Scott O. Brown
| Scott O. Brown | |
|---|---|
| Born | Scott Oliver Brown 1975 (age 50–51) Mobile, Alabama, U.S. |
| Area | Writer |
| Pseudonym | S.O.B |
Notable works | Cyberosia Publishing Nightfall |
Scott O. Brown (born 1975) is an American writer, letterer, publisher, editor, and production manager. Under his publisher name Cyberosia Publishing, Brown has been responsible for publishing creators like Amin Amat, Malcolm Jones III, Drew Gilbert, Antony Johnston, Steven Grant, and Jamie Delano.
During Cyberosia's history, he oversaw the development of the supernatural pulp thriller Frightening Curves, the critically acclaimed short story collection Aporiatica, along with Overtime and Rosemary's Backpack.
Published by Platinum Studios, Brown's graphic novel Nightfall was inspired by Joss Whedon's Buffy and Angel television shows, and tells the story of industrious, right-wing survivalist David Paxton, who is sent to a tough Texas prison that is run by vampires.[1] In 2007, it was also announced that an adaptation of Nightfall was to be James Wan's next film after Death Sentence.[2] However, nothing materialized and Wan lost the rights to the film.[citation needed]
Brown is also the letterer behind the Zuda series High Moon, Box 13 at ComiXology.com, and many Platinum Studios comics, including Cowboys & Aliens, Red Mantis, and several others. He is also the writer and letterer of his self-published titles They Do Not Die, and Red Ice with artist Horacio Lalia.
Titles published (Cyberosia)
- Aporiatica (2001)
- 2020 Visions (2004)
- Cathedral Child: Texas Steampunk (2002)
- Clockwork Angels (2002)
- Damned (2003)
- Dark Gate (2004)
- Death Valley (2005)
- Johnny Nemo (2002)
- Overtime (2002)
- Passenger (2004)
- Popimage Vol. 1: The Time Of Change (2002)
- Rosemary's Backpack (2002)
- Second Soul (2003)
- Spookshow (2003)
- They Do Not Die (2011)
- District Comics: An Unconventional History of Washington, DC (2012)
- Monstrology (2013)
References
Notes
- ^ "Scott O. Brown, 'Man of Comics'". Occasional Superheroine. Interviewed by Valerie D'Orazio. September 27, 2007.
- ^ Herner Klenthur aka Meh (August 26, 2007). "SAW Creator James Wan Takes on Vampires in Night Fall". HorrorMovies.ca. Horror Movies.ca. Archived from the original on August 27, 2010.
Sources
External links