General Category > Comic Related Discussion
Your interest in GAC stems from??
darkmark (RIP):
Well, the first GA books I ever encountered were a small pile my uncle left behind, when I was about 5 or 6. They included a BLACKHAWK, an ACTION, an ish of CANNONBALL, one of JOKER (with Powerhouse Pepper in it), a BIG SHOT, and a LOONEY TUNES. By the time I got back to check on those things years later, they'd given them away. But my interest was really piqued early on by JLA #21-22, the first issues I bought, the ones with the Justice Society's first crossover. Also, Marvel put a faux Captain America in STRANGE TALES about that time as a tryout. Learning that there had been heroes before the present era was always a curiosity point, and I never stopped wondering about them or picking up information on them where I could.
Decades later, I had a batch of Fawcett CAPTAIN MARVELs and related books that I'd scanned and was looking for gap-fillers. I happened on this site. Mirabile dictu! The rest is historic.
Ami_GFX:
--- Quote from: narfstar on December 15, 2010, 01:27:13 PM ---Working at 12. That is child labor which a violation of the law. Forced into a life of crime by comic bookis ???
--- End quote ---
Could be but at 12 years old in 1974, I saw things differently. I just wanted to buy comic books and I felt fortunate to have the paper route. There was a lot of competition for those paper routes among my fellow 12 year olds. Plus it gave me a lot of bike riding which compensated for the hours and hours I sat around on my duff reading my comics. Comics were, before sex, drugs and rock & roll kicked in, one of my first real motivations in life. ;D
John C:
I blame Roy Thomas. Or Adam West.
I watched (in syndication) the Batman TV show and loved it, so when I saw Batman comics, that was what I needed to buy. On a week with no new book at the local convenience store, I happened on the big Justice League/Justice Society crossover for the year...that also featured the Crime Syndicate, All-Star Squadron, and possibly partridges in pear trees.
The Golden Agers captured my imagination immediately, and All-Star Squadron became the obsession. Then the All-Star Comics revival and the Adventure Comics run, plus as many JLA/JSA crossovers as I could lay hands on.
It took much longer to step outside of DC, and I can't quite recall when, actually.
OtherEric:
I first really heard about and got interested in the Golden Age when I found a copy of Crawford's Encyclopedia of Comic Books at the local library. I now know that that book is one of the worst pieces of Comic scholarship out there; which is quite an accomplishment given how bad some of the early works can be. What gets missed in how bad it is as a history book is how good a job it does of making old books sound fun and come alive.
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