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Post by Cei-U! on Dec 14, 2014 9:31:25 GMT -5
Most people assume that, because I read comic books, I *must* be a science fiction buff too. As the old song says, it ain't necessarily so. Naturally I watched Star Trek and Lost in Space as a kid but I never cracked open a sci-fi novel, juvenile or otherwise, until inspired to do so by #11. Fantastic VoyageBased on the movie of the same name starring Stephen Boyd, the great Donald Pleasance and the voluptuous Raquel Welch, this Gold Key one-shot featured art by Wally Wood (layouts) and Dan Adkins (finishes). As adaptations go, it was a pretty successful one, though I wouldn't realize that until I saw the film a good five years after reading the comic, but what put it on my list is what happened in between. My older brother *was* a sci-fi buff at the time. One afternoon, while snooping around his room in hopes of ferreting out his stash of nudie magazines, I came across the novelization of Fantastic Voyage written by no less than Isaac Asimov. Out of a combination of curiosity and boredom, I read it and found I really liked it. This led me to seek out more examples of Asimov's work, then that of other writers working in the genre. Before long, I was hooked. I'm still not a huge sci-fi reader (I'd much rather indulge in a juicy murder mystery) but I know my life would be poorer for not having read Robert E. Heinlein, Andre Norton, Arthur C. Clarke or Ursula LeGuin. And I owe it all to today's choice. Cei-U! I summon the Proteus!
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Post by Icctrombone on Dec 14, 2014 10:30:27 GMT -5
12 days of Classic Christmas #11Flash #1 (1987)Mike Baron/ Jackson Juice/Larry MahlstedtI have always liked the concept of the Flash, but always thought the Barry Allen version to really be bland and boring. When they started a new Flash series using Wally West I thought it might be a little better. Boy was I wrong, It was a Lot better. Flash #1-18 is my favorite run of the any series involving a Flash Character. A real transition from his Kid Flash status is made in the very first pages when he is celebrating his 20th birthday with the Teen Titans and the book takes off from there. During the run, Wally has real world situations and an active sex life , which made it all a nice read. He was a young guy with hermones raging and it showed in his behavior. Great dialogue from Baron really makes this comic stand out for me. I know many are fond of the Later Mark Waid and Geoff Johns runs but for me, this will always stand out as THE Flash. He is handed the mantle of the Flash because of the COIE events. This is one of the good side effects of that series , among the bad. Other reasons This issue stands out for me : He is only able to run at 700 Mph, tops. He has to eat incredible amounts of calories in order to maintain his strength. He shows real world sensibilities by negotiating with a hospital for free health insurance in exchange for transporting a heart. And , Oh yeah, he hits the Lotto. That uncomfortable feeling when Wally asks for Health insurance for helping them out
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Post by Pól Rua on Dec 14, 2014 10:33:53 GMT -5
#11: Untold Legend of the Batman (1982, Murray Publishers Pty.Ltd) ANOTHER Australian reprint (and also from 1982!), this one reprints the titular miniseries by Len Wein, with art by Jim Aparo. Now I'd been reading Batman comics for ages, and, of course, I'd been exposed to the character in the live action TV series and movie (100% pure West!) and through the Super Friends and Filmation Cartoon, and I've always loved the 'Brave and the Bold' stories by Bob Haney and Jim Aparo (who's always been the guy who draws 'my' Batman!), but this one brought it all together for me and crystallized a bunch of the mythology that grew around the character... plus, of course, to an inquisitive little comics weasel like me who wants to know everything about everything, this was a crazy treasure trove! The man who trained Batman? The secret of the Batmobile? Thomas Wayne - the original Batman? Heady stuff for 11 year old me. However, none of that is why this is here. This is here for two reasons, two scenes that no matter HOW they revive, rework, retcon or wipe from existence, will ALWAYS be part of the mythic landscape of The Batman for mine. The first is the ironic final fate of Joe Chill. Confronted by the Batman, who's finally tracked him down, it's the face of Bruce Wayne which truly terrifies him! As he realizes the enormity of what he's done, he flees, seeking sanctuary with his criminal cohorts who, upon hearing that he's "The Man Who Made Batman", gun him down, only to realize too late that he could have told them Batman's secret identity. It's a beautiful and elegant piece of theatrical storytelling, and for me, it's as essential a scene in the Batman mythology as a Bat crashing through a window, pearls falling in an alley, a tear-filled but resolute graveside oath, or The Mark of Zorro. It's the final curtain on the last vestige of Batman as a force of vengeance, and the beginning of his role as a guardian, a protector and a hero. The second thing is the Secret Origin of Alfred Pennyworth. Of course, I'd always known Alfred was THERE. I'd never really met him in his chubby, bungling, Nigel Bruce-esque amateur sleuth phase, so my main knowledge of him was the truly superb performance of Alan Napier in the 60's TV series (a performance I didn't really appreciate until much later). And up until this story, I'd never really thought of him much at all. But here we find a young, vigourous man who rejects a life of service and pursues his dreams of a career on the stage. At the outbreak of WWII, he joins the British Army and, when they learn of his acting and disguise abilities, he becomes a spy and commando, stabbing Nazis and romancing it up with DC War Comic Heroine, Mademoiselle Marie of La Resistance. But after the war, the acting he loved is all tied up with fighting and killing, so he returns to a life as a Butler, where he can care for people, provide comfort, compassion and empathy - healing instead of harming. This to me is the heart of Alfred Pennyworth (and it doesn't matter HOW many bloody years it's been since WWII, he's always going to have that in his backstory). The idea of a man of war who throws aside the tools of his trade to be a force for compassion and healing, and it's this story which made him one of my all time favourite comic book characters. Of course, being an Australian reprint, it also featured a bunch of secondary features and filler, including: Two 'Commissioner Gordan' stories, one by Paul Kupperberg and Jose Delbo, and the other, a nice little mystery story, by Bob Rozakis and Joe Staton, A 'Nemesis' adventure about the mob-hunting master of disguise (who I was always quietly a bit of a fan of) by Cary Burkett and Dan Spiegle, and a Man-Bat adventure by Bob Rozakis and Don Newton.
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Post by wildfire2099 on Dec 14, 2014 12:12:57 GMT -5
11. Ravage 2099 #1 Dec. 1992 Written by: Stan Lee Penciller: Paul Ryan Plot: Paul-Phillip Ravage, CEO of ECO, is framed for murder, and forced to go on the run from the corporate cops of Alchemax. We get introduced to Dack, who seems like he could be a sidekick, but never appears agao, and Tiana, who would be Ravage's actual sidekick/love interest for the rest of the series. Why I picked it: Y'all know I'm a 2099 fan (hence the profile pic). 2099 started in comics just as I did, I was pretty excited when not only was there a new universe starting up for me to get in on, but Stan Lee was creating it! I was super excited. Of course, the comic itself isn't all that great, it's starts out as an enviornmental parable, but quickly becomes a Wolverine clone. I really like the early art though (Paul Ryan) What I really liked was the idea of a spin-off future Marvel Universe. At first, they did a great job creating new character for it.. Ravage was all original, Miguel O'Hara was pretty different as Spidey, and the X-Men, while still mutants, had no relation to the current ones other than the name. Then there's Doom, who was just awesome. ON top of that, they had GREAT creators... I quickly realized I liked PAD and Warren Ellis (though the latter has since gone of the rails, IMO)... it was really the first time I paid attention to creators, to be honest. I think it all went off the rails when they tried to tie it to the present with the Fantastic Four, and started killing people off (just like the Ultimate universe, incidently... no lesson learned). Of course, Hulk and Ghost RIder were pretty medicore, too, but that's another story. Historic Significance: Ravage was the last Stan Lee creation at Marvel, as many know. Funny, I know I'm not the only fan out there, (since there's now a new Spidey 2099 book) but 2099 really only lasted 4 years... maybe 5 if you count the horrendous 'World of Tomorrow' series.
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Post by Pharozonk on Dec 14, 2014 12:21:22 GMT -5
#11: The Flash #20From one Flash writer to another, William Messner-Loebs kept the ball rolling after Mike Baron left the book and made the book a bevy of fun to read. In this story, Wally finds out that he and his mom are being evicted from his apartment and are forced on to the streets. While this may intially seem heartbreaking, Messner-Loebs never makes the proceedings dour by constantly mixing in humor to break tension, such as when Wally calls the JLI for help, but Oberon tells Booster Gold to not help Wally because he's been an asshole to the JLI for a while. Small scale stories like these were Messner-Loebs' specialty during his Flash run and this one stands out as one of the peaks of his creativity and brilliance.
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shaxper
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Post by shaxper on Dec 14, 2014 12:36:49 GMT -5
11. Batman #428 (DC 1988)While Starlin's "A Death in the Family" storyline was clumsy, in poor taste, and generally a mess that never should have happened, I feel quite differently about this climactic chapter, in which Starlin, having fulfilled his agenda of gleefully and unapologetically killing off the kid sidekick concept, stands back, hangs his head, and pays respect to what he's just destroyed. I was eight when this was published. I knew little about comics and cared even less when my mother, hearing the media buzz about the death of Robin, immediately drove my best friend and I out to the neighborhood stationary store, handed us $2, and demanded we both buy a copy of the book. I clearly remember the impression that book left on me; not just that brilliant Mignola cover where you can almost literally see the life leaving Jason Todd's body in a moment of white shock, but the gorgeous pacing of the book as Starlin allows Aparo's visuals to grieve for the boy wonder at the pace of an awkward funeral, Starlin's dialogue seeming to understand when to come in and when to let the gravity of the situation weigh on the reader in silence. In fact, for me, the big moment of shock wasn't finding Jason dead. We already knew that was coming. Really, it's the before and after. The before being when Batman finds his mother -- the grim reality of Aparo's pencils as she uses her last breaths to finally give the kid no one wanted (especially not the fans, and especially not her) the epitaph he deserved ("He turned out to be such a good kid...he's much better than I deserve"), and the after being that final hug Bruce gives to Jason's dead body. Hyped event or not, this installment is still tremendously touching, and it's probably the single comic I've gone back and re-read the most often in my life. And, at the age of eight, I got it. I didn't understand a lot of what had occurred, why Jason and his mother had been blown to bits, and I'm not even sure I understood that this wasn't the original Robin or where this replacement kid had come from, but I got the emotion; I was moved. My friend didn't want his copy, so I got two, and though this was not the impetus that drove me to collecting comics (the writing still felt far too dense/mature/inaccessible for me), I respected these books. Yes, I knew they were supposed to be collectors' items, which was why my mother made me buy them, but they were special to me now too; they'd elicited a feeling from me that nothing else in my eight year old world had offered. I clearly remember having these plastic drawer cabinets my parents had bought me and having nothing of importance to put in them. Each drawer was devoted to anything I could find to put in it. There was literally one reserved for a sheet of Babe Ruth stamps my mother had bought me, but I clearly remember my two copies of Batman #428 had the third drawer from the top, and that was the drawer that got opened most often in the year before I actually started collecting comics and, soon after, had bags, boards, and a box for those two cherished copies.
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Post by JKCarrier on Dec 14, 2014 12:50:49 GMT -5
Captain America #153 (1972) I had already seen Captain America in reruns of the "Merry Marvel Marching Society" cartoons, and was pleasantly surprised to find out that there were comic books about him, too. I couldn't have picked a better jumping-on point: This was the first issue of Steve Englehart's legendary run, and served as a great introduction to Cap and his supporting cast. Nick Fury shows up at Steve Rogers' apartment, spoiling for a fight because he thinks (mistakenly) that Cap is making a play for his girlfriend Val. As the two battle, we find out there are deeper layers to Fury's resentment: As a career military man, he considers Cap a dilletante, working with SHIELD only when it suits him. And perhaps most importantly, he's jealous becasue they're both WWII veterans, but Cap was frozen for 20 years and is therefore still young. Once all the cards are on the table, they're able to finally come to terms before they knock each others' blocks off. Heroes working out their emotional problems by fighting is a Marvel Comics cliche, but this was certainly a deeper level of characterization than I was used to in my entertainment. This issue also has one of the all-time great cliffhangers, with the Falcon running into an "evil" Captain America and Bucky, who the narrative captions assure us are not any kind of robots, aliens, or imposters. Needless to say, I was hooked!
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Post by DubipR on Dec 14, 2014 13:29:19 GMT -5
Let's flash forward from 1982 to 1985 for the Second Day of CCF Chrtistmas 2014: Number 11THE AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #262Year of Release: March 1985 Written & Drawn by: Bob Layton Jr. Synopsis: Peter Parker is caught with his mask off, literally by a sleazy photographer, Jake "Dirty Jake" Jones. Spider-Man goes off and tries to chase down Jones to get his roll of film back. Along the way, Jones ticks off some local mafioso goons and Spider-Man has to now defend Jones and get the film back. A decent script by Layton, and solid pencils by Mr. Iron Man himself. Why This Is A Classic: As a 9 year old (almost 10) DubipR, I was engulfed in Saturday morning cartoons, tons of G.I. Joe toys and cartoons and cap guns. As I was slowly buying comics off the local 7-11 spinner rack, my brother was selling subscriptions of magazines for his class. I asked my mom if she would order me some comics and she said pick two..and I did. G.I. Joe, as I mentioned above and Spider-Man; loved the 60s theme song, and loved Spider-Man & His Amazing Friends. So mom and dad place an order for those 2 titles to come in the mail. Of the two books, this was the first to come via mail subscription. And a great book to start off with. First off.. it's a photo cover! Hokey Smokes Bullwinkle! It blew my 9 year old mind that they took an actual photo of Peter Parker! I remember seeing the comic on the kitchen table when I came home from school with the rest of the mail. The comic, packaged in a thin brown paper slip cover, that now a days, would've freaked the crap out of a collector... dings everywhere, etc. But I didn't care! It was Spider-Man..coming to me via the postal service 12 times a year.. I ran upstairs and read that book, over and over and over. Yes, I had other Spider-Man books from what I bought at the 7-11, but this was from the subscription service that was mailed from the Marvel offices. I had a Spider-Man subscription from 1985 to 1990.. while I got some infamous issues, getting that first one makes it a classic.
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Crimebuster
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Post by Crimebuster on Dec 14, 2014 15:27:14 GMT -5
1997. I had been out of college for a year and was learning what an English degree can do for you. I wanted to be a writer, of course, but that was easier said than done - I mean, in terms of getting paid for it - so I took a job at a book store. It didn't really have anything to do with actually writing, of course, but it felt like it did. Meanwhile, I was working up all sorts of weird comic book pitches in the hopes that Marvel or DC would somehow realize my genius and hire me on. And while I was in the process of losing a lot of weight, I was still a kind of portly comic nerd, with all the awkwardness around women that suggested. That summer I went to a comic book show in Boston. I had with me some of my pitches, for the hottest properties and characters of the day - Rom and The Haunted Tank. Yes, I obviously knew just what modern audiences wanted. My plan was to talk to some comic pros about my pitches, and pitching in general, so I could do some networking, get my feet in the door, all of that. Of course, when the time came, I was too embarrassed to actually talk to the pros about my ideas. I stood in front of Bob Layton's table, clutching my Rom pitch and thinking, "this is just not going to work." But I wanted to at least talk to someone in the business, so I distracted myself from my own failure by stepping over to the next table, where an indie creator was sitting all alone, ignored by everyone. I chatted with him about the indie side of the business for a couple minutes, mainly so I could tell myself I had actually tried, and then left. But I felt like it would be rude not to at least pretend to be interested in his book, so just for the sake of politeness, I bought one of his comics. When I got home and read it, I discovered a story that would speak to me and the specifics of my life more directly than anything I have ever read, before or since: 11. Box Office Poison #0Box Office Poison, by Alex Robinson, is kind of an ensemble piece. But there are two main characters. Sherman is a recent college graduate who longs to be a professional writer, but instead finds himself wasting away in a low paying job as a book store clerk. His best friend Ed is a portly comic nerd who is awkward with the ladies, but dreams of becoming a professional comic book creator. Sound familiar? It was immediately obvious to me reading this that Alex was writing from his own experience, and that his own experience was amazingly and exactly similar to my own. The details about Sherman's job at the bookstore were so dead on correct that they could only have been written by someone who had been in the trenches. In fact, this scene here actually happened to me and a co-worker. I mean, almost word for word, with the exact same customer even: It wasn't just the details of the store and work, though, because Sherman's inner monologue, his struggles with his desire to be a writer and the reality of actually becoming one, were also a perfect reflection of my own. Ed, meanwhile, didn't get much of the spotlight in this first issue, but I would come to discover that his own character and arc were also completely recognizable and relatable. Obviously, I've gotten older, moved on, changed, whatever. But for a few years there, I knew that every issue, I could count on the fact that there were at least two people in the world who understood exactly what I was going through in my life: Ed and Sherman. Cannot beat that.
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Post by hondobrode on Dec 14, 2014 15:30:01 GMT -5
This next entry is as classic a send off for a character as I can think of, and is the epitome of 70's Marvel, and one of my favorite characters. Jim Starlin was one of those great 70's creators whose work had a high power energy and freshness that was kind of Kirby-esque and boldly threatened everything you knew about the Marvel Universe. I had read Warlock but was kind of confused by it but impressed with Starlin. When I found my first comic shop, Dragon's Lair in Omaha, my first mission was completing my Miller Daredevil run and then getting Starlin's Captain Marvel. I loved everything about Mar-Vell. Even Rick Jones worked ok here. and then the year was 1982 and Big Jim Shooter releases the platimun new format inspired by those high-brow Europeans and it rocked my world : Mar-Vell is at the end and it's cancer. Who doesn't know someone who has died from cancer ? It was so moving too. My brother and I both teared up reading this and read it repeatedly despite our little fingerprints showing on the glossy pages we weren't used to at the time. Beautiful, oversized, but expensive ($5.95 ! That was the equivalent of 10 comics), and a poignant and fitting sending off to one of my favorite characters. This has been one of Marvel's perennials and with good reason.
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Post by Action Ace on Dec 14, 2014 15:35:44 GMT -5
CLASSIC COMICS CHRISTMAS #11
SUPERMAN ADVENTURES #41
"22 Stories in a Single Bound!"
On Sale January 12, 2000 Written by Mark Millar Penciled by (in order): Ty Templeton, Joe Staton, Neil Vokes, Bret Blevins, Min S. Ku, Cameron Stewart, Mike Manley, Craig Rousseau, Rick Burchett, Darwyn Cooke, Aluir Amancio and Philip Bond Inked by Terry Austin Colored by Marie Severin Edited by Joey Cavalieri Cover by Mike Manley From Batman Adventures to Tiny Titans, I could have done this entire list with nothing but DC Kids comics from the last two decades and felt good about my list. The regular universe could have replacement heroes, it could be drenched in blood, it could careen from one sixty part crossover to another, but in these comics everything was still "normal." From the beginning, these comics were of high quality and had a lot of hidden gems. I needed to pick one of them from before 2005 to be on this list and chose this one. Listing the honorable mentions from Mad Love to Batman Adventures (2nd series) #17 would take over an hour. Before he became Mark Millar "Hollywood Superhero Machine" he was doing twenty stellar issues of Superman Adventures. It is still my favorite work by the man. In this issue there are 22 one page stories and they are all delightful. It's hard to do a single story 22 page comic these days, so to do one page comics and to still be clever and enjoyable is a real test. The Ultimates #1 deserved to be on this list too, but I think this comic will suffice. Up next... my first visit to the Silver Age
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Post by foxley on Dec 14, 2014 15:39:14 GMT -5
11. Marvel Two-In-One #51
Synopsis: A superheroic poker game is interrupted by an assault on the SHIELD helicarrier. Why I picked it: Oddly, this was one of the first comics I thought of on learning the topic for this year's 12 Days. But I cannot give you any deep reason for my choice. It has no particular emotional attachment. It was not significant in my comic collecting history. It is certainly not a masterpiece. The reason is that I like it: as simple as that. Something about this issue just appeals to me. It always makes me smile. The plot is not overly serious, but is not a parody either. We get some great scenes of the heroes just chilling, alongside some great action sequences (drawn by Frank Miller before he went insane). The banter sparkles (kudos to writer Peter B. Gillis). So whenever I need reminding that my beloved superhero comics do not need to be angst-ridden doomfests, and can simply be fun, this is the book I will turn to.
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Post by Icctrombone on Dec 14, 2014 16:18:53 GMT -5
This next entry is as classic a send off for a character as I can think of, and is the epitome of 70's Marvel, and one of my favorite characters. Jim Starlin was one of those great 70's creators whose work had a high power energy and freshness that was kind of Kirby-esque and boldly threatened everything you knew about the Marvel Universe. I had read Warlock but was kind of confused by it but impressed with Starlin. When I found my first comic shop, Dragon's Lair in Omaha, my first mission was completing my Miller Daredevil run and then getting Starlin's Captain Marvel. I loved everything about Mar-Vell. Even Rick Jones worked ok here. and then the year was 1982 and Big Jim Shooter releases the platimun new format inspired by those high-brow Europeans and it rocked my world : Mar-Vell is at the end and it's cancer. Who doesn't know someone who has died from cancer ? It was so moving too. My brother and I both teared up reading this and read it repeatedly despite our little fingerprints showing on the glossy pages we weren't used to at the time. Beautiful, oversized, but expensive ($5.95 ! That was the equivalent of 10 comics), and a poignant and fitting sending off to one of my favorite characters. This has been one of Marvel's perennials and with good reason. This was on my original list because it reaches inside everyone's primal feeling of hopelessness regarding a disease that is known to us all. Starlin wrote this type of ending in order to work out his grief over losing his father to cancer. That last page is powerful.
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Post by coke & comics on Dec 14, 2014 16:38:48 GMT -5
11. Blanketsby Craig Thompson July, 2003 (Top Shelf) I originally had no intention of including OGNs here, but I realized things I actually had read in single issue format was basically limited to superhero comics. For everything else, I've favored trades. In 2003, I had graduated college, but had still not particularly expanded my comics tastes. I read more than superheroes now, but not much. A lot of Vertigo output. And I'd followed some of my favorite superhero writers to non-superhero projects. But not too much radically different. I owe a lot of my taste expansion to a man named James Sime. Back when I was working in a comic store in college, he worked in the store a few blocks away. His store was not very good and I think he knew this. During a time I had quit my job at the comic store (I quit the job quite frequently, but always ended up back there and was working it the day it closed) he took my place. He and my boss were a poor fit together; I was better at not proposing new ideas and my boss was a creature of habit. James introduced me to the First Comics in our quarter bins, Grimjack and Jon Sable, for example. He did not work in the store long. His old boss down the road was closing up shop and he decided to buy the place and run things his way. He made a new store out of it, which eventually changed its name and moved to a better location. It is now Isotope Comics and has become quite famous, as comic stores go. He did what my boss had never been interested in: events. Bringing in creators to promote their work, complete with generous helpings of alcohol. At one of these, my brother had picked up True Story, Swear to God and gotten it signed by creator Tom Beland. Not my brother's usual fare. Or mine. I read his copy and loved it. I should explain that I'm a big fan of stories. I definitely approach comics as a storytelling medium and stories are what I love. Realism in stories never mattered too much and it sometimes made me skeptical, afraid that story would necessarily get sacrificed in the name of realism. What I liked about True Story was that it was basically a fairy tale. The fact that the events depicted actually happened did not manage to harm the magical nature of the story one iota. And it began to help me appreciate that good stories could be found in lots of places. Tom Beland returned to the store for an event in 2003 or so, and there I met him, being able to tell him I loved his book. I had a couple questions for him. The first was about Batman. He mentioned in the comic his favorite book being Dark Knight Returns, which had reinforced my impression that I was only person on earth who thought Year One was the superior Miller Batman work. I asked him about this, and he said that as he'd grown older, he'd come to prefer Year One as well. This pleased me. I also asked him what his favorite romance comic was. And he told me Blankets. So I picked it up. And to these comics I think I owe eventually reading comics like Persepolis and Fun Home and other masterpieces. Blankets is a comic I have now read a few times, simply beautiful in its illustration. It tells the story of the author reconciling his feelings toward his first girlfriend with his strict Chrisitan upbringing. While Catholic, my upbringing was hardly strict about religion. But the sexual repression inherent in Christianity and really in all of America still invaded my psyche, so I like many can relate to the emotions of the book. A confusing time in a person's life made more confusing by screwed-up sex-demonizing values lurking beneath the surface of our culture. It's open, honest, beautiful in both words and illustrations, and finds within its author's own life, a compelling story which wrestles with important complex issues. Craig Thompson would later create Habibi, about the bond between two escaped child-slaves in the Arabic world of yesteryear, a work where every page has such poetic beauty, that no description of mine would do it justice.
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Post by Paste Pot Paul on Dec 14, 2014 16:52:11 GMT -5
11. Batman 251: Denny O'Neil and Neal AdamsI would have read this originally in a B&W reprint, as a pre-teen in the early to mid 70s, but cant find a cover scan for anything around that time. Fortunately for me(in terms of this thread) I own it digitally on Comixology, so I can claim it after all. Whenever I picture Batman, the first image that comes to mind is... the iconic shot of Batman running through the sand. Then there is what may be IMHO the greatest Batman cover ever. We have an issue by arguably the most important team to ever chronicle Batmans life, giving us one of his best stories. While some argue that their Ras al Ghul stories are better(and may well be) this cover, this image, and frankly the Joker make this my pick. Batman to me is grey underoos and blue gloves/cape, he is fallible, he is a great fighter but not unbeatable, he is smart but not THE smartest. I dont feel any of that with the modern Batman (post Knights End I guess) though I do enjoy the work of some creators in that time.
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