Psychologists have noted that his work is popular among people dealing with ambiguous grief—the kind of loss that has no funeral. Persons himself once said in a rare interview for The Comics Journal (1999): "I draw what it feels like to have a thought you can’t stop thinking."
In the sprawling universe of independent comics, few names spark as much instant recognition—or visceral reaction—as John Persons . For the uninitiated, stumbling across a John Persons comic for the first time is like finding a VHS tape of a lost 80s horror movie in your grandparent’s attic: it’s gritty, unsettling, and impossible to look away from. john persons comics
Persons also faced a minor scandal in 2015 when it was revealed that the character "Ricket" (a recurring child-like ghost) was based on a real person without their explicit consent. Persons issued a rare and terse apology via a single panel posted online: a hand drawing a line through a name. What is next for the reclusive cartoonist? Rumors have been swirling about a potential animated adaptation of Crow-Mother at A24 Studios, though Persons has reportedly demanded that the film be screened only in abandoned drive-in theaters. More reliably, his upcoming project The Whale Watcher is slated for a Halloween 2025 release. Psychologists have noted that his work is popular