ln a comic she drew before bedtime one night, K. Woodman-Maynard manifested a project that would occupy her for the next couple of years.
The author and cartoonist, who lives in south Minneapolis with husband Mike Schowalter and a one-eyed Vizsla named Leif, writes a “diary comic” each night. Creator of a graphic novel version of “The Great Gatsby” that came out in 2021, she craved a new project. So Woodman-Maynard, who grew up in Golden Valley, drew a portrait of herself in a Wonder Woman-like position, with arms akimbo.
“Two days later, the call came,” said Woodman-Maynard, who also writes her own original comics and works as a comics coach, helping other artists create work and feel good about it.
A couple years, 1,400 hours of work and a pile of gorgeous watercolor paintings later, that call has resulted in “Natalie Babbitt’s ‘Tuck Everlasting’: The Graphic Novel.” Celebrating the book’s 50th anniversary, it’s a fresh, inventively-illustrated look at the middle-grade book about a girl who meets a boy named Jesse and his family — who have achieved eternal life and aren’t sure that’s such a great thing.
I met with Woodman-Maynard, 40, to discuss death, hope and whether her adaptations are abominable.
Q: Graphic novel adaptations of classics are hot right now. How did these two biggies come to you?
A: “Gatsby” is in the public domain and it was my idea. We pitched it and a publisher bought it. For “Tuck,” [Babbitt’s estate] approached me because of the “Gatsby” adaptation, thinking it would fit stylistically.
Q: You were immediately interested?