Entry tags:
Red and Blue: a comic about spontaneous abortion
Here we go! Red and Blue is up for sale in ebook and paper forms, $6 USD either way! And boy is it grim; content warnings (with spoilers) will be in the comments below.

Every attempt I have made to convey my experience of miscarriage in my own words has failed. It is unspeakable. So I made the creative choice to not speak in the comic myself. Everyone speaks but me, and the scene breaks are quotes from academic articles, the Texas governor, and a Planned Parenthood blogger. I also have a brief playlist.
I did not make this comic with the intent of convincing pro-life people. I cannot, and it cannot. Instead, I made it because I had no idea that my experience, however lurid, is statistically documented as... if not normal, not nearly as rare as I thought. Many, many pregnancies become miscarriages. Only luck and incompetence prevented me from becoming another statistic in the "third most common" bracket.
This comic is not a reasoned argument. It is a scream. Sometimes I feel like my heart is still screaming. But I hope it proves useful to others.

The leading cause of death for pregnant people in the United States in 2018-2019 was homicide. That risk was heightened for Black folks and young people (age 10-24) of all ethnicities. Two-thirds of the life-ending injuries took place in the home, and strangulation was the third most common means of murder. (Source: Wallace et all, "Homicide During Pregnancy and the Postpartum Period in the United States, 2018–2019")
This is a reality-mashing horror comic about being that kind of statistic. 32 pages, black and white with spot color, mostly red and blue.
This was a comic I made by accident, over three different periods. The first scene I drew was the garbage bag one, penciled in November when dealing with the memories involved. In a similar state, I horked up the cover images and all but one of the full-page illustrations this past December and January, done in raw ink. They then lay in my sketchbook, unrelated fragments, for months, until May, when I heard about the leaked Roe vs. Wade documents. Something inside me began to scream and scream, and the rest poured out of me in the following weeks, and I debuted it at the Toronto Comics Arts Festival.Every attempt I have made to convey my experience of miscarriage in my own words has failed. It is unspeakable. So I made the creative choice to not speak in the comic myself. Everyone speaks but me, and the scene breaks are quotes from academic articles, the Texas governor, and a Planned Parenthood blogger. I also have a brief playlist.
I did not make this comic with the intent of convincing pro-life people. I cannot, and it cannot. Instead, I made it because I had no idea that my experience, however lurid, is statistically documented as... if not normal, not nearly as rare as I thought. Many, many pregnancies become miscarriages. Only luck and incompetence prevented me from becoming another statistic in the "third most common" bracket.
This comic is not a reasoned argument. It is a scream. Sometimes I feel like my heart is still screaming. But I hope it proves useful to others.
Content Warnings
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It's been a bad seven months.
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As morbid as it is to say, I'm glad you were able to get *something* productive out of the wreckage. Those stories are important. They hit differently than just statistics. And they do help people.
It's woefully inadequate but there's tea over [here] if you want some.
- Red Jake (he/him)
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--Rogan
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--Janusz
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But we're still here.
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--Janusz
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But no, it wasn't something I did on purpose. If I had to name names, I'd say I was more influenced by Sam Kieth's works like the Maxx and Zero Girl, and he used abstraction very differently. Bryan Talbot was far more restrained but did some reality-mashing in The Tale of One Bad Rat that also stuck with me, though I was way less disciplined about it.
Rogan
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--Janusz
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Good choice of scene breaks, by the way. I honestly didn't know the statistics were that grim, and it added a lot of impact.
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Plus I do truly want people to read the works I got those quotes from, since they were a huge help for me, putting my experience into context so it wasn't just this bubble of shame or a freak lightning strike that had no relevance to society as a whole. (Which reminds me, I should go into the healthymultiplicity.com coding and add clickable links for the online cites right now. *goes and does so*)
--Rogan