cost

really.

And honestly, that's not a bad deal.

Five hundred dollars to print.

that's, that's honestly pretty good.

And who do y'all go through for your

print?

Are you doing someplace local there in

Atlanta or?

No, it's a comic impressions, uh,

was the first two comic or first two

issues went through them.

And, uh, I've, I've had a good,

I mean,

so far I had a good relationship with

them.

You know, uh,

they seem to turn around things really

quickly.

The only,

the only slight question mark and it has

nothing to do with them.

It's we're launching this in October and,

And, you know,

it'll end in early November and then we

have the holidays.

So I've tried to, you know,

as far as like on the rewards,

when thing, you know,

when the actual print copies will be sent

out.

I try to give myself the slight buffer

because I know the holidays are there and

that's going to slow everything down ever

so, you know, so much.

Yeah.

And right now, I think if, you know,

USPS always has their issues.

I know like from one of my previous

interviews I had on,

Greg, Duke Electric, nerd in the sky.

His Canadian postal is currently on strike

again, I believe.

Oh, wow.

So his campaign just closed,

and he can't even get books out of

Canada currently, I think.

Yeah.

So there's always that to think about.

Yes.

Yeah.

And that's, again.

That and the prices have gone up

ridiculously.

Yeah.

Yeah.

So it's all those little things are like

the learning experiences that, you know,

I, I always want to, you know,

it's the thing you always want to under

promise and over.

Over deliver.

Over deliver.

Yeah.

So if I tell you that it's going

to be March before you get your comic

and we get it to you in January,

I think that's only going to be a

positive, you know,

but I want to make sure that I

don't hose myself on.

Yeah.

And people can, it can happen quickly,

you know?

Yeah.

Well, on the Gilded Age,

when we did the trade for that,

we actually had a Chinese printer and it

never occurred to me because I'm an

American and I just live in my own

American world that Chinese New Year is

kind of big over there.

And so literally, just like literally,

yeah, they the whole month basically.

And the books were ready to be shipped.

but they,

because they basically took the month off,

they didn't get to the port.

And I just, again,

luckily I'd added some buffer in there,

but it ate all the buffer up,

you know?

So, um, and it just wasn't on my,

it was never on my list of things.

Like I need to make sure that this

is done before this date, you know?

Yeah.

And, and,

Again, that goes back to lessons learned.

And do you have any advice for anybody?

You're kind of a...

You're getting up there into the semi-pros

of Kickstarters now.

This is your fourth one going in.

Sure.

Like...

Do you have any good advice for guys

who are considering going to Kickstarter

route?

Because I know a lot of people kick

this can and it seems like I see

these great concepts pop up online,

whether it be Instagram or Facebook,

and I love their concept,

but they're like, well, I'm pitching it.

Like, dude, why are you pitching it?

Go to the Kickstarter and just do it.

Yeah.

Let people fund your project.

Sell your product to people.

And I know that's really hard for some

people to do.

But what advice do you have for people

who are kind of on the edge of

their seat?

Like,

do I want to do a Kickstarter or

do I still want to kind of kick

this to people and see what they say?

Yeah.

So one thing I would say, but,

you know,

I don't think this is an absolute.

It's an absolute for me as best as

I can make it.

is I want to have the project done

before I actually launch the Kickstarter.

And the big reason is the stress.

You already have stress doing the

Kickstarter.

You always have the imposter syndrome guy

sitting on your shoulder.

The last thing I need is then

know and i'm not trying to blame anybody

but what if the printer you know takes

an extra month to get the thing what

if the the artist you know those last

couple of pages it takes an extra few

weeks to get in you know these these

things can snowball on you and i don't

want to be sitting there thinking i'm

letting down the backers because again at

the end of the day i'm the one

launching it it's my project you know

And there has to be a trust that

you build up hopefully between you and the

backers because they're giving you money

for something they haven't seen, you know,

necessarily seen,

especially if it's your first thing.

So that would probably be my number one

thing.

And I would highly suggest it for anybody.

And then the other thing kind of goes

back to what you're saying, though.

Don't pitch it.

Let's do it.

you know,

like the difference between somebody who

has written some something and somebody

who has not written something is the

words, the end basically on the, you know,

at the end of the page.

Right.

So like,

So many times, especially early on,

it was like,

I can't do it for whatever reason.

And some of them are legit, right?

Obviously,

money at the end of the day is

one of the biggest things.

Yes, money and time.

Yes.

But if you can find a way, heck,

if you could figure out a way to

get the first five pages and a cover

done, right?

Can you can you scrounge up enough money

for that?

And then maybe that's what you take.

Now, again,

that goes against the having the whole

thing done.

But, you know,

maybe you can figure out if I had

a five hundred dollars,

I could get the rest of this done.

If I had a thousand dollars, you know.

Yeah.

How much blood and sweat are you willing

to put into it?

You know, as well.

Right.

At the end of the day, you know,

if you're going to be going into it

and you're not you have, you know.

not putting nobody on blast i would never

do that but if you're coming into it

and you got half a book and a

freaking banging cover and you need that

that kickstarter to really finish that

book start that kickstarter yeah i i i'm

interviewing a guy in two weeks that's the

boat he's in and i'm hoping what we're

bringing to the table when he comes to

the table hey i've read what he's got

amazing stuff like i'm like dude yeah i'm

glad you're doing the kit started to get

this out because it's it's a a cool

spin on a superhero character that i

really like i was like this is new

it's a little different yeah i'm like i'm

glad you're going this route because you

need to get this finished

The story's done.

It's just the art that he needs to

get done.

So the Kickstarter is going to help him

get the art done and get that book

out to people.

And I'm just like, dude,

I love this concept.

So again,

we'll talk to him in like two weeks,

but he's one of, like you just said,

he's one of those guys where he's got

a great initial concept.

The half of the book is done.

The art looks great.

The story is great.

And yeah,

Jump into that Kickstarter, get it funded,

and get it done.

Yeah.

No better time than the present.

Yep.

Get her done.

Yep.

So.

I'm going to ask,

how important has the community been,

like reviewers and podcaster fans,

been to your success with these books?

I know when you initially emailed me,

you were like, hey,

would you do a review?

And I'm like, dude,

I do podcasts and I give you the

review, basically.

And I've done that for what,

an hour now?

Yeah, absolutely.

I've sung the praises of the book.

And yeah,

I could type you out a review,

but I think this is more personal.

No, I think you're absolutely.

And like I said, you know,

I'm dipping my toe into the podcast side

of things, trying to get these, you know,

conversations going.

But, you know, I feel like every,

every person that's taken the time to do

a review to even do some kind of

just spotlight, you know, share the link.

I mean, every single one of those,

you know, whether I can directly measure,

oh, that's definitely a sale, you know, I,

you know, I don't necessarily know,

but

Again,

my hope is that to get this in

front of people,

to get them to read it,

to get them to buy in and that

they'll be excited when issue four drops

next year and kind of go that way.

Because at the end of the day,

Ag and I are doing this because we

love comics.

We love the story.

And we want other people to like and,

you know, love the thing that we've made,

which is always a weird thing to say.

But like, no, but it's not, though.

You want to share your passion with

everybody around you with what you've

done.

And y'all put together this phenomenal

story that and to be fair to everybody

out there right now.

Very few people have done this kind of

story and executed it to the level that

y'all have executed it at.

Well, I appreciate that.

Those are very kind words.

And that's, you know, that's what we hope,

right?

Like,

we hope that somebody reads the story,

they really enjoy it.

And, you know,

And if that happens and at the end

of the day, they say, hey, you know,

this was something that moved me or

touched me or, you know, whatever.

That's kind of the goal.

And so, you know,

getting back to the original question,

any person that has that has shared it

in some way or or put even the

tiniest spotlight on the book.

I mean, I you know.

If any of them came to me,

I would do whatever I could to help

them out.

So sharing things, putting the word out,

I feel like that's the part of the

community that I try to do whenever I

can.

And certainly during the course of the

Kickstarter,

occasionally doing an update that says,

hey, by the way,

there's this thing over here too that you

might like.

because so that's literally what i do as

your kickstarter is going as i see your

post come across social media i

immediately re-blog it or reshare it or

whatever you want to call it yeah and

then i add it to my story like

hey check this book out you know and

like us i told you before we went

on air is if you're on my podcast

you you've a

You're welcome because you're now a member

of the Council of Nerds.

And B, if I don't like this shit,

it's not coming on here.

You know what I'm saying?

No, fair enough.

I mean, again, we all have limited time,

right?

So that's why I totally appreciate it too.

You're getting my seal of approval at the

end of the podcast.

You know what I'm saying?

So, I mean, for me,

I've never said no because I've never been

delivered a product or a project where I

was just like,

might want to rethink this one i've never

had that happen yet i'm sure it's going

to it's bound to happen someday but i've

been very lucky and very blessed in the

fact that when people present me things

either it's new and i love the concept

or it's just so well done that how

can i say no to it right yeah

or you're an established individual within

your what you're doing you know and i'm

like

Let's feature them.

And that's what we're doing here tonight

with you, John.

But we're going to start wrapping this up.

But since it's October,

spooky season is upon us.

We're going to end this tonight with some

spooky twist before we let you plug your

social media.

And since In Our Dreams Awake is all

about dreams,

do you believe dreams can predict the

future or reveal truths about us?

a thousand percent yes absolutely like uh

i mean i feel like everybody has that

story of uh an aunt or a grandmother

or somebody who had some dream that you

know kind of predicted something

and not necessarily always bad but a lot

of times those stories are like i i

had this thing and then it turned out

this person was sick with the flu and

you know or whatever um yeah and so

i've i have you know there's been a

couple of those in uh my family tree

that i feel like uh makes me think

it makes me think it has to be

true.

And I kind of want to live in

a world where it's true,

even if it's not true.

Right.

A hundred percent.

A hundred percent.

Everybody's got that one on in their

family that you swear to God is a

witch.

Absolutely.

I said, which with the W people,

I heard it.

I heard it.

I can back.

Everybody's got one of those other ants.

That's one of those two other ones too.

So,

so now the weirdest dream you've ever had.

And not those ones from your teenage

years, John.

No, no.

This is going to sound so bizarre,

but dreams are like that.

That's the point.

I think the weirdest dream I ever had

was when I was very young,

it was like a recurring nightmare that

really didn't make any sense,

but it was numbers.

I don't know,

like from the old Sesame Street style

where they were like puppets or Muppets.

Yes, yes.

And they were basically like lemmings

going off a cliff.

And that was like the big part of

the dream was I couldn't stop them from

doing this.

And, you know,

it's I don't know if that was I

was on my way for my engineering degree,

even at like five or six.

But that number is in the head.

I mean, that's, you know,

over forty years ago.

And it's still in my brain that like

that was something that kind of my my

youth just I don't know.

I don't want to say scarred me,

but it was just a recurring little

nightmare.

No, never scarred me, too.

But it was my algebra teacher.

But how about you?

Do you have a recurring something like

that?

For me,

it would be like I always had the

fallen dream where you're just fallen.

Oh, yeah.

Yeah.

And it always would happen like in

different ways.

Like I was spinning on the merry-go-round

really fast and I fell off and I

just kept falling.

And for me,

it was always that that concept there.

Yeah.

But it was the only thing that was

like the same every time is that I

was fallen and I would never stop falling

and then I would just wake up.

But I always got to the fall differently

every single time.

Right.

So whether I accidentally fell off a cliff

or I was hiking and I fell into

a cave is just the I would just

keep falling.

So that was for mine.

And I know that's weird.

And I'm sure other people have one similar

to it.

But for me, it was always the fall.

And how I got to the fall was

always different.

So Jason Byron is our main character in

In Our Dreams Awake.

If he had a Halloween costume,

what would he be?

Well, I think that...

In some weird ways,

he's kind of wearing them in the dreams.

But which one is the costume?

I know.

I feel like on the fantasy side,

he would probably go as a Magi.

and dress up and maybe try to live

that life for a hot you know minute

um with the uh with jason and the

cyberpunk i mean he'd have to like go

as a fish alien i mean that way

you know he can't pull off the cat

so yeah yeah no he's too tall for

that but like yeah i think going as

a fish alien i like it i like

it so

To wrap up our Halloween Twisted questions

here,

what is your all-time favorite horror,

sci-fi,

or fantasy story that really inspired you

to write novels and to write comic books?

You can have more than one.

Yeah.

So I think that one of my all-time

favorites just of the horror genre is

Scream.

And I love the fact that they

deconstructed the whole horror genre while

still being very true to all of it

as well.

And I think that was one of those

movies when I watched it,

I think opened my eyes to like, oh,

you can do you can look at things

from a different angle than everybody

else.

And that's a good thing, just because,

you know,

so many times it's very easy to just

do the same thing as everybody else.

I feel like that's one of those that

kind of keyed off.

And then the other thing would be Stephen

King's The Dark Tower.

which just periodically... Not the book.

The book, not the TV show.

The movie was horrible.

No,

and I haven't watched that because my

brother basically said, shook his head.

It was done horribly.

Great concept,

but they just didn't do it right.

Yeah, the series itself,

the book series itself, I mean,

it's one of those things where after you

read a book, you go...

both in a good and a bad way.

It's like, why am I even doing this?

Should I break my fingers?

Cause I can't write that.

But it also, again,

gives you something to aspire to.

It really does.

And what's so great about that series is

you can go from that series into branches

to all his other books.

And what's really cool about it is his

son's books can fit into all of it

as well.

Yeah.

Yeah.

I,

and what's funny is I've only done really

the dark tower and a couple of the

other books that he's written,

but I have read horns by Joe Hill

and I've read some of Joe Hill shorts.

So probably like,

I know they did the TV series based

off of it, but I don't think it,

even that it was, it was good,

but it didn't do the book justice.

Yeah.

That's definitely one on my,

my short list that I need to get

to reading.

Okay.

But yeah,

I think those are probably two of the

keys.

I mean, everything I read,

I try to take in and see how

it affects me or whatever.

Now, follow up to the Scream.

Where should they have stopped?

Well, weirdly,

I'm excited about the new one that's

coming out next year.

Yeah, I thought this last one was like...

excellent in a lot of ways that it

just, it hit me just right.

Like I didn't see it when it came

out.

It was probably six months later because I

kind of felt, maybe I felt like, okay,

we've kind of done this.

And then I watched it.

I was like, oh wow.

Okay.

Like y'all really stepped it up.

So if I was going to stop it,

I would probably say though after four and

the reason for that.

Yeah.

The reason I say four is

And this is where I want the alternate

ending to be the thing where spoiler alert

for a twenty year old movie.

She the the cousin or whatever that's

basically behind everything.

I want to see a movie where she

got away with it.

I mean,

how cool would it have been screen five

to just feature her in this weird like

celebrity thing?

And then kind of what they did with

they tried to go back and do that

with Saw.

yeah yeah a little bit like that yeah

but that i i feel like both it

was a missed opportunity but i still

really enjoyed the fourth one as well so

i mean i've watched them all it's one

of those where i'm like i would have

probably stopped at three yeah fair but

let's close it out john where can

everybody find you in go

uh so my website is john r mcguire.com

so i try to post for his newsletter

yes absolutely i try to write a weekly

blog on there um and uh try to

post any of my work there so if

you happen to like anything you can

definitely go and purchase it uh let's

let's cheat over here to see

what the actual other things i'm on x

uh under john mcguire i'm on blue sky

uh john mcguire and then instagram john

mcguire forty um i'm a little slacker on

instagram but i'm trying to get better i'm

trying to get better about posting things

because i do i am trying to do

a visual medium so it makes the most

sense to be you know more active on

there

To be fair to Instagram is where I

do a lot of my sharing for the

Kickstarters and stuff like that.

I do a lot on Blue Sky as

well if people are on Blue Sky.

But you have to really dig on Blue

Sky to find it.

But Instagram is like right in my face.

Yeah, absolutely.

And that's pretty much it.

John,

I can't thank you enough for coming on

In Our Dreams Awake, y'all.

Phenomenal, phenomenal book.

Drops tomorrow on Kickstarter at

lunchtime.

Go give it some support.

It's a phenomenal, phenomenal book.

If you're into dreams and twisted tales

where it's the same dream,

total two different ways,

but done very eloquently,

and it's tremendous.

It's...

If you want something different to read,

I highly,

highly recommend In Our Dreams Awake.

And on top of everything, John McGuire,

In Our Dreams Awake,

we'll throw in Egg too because he's a

part of this whole thing and all the

artists and everybody else,

is USDN approved.

Awesome.

So there it is.

And John, again,

welcome to the Council of Nerds.

And with that, everybody,

we'll see you back in a couple of

weeks.

Unless I get another interview lined up,

which maybe I will.

With that, everybody, y'all be good.

And we are out of here.

Thank you again.

We're going to do the outro and then

we'll.