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11 April 10
In the process of getting links for Patton Oswalt, I found out that he wrote a one shot elegy for Wash from Firefly/Serenity. It comes out in June.
It is called “Serenity: Float Out”.
Here’s an interview with Oswalt about it:
In June, actor/comedian Patton Oswalt  will add yet another chapter to the “Firefly” universe with a one-shot  comic titled “Serenity: Float Out,” picking up where the 2005 film left  off. 
Written by Oswalt with interior art by Patric Reynolds and a cover by  “Buffy” artist Jo Chen, “Float Out” explores how the end of one  character’s life spins out into the beginning of a new chapter in the  “Serenity” universe.
“Post-‘Serenity,’ a bunch of Wash’s friends who we haven’t met on the  show, they’re basically buying a new ship and christening it,” said  Oswalt of how the death of Serenity’s pilot, Wash (played by Alan  Tudyk), plays into the comic. “It’s called a ‘float-out’ when you  christen a ship.”  
“As they’re christening a new ship, they’re telling stories about  Wash, and we’re basically seeing what could be the start of a new  adventure,” he said.
While Oswalt wouldn’t divulge which members of Serenity’s old crew  (if any) appear in the comic, he did share some thoughts about why this  particular tale appealed to him. “I had always been kind of bothered by  Wash’s death,” he said.
Of course, “Firefly” fans will be happy to know Oswalt didn’t need to  do much research for the project, since he was already a huge fan of  the series.
“I talked a little bit to Joss, but I was such a huge fan of the show  that I didn’t really need to talk to anybody about it. I kind of just knew  it,” he laughed.
“[Whedon] was just like a lot of really good comic book writers, like  Mike Mignola and people like that,” said Oswalt of what first attracted  him to the series. “He was really starting to populate a universe, just  even in the suggestion of people’s slang and what they would reference,  you could tell that there’s a whole world developing here. I loved that  he was slowly starting to put that together.”
“So it was very frustrating to see the show get canceled when a world  was starting to come together,” he added. “I just wish Fox had given it  some more time, I guess.”
Given his attachment to the “Firefly” universe, the importance of  contributing to the series’ canon isn’t lost on him, either.
“It’s a tiny little chapter, but it’s very flattering,” he said.  “It’s definitely very flattering.”
“Serenity: Float Out” hits shelves June 2 from Dark Horse Comics,  featuring a story by Oswalt, interior art by Patric Reynolds and a  cover by Jo Chen.
Interview via
Pictures via

In the process of getting links for Patton Oswalt, I found out that he wrote a one shot elegy for Wash from Firefly/Serenity. It comes out in June.

It is called “Serenity: Float Out”.

Here’s an interview with Oswalt about it:

In June, actor/comedian Patton Oswalt will add yet another chapter to the “Firefly” universe with a one-shot comic titled “Serenity: Float Out,” picking up where the 2005 film left off.

Written by Oswalt with interior art by Patric Reynolds and a cover by “Buffy” artist Jo Chen, “Float Out” explores how the end of one character’s life spins out into the beginning of a new chapter in the “Serenity” universe.

“Post-‘Serenity,’ a bunch of Wash’s friends who we haven’t met on the show, they’re basically buying a new ship and christening it,” said Oswalt of how the death of Serenity’s pilot, Wash (played by Alan Tudyk), plays into the comic. “It’s called a ‘float-out’ when you christen a ship.”  

“As they’re christening a new ship, they’re telling stories about Wash, and we’re basically seeing what could be the start of a new adventure,” he said.

While Oswalt wouldn’t divulge which members of Serenity’s old crew (if any) appear in the comic, he did share some thoughts about why this particular tale appealed to him. “I had always been kind of bothered by Wash’s death,” he said.

Of course, “Firefly” fans will be happy to know Oswalt didn’t need to do much research for the project, since he was already a huge fan of the series.

“I talked a little bit to Joss, but I was such a huge fan of the show that I didn’t really need to talk to anybody about it. I kind of just knew it,” he laughed.

“[Whedon] was just like a lot of really good comic book writers, like Mike Mignola and people like that,” said Oswalt of what first attracted him to the series. “He was really starting to populate a universe, just even in the suggestion of people’s slang and what they would reference, you could tell that there’s a whole world developing here. I loved that he was slowly starting to put that together.”

“So it was very frustrating to see the show get canceled when a world was starting to come together,” he added. “I just wish Fox had given it some more time, I guess.”

Given his attachment to the “Firefly” universe, the importance of contributing to the series’ canon isn’t lost on him, either.

“It’s a tiny little chapter, but it’s very flattering,” he said. “It’s definitely very flattering.”

“Serenity: Float Out” hits shelves June 2 from Dark Horse Comics, featuring a story by Oswalt, interior art by Patric Reynolds and a cover by Jo Chen.


Interview via

Pictures via

Themed by Hunson. Originally by Josh