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Post by masterofquackfu on Jul 12, 2016 7:43:55 GMT -5
Mine is one that I remember quite clearly. I remember reading Iron Fist #4(which I figure was probably around 1976) at a church event. Even though I was too young to really understand much of the dialogue, I just remember how the art made an impression on me. I still have this comic in storage..it is beat up and 40 years old, but it is one that I will always remember fondly. I think what I will remember the most is the brutality of the artwork...Iron Fist and Radion just beat the hell out of each other and it has always stuck with me all these years. What a great issue....
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Post by Cei-U! on Jul 12, 2016 7:51:40 GMT -5
If you mean my earliest comic-related memory, I'm not sure I can pinpoint one. I have only a handful of memories of my early childhood. Comic books were a part of our household since before I was born, though, and my mother taught me to read at age 3 with a comic. I do have a memory of looking at a copy of Fantastic Four #3 and not understanding that the Thing was a good guy even though he was a monster but that would've been a couple of years after I started reading.
Cei-U! I summon the misty water-colored mem'ries!
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Post by Deleted on Jul 12, 2016 8:32:02 GMT -5
I did a lot of reading of the Justice League of America, the Fantastic Four, The Avengers, and the Justice Society of the America in that order. Honestly, it was these four titles that got me started in the first place.
Also, Green Lantern, World Finest, X-Men, and Spider-Man too ...
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Post by shishard on Jul 12, 2016 9:15:30 GMT -5
New Guy here, my favorite early memory was one Saturday I was 12 and was sick. I was unable to go to our flea market that was huge and a Saturday event for my family. I usually went for the 25 cent Star Wars figures and my mom said she would bring me back something. Well when everyone got home I had received a stack of comics. Mainly DC Arak and Arion. I had a few Spiderman and Batman books but had not heard of these as we did not have a local comic shop. All my comics came from grocery store racks. These books got me into collecting more. I spent every Saturday digging through these old back issue bins at the flea market and getting a few "new" indie comics like original TMNT comics, this was the 80s.
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Post by DE Sinclair on Jul 12, 2016 9:31:13 GMT -5
New Guy here, my favorite early memory was one Saturday I was 12 and was sick. I was unable to go to our flea market that was huge and a Saturday event for my family. I usually went for the 25 cent Star Wars figures and my mom said she would bring me back something. Well when everyone got home I had received a stack of comics. Mainly DC Arak and Arion. I had a few Spiderman and Batman books but had not heard of these as we did not have a local comic shop. All my comics came from grocery store racks. These books got me into collecting more. I spent every Saturday digging through these old back issue bins at the flea market and getting a few "new" indie comics like original TMNT comics, this was the 80s. What a great memory and a really nice thing your mom did for you. Welcome to CCF, hope you'll enjoy hanging out with us.
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Post by shishard on Jul 12, 2016 13:01:08 GMT -5
Thank you for the welcome. I have searched for years to find a good comic forum ( I will not blast those I tried). This is the coolest place for comics.
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Post by dbutler69 on Jul 12, 2016 13:43:25 GMT -5
I got my early comics from the local Convenient Food Mart (similar to 7/11) until discovering my local comic shop in 1979, at the age of 10. My first comic was Road Runner #55 (from late 1975), and my first superhero comics were World's Finest #236 and Fantastic Four #172 (early 1976). However, the title I collected the most at that time were Fantastic Four, Legion of Super-Heroes, and JLA. Once I discovered my LCS, I could get into the X-Men.
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Post by shishard on Jul 12, 2016 14:20:00 GMT -5
I got my early comics from the local Convenient Food Mart (similar to 7/11) until discovering my local comic shop in 1979, at the age of 10. My first comic was Road Runner #55 (from late 1975), and my first superhero comics were World's Finest #236 and Fantastic Four #172 (early 1976). However, the title I collected the most at that time were Fantastic Four, Legion of Super-Heroes, and JLA. Once I discovered my LCS, I could get into the X-Men. Yep, gas station and grocery store spinner racks. My first "new" X Men was a Classic X-Men #1 from Red Food Store. Shortly followed by Uncanny 214.
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Post by Rob Allen on Jul 12, 2016 14:34:50 GMT -5
My parents had been reading the newspaper comics to us practically from birth, but the first time I remember noticing comic books was at the local newsstand/candy store that was between our apartment and my school. It was September 1963 and I was about to start the second grade. My parents had been comic book fans in the late 30s/early 40s, and when they noticed me looking at these colorful little magazines, they encouraged me to pick one. I chose Spider-Man #7, and my life changed. That comic has been coverless since about 1965 but I still have it.
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Post by Action Ace on Jul 12, 2016 14:56:52 GMT -5
I'm not sure what it was. I imagine it involved someone yelling at me.
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Post by Deleted on Jul 12, 2016 15:05:50 GMT -5
That would 50 years ago...not sure. I remember some Harvey stuff like Casper, Spider-Man, World' Finest & the Flash as my firsts...
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Post by Bronze Age Brian on Jul 12, 2016 16:26:44 GMT -5
Summer of 1979.
Walked into the Steel Bear Deli in Cotati, CA.
Walked out with ASM #194, Batman #313, Fantastic Four #206, Godzilla #23, JLA #168, Iron Man #122, two Suzy Q's and an RC Cola.
A day I'll never forget.
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Post by String on Jul 12, 2016 17:03:27 GMT -5
Sadly, I do not remember how I got into comics. The earliest comics that I recall having are Iron Man #111 and Superman #347.
I do remember in either the 5th or 6th grade, I spent one afternoon making a list of every comic I owned so I would know what I had and what I needed to help with trading comics with kids in my neighborhood and school. By the time I finished, the floor of my bedroom was littered with comics and my list totaled over 200 comics.
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shaxper
CCF Site Custodian
Posts: 22,872
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Post by shaxper on Jul 12, 2016 21:19:55 GMT -5
I was practically born into comics. My parents had absolutely no interest in comics, so how I got into them is a rather long story. My mother was (and is) wickedly brilliant. She used to regularly take me to Toys R Us as a reward for good behavior. You'd think that would get expensive, but she had a strategy that never failed. She would tell me I could have any ONE item in the store and then take me to the most expensive aisles first. We'd look at bikes, electronic handheld games (remember the ones BEFORE the advent of Gameboy??) and electric train sets. I'd point to something I wanted, and she'd place it in the cart. Then, when we went down the next aisle, I'd see something else I wanted, and she'd take out the more expensive item and put in the less expensive item I'd just become obsessed over. On and on we'd do this until we ended up in the action figure aisle, looking at the DC Super Powers figures because they were the absolute cheapest toys in the store that looked interesting to me. Every single time, she'd make sure we'd end up in that section, and every single time, I'd go home with a new superhero. It just followed from there that I started watching the Super Powers Galactic Guardians cartoon, and my mother continued to encourage this interest with the licensed pajamas, the coloring books, the wooden puzzles, everything DC Superheroes. In fact, I recall crying in the shoe store one day because the salesman wouldn't let me try on licensed Wonder Woman sneakers. So when the Adam West Batman show and the Lynda Carter Wonder Woman series would come on reruns, or Superman (1978) or Superman II would be the 8 o'clock movie of the week, I took extra notice. Thus, by the time of my earliest memories, I was already a die hard DC fanatic. My first DC comic book didn't actually come until at least a year later, when I noticed a comic book spinner rack for the first time and picked out Detective Comics #552, but it was one of those Doug Moench stories where he waxed prosaic with excessive narration and symbolism, leaving a five year old me utterly lost as to what was happening. So, as much as I LOVED DC superheroes, I didn't pick up another comic book until Jason Todd died three years later, and even then it took the 1989 Batman movie to turn me into a regular comic book reader. Really though, my curse with comic books has always been that I was born at the wrong time. When I was five in 1985, the comics I wanted to read were being written for adolescents, and when I became an adolescent in the early 1990s, comics like Batman were being written for adults, and a lot of the other stuff was just really substance-less hype with cool looking characters posing dramatically on foil covers protected by polybags. My favorite comics are from the 1970s through the mid 1980s, and it's to my constant regret that I wasn't there to enjoy them when they were new. I have tremendous love--but very little nostalgia--attached to comics because of growing up when I did.
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Post by Bronze Age Brian on Jul 12, 2016 21:43:44 GMT -5
I was practically born into comics. My parents had absolutely no interest in comics, so how I got into them is a rather long story. My mother was (and is) wickedly brilliant. She used to regularly take me to Toys R Us as a reward for good behavior. You'd think that would get expensive, but she had a strategy that never failed. She would tell me I could have any ONE item in the store and then take me to the most expensive aisles first. We'd look at bikes, electronic handheld games (remember the ones BEFORE the advent of Gameboy??) and electric train sets. I'd point to something I wanted, and she'd place it in the cart. Then, when we went down the next aisle, I'd see something else I wanted, and she'd take out the more expensive item and put in the less expensive item I'd just become obsessed over. On and on we'd do this until we ended up in the action figure aisle, looking at the DC Super Powers figures because they were the absolute cheapest toys in the store that looked interesting to me. Every single time, she'd make sure we'd end up in that section, and every single time, I'd go home with a new superhero. It just followed from there that I started watching the Super Powers Galactic Guardians cartoon, and my mother continued to encourage this interest with the licensed pajamas, the coloring books, the wooden puzzles, everything DC Superheroes. So when the Adam West Batman show would come on reruns, or Superman (1978) or Superman II would be the 8 o'clock movie of the week, I took extra notice. Thus, by the time of my earliest memories, I was already a die hard DC fanatic. My first DC comic book didn't actually come until at least a year later, when I noticed a comic book spinner rack for the first time and picked out Detective Comics #552, but it was one of those Doug Moench stories where he waxed prosaic with excessive narration and symbolism, leaving a five year old me utterly lost as to what was happening. So, as much as I LOVED DC superheroes, I didn't pick up another comic book until Jason Todd died three years later, and even then it took the 1989 Batman movie to turn me into a regular comic book reader. Really though, my curse with comic books has always been that I was born at the wrong time. When I was five in 1985, the comics I wanted to read were being written for adolescents, and when I became an adolescent in the early 1990s, comics like Batman were being written for adults, and a lot of the other stuff was just really substance-less hype with cool looking characters posing dramatically on foil covers protected by polybags. My favorite comics are from the 1970s through the mid 1980s, and it's to my constant regret that I wasn'tthere to enjoy them when they were new. I have tremendous love--but very little nostalgia--attached to comics because of growing up when I did. Toys R Us was a magical place back in the day. Truly magical. Great story!
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