![]() It was the love of fantastic stories and creating her own that carried Robbins through her teens in New York all the way to California as a young woman ready to change the world.Īnd change the world she did. In high school, she briefly set comics aside when she discovered science fiction. ![]() She devoured titles such as Mary Marvel, Wonder Woman, and Sheena, Queen of the Jungle. ![]() Long before this, Robbins grew up fascinated by comics about women heroines. This all changed in 1970 when Robbins and a group of women in Berkeley created It Ain’t Me Babe Comix, the first all-woman comic book. It was a foreboding atmosphere for female creators. Especially comics entirely created by women. ![]() Other than a brief period in the early forties when women were hired to fill spots vacated by men drafted to fight in WWII, comics written or illustrated by women were unheard of. When Robbins first entered the comics industry, it was long considered an old-boys club. Yes, that’s Trina Robbins appearing as herself in Wonder Woman Annual #2 (1989). ![]()
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