My Creative Journey from Comic Strip Creator to Sci-fi Novelist

In this post, I share a tongue-in-cheek reflection on my creative journey—from professional graphic designer to creating the Lost Cactus comic strip and how this lifelong aspiration surprisingly led to writing short stories and, finally, full-length science fiction novels.

 
Collection of early comic strips circa 1990 in pen and ink on vellum.

Collection of early comic strips circa 1990 in pen and ink on vellum.

I have a confession to make. My journey to authoring a science fiction trilogy with sequels in the works began a long time ago (not in a galaxy far, far away) at the pen-and-ink-blotched aspiration of creating the next Calvin and Hobbes. Before spit-taking your coffee and scoffing with righteous indignation, understand that I hail from a family of artists. Hence, the pie-in-the-sky notion of joining the hallowed ranks of Watterson and Schultz et al. was not far-fetched for a modestly talented art school student making his way in a world on the cusp of a new digital age (It’s hard to believe 1990 was 35 years ago).

Of course, the first dilemma when venturing down the path of developing a new comic strip involves avoiding the creation of yet another derivative strip about snarky pets and lovable loser owners. So, what to do? Fascinated by the idea of reanimating dinosaurs through DNA harvested from prehistoric amber at the center of Michael Crichton’s novel Jurassic Park, I sat at my father’s hand-me-down drafting table, sketching and inking a lab-grown dinosaur and mutant bee comic strip duo. What a novel concept. There was nothing like this in the funny papers as far as I knew. What could go wrong?

Well, nothing pre se. The reality of life, marriage, and a burgeoning commercial art career (at the absolute beginning of computer graphics) took center stage, relegating my hammy, gag-filled strips to a long-forgotten, dog-eared folder labeled Bentley, tucked away in a flat file under stacks of paintings and drawings, and soon forgotten.

Fast-forward a couple of decades to an older, not wiser, version of myself rediscovering this same dog-eared art folder unseen for years. While sifting through strips inked on old-school vellum, xeroxed sheets with scale percentages scribbled in the margins, and stacks of pencil-sketched character studies, the insane spark to resurrect my comic strip rekindled in my brain.

🤪 Or, I lost my mind. It depends on who you ask. 

* * *

Following a year of drawing, writing, and developing the original strip’s unique backstory using online resources and digital tech nonexistent in my initial pass at a comic strip, Lost Cactus, the eponymous code name of a top-secret base sequestered behind a barbed-wire perimeter in the arid southwestern hinterlands came to life in 3-panel comic strips.

In addition to Bentley and Ty (the original bee and dinosaur duo), I created a white-coated scientist named Doc (my lovable loser) and a supporting cast of quasi-military characters, mutants, zombies, and aliens on the ultra-secret base. Envision M*A*S*H meets the X-Files, and you get the idea. 

Cognizant of the remote chance of success, I snail-mailed submissions to syndicates far and wide. After too many rejection letters to count—and an interested editor’s suggestion to drop the alien character—I realized wedging my creation into the shrinking comics section of a vanishing newspaper industry was a non-starter. Only now, what to do with over 300 comic strips? Improvise. Leveraging my graphic design expertise and the fast-emerging self-publishing industry, I made two Lost Cactus anthologies. And because it’s never enough, I filled the colorful books with art, humorous essays, liner notes, pop quizzes, and something new and exciting for me at the time, science fiction short stories. These early forays into fiction writing, while indeed a cringe-worthy read in parts, presaged characters, entities, and narratives that expanded outward like a big bang into The Powers That Be trilogy (The Golden Ellipse, The Lost Ship, and The Blue Spark).

Now that you have a Cliff Notes version of my Author Journey to this point in late August 2025, let’s get on with …

What’s Next.

In the veins of other powerhouse world-building brands like Marvel and Star Wars, The Powers That Be | Lost Cactus multiverse is a limitless canvas on which to write and paint new stories and sci-fi adventures starring the expansive cast of old and new characters in everything from short stories and full-length novels to fully-illustrated graphic novels. Remember to check back often on my site to discover news, updates, and teasers on Coming Attractions already in stages of development while other projects simmer on the back burners of my creative brain. Far from the typical writers block, I need more minutes, hours, and days added to weeks flying past like an out-of-control train speeding through the station. In other words, I need to clone replicants of myself in a manner similar to Professor Mitsuo Kobayashi—the robotics genius from The Blue Spark. (Perhaps with less fire, death, and dire consequences for humanity.) In other words, Stay Tuned! I have lots more on the way predicated on my mission statement of providing compellingly entertaining sci-fi action-adventure tales that expand like supernovas into uniquely imaginative visions of What’s Next.

See you in the funny papers.

 

What do they say about hindsight?

Could I have predicted my path from comic strip creator to science fiction novelist from the outset? Thereby avoiding the numerous inevitable pitfalls, dead ends, and failures. Short answer: No. Besides, where would the fun be in that? Life is messy and unpredictable by design, which makes it all the more worth living and writing about.

“You miss 100% of the shots you don’t take.”

- Wayne Gretzky

“The best time to plant a tree is 20 years ago. The second best time is now.”

– Chinese Proverb

 

Don’t Skimp on the Research: The Importance of Exploring Beyond Common Knowledge.

Researching the fascinating and, in parts, controversial subject matter underlying my science fiction has expanded my armchair understanding of a staggering range of uncommon knowledge—from ancient megalithic sites and uncontacted Amazonian cannibal tribes to the ingredients of a Corpse Reviver No. 1—as well as robotics and AI to an inevitable posthumanism. Added to the equation, a multitude of brilliant thinkers have influenced my storytelling, from Fermi and Fibonacci to the inimitable David Bowie, along with literary greats such as Michael Crichton, Isaac Asimov, Edgar Rice Burroughs, Ray Bradbury, and Jules Verne, to name a few favorites.

I could go on—indeed, a little knowledge is a dangerous thing. Having said that, future blogging will delve deeper into the expansive and mind-blowing subject matter permeating my writing.

 

My Advice for Writers: Embrace Your Inner Skeptic.

Humankind’s place in the universe is an astonishing mystery to behold. Embrace your inner skeptic and dare to explore beyond common knowledge—that is where your answers lie, and the fun begins.

 

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Paperback and hardcover editions are also on sale! Follow the links right here on my site that take you to secure checkout pages on Ingram Spark (my distributor). The eye-catchingly vibrant novels will enhance the appearance of your bookshelf and make the perfect gift for avid readers and fans of the sci-fi genre.

 
John Hopkins

Author and artist John Hopkins’ curiosity for what lies beyond common knowledge shapes his imaginative, character-driven storytelling. Following his muse, John created LOST CACTUS, a comic strip set on an off-the-grid top-secret research base—think Area 51. The strip’s quick wit, fearless lampoonery, and supernatural mythology expanded into a shared universe of science fiction short stories and novels. Sequels and graphic novels featuring the science fiction action-adventure Lost Cactus | The Powers That Be multiverse are in the works.

Stay tuned and keep an eye on the sky.

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