Sarah Drake has an extensive and very smart interview with Sarah Glidden up at Bad at Sports. It’s a really savvy conversation about comics, journalism, and being an artist.
Drake has created tremendous comics from Cambodia, and Glidden, a contributor to Symbolia, is working on a new book about journalism and the Middle East (check out the sneak peek above!). Their chat is totally worth a read.

Sarah Drake has an extensive and very smart interview with Sarah Glidden up at Bad at Sports. It’s a really savvy conversation about comics, journalism, and being an artist.

Drake has created tremendous comics from Cambodia, and Glidden, a contributor to Symbolia, is working on a new book about journalism and the Middle East (check out the sneak peek above!). Their chat is totally worth a read.

Meet Sarah Glidden

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Sarah Glidden wrote and illustrated “The Rollerbladers of Sulaymaniyah” for Symbolia’s preview issue. Download Symbolia on your iPad or subscribe via PDF edition today.

What inspires you?

I feel really lucky to be friends with a lot of people who are doing really amazing things in fields that wildly different from each other. Some of them make comics, some are mathematicians, social psychologists, journalists, comedians or performance artists.

Learning new things from people who are passionate about what they do and are making waves around them is inspiring. They make me want to work harder at my own projects.

What is one tool of your trade that you couldn’t give up?

I am in love with my Platinum Carbon Desk Fountain Pen. It’s this Japanese fountain pen which takes cartridges of ink that is waterproof but that doesn’t clog, something which is almost impossible to find. When I go out sketching I use that pen along with a waterbrush pen filled with inkwash. Those two tools and some kind of paper to draw on are all I need to keep myself busy and happy.

Where do you work best?

When I lived in Brooklyn, I shared a 300 square foot studio space with five other cartoonists. We called it Pizza Island and it was the highlight in my history of workspaces.

Cartooning can be really isolating, so having a community of artists around you is a must if you want to stay healthy. If you’re lucky enough to actually share the same room with some of them, its ideal. We each did very different kinds of comics, so when we shared our work with each other, we were getting feedback from fresh eyes. That was important for me when I was working on my first pieces of comics journalism. I wanted to make sure that my work was clear and interesting to someone who was not already well versed in refugee issues or international journalism.

These days I’ve been traveling a lot while I work on my next book, so I make a studio wherever I can. I’m writing this from a friend’s apartment in Buenos Aires where I’ll be working for the next month. Its a little cramped but we have unlimited coffee and I can buy Alfajores (these amazing Argentinian snacks) whenever I need a boost.

How did you get into this line of work?

I was about 26 when I started making comics, and the work I was doing was autobio/memoir. At that same time, some journalist friends of mine started a non-profit multimedia journalism collective (the Common Language Project) with a focus on both local and international reporting. I thought what they were doing sounded interesting and important, so I asked them if I could accompany them on one of their reporting trips and make a comic about what they did. They were really into the idea, and so a few years later, after I finished my first book, I went with them and documented their process during a two month reporting trip to Iraq and Syria.

Somewhere along the way, I fell in love with journalism (OK, it was about day one), and by the time I got back I was not only ready to start working on my [next] book, but I felt ready enough as a newly-formed journalist to work on other short comics journalism pieces of my own.

Sarah Glidden’s first full-length book, a graphic-memoir entitled How to Understand Israel in 60 Days or Less, was published in 2010 by DC Vertigo. She is currently working on her second book, a work of graphic journalism following reporters into Iraqi Kurdistan, Lebanon and Syria. Her short pieces of graphic journalism have been published on Cartoon Movement, Ha’aretz, and the Jewish Quarterly. You can find more of her work at sarahglidden.com

Symbolia has arrived.
And we are so excited to share it with you. Symbolia mixes the best of comics art with thoughtful journalism from around the world.
Here’s how to get your mitts on our preview issue today:
Own an iPad? Then get our flagship iPad app, featuring audio, animation, and interactive infographics.
No tablet? No sweat! Symbolia also has a PDF edition that can be read on any device. Subscribe to the PDF version, or download our free preview issue.
Help spread the word: Tweet about Symbolia, or share us on Facebook.
The Details: Symbolia is a bi-monthly digital magazine dedicated to incendiary storytelling from around the world. We’re merging longform journalism and sequential art to create an entirely new digital news experience. Subscriptions are $11.99 for 6 issues, and single issues will be available for $2.99 a pop. Our preview issue is free, and comes with any subscription.
Symbolia’s preview issue features incredible stories from around the globe, including:
Susie Cagle’s thoughtful exploration of California’s Salton Sea.
A look at life in Iraqi Kurdistan by Sarah Glidden.
Kat Fajardo and Audrey Quinn on evolution and a fish called “The White Man’s Office” in the Lower Congo River.
The bold history of Zambian Psychadelic Rock, by Chris A. Smith and Damien Scogin.
Andy Warner and Lauren Sommer tour the millions of microflora in our guts. 
Coming soon! Ebook editions of our preview issue in the Amazon, Nook, and Google Play stores will be available shortly. We’ll also be building apps for Android and Kindle tablets in the months to come. Sign up for our mailing list and be among the first to know when these products are available.
We hope you enjoy the preview issue of Symbolia as much as we enjoyed making it! 
With love,
Erin Polgreen + Joyce Rice
Co-Founders, Symbolia Magazine

Symbolia has arrived.

And we are so excited to share it with you. Symbolia mixes the best of comics art with thoughtful journalism from around the world.

Here’s how to get your mitts on our preview issue today:

Help spread the word: Tweet about Symbolia, or share us on Facebook.

The Details: Symbolia is a bi-monthly digital magazine dedicated to incendiary storytelling from around the world. We’re merging longform journalism and sequential art to create an entirely new digital news experience. Subscriptions are $11.99 for 6 issues, and single issues will be available for $2.99 a pop. Our preview issue is free, and comes with any subscription.

Symbolia’s preview issue features incredible stories from around the globe, including:

  • Susie Cagle’s thoughtful exploration of California’s Salton Sea.
  • A look at life in Iraqi Kurdistan by Sarah Glidden.
  • Kat Fajardo and Audrey Quinn on evolution and a fish called “The White Man’s Office” in the Lower Congo River.
  • The bold history of Zambian Psychadelic Rock, by Chris A. Smith and Damien Scogin.
  • Andy Warner and Lauren Sommer tour the millions of microflora in our guts. 

Coming soon! Ebook editions of our preview issue in the Amazon, Nook, and Google Play stores will be available shortly. We’ll also be building apps for Android and Kindle tablets in the months to come. Sign up for our mailing list and be among the first to know when these products are available.

We hope you enjoy the preview issue of Symbolia as much as we enjoyed making it! 

With love,

Erin Polgreen + Joyce Rice

Co-Founders, Symbolia Magazine