Nat Gertler is an American writer known for his comic books and his books about comics, including two on Charles Schulz's Peanuts. Gertler is the publisher of About Comics, and founded an annual cartoonists' challenge, 24 Hour Comics Day. He has been nominated for two Eisner Awards. Gertler made a guest appearance on the comic review show Atop The Fourth Wall as himself.
His first comic-book story, the six-page backup feature "The Visit", appeared in First Comics' Grimjack #57. He went on to publish horror-comics stories in Hamilton Comics' Dread of Night and Grave Tales in 1991, and through the 1990s did work for the independent publisher Comic Zone Productions, WaRP Graphics, and Caliber Press, and an issue of Blood Syndicate for DC Comics' Milestone Comics imprint. For Image Comics, he wrote stories for Big Bang Comics #7–8. He founded comic-book publisher About Comics, initially for his own work, beginning with The Factor issue #0, and later encompassing new and reprinted work by other creators. About Comics would go on to publish properties such as The Weasel Patrol, The Factor, Licensable BearTM, and The Liberty Project. In 2004, he founded the annual 24 Hour Comics Day challenge to cartoonists to produce a 24-page comic book, based on a concept previously conceived by Scott McCloud and Steve Bissette in 1990. Outside of comics, he has written or co-written numerous books in the Complete Idiot's Guidesseries of books, including The Complete Idiot's Guide to Creating a Graphic Novel, The Complete Idiot's Guide to Music on the Internet with MP3 and The Complete Idiot's Guide to Microsoft PowerPoint 2000. In November 2016, Gertler's company About Comics began publishing facsimile editions of The Negro Motorist Green-Book guides, originally published by Victor Hugo Green and his wife Alma Green from the 1930s to the 1960s to help African-Americans travel safely in a segregated U.S.
Reviews
Gertler's 2010 The Peanuts Collection received positive reviews in USA Today and elsewhere. The Chicago Sun-Times described it as a "slipcovered museum collection" filled with "treasures", and the Christian Science Monitor described it as "a gold mine of Peanuts memorabilia and removable inserts". Gertler's script anthologies Panel One and Panel Two were "highly recommend" by USA Today for persons interested in learning how to write comic books.
Awards and nominations
1999 Eisner Award nomination: The Factor miniseries
2006 Eisner Award nomination: Best Anthology 24 Hour Comics Day Highlights 2005, edited by Nat Gertler