![]() ![]() So I said in the back of my mind if I ever became a writer, and I could tell a story, I would put people of color primarily at the center of the narrative. You know, very rarely, we pop up every once in a while, but never as the main protagonist or the main antagonists. ![]() When I was a kid, I loved the Universal Monsters. ![]() Rodney Barnes: I'll try to make it simple. Where did the idea for Killadelphia come from? But I feel like vampires take on new significance in the story. ![]() I love your book, Killadelphia, there's just so many parts about it that I just find so enriching. Related: Buffy's Epic Vampire Slayer Return Has Begun At San Diego Comic-Con, we sat down with Killadelphia writer Rodney Barnes to talk about the genesis behind the series, the balancing act of creating a morally complicated vampire story, and where horror is headed next. Together, Jimmy and his father must reconcile their differences in order to save the city from the vampires' sinister plans, and from humanity's worst impulses. is a vampire, it is only the tip of the iceberg in a larger network of power governing Philadelphia, with Former President John Adams and his wife, Abigail, being at the top of it. Killadelphia follows a policeman named Jimmy Sangster who returns to the city when his father, James Sangster, Sr., is murdered. ![]()
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