
Happy Public Domain Day!!! Today, works published in 1930 enter the public domain in the US and many other countries. This year that includes The 42nd Parallel by John Dos Passos (the first book in his U.S.A. trilogy), Olaf Stapledon’s Last and First Men, and the 1930 Watty Piper version of The Little Engine that Could, with illustrations by Lois Lenski. You can read more about what’s entering the public domain over on Duke’s Center for the Study of the Public Domain blog.
As I do every year, I’m celebrating by releasing one of my own works to the public domain. This time it’s a little different—the work I’m ceding to the public domain is a script for an as-yet-unwritten graphic novel, titled BLOOD DINER • FULL SERVICE • BUTCHERED LIVE. It’s set in a future where medical technology allows for the rapid regeneration severed body parts, and the story follows a server on a trial shift at a restaurant which serves human meat.
So you can take this script and read it, print it, adapt it into your own comic, adapt it into a film or a play—whatever you want! I do intend to eventually make it into a graphic novel, and when I do I’ll probably publish that graphic novel as a copyrighted work—but even then, the script will remain in the public domain.
You can download BLOOD DINER as a PDF or Docx. If you end up doing anything with it please let me know! It may be a while before I get around to making my comic.
In further celebration of the public domain, I just reviewed Who Owns this Sentence? A history of copyrights and wrongs by David Bellos and Alexandre Montagu, and you can read that here. And if you want to see previous years’ posts about the public domain, and all the other works I’ve ceded to it, you can find that here.


























