Bone creator Jeff Smith promises more Tall Tales with the cousins (and the scouts)

Bone
(Image credit: Jeff Smith (Cartoon Books))

Writer/artist Jeff Smith recently wrapped up a successful Kickstarter campaign for a print edition of his series Tuki, but for many of his fans, he'll forever be known for his classic series Bone. And for those of us who miss Fone Bone, Phoney Bone, and Smiley Bone, there's good news: they're coming back.

(Image credit: Jeff Smith (Cartoon Books))

"Through Scholastic, we are doing a new Bone: Tall Tales book, Bone: Tall Tales 2, which stars the Bones as they take their little Bone scouts camping," Smith tells Newsarama's Hayden Mears. "And they tell stories."

When readers last saw the Bone cousins (in 2016's Bone Coda), the trio was beginning to head back to their hometown after their Hobbit-esque journey in the original Bone series. While they were on their way back home, the story ended before showing them actually returning.

"We have a few stories in the can," Smith continues. "And I'm doing this with Tom Sniegoski again. We had a lot of fun doing that. We laughed a lot. But that will take a couple of years. I'm working on it, but not immediately."

2021 is the 30th anniversary of the debut of Smith's Bone back in 1991, and its impact on the creator himself, the comics medium, and fans aren't something anyone could have expected - especially Smith himself.

(Image credit: Jeff Smith (Cartoon Books))

"So much of it was completely unexpected," Smith says. "But the biggest thing has to be the jump to YA graphic novels. Having Bone be in those little Scholastic catalogs you used to get when you were in school...That had to be the biggest, most amazing thing."

The comics industry has changed tremendously since 1991, especially outside the traditional 'Big Two' of Marvel and DC with the growth of the booktrade market. With so many new ways to share comics, not to mention making comics, Smith tells Newsarama he almost can't even recognize it anymore.

"It changed so radically that I almost can't even recognize it," says Smith. "Everything about it. Graphic novels existed, but they were really not generally thought of the way we think of them today. Where you actually keep them in stock like you would a regular book. Back then, they were more like a magazine."

Bone is available now in print and on most digital platforms. Check out our list of the best digital comics readers for Android and iOS devices.

Chris Arrant

Chris Arrant covered comic book news for Newsarama from 2003 to 2022 (and as editor/senior editor from 2015 to 2022) and has also written for USA Today, Life, Entertainment Weekly, Publisher's Weekly, Marvel Entertainment, TOKYOPOP, AdHouse Books, Cartoon Brew, Bleeding Cool, Comic Shop News, and CBR. He is the author of the book Modern: Masters Cliff Chiang, co-authored Art of Spider-Man Classic, and contributed to Dark Horse/Bedside Press' anthology Pros and (Comic) Cons. He has acted as a judge for the Will Eisner Comic Industry Awards, the Harvey Awards, and the Stan Lee Awards. Chris is a member of the American Library Association's Graphic Novel & Comics Round Table. (He/him)

Read more
Finn riding Jake with a broken sword in the air.
Oni Press shares an exclusive preview of the first Adventure Time comic in 7 years
Yeb and the other characters from Bowling With Corpses.
Hellboy creator Mike Mignola introduces a new folk horror shared world in Bowling With Corpses that will "Take inspiration from old stories and make them our own"
The SilverHawks line up.
39 years after its final animated episode, cult cartoon SilverHawks is back in a new comic that writer Ed Brisson calls "The Untouchables in space"
Huck runs with a heart-shaped box.
10 years after the original comic, Mark Millar's feel-good superhero series Huck returns for a sequel
Covers of the new Fighting Fantasy books
Choose-your-own-adventure style RPG Fighting Fantasy was a UK obsession in the '80s, and it's finally coming to the US
Marcos Martin's cover for Marvel: Unforgettable Stories
Patton Oswalt and Jordan Blum explain why comics are still the perfect medium for superhero stories - "Visuals that will never be achieved in TV or movies can be achieved in comics"
Latest in Comics
The Punisher holding two machine guns in the rain
Daredevil: Born Again - Learn the bullet-riddled comic book history of the Punisher before he officially joins the MCU
Jay, Silent Bob, Archie, Betty and Veronica.
Snootch to the nooch! Mallrats director Kevin Smith is writing an Archie Comics/Jay and Silent Bob crossover
Absolute Batman in the snow.
Absolute Batman writer Scott Snyder teases the arrival of Robin, crossovers with Superman and Wonder Woman, and building up to the Joker
King Kong wrestling a giant squid monster
The Monsterverse expands with Return to Skull Island, a comic tying into Netflix's King Kong-centric animated series
Close up on Emma Frost's face as she sits on a throne on the cover of Emma Frost: White Queen #1
"Bow down to the White Queen" as Emma Frost gets her own X-Men solo comic that flashes back to her time as a villain
The Biker Mice From Mars.
Oni Press's new Biker Mice From Mars comic will take a "hard-hitting approach to the stories" and "definitely won't pull any punches"
Latest in News
Original Xbox console
Former Microsoft exec says the first Xbox was killed early in favor of 360 because it was "losing money left right and center," but luckily "we could afford to hemorrhage cash"
A Monster Hunter Wilds character holding binoculars.
Despite Monster Hunter Wilds suffering monstrous performance problems on PC, it still outsold the PS5 and Xbox Series X versions in the US
Jordan A. Mun looks at herself in a mirror in just a vest in Intergalactic: The Heretic Prophet screenshot
The Last of Us creator Neil Druckmann says Intergalactic: The Heretic Prophet will also be about "being lonely," as if his zombie apocalypse wasn’t isolating enough: "I really want you to be lost"
A screenshot of Jordan drinking a soda during the reveal trailer for Intergalactic: The Hertic Prophet.
Intergalactic: The Heretic Prophet is "a game about faith and religion," which Neil Druckmann jokes will surely get less hate than The Last of Us 2
Pedro Pascal as Joel in The Last of Us
The Last of Us is "better" than 28 Days Later, says movie writer Alex Garland: "This is so much more sophisticated and moving"
Atelier Ryza 3 protagonist closeup
JRPG producer says people prefer their anime girls to have thick thighs when the economy's in the tank, and he's not even joking a little bit