General Category > Comic Related Discussion
Your interest in GAC stems from??
narfstar:
I think I called it the Good Guys and Gals of the Golden Age or something silly like that. I changed internet providers and lost the site.
Yoc:
Good Guys and Gals went offline eventually.
Bill's Pure Excitement is still alive but not updated for years.
bchat:
--- Quote from: comicOD on December 13, 2010, 03:09:18 PM ---What started you off, with your fascination with golden age comics. Does it
stem from enjoying them from your childhood or adolescence? Was there
something in particular that just drew you to this site?
--- End quote ---
Growing-up, I'ld seen Golden Age heroes in various books from Marvel & DC, but it was Malibu Comics' "Protectors" series that really got me interested in Golden Age comics & heroes, and the "Centaur heroes" in particular. From there, I started getting AC Comics' "Men of Mystery" books and various reprints from The Big Two, but never bothered to buy any original Golden Age books as I don't remember any of the local shops of that time having any that caught my eye. I passed on whatever few GA comics I saw at conventions that I went to during that time period due to their high prices (I was spending big money on another hobby at that point).
I think it was around 2001 when I found "Pure Excitement Comics" online, and it was cool to see the original stories in color, as opposed to AC's B&W reprints. My interest in GA comics waned for a few years but was rekindled when Dynamite Entertainment started their "Project Superpowers" line (which I've since given-up on). From a link on a some blog, I found GAC in 2008, which eventually led to my being a member here at DCM.
Ami_GFX:
My interest in GA comics started with the first comic I ever owned, a Walt Disney's Comics & Stories with a Barks reprint my grandmother bought me in 1970. I was 8 at the time and continued to read and buy the Gold Key reprints until I discovered superheroes around 1974 with a DC 100 page Detective Comics with a good Batman Story and the first episode of Archie Goodwin & Walt Simonson's Manhunter and the rest filled with reprints, most of them GA. I bought every issue of Detective afterward and every 100 page spectacular that I could get my hands on. I also got into DCs Shazam and got to know the Marvel Family. Next on the list was The Spirit which I discovered through Warren's B & W Spirit Magazine which came out in 1974 and I just happened to buy the first issue at a local drug store. My mom was initially very skeptical of my interest in comics but as it progessed started to be supportive and buy me big hardbound books on the history of comics and comic strips which I got every Christmas. By 1975, I was serious about comics, I subscribed to the Comic Reader and bought just about everything Marvel and DC put out and both bought and sold at a local comic book swap meet that happened every month. I started to collect by artist and my favorites were Kirby, Ditko and Eisner on the GA & silver age side and Jim Starlin, Neal Adams and P. Craig Russel on the 1970s side with a lot of others as well. By age 16 or so, I'd moved on and still bought and read comics but not so fanatically. I pretty much stopped buying comics by my late 20s but almost all of the comics I bought in the 1980s were GA reprints of comics I wanted in my teenage collecting days but could never afford even at 1970s prices. I still have my collection, pretty much in the state I left it in as a teenager. I love reading GA scans. I always loved the GA comics and only got them in small doses when I was collecting and it is just fantastic to read the comics of collectors like JVJ who were on the scene when I was too young to even dream about it and got to collect GA comics like Fiction House which was not even talked about much in the 1970s.
remz:
My interest in GAC also comes from my first experiences with comics in the mid-to-late 1950s. Relatives had been buying me licensed Dells and St. Johns comics for several years, but the real eye-opener for me was visiting my cousin who had a very near-complete collection of EC comics. Healthy or not, those covers and stories stayed with me, and I avidly sought out every crime and horror comic I could find in the mom-and-pop second hand stores. I was buying the Atlas line of supernatural and mystery comics new and got interested in superheroes with their introduction of the Marvel characters. Getting the opportunity to reacquaint myself with all these books on this site has been a wonderful source of nostalgic joy for me. My interest in comics was unflagging until my late teens at which time I discovered a new interest: Pulp Magazines! But that's another story ...
Navigation
[0] Message Index
[#] Next page
[*] Previous page
Go to full version