Template:Short description Template:For Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox Webcomic
Girl Genius is an ongoing comic book series turned webcomic, written and drawn by Phil and Kaja Foglio and published by their company Studio Foglio LLC under the imprint Airship Entertainment. The comic won the Hugo Award for Best Graphic Story three times, has been nominated for a Hugo Award for Best Professional Artist and twice for Eisner Awards, and won multiple WCCA awards.
Girl Genius has the tagline of "Adventure, Romance, Mad Science!". It follows the main character Agatha Heterodyne (introduced in 1995[1]) through an alternate-history Victorian-style "steampunk" setting, although elements veer from what is usually thought of as steampunk. Kaja Foglio describes it as "gaslamp fantasy" instead to suggest its more fantastic style.
As well as the comics, the Foglios have also written four Girl Genius novels, all published by Night Shade Books, and two games based on the world have been made.
Overview
Setting
The setting has been described as steampunk,[2][3][4][5] with reviewers for Wired describing it as a "mosh of Victorian era, magic and emerging technology"[4] and "steampunk to the core",[2] but co-creator Kaja Foglio dislikes the term and instead coined the term "gaslamp fantasy" to describe the work. Kaja said in a blog post that when Girl Genius was first coming out, there was a comic called Steampunk and she wanted to avoid confusion. She added that "we have no punk, and we have more than just steam, [so] using a different name seemed appropriate."[‡ 1] Girl Genius differs from classic steampunk in that technology is not just limited to machines but also encompasses biology such as "constructs" – biological creations which range from Frankenstein-style creatures[‡ 2] to talking cats[‡ 3] and mouse-sized mammoths.[‡ 4]
Girl Genius is set in an alternate-universe Europe[5] with Industrial Revolution-like surroundings, airships, and mad scientists called Sparks.[2] These Sparks, who have incredible powers of invention,[3] turned the Age of Enlightenment into a full-scale war that ravaged the continent, until Baron Wulfenbach brought an uneasy peace through force.[‡ 5]
Plot
Girl Genius tells the story of Agatha Clay, a student and apprentice at Transylvania Polygnostic University, whose experiments never work until she encounters an electromagnetic pulse and is robbed of her locket.[3][4][5] This leads her to break free of an attempt to suppress her powers as a Spark and to hide that she is the long-lost daughter of legendary figures William "Bill" Heterodyne and Lucrezia Mongfish,[‡ 6] and thus is the last of the prestigious and dreaded House of Heterodyne.[‡ 7] Agatha Heterodyne learns to mix scientific genius, a streak of heroism, and an obsessive possessiveness for what she considers her own in order to claim her heritage and birthright while trying to remain safe from the many European powers trying to use her for their own ends.[‡ 8]
Major characters
The main and recurring characters of Girl Genius include:
- Agatha Heterodyne: She was raised under the name of Agatha Clay and was kept ignorant of her true identity growing up. It is when her locket is stolen that Agatha "breaks through" as a Spark, leading her to learn that she is the last of the Heterodyne family. She spends the story trying to reclaim her family heritage and defend it from the many threats to its safety.[‡ 8][‡ 6][‡ 7]
- The Heterodyne Boys: Two legendary brothers and heroes, Bill and Barry Heterodyne, who are Agatha's father and uncle respectively. Bill's wife Lucrezia Mongfish went missing one day, prompting the Heterodyne Boys to fight in a war from which they became missing in action.[‡ 9]
- The Other: A malevolent, enigmatic entity who almost destroyed Europa twenty years before the story's start,[‡ 8] and whom the Heterodyne Boys went missing when going off to fight. Over the course of the story, Agatha comes to believe that the Other was Lucrezia Mongfish, her long-lost mother.[‡ 10]
- Baron Klaus Wulfenbach: A pan-European leader.[‡ 8][‡ 11] Klaus was once a sidekick of the Heterodyne Boys, but when they disappeared, he chose to bring peace to Europe through force. He suspects Agatha Heterodyne to be the Other.
- Gilgamesh "Gil" Wulfenbach: The only son of Klaus Wulfenbach,[‡ 12] who is raising him as a successor, and one of Agatha's love interests. He is torn between his loyalty to his father and his love for Agatha.
- Tarvek Sturmvoraus: A prince from Sturmhalten,[‡ 13] who is the direct descendant of the legendary 17th century "Storm King" Andronicus Valois.[‡ 7] Though only introduced in Volume 6 (after it moved to webcomic format),[‡ 14] Tarvek later became one of Agatha's love interests.
- The Jägermonsters or Jägers: A type of super-soldiers serving House Heterodyne.[‡ 15]
- Zeetha: A lost warrior-princess from a faraway land known as Skifander.[‡ 6][‡ 16] She volunteers to mentor Agatha.
- Krosp: An artificially-made cat with human intelligence[‡ 17] and one of Agatha's sidekicks.
- Othar Tryggvassen: A self-styled "Gentleman Adventurer" and a Spark who seeks to kill all the Sparks in the world, ending with himself.[‡ 18]
Publication history
The idea for the style of Girl Genius came about when Kaja Foglio went through some of Phil's loose drawings, saying in an interview: "I was going through all of Phil's old files and I was filing all of the old sketches, and I was coming across weird airships and cats in tophats with walking canes, and all of this wonderful... Victoriana sci-fi stuff... it was like 'Oh, this is everything I love!'"[6] Phil Foglio said, "We wanted to do something with a strong female lead character. We both like the tropes associated with mad science, and I really enjoy drawing fiddly Victorian-style gizmos".[7]
Agatha Heterodyne first appeared in print in 1995 in a GURPS sourcebook that the Foglios illustrated.[1] Phil Foglio states that plotting for Girl Genius started in 1993, and it was first published in 2000.[8] Girl Genius: The Secret Blueprints Vol. I was printed in January 2001, followed closely by the monochrome Issue 1 in February.Script error: No such module "Unsubst". In 2005 Girl Genius became a webcomic, and quarterly print publication of the comic ceased.[8]
The first three printed issues (which make up Volume 1) were in black and white. Subsequent printed and web comics were in color. Volume 1 was inked by Brian Snoddy, Volumes 2 and 3 by Mark McNabb. Volume 4 by Laurie E. Smith, and all subsequent volumes by Cheyenne Wright.[‡ 19] Wright also colored the comics of Volume 1; these colored versions were used for a new print edition of Volume 1 and have replaced the original comics on the website.[‡ 20]
In an interview recorded in January 2008, shortly before they began releasing pages of volume 8 of Girl Genius on their web site, the Foglios stated that they expected the climax of Volume 8 to be the rough equivalent of "the end of the first season," and that it would provide a logical break in case of author catastrophe and a fresh jumping-on point for new readers.[9] However, this was an underestimate of the length of the remaining "first season": the end of Volume 13 turned out to be approximately halfway through the planned overall story arc.[‡ 21] The "second season" of the series began March 3, 2014, with "Act 2, Volume 1,"[‡ 22] after a two-month hiatus of the main story.
Published collections
Template:Unreferenced section The webcomic, as well as the initial printed issues, have been collected into printed volumes, and in some cases those volumes have been collected into printed omnibuses. Unless stated in the notes below, the books reprint works first published as the webcomic.
The First Journey of Agatha Heterodyne (also called "Act 1")
Vol / Omnibus # | Title | Pages | ISBN | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Volume 1 | Agatha Heterodyne and the Beetleburg Clank | 96 |
Paperback: , full color paperback: , hardcover: |
Reprints issues #1–3 |
Volume 2 | Agatha Heterodyne and the Airship City | 112 |
Paperback: , hardcover: |
Reprints issues #4–6 |
Volume 3 | Agatha Heterodyne and the Monster Engine | 128 |
Paperback: , hardcover: |
Reprints issues #7–10 |
Volume 4 | Agatha Heterodyne and the Circus Of Dreams | 128 |
Paperback: , hardcover: |
Reprints issues #11–13 and webcomic from April to June 2005 |
Volume 5 | Agatha Heterodyne and the Clockwork Princess | 112 |
Paperback: , hardcover: |
|
Volume 6 | Agatha Heterodyne and the Golden Trilobite | 150 |
Paperback: , hardcover: |
|
Volume 7 | Agatha Heterodyne and the Voice of the Castle | 128 |
Paperback: , hardcover: |
|
Volume 8 | Agatha Heterodyne and the Chapel of Bones | 144 |
Paperback: , hardcover: |
|
Volume 9 | Agatha Heterodyne and the Heirs of the Storm | 144 |
Paperback: , hardcover: |
|
Volume 10 | Agatha Heterodyne and the Guardian Muse | 152 |
Paperback: , hardcover: |
|
Volume 11 | Agatha Heterodyne and the Hammerless Bell | 168 |
Paperback: , hardcover: |
|
Volume 12 | Agatha Heterodyne and the Siege of Mechanicsburg | 192 |
Paperback: , hardcover: |
|
Volume 13 | Agatha Heterodyne and the Sleeping City | 160 |
Paperback: , hardcover: |
|
Omnibus 1 | Girl Genius Omnibus Edition Vol 1 | Paperback: | Reprints Volumes 1–3, in a smaller, black & white edition | |
Omnibus 1 | Girl Genius Omnibus Vol 1: Agatha Awakens | Hardcover: | Reprints Volumes 1–3 in color and new lettering[2] |
The Second Journey of Agatha Heterodyne (also called "Act 2")
Vol / Omnibus # | Title | Pages | ISBN | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Volume 14 | The Beast of the Rails | 128 |
Paperback: , hardcover: |
|
Volume 15 | City of Lightning | 128 | Paperback: | |
Volume 16 | The Incorruptible Library | 122 | Paperback: | |
Volume 17 | Kings and Wizards | 120 | Paperback: | |
Volume 18 | Queens and Pirates | 128 | Paperback: | |
Volume 19 | Sparks and Monsters | 128 | Paperback: , hardcover: | |
Volume 20 | The Exorcism Engines | 122 | Hardcover:[10] | |
Volume 21 | An Entertainment in Londinium | 122 | ||
Volume 22 | The Chronometric Lantern Expedition | 121 | ||
Volume 23 | Escape from the Island of the Rat Queen | 120 |
Girl Genius in other media
Girl Genius has been adapted, or proposed for adaptation, for other media:
Novels
Template:Unreferenced section The Foglios have written four Girl Genius prose novels, which follow the same story as the comics:
- Agatha H. and the Airship City, covering volumes 1–3 of the comic;
- Agatha H. and the Clockwork Princess, covering volumes 4–6;
- Agatha H. and the Voice of the Castle, covering volumes 7–9; and
- Agatha H. and the Siege of Mechanicsburg covering volumes 10–13.
The prose novels are published by Night Shade Books.
Games
- Agatha Heterodyne appeared in two illustrations and by name in the 1995 role-playing game supplement GURPS Illuminati University. This sourcebook for GURPS was illustrated by the Foglios and predates the release of the comic.[1]
- Girl Genius: The Works is a card game designed by Phil Foglio and James Ernest, published in 2001.[11] This game was an adaptation of an earlier game involving the Foglios called XXXenophile.[12]
- Girl Genius and the Rats of Mechanicsburg is a mobile game released in 2014 following a Kickstarter in 2012.[13][14]
- A role-playing game, Girl Genius Sourcebook and Role-playing Game, was released in 2021 by Steve Jackson Games.[15] A role-playing game had been first announced as early as 2004.[16]
- A video game, Girl Genius: Adventures In Castle Heterodyne, was released in 2023 after a Kickstarter in 2020.[17][18]
Movie
In 2010 it was reported that Felicia D. Henderson had optioned the rights to Girl Genius and was adapting it into a movie.[19] However, Template:As of no movie had been produced.
Awards
Girl Genius and its creators have won multiple Hugo Awards and Web Cartoonists' Choice Awards (WCCAs). They have also been nominated for further Hugo awards, WCCA awards, and Eisner Awards.
Year | Organization | Award | Recipient / Book | Outcome | Citation |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2014 | Hugo Awards | Best Graphic Story | Girl Genius, Volume 13: Agatha Heterodyne and the Sleeping City | Template:Nom | [20] |
2011 | Hugo Awards | Best Graphic Story | Girl Genius, Volume 10: Agatha Heterodyne and the Guardian Muse | Template:Won | [21] |
2010 | Hugo Awards | Best Graphic Story | Girl Genius, Volume 9: Agatha Heterodyne and the Heirs of the Storm | Template:Won | [22] |
2009 | Hugo Awards | Best Graphic Story | Girl Genius, Volume 8: Agatha Heterodyne and the Chapel of Bones | Template:Won | [23] |
2008 | Hugo Awards | Best Professional Artist | Phil Foglio | Template:Nom | [24] |
Web Cartoonists' Choice Awards | Outstanding Comic | Template:Won | [25] | ||
Outstanding Writer | Template:Won | ||||
Outstanding Environment Design | Template:Won | ||||
Outstanding Artist | Template:Nom | ||||
Outstanding Character Writing | Template:Nom | ||||
Outstanding Long Form Comic | Template:Nom | ||||
Outstanding Use of Color | Phil and Kaja Foglio (and Cheyenne Wright) | Template:Nom | |||
2007 | Web Cartoonists' Choice Awards | Outstanding Science Fiction Comic | Template:Won | [26] | |
Outstanding Comic | Template:Nom | [27] | |||
Outstanding Long Form Comic | Template:Nom | [28] | |||
Eisner Awards | Best Digital Comic | Template:Nom | [29] | ||
2006 | Web Cartoonists' Choice Awards | Outstanding Story Concept | Template:Won | [30] | |
Outstanding Comic | Template:Nom | [31] | |||
Outstanding Science Fiction Comic | Template:Nom | [32] | |||
2005 | Eisner Awards | Best Writer/Artist—Humor | Phil Foglio | Template:Nom | [33] |
References
Primary sources
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External links
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- ↑ Girl Genius: Second Journey: Volume 7: Exorcism Engines (Hardcover) on forbiddenplanet.com (Accessed October 13, 2022).
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