The Guardian

My comic book romance: why Gerard Way ditched emo for ink

The former frontman of My Chemical Romance discusses his love for comics and his own titles that he’ll be unveiling at New York Comic Con this week
ANAHEIM, CA - APRIL 01: Gerard Way attends day two of WonderCon 2017 at Anaheim Convention Center on April 1, 2017 in Anaheim, California. (Photo by Araya Diaz/WireImage) / Getty Images

It’s perhaps an exaggeration to say that comic books saved Gerard Way’s life, but they certainly played their part. “I was often quite a depressed teenager,” says the former My Chemical Romance frontman. “I didn’t even know there was such a thing as group therapy until I read about it in a Doom Patrol comic.”

As a teen, New Jersey-born Way worked in a comic shop, and that particular DC comic was just finishing up its four-year run under the stewardship of writer . It embodied the quirky, often grotesque feeling that a lot of early 90s comic books embraced, especially those under the “mature readers” Vertigo imprint later published by DC. Morrison’s Doom Patrol

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