Comics NYX returns!

Specter313

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NYX: NO WAY HOME #1 (of 6)
Written by MARJORIE LIU
Penciled by KALMAN ANDRASOFSZKY
Cover by ALINA URUSOV
Variant cover by JO CHEN
There’s no place like home"just ask young mutant KIDEN NIXON. She’s survived the hard streets of Manhattan, and she’s built a home"and a family"for herself, with her friends TATIANA, BOBBY SOUL and his LI’L BRO. But with fewer than 200 mutants left on the planet, Kiden’s become a target"and when somebody strikes at one of her friends, Kiden’s going to find out just how much farther she can fall! Don’t miss the breathtaking return of this beloved series, by NEW YORK TIMES best-selling writer MARJORIE LIU (the DIRK & STEELE SERIES) with stunning art by KALMAN ANDRASOFSZKY!
Plus"a special behind-the-scenes gallery!
 
is this something worth getting excited over? Never read the first series
 
only if Kidden or whatever her name is isnt the only one with powers in thsi book..if she is then blah...oh and this is the book that gave us X-23...yay....
 
is this something worth getting excited over? Never read the first series
The colors, Duke! THE COLORS! No, The first series was cool. It left an open ended ending,
 
hmmm.. while i did like NYX, part of me thinks they should have just moved Kidden into one of the other books. Kidden+X-23 were the only interesting parts of this book. The other characters all seemed a littlle.. Meh! Hopefully theyl get more fleshed out.
 
hmmm.. while i did like NYX, part of me thinks they should have just moved Kidden into one of the other books. Kidden+X-23 were the only interesting parts of this book. The other characters all seemed a littlle.. Meh! Hopefully theyl get more fleshed out.
I agree with this, though I'd be happy to keep reading this. I just hope this thing comes out on time, especially if they decide to make it an ongoing. I think NYX would have done well if it hadn't kept coming out so late.....
 
are they even mutants?

Yep.

Kiden Nixon - can enter a timestream she calls "no-time" where she is apparently moving faster than everything else and the only way to get out of it is to touch someone else, but since she is moving faster than everyone else, she has to be careful how she does it, as once she just poked someone's arm and broke it.

Catiana - takes on the attributes of the blood of any animal she comes in contact with, think Wolfsbane or maybe even a more human looking version of Catseye, only she just needs animal blood to activate it.

Felon - can project his consciousness into a person and control them, kinda like Karma.
 
So none of these kids were depowered on M day? I had thought that they might have been...
 
Well, apparently not. I know Kiden and Catiana were confirmed in the 198 Files thing to still have their powers.
 
I only glanced at the 198 files. I had taken for granted the kids here were depowered because we never heard form them again until now. :(
 
I know. I was excited to see them in the files cause it made me think that there was something planned for them, but it took forever until now for it to happen.
 
I'm just glad it did. I really enjoyed the first series and was really disappointed that that "ongoing" was cut so short.
 
Yep.

Kiden Nixon - can enter a timestream she calls "no-time" where she is apparently moving faster than everything else and the only way to get out of it is to touch someone else, but since she is moving faster than everyone else, she has to be careful how she does it, as once she just poked someone's arm and broke it.

Catiana - takes on the attributes of the blood of any animal she comes in contact with, think Wolfsbane or maybe even a more human looking version of Catseye, only she just needs animal blood to activate it.

Felon - can project his consciousness into a person and control them, kinda like Karma.

is it Catiana or Tatiana? also who is Felon? and who are BOBBY SOUL and his LI’L BRO
 
Tatiana = Catiana, it's just her mutant name. Same with Bobby Soul = Felon, and his Lil bro is his younger brother who, if I remember right, might have a power too.
 
Over four years ago, writer Joe Quesada and artist Josh Middleton introduced readers to a new, unique corner of the mutant world. There weren’t gigantic 10 on 10 battles against super-villains in this world. Instead, there were a few kids trying desperately to make their way. It was presented with a style that hadn’t really been seen in so-called “mainstream” comics; a style that has since exploded, and can be seen all over the stands. Now, three years since that series’ conclusion, novelist Marjorie Liu is hitting the comics world with new tales of Kiden and her friends. We spoke with Liu and editor John Barber about the past, present, and future of NYX and what we can expect come August.

Newsarama: Majorie, your first work with Marvel was on the novel, X-Men: Dark Mirror. How did that lead to you working on NYX?

Marjorie Liu: It was a foot in the door, more than anything else. It gave me an excuse to march up to Ruwan Jayatilleke (Vice President of Development) at New York Comic Con and give him my card. He had liked my work on X-Men: Dark Mirror, and a couple weeks after the convention we started talking about the possibility of doing more -- specifically, comic book work. It took about three years of going back and forth, but here I am!

NRAMA: Your novels seem to focus on two major themes –Romance, and the Paranormal. Will readers see those themes enter into the series?

ML: I can't see there being much romance in these books, but as Kiden's dad is a ghost -- and he's a rather important part of the current story line -- the paranormal is definitely going to be part of the series.

NRAMA: How is writing for comics different from writing novels? Was the transition easy to make?

ML: Not easy -- but not as difficult as I thought, either. Storytelling is storytelling, whether you're writing a comic or novel. It's the format that makes things trickier. When you write a novel, you plow straight through and everything works together in an easy mess. But with a comic book script, you have to separate dialogue and description into two distinct parts, and it's a very different kind of effort. Once you get used to it, though, it's a lot of fun. I've been lucky to have a lot of support from my editor, John Barber, and NYX's artist, Kalman Andrasokszky.

NRAMA: How does your law degree affect your writing? Do you feel that education creeps into your stories at all?

ML: I'm certain it does, if nothing else because when you study the law, you also study the human condition -- in a distant, highly compartmentalized sort of way.

NRAMA: You’re a reported fan of the first volume of NYX. How long have you been reading comics?

ML: Since college, so...about eleven years? There was a comic book shop down the street from my school (here's a shout-out to Powerhouse Comics in Appleton, Wisconsin), and it was the first time I ever had easy access to comics. I had watched the X-Men cartoon before that -- found fan-fiction on the internet -- and suddenly got the urge to check out actual comic books, for real. I never looked back.

NRAMA: The first series was grounded in reality much moreso than most mutant books. Is that something you’re still shooting for here? What will be the general tone of the book?

ML: I always try to shoot for reality in everything I do, even if I'm writing about the crazy and fantastic -- and the first series was indeed very gritty, very dark. This one is, too, but the difference is that Kiden and her friends have matured slightly. It's not enough for Kiden to party anymore. She's got friends she feels responsible for, a desire to live off the street and keep a roof over her head. Not that she still isn't spunky and smart and fun -- but her priorities have changed somewhat. I would say that describes the general tone of the book, as well. These kids have formed a unit since the first run of the series, and everything they do will be about preserving the life they've built together as a disparate little family. They still want to be kids, but the world is making them grow up fast.

NRAMA: Tell us about the characters we’ll be seeing. There are some familiar faces on the cover to issue 1…

ML: All the old characters are back! Kiden, Bobby, Tatiana, Lil'Bro...even Cameron Palmer. I kept everyone, because I loved them all so much, and I still felt they had stories to tell, questions to answer. There will be some new faces, but they won't be friendly.

NRAMA: District X, or Mutant Town, was just set ablaze in the pages of X-Factor. Have Kiden and company set up residence elsewhere?

ML: Yes. They're living around regular people, doing the same things as everyone else -- trying to survive, make ends meet, have a little fun when they can.

NRAMA: Where are the kids, storywise, in relation to the first volume? How much time has passed since that initial story?

ML: Hard question. I would say at least six months to a year. Time has always seemed a bit intangible when it comes to comics, at least for me, but they've had enough time to grow into a routine, and get comfortable with each other and their new lives.

NRAMA: This book, and these characters, were co-created by the E-i-C of Marvel Comics, Joe Quesada. Does that increase the pressure of a writing assignment like this?

ML: To be honest, I haven't thought about it. I care about and respect the characters very much. That alone puts enough pressure on me!

NRAMA: Have you enjoyed your first comics experience so far? Any other projects lined up, or that you’re dreaming of?

ML: Oh, this has been a dream come true. I've wanted to write for Marvel since I brought home my first stack of X-Men comics, all those years ago. And yes, there are some other projects lined up. And some I'm dreaming of. 'Nuff said!

NRAMA: John, in August, it’ll have been almost exactly 3 years since the last issue of Volume 1 of NYX. Why bring it back now?

John Barber: We always felt that NYX is a book where the only reason to even DO it, is that we have an exciting take on it. And Marjorie’s understanding of the characters provided just that take. Once Marjorie came on-board, it was really just a matter of waiting until ]Messiah CompleX laid down the ground rules for the X-books. Just like X-Force, this book has a unique place in the world of X, and an utterly distinct feel to it.

NRAMA: Seeing that it has been so long, is this story being designed with new readers in mind, or fans of the first series, or both?

JB: Both, absolutely! I think it’s important that any story arc should work for new readers, really. But especially with something like this, where (as you say) it’s been 3 years since we checked in with these kids, in a very real way, EVERYBODY’S a new reader. We’re definitely treating this as a jumping-on point. And to be brutally honest, I think the original NYX series had shed some of it’s readers over the time it took to actually conclude. So, to anybody that jumped off, here’s a great chance to jump back on!
All that said, if you’re already invested in these characters, their lives are DEFINITELY moving forward in this series, so you won’t want to miss this next chapter in their lives.

NRAMA: The return of NYX was teased at Wizard World LA 2007. Is this the pitch that was being teased then?

JB: Yeah, absolutely. Wait, you mean at a Marvel panel, right? DC wasn’t teasing an NYX series, were they?

NRAMA: How was this creative team chosen? They aren’t exactly household names to the average comic reader (yet)…

JB: Marjorie had written an X-Men novel and got in touch with Ruwan Jayatilleke here at Marvel, who was (for a while) overseeing all the Marvel novels that were coming out, but who was also reaching out to creators from other mediums.

I guess they got to talking, and Marjorie wrote a spec script for NYX, kinda like they do with TV shows—not a script that was actually expected to run, but something that showed how she’d write and how she’d handle the characters. Joe Quesada and Axel Alonso loved it, and got the ball rolling. When I moved into the X-Office from the Ultimate books, Axel handed the editorial reigns to me, and at first I had no idea what to expect…Marjorie’s a New York Times bestselling author, but I gotta admit, I hadn’t read any of her books. We talked for a while, and she seemed like she might be really good—then she turned in the first script, and I KNEW she was good. It really floored me.

Kalman Andrasofszky, I knew from working with on the Legion of Monsters series, which, while it, uh, wasn’t exactly a sales powerhouse, was one of the best series I ever worked on. He was actually the one person on that book that I didn’t know before going in. Chris Allo, here at Marvel, suggested him. And Kalman did an amazing job on the “Satanna” story. So when we were figuring out NYX, we knew we needed somebody with a unique look to do the art, and Kalman fit the bill. Then, when he actually started drawing it, he went and proved he was an even better artist than I thought he was. I’m pretty sure he’ll be a household name pretty soon…

And Kalman also suggested John Rauch for the coloring. I’d worked with John before on some Ultimate stuff, but nothing prepared me for what he started doing on this series. He’s really great, and adds a very important part to the creative team. Joe Caramagna, too, on letters, is trying some very unique things! Everybody’s pulling out all the stops.

NRAMA: This is being solicited as a six issue mini-series; is there a chance for more, if well received?

JB: Absolutely. The 6 issues will really stand together on their own, but there are a lot more stories to tell.

NRAMA: Similar to what we asked Marjorie, will the general style and tone from the first series remain here?

JB: We’re trying to push things in the direction of this being as stylish a book as the first series was. It’s still about the same mutant teenagers in the dark underbelly of Manhattan. A little time has passed, but Kiden and Tatiana and Bobby Soul and Lil’ Bro are all still here. The tone remains pretty dark. We’re definitely not giving all the kids spandex and super-hero names. That said, the landscape of mutantkind has really changed. In the first series, these kids were all just another bunch of mutants out of a population of millions. Now, those four represent more than 2% of the total number of mutants on Earth. If anything, there’s even more at stake. Not just their survival, but the survival of the entire species.

NRAMA: What’s one moment from the book that’s blown you away as the scripts have come in?

JB: I think the end of issue #2. I don’t want to give it away, but in quick succession two very exciting things happen to Tatiana. One shows Marjorie’s thinking outside the box about how these kids work, how they think, and how their powers work, both physically and emotionally. The second shows that in Marjorie’s world, nothing is sacred and nobody is safe…

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http://forum.newsarama.com/showthread.php?t=158386
 
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NYX: NO WAY HOME #2 (of 6)
Written by MARJORIE LIU
Penciled by KALMAN ANDRASOFSKY
Cover by ALINA URUSOV
Kiden, Tatiana, Bobby Soul, and Lil’ Bro never had an easy life. But when someone kidnaps their would-be mentor, the only person who ever lifted a finger on their behalf, this is when the NYX learn what they’re really made of. Will they stand together…or fall apart? All this, plus a special section of behind-the-scenes bonus material and never-before-seen art!
40 PGS./Parental Advisory …$3.99
 
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NYX: NO WAY HOME #3 (of 6)
Written by MARJORIE LIU
Penciled by KALMAN ANDRASOFSKY
Cover by ALINA URUSOV
The only adult Kiden Nixon ever trusted was her dad"his guidance helped her survive life on the streets. Only one problem: Nick Nixon was killed years ago. Now, at her darkest hour, Kiden has to ask herself if she can trust this voice from the afterlife…or if he has a larger role in the dangerous game she’s trapped in. All this plus a special behind-the-scenes section featuring sketches and never-before-seen material!
40 PGS./Parental Advisory …$3.99
 
Protecting a world that fears and hates them isn’t a priority for all of the Marvel Universe’s remaining mutants. Some have to use their special abilities simply to protect themselves or fight for necessities as basic as food and shelter. That’s the status quo for Kiden Nixon, Tatiana Caban and Bobby Soul, the cast of “NYX.” The adventures of the three hard luck mutants continue this week in issue #1 of the new six-issue miniseries “NYX: No Way Home” by “Dirk & Steele” novelist Marjorie Liu and illustrator Kalman Andrasofszky (“Legion of Monsters: Satana”). CBR News spoke with Liu about her plans for Marvel’s most downtrodden mutants.

In the original “NYX” series by Joe Quesada and Josh Middleton, readers learned how Kiden Nixon ended up on the streets. When she was just a girl, Kiden witnessed the murder of her police officer father. The shock and trauma resulted in Kiden growing into a very troubled teenager. When an incident with her emerging mutant power -- the ability to alter the speed at which she moves through time -- resulted in one of her teachers getting injured, Kiden took to the streets. It was there where the ghost of her father led Kidden to future X-Force member X-23 and Tatiana Caban --AKA Catiana-- a mutant with the ability to shapeshift into any animal whose blood she touches, and Bobby Soul -- AKA Felon -- whose mutant ability allowed him to project his conscious into others’ bodies and take control of them.

When “No Way Home” begins, X-23 is no longer part of Kiden, Tatiana and Bobby’s circle but in some ways life is pretty good for the typically downbeat trio. “All the kids are living under the same roof, pooling their resources to pay for rent and food,” Marjorie Liu told CBR News. “It’s a good arrangement -- one that Bobby and Kiden probably appreciate just a little more than Tatiana, who never thought she would have to live one step away from the streets.”

Liu sees Kiden as someone who can’t help but be herself 100 percent of the time. “Which isn't to say that she doesn't hold back her feelings -- she's hiding a lot of grief and fear -- but she's no fake, either,” the writer remarked. “She does not try to fit in. She does not say what she thinks people want to hear. She speaks the truth as she feels it, good or bad, and she carves her own path -- whether or not anyone is there to back her up. She's tough, smart, stubborn -- but not hard. Still innocent, in her own way. A dreamer. Which, when times get tough, can mean the difference between mere survival, and actually living. I suppose that’s a lot of adjectives to throw at one character, but she’s very complex -- at least, in my mind.

“Having said that, though, Kiden's weaknesses run parallel to her strength: she is confident enough to be herself, but not confident enough to believe that who she is might be worthy of absolute love. She has major abandonment issues. And for good reason.”

Kiden has done some growing up since readers last saw her. “She’s taken a more practical approach to survival -- it’s not enough to party or take drugs anymore,” Liu explained. “She feels responsible for her friends. And she doesn’t want to disappoint the ghost of her father, who worked from beyond the grave to bring her into the lives of Bobby and Tatiana.”

Bobby is another character who’s had to mature, both for his sake and his little brother, who has no one else to care for him. “He came from a home that was never entirely safe -- physically and mentally -- and it was up to him to take care of things, to be in control,” Liu said. “He's still in control. Always. And deep down, he's tired of it. He would like to let loose, and be a kid 00 but he’s too responsible. Or at least, he’s responsible now. He’s seen the consequences of what happens when he’s not careful, because for a time he was an addict -- addicted to using his powers of possession as a means of escaping his life. He would flee into other people -- the rich, the famous -- and be someone else for a time. Soak up their fame and comfort, their money and superficial power. The cost, though, would be his memories -- and the more he possesses others, the steeper that price. Until he’s reached a point where he fears that any more jumps into other people will result in permanent amnesia. For his brother’s sake, he can’t allow that.”

When “NYX: No Way Home” kicks off, Tatiana is probably the most stable of the book’s mutant protagonists. “Even though her home life wasn’t great, before the original run of ‘NYX’ she had a family to back her up -- occasionally -- and she enjoyed the structure and promise of a better life that school offered,” Liu said. “Tatiana believes in honesty and hard work. She doesn’t like to bend the rules. She is afraid of being in trouble. And ever since she discovered she’s a mutant -- and joined up with Kiden and Bobby -- trouble is all she’s been in. That doesn’t mean she wants to leave them, though. She’s more afraid of being alone than living on the edge, and the dubious structure that Kiden and Bobby offer by their presence is something that Tatiana needs mentally to survive.

“All of which creates a very interesting dynamic between the kids,” Liu added. “They all like each other, but each has a different and very compelling reason for sticking around -- reasons that outweigh personal affection. There’s no more powerful motivator than survival.”

The “NYX” cast has become a family. They’ve developed routines and grown comfortable in their ways. And then it’s all taken away. “Everything they’ve worked to create for themselves is stolen, and they have to start over. Except now they’re being hunted,” Liu explained. “And the stress of that, and the reason **why** their lives are being methodically destroyed, will send them on a new and much darker path than anything they might have imagined for themselves.”

The original “NYX” took place before “House of M” and M-Day, the vast depowering of most of the Marvel Universe’s mutants, something that didn’t affect Kiden, Bobby or Tatiana. And it’s the trio’s retention of their mutant abilities that puts them in danger in “No Way Home.” “The best way to describe the obstacles facing them is the two basic questions I asked myself when thinking about this storyline,” Liu explained. “First, what happens now that mutants are almost extinct? Should mutant powers be feared -- or should they be looked at as a limited and therefore valuable resource? In other words, commodities to be sought after? By any means necessary?

“Second, how do priorities change when you’ve got nothing -- and when what little you do have, is ripped away from you? Everything the kids have built for themselves is going to be stolen from them -- brutally -- until all they have left are each other. And if you want to talk obstacles, what happens internally and between themselves will either make or break them all.”

Kiden and her friends won’t be completely alone in “No Way Home.” In the original “NYX,” the ghost of Kiden’s father would often show up and offer her cryptic hints and direction. “I don't think the appearance of her father was ever really explained,” Liu said. “So, I'm taking it upon myself to do so in this six-issue run. Kiden's father plays a pivotal role in 'No Way Home' -- and his motivations, I promise, will be answered completely by the end of issue six.”

Cameron Palmer, Kiden’s former teacher who assisted her in the original “NYX,” is the other major returning supporting cast member in “No Way Home.” “There are, of course, fresh supporting characters -- if you count the bad guys as support -- but their sophistication and motives will be totally beyond Kiden and her friends,” Liu stated. “Even up until the last page.”

The tone of “No Way Home” is gritty and often times brutal. “Bad things happen,” Liu said. “Which is vague, I know, but ugliness is never pretty to write about. Even children with superpowers are vulnerable to the abuses of adults. What makes it worse is when that abuse comes from someone you trust.”

Liu is very happy to be collaborating with Kalman Andrasofszky on “No Way Home.” “I'm not much of a gusher, but Kalman has been fantastic to work with. Not only is his art delightfully perfect for the story, but he also gets what I'm trying to do,” she said. “Working with someone who is on the same wavelength has made the experience one in a million.”

When Marvel offered Liu the chance to write a new “NYX” series, she eagerly accepted. The writer has been reading comics for 12 years and has fond memories of the original “NYX.” “I remember, very specifically, that I was in law school at the time, and totally enchanted by the art and storyline,” Liu stated. “I loved how messed up all the kids were -- and yet, despite their circumstances, how heroic and compassionate they managed to be. Flawed, tragic, and lovely -- that was how I saw Kiden and the others. And that’s how I still see them.”

“No Way Home” isn’t the first time Liu has written mutant characters. The writer earned her “NYX” assignment on the strength of her 2005 novel, “Dark Mirror,” which starred the X-Men. “I'm a lucky girl. Four years ago I mentioned to my agent that I was a huge comic book fan -- and she happened to know an editor at Pocket who was looking for authors to participate in a new line of prose novels for Marvel,” Liu explained. “I managed to snag the first X-Men slot -- and went totally over the moon. Just so happened, too, that the story was well-received at Marvel -- and because of that, I gathered up the courage to broach the topic of doing more work for them. That conversation -- after several years of going back and forth -- eventually led to ‘NYX.’”

“NYX: No Way Home” is Liu’s first comic book gig but it won’t be her last. “This has been a wonderful experience. Honestly, I didn’t know what to expect when I first jumped into this venture, but everything I have seen has merely reinforced the fact that this is a great profession to be part of,” Liu said. “I love writing -- obviously -- and I love learning new methods of storytelling -- and so I feel like a sponge at the moment, simply soaking up everything Marvel has to offer. And yes, I would love to tackle some other characters. Or write something fresh and new from my own mind. We’ll see what happens.”


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Marjorie Liu at Comic-Con International 2008


http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=article&id=17625
 
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NYX: NO WAY HOME #4 (of 6)
Written by MARJORIE LIU
Penciled by KALMAN
ANDRASOFSKY
Cover by ALINA URUSOV
All Kiden and her friends wanted was to find their missing mentor. But that was before one of their own was shot and the authorities were hunting for them. Without clues, without direction, without hope, will Bobby and Tatiana stand by Kiden in her desperate search...or will they teach her that grownups aren't the only people who can let you down?
40 PGS./Parental Advisory ...$3.99
 


NYX: No Way Home #3 will arrive in stores on Oct. 15 from Marvel Comics. The issue is written by Marjorie Liu, with art by Kalman Andrasofsky and a cover by Alina Urusov.

Here's how Marvel describes the issue:

"The only adult Kiden Nixon ever trusted was her dad -- his guidance helped her survive life on the streets. Only one problem: Nick Nixon was killed years ago. Now, at her darkest hour, Kiden has to ask herself if she can trust this voice from the afterlife...or if he has a larger role in the dangerous game she's trapped in. All this plus a special behind-the-scenes section featuring sketches and never-before-seen material!"
NYX: No Way Home #3 will be 40 pages and will cost $3.99




 
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NYX: NO WAY HOME #5 (of 6)
Written by MARJORIE LIU
Penciled by KALMAN
ANDRASOFSZKY
Cover by ALINA URUSOV
Kiden Nixon has finally come face to face with the man who has made it his mission to destroy her life.But who is this shadowy figure that has sent assassins and headhunters after Kiden and her mutant friends? And what secret will he reveal about her long-dead father?Best-selling author Marjorie Liu reveals all in this chilling penultimate chapter…Plus: behind the scenes bonus features and never before seen artwork!
40 PGS./Parental Advisory …$3.99
 

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