After viewing a tweet recently wondering who the best writer in comics was this year, I realized I didn’t necessarily have a definitive answer, in part because it’s early in the year, and in part because comics have been on a virus-impacted hiatus for nearly two months. My stock-in-trade response has unquestionably been Jonathan Hickman since House of X
I made a list of names I thought had a chance at the crown, but rather than simply rank them by feel, I decided to score each creator through a series of simple criteria (things like how I’d rate their current work, whether the writer’s an “auto pull” at my LCS, etc). The biggest challenge was effectively how to deal with weighted bonuses for quantity of output, aka the Jeff Lemire Rules. In any scoring system I set up that gave bonuses for quantity of output, Lemire wins hands down every time. The writer/artist’s rate of output is absolutely incredible and deserves its own award.
I’m also attempting to rule out creators with only one annual work to their name, no matter how excellent I find it. For example, N.K. Jemisin would definitely be up for consideration for work on Green Lantern: Far Sector
As always, the list is of course limited to comics I’ve read, meaning there are countless creators who deserve recognition but are simply off my radar (hopefully just for now – I’d love to hear names you think belong!).
Below you’ll find the short-list (seriously, just the short-list!) of contenders in alphabetical order (last name), and my mid-year pick!
Support For Comic Book Herald:
Comic Book Herald is reader-supported. When you buy through links on our site, we may earn a qualifying affiliate commission.
Comic Book Herald’s reading orders and guides are also made possible by reader support on Patreon, and generous reader donations.
Any size contribution will help keep CBH alive and full of new comics guides and content. Support CBH on Patreon for exclusive rewards, or Donate here! Thank you for reading!
Jonathan Hickman
2020 Comics:
- X-Men
- Giant-Size X-Men
- Decorum
I’ve been a super fan of Hickman’s comics writing for years now, as anyone reading our best comics of the decade recap can attest. I’m also plugged into Hickman’s work more than any writer in the medium, given my standing “please pull anything by him” order at my comic shop, and my obsessive theorizing on the Krakin’ Krakoa podcast and Youtube series.
At the end of the day, Hickman’s master plan for Marvel’s X-Men is the thing in comics I’m most excited about, but admittedly we’re still in the pretty early stages of what is hopefully a long run.
Jeff Lemire
2020 Comics:
- Ascender
- Berserker Unbound
- Family Tree
- Gideon Falls
- Skulldigger & Skeleton Boy (Black Hammer)
- Joker: Killer Smile
- The Question: Deaths of Vic Sage
As you can see from the comparative output, Lemire’s body of work is staggering. I’m all-in on the Black Hammer universe, and keep up with each new issue of Family Tree
W. Maxwell Prince
2020 Comics:
- Ice Cream Man
- Quarantine Comix
- King of Nowhere
I’ve said it before, but pound-for-pound, Ice Cream Man
Gene Luen Yang
2020 Comics:
- Dragon Hoops
- Superman Smashes the Klan
- The Terrifics
Yang’s comics career is already extremely impressive with works American Born Chinese
My Pick…
I don’t know how I could land on anyone but Gene Luen Yang. Even his Instagram mini Q&As are some of my favorite reading. The only argument working against him is that most of Superman Smashes the Klan technically came out in 2019. I’ve already ranked both Dragon Hoops and Superman Smashes the Klan among my favorite 100 comics of all time, which makes it pretty easy for me to say Gene Luen Yang is my favorite writer in comics this year!
View Comments (4)
Solid list, but personally I think it is hard to argue that Simon Spurrier deserves a spot at or near the top of this list
2020 comics:
Alienated
John Constantine: Hellblazer
The Dreaming
Doesn’t*
Does Yang's Terrifics get any better after the whole Bizarro arc? That's where I dropped the title. DC and that Year of the Villain stuff...oof.
Issue #25 is fantastic, but otherwise only marginally. Terrifics being relatively average is the only thing that really makes this a contest to me. It's interesting how Yang's work suffers when its boxed into the DC Universe proper (same thing happened with his Superman). New Super-Man escapes these trappings, but that's practically a creator-owned standalone work, so it's not necessarily a surprise.