How I write. In case anyone gives a shit.
– I build an outline for each arc with major story beats, some specific scene notes, maybe some important dialogue. For an issue, I start by just numbering 1 through 22 and writing a brief description of each page. Sometimes after that I’ll go through and breakdown each page into very brief panel descriptions and build from there. Other times I’ll just start at the beginning and build the whole thing as I go. It usually just depends on how long I’ve had the story in my head and how nailed down I’ve already got it. My best days of writing, when I can churn out 12 or more pages, are always preceded by several days of no writing at all, but instead just a lot of thinking, so by the time I’m actually sitting down to write, the story is already nailed down and all I have to do is get it on paper.
– The first five pages and the last five pages of any script are usually pretty easy. It’s always that shit in the middle that’s hard.
– I always aspire to have something memorable on every page, whether a line of dialogue or an action or what. I certainly don’t always achieve that, but I try.
– I write people throwing up a lot. I write sour looks and stern stares a lot. I use “fuck” a lot. Just making note of all that.
– I try not to dictate camera angles or set up shots. I always figure that’s best left to the artist.
– I can’t listen to music or watch TV while I write. I’m too easily distracted.
– I try to always talk my dialogue out, to say it out loud. Would sometimes make for an interesting listen, no doubt, if someone happened to be passing by the window.
– I break the supposed dialogue rules all the time, in terms of how many words you shouldn’t exceed in a given balloon or panel. Maybe I shouldn’t, but fuck it, if the story needs it, it needs it. I don’t feel like I’m overly wordly overall though. Maybe I was a couple years ago when I was first starting out, but these days I truly appreciate a great silent beat. It may sound weird, but I love being able to take out dialogue or narration from a page because you realize that you don’t need it, that it’s all there in the art.
– I suck at coming up with character names. I’ve reused lots of the same names, usually of people I know. When I was in college I would always flip through CD liner notes to find good names, but these days all my CDs are packed up in boxes in the basement. I try to keep a list where I jot down interesting names I encounter. The sheriff in SCALPED takes his name from a road sign I passed years ago in Ohio for the town of Wooster. I used to also keep a notebook for jotting down interesting bathroom graffiti, though I’m not sure anything useful ever came of that.
Okay, enough of this. I should be doing actual writing now.
Tags: Jason Aaron, Notes on Craft

You make it sound so easy that anyone could write a comic (or SCALPED for that matter)!
Not that I’d ever want to touch a book like SCALPED, I enjoy reading it but if I try writing it–it’d be cancelled before the first issue’s out! That’s how bad I am.
I think more people give a shit about how you write than you think. Process junkies, like me, eat this stuff up. Good to know that you can’t listen to music and write– I can’t as well– but I know a few dudes that can. I’m always jealous of them.
Y’know, I’ve been meaning to get in touch with you for a bit now, I run a little site called the Comic Book Script Archive, which is exactly what it sounds like– Being a big fan of your work, I’d love to be add a Jason Aaron script…I mean, if you’re cool with that.
Since the script format of comics radically change from writer to writer, I think it’d be really cool to see what your particular take is.
If for any reason you don’t want to, I totally understand. Kirkman won’t give me one because he said he talks too much shit in his scripts…I thought that was funny.
Anyhow, thanks for this post!
oh, right– the site, if you want to check it out is: http://www.comicbookscriptarchive.com
interesting read, it’s always interesting to see different processes. From what I’ve seen some writers have very different methods and perspectives on their narratives.
Hey, Tim. Sure, I’d love to contribute some scripts. You can email me at jason@jasonaaron.info, if you wanna.
Jason, this is Pastor Jonathan. You were so awesomely kind to print my letter in an issue of Ghost Rider. THANK YOU for sharing your tips. As a guy who has to write weekly sermons and monthly newsletter articles (and the occassional speech) I love to hear how a true writer like yourself plans out a script. Keep up the great work!
Oh, and I just got my first trade of Scalped! I am hooked!