When, at the age of eight, Elton Pruitt
authorized his mom to sell all of his comics at a garage sale, he
thought he had outgrown them. Sadly, these included numerous issues
of Neal Adams’ now-legendary run on Batman and Detective Comics.
Years later, Elton regained his senses
and rediscovered his love of comic books. Around this time he also
discovered a passionate dislike for Southern rock – Lynyrd Skynyrd,
38 Special, you name it – and proudly attested to its worthlessness
throughout the halls of his high school in Searcy, Arkansas.
So it seems only fitting that his first
published comic book story1 would revolve around an apocryphal Lynyrd Skynyrd
song.
Prior to his work in comic books, Elton
worked as a copywriter for a small ad agency in Little Rock, where
his pitch to Roller Funeral Homes of Arkansas (“We put the fun in
funeral”) never quite caught on. His work for Five Miles Out
writing the screenplay for their Immercenary video game was
better received and led him into the fabled land of The Internet,
where he has spent the last ten years programming custom web
applications for Aristotle Inc.
Today – at the exact moment you are
reading this, in all likelihood – Elton is hard at work on his next
comic book project, a little something he likes to call Descartes
the Zombie. Watch for it – and check out EltonPruitt.com2 for
more information on Elton and his ongoing quest to become the 22nd
century’s second greatest living comic book writer (after Drew
Melbourne, of course).
1Okay, okay, it hasn't technically been published yet -- but I've got a good feeling about its chances.
2"But I'm already on EltonPruitt.com, so why are you telling me to check it out?", you may be asking yourself about now. If you are, all I can tell you is, the answer involves either (a) quantum physics, dark matter, and the black hole at the center of our galaxy, or (b) the fact that Platinum Studios asked me for a bio to go with my submission for their romance anthology comic, and I just pasted it in here with little, if any, edits. Unless you count the footnotes.