The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys


The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys is a 2013 comic book limited series written by Gerard Way and Shaun Simon, illustrated by Becky Cloonan and published by Dark Horse Comics. The series serves as a sequel to the My Chemical Romance album , focusing on the followers of the original Killjoys as they try to fight against the tyrannical megacorporation Better Living Industries.

Synopsis

Following the aftermath of the first battle waged during Danger Days: The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys, the group's followers have kept to the desert while Better Living Industries continues to "strip citizens of their individuality". Only The Girl, the sole survivor of the original Killjoys, can help stir up the fight or join the masses in their mindlessness.

Development

Gerard first announced the project, that would be co-written with Shaun Simon, at the 2009 San Diego Comic-Con and in 2012 New York Comic Con stated that artist Becky Cloonan would be producing the artwork. He commented that the comic would serve as the final part of the story and that it would not be "as frantic as what people are going to expect". Way also described the story as "a coming of age story about a young girl" and that she would be " her own path". On July 21, 2020 Way announced that the original concept of the comic would be created in a new series titled

Release schedule

NameRelease Date
Issue #1 -- "Whatever Gets You Through the Night"12 June 2013
Issue #2 -- "Ghost Stations"10 July 2013
Issue #3 -- "Blind" or "Teenage Lightning"14 August 2013
Issue #4 -- "Run!"11 September 2013
Issue #5 -- "Waking the Destroya!"30 October 2013
Issue #6 -- "Boom!"1 January 2014

Collected editions

On May 7, 2014, two separate collected editions of issues 1 through 6, as well as the "Dead Satellites" one-shot from Free Comic Book Day 2013, became available online through Things from Another World. One edition is a standard 160-page trade paperback, while the other is a hardcover limited to just 2,500 copies, filled 232 pages and featured an extensive sketchbook with artwork from Becky Cloonan, Gabriel Bá, Paul Pope, Gerard Way, Fábio Moon, Rafael Grampá and Brian Ewing.