What were the most fun parts or characters to work on in this latter half, issues #8-12?

Ed Brisson: For me, it was getting Logan back to the Wasteland and playing around in that sandbox. It only felt right that if we were going to kill Logan off, that we do that back where he belongs, so that he can die where his family is.

On top of that, being able to expand the world and add in some new "Old Man" characters was a lot of fun. I mean, Old Man Speedball! Just the idea of putting him in the run gave me tingles.

Mike Henderson: I'd been chomping at the bit to go back to the Wastelands for our own little western showdown from the very start, and having built all that tension and pathos on the way made it all that much more rewarding. But once we were there, drawing Old Man Speedball (especially that scene) and the Terminator-esque Sabretooth hunting our heroes were special thrills.

What are you both most proud of in this series so far?

Ed Brisson: On a creative level, I'm so happy that we were able to maintain the same creative team throughout the entire run. You don't get that too often in comics these days, so I'll be forever grateful that we were able to pull it off. Both Mike and Nolan were the perfect collaborators and I'm already desperate to work with both again.

In terms of story, I'm really happy with the way that the series wraps. It's not often that you're given the task to send a character out and know (hope) that their death is going to stick. I'm proud of it all, but am really happy with how the last issue played out especially. I'm happy with where we're leaving the other characters at the end as well, especially with Dani's new status quo!

Mike Henderson: Apart from the reaction of all the readers we've heard from about what we did with the series, working with Ed, Nolan, Chris and the rest of this team was the most seamless and utterly professional experiences I've ever had in comics. Getting to stay together for the entire run of this special series is something I'm also very proud of. It's such a rarity in comics these days that it makes it that much more memorable. I can't wait to work with them all again.

How do you both feel now near the end compared to the beginning of DEAD MAN LOGAN?

Ed Brisson: We've been working on this for over a year now, yet it feels like we just got started. Mike, Nolan, and I work so well together that there was never any moment where it didn't feel like we were completely in sync. I feel just as hyped about it now as I did when we started and could easily go for another 100 issues – though, tough to do after Logan's dead. But, I'm sure we'd make it work!

Story-wise, I think we gave Logan the ending he needed. We tied up some loose strings and got in his proper goodbyes. I feel really good about it.

Mike Henderson: I admittedly had some apprehension early on about doing justice to the final tale of this character that so many people feel so strongly about and had followed all these years, but after a few issues that had transformed into excitement. By the time I'd started the final stretch though, the response had been so warm that I knew we only had to keep doing what we were doing, and make sure to crank it up to 11.

What scene or page(s) in any of the published issues so far could you break down and discuss its process from idea to page? What challenges did it present to you as creators, and were there any easter eggs that folks might have missed?

Ed Brisson: I think our opening salvo here is the first page to #7. We opened up with a splash that was an intentional mirror to the original WOLVERINE: OLD MAN LOGAN series by Mark Millar/Steve McNiven. We wanted to echo their start in an attempt to bring the reader right back into that world. Make it feel familiar.