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The Beginning of My Comic Fandom
Ever since I was young, I’ve enjoyed comic books. Although I’ve never been a hardcore comics buyer or reader, I have dabbled in them from time to time, and my collection has expanded and retracted a lot through the years.
In the beginning, my older brother had a large collection of comic books that were kept under a table on our carport in the house I grew up in. During the summer months, I would pull out random issues and read through them. In his large pile of comics, there was Justice League America, Unknown Soldier, Sgt. Rock, Fantastic Four, Batman, Incredible Hulk, Mad Magazine, and Cracked.
Rainy days were whiled away kicked back on a sofa we had on the carport, watching and listening to it rain and reading issue after issue. Since they were kept on the carport, they ended up drawing moisture and thus any monetary value they had vanished. But that didn’t matter to me. What mattered was the content inside.
We eventually let my Uncle come and take them all away when we were moving to a new house. I never saw any of those old issues again, and when we arrived at the new house, I no longer had any comic books to read.
Eventually, I was turned on to the joys of reading Archie Comics. During the summer after we moved, we took a vacation, and my Mother picked up an Archie Comics digest to kill time while riding. Once she was done with it, I settled into the back seat and blew through the whole thing and loved it.
The characters of Archie, Betty, Veronica, Jughead, and Reggie populated a fun world that was filled with great supporting characters like Moose, Midge, Dilton, Josie, Big Ethel, and others. I soon found myself spending allowance money on new issues of the Digests and Double Digests of the Archie world. It wasn’t long before a super-hero comic once again caught my eye.
While at the local Piggly Wiggly grocery store on a weekly shopping trip with Mom, an issue of Green Lantern caught my eye. I had been a fan of Green Lantern since the Superfriends cartoons, so I picked up this issue of Emerald Dawn #5. Unfortunately, I had no point of reference to the story since I picked up the 5th issue from a 6 issue mini-series.
Even though I had no clue what was going on in the story, I went back and picked up the 6th issue the following month. To this day, I’m a fan of Green Lantern, and have picked up a lot of GL comics through the years when I’ve been back on the collecting wagon or was intrigued by different story lines.
I didn’t really pick up many more comics from that point until the hype surrounding the Death of Superman story line came out.
The Death of Superman was one of the biggest story line events in the history of comic books. The hype surrounding this was unreal, and thus, the first print copies of Superman #75 sold out in record time. My brother had interest in picking up the issue as a collector’s issue, and I had interest in reading it.
He took me to a local comic book and card store to pick up a copy, but they were already sold out. The dealer told us he would be getting more copies in and we should keep checking back. We went back every few days to see if he had gotten any in. My brother kept getting disappointed, but I just kept seeing more and more cool comics to pick up that I hadn’t seen before.
One little gem that caught my eye was a copy of Wizard: The Guide to Comics. The issue that was out at that time was #17. There was really nothing special about the issue, but I was hooked on the contents of this magazine from the beginning. From then on, I picked up every new issue and would read it from cover to cover within a week of getting it.
In the pages of Wizard magazine, I was turned on to many new and exciting comic books that I looked forward to picking up each week on subsequent visits to the comic book store. I eventually went on to pick up the rest of the Death of Superman saga, the follow-up Funeral for a Friend story line, and the eventual Reign of the Supermen arc. It was the start of many years of enjoying comic books on a continuing basis.
That little old comic book shop went out of business at the tail end of the speculator market, but I had the opportunity to pick up a good many books there, some I still have in my collection. I’ve never stopped reading comics since picking them up all those years ago. I still read the occasional Superman title, but Batman took over the spot as my favorite years ago. Today, I read stuff like Hellboy, Walking Dead, and love reading old golden age tales. I’ve actually published an anthology of golden age comic book stories, and you can find that here on Amazon.
So that’s how I fell into comic books, and why now I’m a huge fan of super heroes in all mediums. But what about you? Do you enjoy comics? If so, how did you get into them? What was the first comic you read? Tell me about it in the comments section below and we’ll reminisce.
Vaporman87 Posted on Mar 29, 2017 at 03:00 AM
Hard to understand why, but my first ever comic purchase was an Ice-Man comic. Yes, Ice-Man had his own stand-alone comic series at one point. LOL
OldSchool80s Posted on Mar 23, 2017 at 01:54 PM
I was always more of a Marvel guy than DC, but I was partial to team-ups. Liked Avengers and JLA, but any issue with a crossover or another character making appearance was always cool. Loved stuff like Secret Wars, Contest of Champions, etc. Those favorites from childhood are still ones I remain loyal/partial to after all of these years. They will always hold a special place for me.
mickyarber Posted on Mar 22, 2017 at 09:04 AM
@Hoju I was a fan of Kyle Rayner too. When he took over in GL #51, I started picking the book up every month up through the last 60's issues. Whichever issues it was that Hal came back and fought Kyle in the 2 part story in those later issues.
Hoju Koolander Posted on Mar 22, 2017 at 02:02 AM
I always love to hear people's comic book fandom origin stories. I too was caught up in the hype of Superman's death and aftermath, with a deep love of Wizard from cover to cover for many years. I recently picked up the Emerald Dawn run at a used book store and enjoyed it quite a bit, though Kyle Rayner will always be my GL for better or for worse (probably the latter).
NLogan Posted on Mar 21, 2017 at 02:38 PM
I would have loved reading some Sgt. Rock and Unknown Soldier with you under the carport as a kid growing up my friend. I found some of my old books in a milk crate in my uncle's garage and begged him for them.
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