Grant Morrison
Grant Morrison (born
January 31,
1960,
Glasgow) is a
Scottish comic book writer and artist. He is best-known for his
nonlinear narratives and
counter-cultural leanings. He is also a practicing
Chaos magician.
Early years
Morrison's first published work were
Gideon Stargrave strips for
Near Myths in 1978, one of the first British alternative comics. Although his work only appeared in three issues of
Near Myths, he was suitably encouraged to find more comic work. This included
Captain Clyde, a
Captain America-type superhero based in
Glasgow, for a local newspaper, plus various issues of
DC Thomson's
Starblazer, a
science fiction version of that company's
Commando title.
1980s
Morrison spent much of the early and mid-1980s struggling to find work with a major comic publisher. However, after writing
The Liberators for
Dez Skinn's
Warrior in 1985, he started work for
Marvel UK the following year. There he wrote two three-part and one one-part eight-page comic strips for
Doctor Who Magazine (his final one a collaboration with a then-teenage Brian Hitch) as well as a
Zoids strip in
Spider-Man and Zoids. 1986 also saw Morrison start to write several
Future Shocks (normally short two- or three-page comic strips) for
2000AD.
Morrison, however, wanted to write a continuing strip rather than short stories. He got his wish in 1987, when he and
Steve Yeowell created
Zenith, an early example of
deconstructing the
superhero genre. Zenith proved to be a hugely popular character in
2000AD, even rivaling
Judge Dredd in terms of most popular character.
Morrison had been sending proposals to
DC Comics for revamping various minor characters during this time. He had several proposals rejected, including one for
The Phantom Stranger and for
Flash, but his work on
Zenith got him noticed by DC. They accepted his proposal for
Animal Man, a little-known character from DC's past whose most notable recent appearance was a
cameo in the
Crisis on Infinite Earths limited series.
Animal Man placed Morrison at the head of the so-called "British invasion" of American comics, along with such writers as
Neil Gaiman,
Jamie Delano and
Alan Moore (who had launched the invasion with his work on
Swamp Thing). Morrison had himself a hit with
Animal Man, even writing himself into the story as a character in his final issue, #26.
Morrison's uniquely
surreal take on the superhero genre proved such a success that he was given
Doom Patrol to write, starting with issue #19 in 1989. Previously,
Doom Patrol had been a fairly formulaic superhero title. Morrison introduced more surreal elements, inserting concepts such as
dadaism into his first several issues.
1989 was also the year Morrison wrote
Arkham Asylum: A Serious House on Serious Earth. Painted by
Dave McKean,
Arkham Asylum was a
Batman graphic novel that featured uses of
symbolic writing not common in comics at the time. (The story was to have included a
transvestite Joker, an element toned down by DC.) The book cemented his reputation as a major talent in the industry. Morrison also wrote various other titles for DC at this time, most notably issues 6-10 of
Legends of the Dark Knight called
Gothic, another of DC's Batman titles.
He also kept working for smaller publishers, most notably writing
St. Swithin's Day for British publisher
Trident Comics.
St. Swithin's Day proved to be controversial due to its anti-
Margaret Thatcher themes, even provoking a small
tabloid press fury and complaints from
Tory MPs such as
Teddy Taylor.
He was also still writing for the
2000AD spin-off title
Crisis. It was in
Crisis he would experience controversy again with
The New Adventures of Hitler â€" a strip that started life in
Cut magazine in 1989 â€" due to its use of
Adolf Hitler as its lead character. He also experimented in storytelling with artist
Daniel Vallely on
Bible John-A Forensic Meditation, telling the story of the Glaswegian
serial killer of the same name.
1990s
The early 1990s saw Morrison revamping another old DC character,
Kid Eternity, with artist
Duncan Fegredo, and updating
Dan Dare to be set in the era of
Thatcherism in
Revolver.
In 1993 Morrison and fellow Glaswegian comic writer
Mark Millar were "given"
2000AD for an eight-week run called "The Summer Offensive". Morrison wrote
Judge Dredd and co-wrote with Millar
Big Dave, a highly controversial strip that helped give Morrison and Millar some brief fame outside the world of comics.
1993 also saw the start of DC Comics'
Vertigo imprint, which published several Morrison titles, such as the
steampunk mini-series
Sebastian O and the graphic novel
The Mystery Play. Later Morrison would write
Flex Mentallo, a
Doom Patrol spin-off with art by
Frank Quitely, and
Kill Your Boyfriend, with artist
Philip Bond, for Vertigo. He also returned briefly to DC Universe superheroics with the critically acclaimed but short-lived
Aztek, co-written with
Mark Millar.
|
Cover of Invisibles volume 1, #1 |
In 1996, Morrison was given the
Justice League of America to revamp as
JLA, a comic book that gathered the most powerful
superheroes of the
DC universe into one team. This run proved to be hugely popular, returning the title back to its former best-selling status. It also proved to be influential in creating the type of "widescreen" superhero action later seen in titles such as
Warren Ellis and
Bryan Hitch's
The Authority. He also handled DC's crossover event of 1998,
DC One Million, a four-issue mini-series with multiple crossovers, as well as several issues of
The Flash with Mark Millar.
It was with
The Invisibles, a work in three volumes, that Morrison would start his largest and possibly most important work.
The Invisibles combined political, pop- and sub-cultural references. Tapping into pre-millennial tension, the work was influenced by the writings of
Timothy Leary and Morrison's practice of
chaos magic.
At
DisinfoCon in 1999, Morrison said that much of the content in
The Invisibles was information given to him by aliens that abducted him in
Katmandu, who told him to spread this information to the world via a comic book. He later clarified that the experience he labeled as the "Alien Abduction Experience in Katmandu" had nothing to do with aliens or abduction, but that there was an experience that he had in Katmandu that
The Invisibles is an attempt to explain. [
1]
The title was not a huge commercial hit to start with. (Morrison actually asked his readers to participate in a "
wankathon" while concentrating on a magical symbol, or
sigil, in an effort to boost sales [
2]). The first issues were critically acclaimed, but many readers found them too confusing or lacking in action. The title was cancelled and relaunched as volume two â€" intentionally more "American" â€" featuring more action while still maintaining Morrison's ideas and themes.
Volume three appeared with issue numbers counting down, signalling an intention to conclude the series with the turn of the new
millennium in 2000. However, due to the title shipping late, its final issue did not ship until April 2000. The entire series has been collected by Vertigo into trade paperback.
2000s
In 2000, Morrison's graphic novel
JLA:Earth 2 was released with art by
Frank Quitely. It was Morrison's last mainstream work for DC for a while, as he moved to
Marvel Comics to take over the writing of
New X-Men, with Quitely providing art. Again, Morrison's revamping of a major superhero team proved to be a critical and commercial success. However, his penultimate arc, 'Planet X', is the subject of much controversy due to his depiction of the extremely deep and sympathetic character Magneto as a raving lunatic. This has since been retconned.
Morrison had one more project for Vertigo during this time:
The Filth, drawn by
Chris Weston and
Gary Erskine.
The Filth actually started out as a
Nick Fury proposal for Marvel, which had turned the idea down. Morrison adapted it into a 13-part mini-series, said to be heavily influenced by
Chris Morris's
Blue Jam radio series.
Morrison also wrote the six-part
Marvel Boy series, as well as
Fantastic Four 1234, his take on another major superhero team. Morrison helped challenge Marvel's reputation for being closed to new ideas, but after finishing his
New X-Men, he returned to DC Comics to work on several titles and help revamp the DC Universe.
Starting in 2004, Vertigo published three Morrison mini-series.
Seaguy,
WE3 and
Vimanarama involve, respectively, a
picaresque hero in a post-utopian world that doesn't need him; cyber-enhanced pets running from their captors in what Morrison calls his "western manga"; and ancient
Hindu/
Pakistani myths translated into
Jack Kirby-style adventures.
WE3 came in for particular praise for its bold storytelling techniques and artwork by
Frank Quitely. Morrison also returned to the JLA with the first story in a new anthology series,
, tales set within the JLA mythos by various creative teams.
|
All-Star Superman #1 cover art by Frank Quitely. |
In 2005, DC Comics started publishing what was dubbed the first ever "megaseries". The Grant Morrison-scripted
Seven Soldiers of Victory features updated versions of older, mostly obscure DC characters: the
Guardian,
Mister Miracle,
Klarion the Witch Boy,
Bulleteer,
Frankenstein,
Zatanna and
Shining Knight. The megaseries consists of seven interlinked four-issue
miniseries with two "bookend" volumes â€" 30 issues in all.
Dan DiDio (current editorial vice president of DC Comics) was impressed with Morrison's ideas for revamped characters. Giving him the unofficial title of "rewrite guy", DiDio asked him to assist in sorting out the DC Universe in the wake of the
Infinite Crisis. Morrison is also one of the writers on
52, a yearlong weekly comic book series that started in May 2006.
In November 2005, DC started publishing a new ongoing
Superman series, starting with a 12-issue story arc by Morrison and
Frank Quitely. Called
All Star Superman, the series will not so much revamp or
reboot Superman, but present an out-of-continuity "iconic" Superman for new readers. Morrison and Quitely have also worked on pop star
Robbie Williams' album
Intensive Care, providing designs for the packaging and cover of the CD.
In 2006, Morrison will write
Batman with art by
Andy Kubert & Jesse Delperdang, for DC, as well as
The Authority and
Wildcats (with the art of
Gene Ha and
Jim Lee respectively) for DC's
Wildstorm imprint.
Grant Morrison first appeared as a comics character with a cameo in
Animal Man #14. He made a full appearance at the end of issue #25, and spent most of #26 in a lengthy conversation with the comic's title character. Shortly afterwards, a character called "The Writer" appeared in issue 58 of the
DC Comics title
Suicide Squad (not written by Morrison), protesting that other "writers" had taken control of his fate now that he was part of "the continuity". The character was killed shortly afterwards. He has also appeared in an issue of
Simpsons Comics, where he is seen fighting with Mark Millar over the
X-Men titles.[
3]
Morrison occasionally involves himself in
screenwriting, and has written numerous scripts and treatments for several different projects, including Sleepless Knights (written with
Mark Millar), a film for director
Ridley Scott and sequels to
The Lawnmower Man. None of his screenwriting projects have yet been produced. [
4]
52 (with co-writers
Geoff Johns,
Greg Rucka, and
Mark Waid,
DC, #1-52, 2006, ongoing)
*
Action Force #17 ("Meditations in Red" an Action Force back-up story tying into their upcoming reprints of
Shang Chi, Master of Kung-Fu)
*
Animal Man (DC, #1-26, 1988-1990):
**
Animal Man (with
Chas Truog,
Tom Grummett and Doug Hazlewood,
tpb collects #1-9,
Vertigo, 2001 ISBN 1563890054)
**
Origin of the Species (with Chas Truog, Tom Grummett, Doug Hazlewood, Steve Montano, and Mark McKenna,
tpb collects
Animal Man #10-17 and
Secret Origins #39, Vertigo, 2002 ISBN 156389890X)
**
Deus Ex Machina (with Chas Truog, Doug Hazlewood, Paris Cullins,
Mark Farmer, and Steve Montano,
tpb collects #18-26, Vertigo, 2003 ISBN 156389968X)
*
Aztek, the Ultimate Man (with co-writer
Mark Millar; Pencils: N. Steven Harris (2-10); Pencils (1) and inks (2-10): Keith Champagne; Inks:
Chris Eliopoulos (1), DC, #1-10, 1996)
*
Batman:
*
Arkham Asylum: A Serious House on Serious Earth (with
Dave McKean, DC,
graphic novel, 1989 ISBN 1401204244)
*
Gothic (with
Klaus Janson, DC, tpb collects
Legends of the Dark Knight #6-10, 1998 ISBN 1563890283)
*
Batman and Son (with
Andy Kubert, DC, 4 issues,
Batman #655-657 and #659?, 2006, ongoing)
*
Bible John-A Forensic Meditation (with
Daniel Vallely, in
Crisis #56-61, 1991)
Big Dave (with Mark Millar):
**"Target Baghdad" (with
Steve Parkhouse, in
2000 AD #842-845, 1993)
**"Young Dave" (with Steve Parkhouse, in
2000AD Yearbook 1994, 1993)
**"Monarchy in the UK" (with Steve Parkhouse, in
2000 AD #846-849, 1994)
**"Costa del Chaos" (with
Anthony Williams, in
2000 AD #869-872, 1994)
**"Wotta Lotta Balls" (with Steve Parkhouse, in
2000 AD #904-907, 1994)
Dan Dare (with
Rian Hughes, reprinted in
Dare #1-4):
**"Dare" (in
Revolver #1-7, 1990)
**"Dare (finale)" (in
Crisis #55-56, 1991)
*
Doctor Who Magazine (#118-119, 127-129 & 139)
*
Doom Patrol (DC, #19-63, 1989-1993):
*
Crawling From the Wreckage (tpb collects
Doom Patrol #19-25, 2000 ISBN 1563890348)
*
The Painting That Ate Paris (tpb collects
Doom Patrol #26-34, 2004 ISBN 1401203426)
*
Down Paradise Way (tpb collects
Doom Patrol #35-41, 2005 ISBN 140120726X)
*
Musclebound (tpb, collects
Doom Patrol #42-50, August 2006 ISBN 1401209998)
*
Fantastic Four: 1234 (with
Jae Lee,
Marvel, 4-issue mini-series, 2001, tpb, 96 pages, 2004 ISBN 0785110402)
*
The Filth (with
Chris Weston, Vertigo, 13-issue mini-series, 2002, tpb, 2004 ISBN 1401200133)
*
Flash:
** "Flash of Two Worlds" (
Secret Origins #50, 1990)
**
Flash #130-138 (with co-writer Mark Millar, 1997)
*
Flex Mentallo (with
Frank Quitely, Vertigo, 4-issue mini-series, 1996)
*
Hellblazer (Vertigo, #25-26, 1990, collected in
Rare Cuts, 2005,
Titan ISBN 1840239743, DC ISBN 1401202403)
*"The House of Hearts Desire" (with Dom Regan, in
A1 #3, 1989)
*
The Invisibles (Vertigo, 1994-2000):
*
Say You Want a Revolution (with
Steve Yeowell and
Jill Thompson, tpb collects vol 1, #1-8, 1996 ISBN 1563892677)
*
Apocalipstick (with Jill Thompson,
Chris Weston, et al., tpb collects vol 1, #9-16, 2001 ISBN 1563897024)
*
Entropy in the UK (with
Phil Jimenez,
Steve Yeowell, et al., tpb collects vol 1, #17-25, 2001 ISBN 1563897288)
*
Bloody Hell in America (with Phil Jimenez, tpb collects vol 2, #1-4, 1998 ISBN 1563894440)
*
Counting to None (with Phil Jimenez, tpb collects vol 2, #5-13, 1999 ISBN 1563894890)
*
Kissing Mister Quimper (with Chris Weston and
Ivan Reis, tpb collects vol 2, #14-22, 2000 ISBN 1563896001)
*
The Invisible Kingdom (with
Philip Bond,
Sean Phillips, Frank Quitely, et al., tpb collects vol 3, #12-1, 2002 ISBN 1401200192)
*
Janus: Psi Division:
**"Will o' the Wisp" (with
Carlos Ezquerra, in
2000 AD Winter Special 1993, 1993)
**"House of Sighs" (with
Paul Johnson, in
2000 AD #953, 1995)
**"Faustus" (with
Mark Millar and
Paul Johnson, in
2000 AD #1024-1031, 1997)
*
Judge Dredd:
**"Inferno" (with Carlos Ezquerra, in
2000 AD #842-853, 1993)
**"Book of the Dead" (with Mark Millar and Dermot Power, in
2000 AD #859-866, 1993)
**"Crusade" (with Mark Millar and Mick Austin, in
2000 AD #928-937, 1995)
|
The cover of JLA:New World Order collecting the first four issues of Morrison's run. Art by Howard Porter. |
*
JLA:
**"JLA: Ghosts of Stone" (
Secret Origins #46, 1989)
*
JLA (with
Howard Porter and
John Dell, DC, #1-17, 22-26, 28-31, 34, 36-41, 1997):
**
New World Order (tpb collects
JLA #1-4, 1997, ISBN 156389369X)
**
American Dreams (tpb collects
JLA #5-9, 1998 ISBN 1563893940)
**
Rock of Ages (tpb collects
JLA #10-15, 1998 ISBN 1563894165)
**
DC One Million (with
Val Semeiks, DC, 4-issue mini-series, 1998, tpb, 2004 ISBN 1401203205 )
**
Strength in Numbers (tpb collects
JLA #16-23 and
New Year's Evil: Prometheus #1 and "Heroes" from
JLA Secret Files #2, 1998 ISBN 1563894351)
**
Justice for All (tpb collects
JLA #24-33, 1999 ISBN 1563895110)
**
World War III (tpb collects
JLA #34-41, 2000 ISBN 1563896184)
*
JLA/WildC.A.T.s (one-shot crossover, 1997)
*
(with Frank Quitely, DC, graphic novel, 2000 ISBN 1563896311)
*
JLA Classified (with
Ed McGuiness, DC, 3-issue mini-series, 2004)
*
Kid Eternity (with
Duncan Fegredo, DC, 3-issue mini-series, 1991, tpb, 2006 ISBN 1401209335)
*
Kill Your Boyfriend (with Philip Bond and
D'Israeli, Vertigo, single issue, 1995)
The Liberators (with
John Ridgway, in
Warrior #26 & the Warrior/Comics International flipbook, 1985 & 1996)
*
Marvel Boy (with
J.G. Jones, Marvel, 6-issue mini-series, 2000, tpb, 2001 ISBN 0785107819)
*
The Mystery Play (with
Jon J. Muth, Vertigo, graphic novel, 1994 ISBN 1563891085)
The New Adventures of Hitler (with Steve Yeowell):
**"What Do You Mean, Ideologically Unsound?" (in
Crisis #46, 1990)
**"Mad Dogs and Englishmen" (in
Crisis #47, 1990)
**"Mr. Hitler's Holiday" (in
Crisis #48, 1990)
** Part 4 (in
Crisis #49, 1990)
*
New X-Men (#114-154 and Annual 2001, all collected in
New X-Men Omnibus, 992 pages, December 2006 ISBN 0785123261):
*
"E" is For Extinction (tpb collects #114-117 + 2001 Annual, 144 pages, 2001 ISBN 0785108114)
*
Imperial (tpb collects #118-126, 224 pages, 2002 ISBN 0785108874)
*
New Worlds (tpb collects #127-133, 168 pages, 2002 ISBN 0785109765)
*
Riot At Xavier's (tpb collects #134-138, 120 pages, 2003 ISBN 0785110674)
*
Assault on Weapon Plus (tpb collects #139-145, 168 pages, 2003 ISBN 0785111190)
*
Planet X (tpb collects #146-150, 136 pages, 2004 ISBN 0785112014)
*
Here Comes Tomorrow (tpb collects #151-154, 112 pages, 2004 ISBN 0785113452)
Nick Fury: "Nick's World" (in
Marvel Knights: Double Shot #2, 2002)
One-Off:
**"Danger: Genius at Work" (with
Steve Dillon, in
2000 AD #479, 1986)
**"Candy and the Catchman" (with
John Ridgway, in
2000 AD #491, 1986)
Really & Truly (with
Rian Hughes, in
2000 AD #842-849, 1993)
*
Seaguy (with
Cameron Stewart, Vertigo, 3-issue mini-series, 2004, tpb, 2005 ISBN 1401204945)
Sebastian O (with Steve Yeowell, Vertigo, 3-issue mini-series, 1993, tpb, 2004 ISBN 140120337X)
*
Seven Soldiers (interconnected sets of 4-issue mini-series bookended with an issue #0 and #1):
*
Bulleteer #1-4 (with
Yanick Paquette &
Michael Bair)
*
Frankenstein! #1-4 (with
Doug Mahnke)
*
The Manhattan Guardian #1-4 (with Cameron Stewart)
*
Klarion the Witch Boy #1-4 (with
Frazer Irving)
*
Mister Miracle #1-4 (with
Pasqual Ferry)
*
Seven Soldiers #0-1 (with
J.H. Williams III)
*
Shining Knight #1-4 (with
Simone Bianchi)
*
Zatanna #1-4 (with
Ryan Sook)
Skrull Kill Krew (with Mark Millar and Steve Yeowell, Marvel, 5-issue mini-series, 1995, tpb, 2006 ISBN 078512120X)
*
Spawn: "Reflections" (#16-18, collected in
Spawn 4: Escalation, Titan, 120 pages, 1997 ISBN 1852868317,
Spawn Collection Volume 2,
Image, 464 pages, 2006 ISBN 1582406103)
*
St. Swithin's Day (with
Paul Grist,
Trident, 4-issue mini-series, 1989)
Starblazer (both writing, drawing and occasional inking):
**"Algol the Terrible" (script and art, #15, 1979)
**"Last Man on Earth" (with Keith Robson, #28, 1980)
**"Operation Overkill" (with
Enrique Alcatena, #45, 1981)
**"The Cosmic Outlaw" (with Jose Ortiz, #86, 1982)
**"The Death Reaper" (with Enrique Alcatena, #127, 1984)
**"Gateway to Terror" (with unknown author; Pencils:
Tony O'Donnell, #142, 1985)
**"Doom World!" (with script: Ray Aspden; Pencils: Tony O'Donnell, #152, 1985)
**"Mind Bender" (with Enrique Alcatena, #167, 1986)
**"The Midas Mystery" (with Enrique Alcatena, #177, 1986)
**"The Ring of Gofannon" (with Garijo, #209, 1987)
*
Steed and Mrs. Peel (3-issue mini-series, 1990, tpb, 48 pages, Titan Books, 1990 ISBN 1870084756)
*
Swamp Thing (with co-writer Mark Millar, Vertigo, #140-143, 1994)
Tharg's Future Shocks:
**"Doing Time" (with
Geoff Senior, in
2000 AD #463, 1986)
**"The Alteration" (with Alan Langford, in
2000 AD #466, 1986)
**"Alien Aid" (with John Stokes, in
2000 AD #469, 1986)
**"Some People Never Listen" (with
Barry Kitson, in
2000 AD #475, 1986)
**"The Shop that Sold Everything" (with John Stokes, in
2000 AD #477, 1986)
**"Wheels of Fury" (with Geoff Senior, in
2000 AD #481, 1986)
**"Curse Your Lucky Star" (with Barry Kitson, in
2000 AD #482, 1986)
**"Return to Sender" (with Jeff Anderson, in
2000AD Annual 1987, 1986)
**"Maniac for Hire" (with Johnny Johnstone, in
2000 AD #507, 1987)
**"Fruitcake and Veg" (with Colin MacNeil, in
2000 AD #508-509, 1987)
**"Fair Exchange" (with Colin MacNeil, in
2000 AD #514, 1986)
**"The Invisible Etchings of S. Dali" (with John Hickleton, in
2000 AD #515, 1986)
**"Big Trouble for Blast Barclay" (with Art: Mike White; Colours: Clive McGee, in
2000 AD #516, 1986)
*
Vampirella #1-9 (with co-writer Mark Millar, 1996)
Venus Bluegenes: "The Pleasures of the Flesh" (with
Will Simpson), in
2000AD Sci-Fi Special 1988)
*
Vimanarama (with Philip Bond, Vertigo, 3-issue mini-series, 2005, tpb, 2006 ISBN 1401204961)
*
WE3 (with Frank Quitely, Vertigo, 3-issue mini-series, 2004, tpb, 2005 ISBN 1401204953)
Zenith:
**"Phase One" (with Steve Yeowell, in
2000 AD #535-549, 1987) (also tpb)
**"Interludes 1 & 2" (with Steve Yeowell, in
2000 AD #558-559, 1988) (reprinted in Book Two)
**"Phase Two" (with Steve Yeowell, in
2000 AD #589-606, 1988) (also tpbs, Books Two and Three)
**"Interlude 3" (with Steve Yeowell, in
2000 AD Winter Special, 1988)
**"Maximan" (with M. Carmona, in
2000AD Winter Special 1988)
**"Mandala: Shadows & Reflections" (with
Jim McCarthy, in
2000AD Annual 1990, 1989)
**"Phase Three" (with Steve Yeowell, in
2000 AD #626-634, 650-662 & 667-670, 1989-90) (also tpbs, Books Four and Five)
**"Phase Four" (with Steve Yeowell, in
2000 AD #791-806, 1992)
**"zzzzenith.com" (with Steve Yeowell, in
2000 AD prog 2001, 2000)
*
Zoids:
*
Spider-Man and the Zoids #19: "Old Soldiers Never Die" (1986)
*
Spider-Man and the Zoids #30-31: "Deserts"
*
Spider-Man and the Zoids #36-37: "Bits and Pieces"
*
Spider-Man and the Zoids #40-49: "The Black Zoid"
*
Grant Morrison's homepage*
Crack Comics, companion site to Morrison's homepage*
2000 AD profile*
Extended look at Morrison's work by Timothy Callahan on Sequart*
Grant Morrison Chronology*
Grant Morrison page at Superman Through The Ages*
Spirophone.com-Website which includes Morrison's music and bands.*
Video of Morrison speaking at DisinfoCon*Fish 1000 Comics have some looks at his early work:
**
Starblazer**
House of Hearts DesireInterviews
*
1991 Interview from Scotland on Sunday Magazine, covering early career, up to Bible John and Animal Man*
PopImage: Grant Morrison Profile - Large Interview with comprehensive reviews - Feb.2001*
Long interview with Barbelith Sept. 2, 2002*
Interview with Sequential Tart's Barb Lien-Cooper*
Comixfan interview*
Flick the Switch: An Interview with Grant Morrison*
PopImage: Jonathan Ellis' Long interview with GM (2004)*
Suicide Girls: Daniel R. Epstein Interviews GM*
Silver Bullet Comic Books: Uniquely Original: Grant Morrison*Morrison, Grant. (2003) Pop magic!
Book of Lies, pp. 16-25 ISBN 0-9713942-7-X
*Disinformation: The Complete Series Disc 2:
DisinfoCon. (1999) Speech by Grant Morrison. Distr. Ryko Distribution.
*
Blazing Through the Secrecy, about uncreditted authors on
Starblazer