shaxper
CCF Site Custodian
Posts: 22,860
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Post by shaxper on May 9, 2015 19:19:52 GMT -5
Inspired by a few posts in the Meanwhile Thread, what do you remember about when you first started buying comics? From the cover prices, to what was popular at the time, to the smell of the newsstand, stationary or drug store, or LCS where it happened, what do you remember about those days?
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Post by Pharozonk on May 9, 2015 19:31:55 GMT -5
I remember when my dad gave me some of the first comics. He was working as a contractor for the now defunct bookstore Borders and as such he had access to a lot of their surplus stock at the end of each year. Knowing that I was a big superhero fan from the cartoons, he got whatever comics he could grab and brought them home for me. Among those he got me was the comic that would forever change my view of superheroes: Robin #149. Immediately, I was drawn into the story. Who was this Tim Drake character? I thought Dick Grayson was Robin? Who is Cassandra Cain? Isn't Commissioner Gordon's daughter Batgirl? I was fascinated by all these new characters and immediately took to Wikipedia to try to learn about these new characters and make sense of the story. As a relatively young kid in 2006, I didn't know about online forums like CBR to help me figure out who these character were so I had to rely on online databases to help me learn more and I loved every minute of pouring over the characters' histories. Unfortunately, my mom caught a glance of an issue of Swamp Thing my dad had also brought home and the graphic gore in it immediately made her throw out all the comics, including the Robin issue so I was never able to read the next issue to find out what happened. In retrospect, I realize that the "One Year Later" era following Infinite Crisis was pretty poorly managed on DC's part and symbolic of a lot of things that would begin to signal the fall of the company. However, as a kid just getting into comics I loved the story for putting the characters I had followed for years into a larger universe. There was a whole world of characters outside the main DCU that I had no idea existed. It's why I get so indignant when people tell me that continuity and history don't matter in comics. I respond, with more than helping of passion, that continuity is the whole reason that I follow these characters. To see something from over a hundred issues ago play a part in the comic I'm reading now gives it a sense of significance, a sense that I'm part of something greater than simply reading about a guy in tights punching over the top villains. I could enjoy the story as part of a never ending tapestry of events and stories that existed decades before I was born and would exist long after I stopped reading comics. That just felt special to me, in a way that I can't say I've felt in years.
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Post by Randle-El on May 9, 2015 19:48:24 GMT -5
I used to get most of my comics from this store that was next door to the supermarket my mom shopped at. My memories are a bit fuzzy -- it wasn't a comic shop per se, in that they sold things like newspapers, sports cards, magazines, candy, etc. But the owner or one of the employees must have been a comic guy, because they had a lot of stuff that you would ordinarily find at a comic shop. In addition to current issues, they had a sizable back issue collection. They also sold bags and boards, a few graphic novels, and even some toys and model kits. It was a pretty cool store and I loved hanging out there. The X-books were the big thing when I started buying there. I remember buying Wolverine #1 and Excalibur #1 from that store.
There was also another store next to my father's work that I used to hang out at prior to the above shop. It was called Geppi's Comic World, and if that name sounds familiar, yes it was owned by THAT Geppi -- Steve Geppi, the founder of Diamond Comic Distributors. Back before he became the kingpin of comic distributing, he had a chain of comic shops in the DC Metro area.
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Post by Calamas on May 9, 2015 20:29:11 GMT -5
I remember ages 14, 15, 16, traveling by city bus to every convenience store I knew of to find the next issue of just about every title DC produced. Heroes Aren’t Hard to Find opened in 1980 and sometime afterwards I learned of its existence from another fan at a Little General spinner rack. One location allowed me to start buying Marvel Comics too. (I had originally felt I could only afford to follow one company; apparently money saved in bus fare would widen my horizons.)
Heroes was the very definition of “a hole in the wall.” I remember once having to wait in an auto supply store around the corner until Shelton could come open the store. When traveling by bus, waiting around bored consumed less time than making a return trip at some later point.
Actually, now that I think about it, it was fanzines, particularly Comic Reader, that opened up the world of Marvel to me. Not so much good reviews or whatever the word for “buzz” was back then but the knowledge that many creators jumped backed and forth between companies, particularly David Michelinie and Michael Fleisher going to Marvel and Marv Wolfman moving to DC.
I’ve been along for the ride, more or less, ever since.
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Post by Deleted on May 9, 2015 20:47:22 GMT -5
My Dad bought me my first comics. I started picking out my own books in the late 60's when the Batman TV show was on. Cover prices were 12/15 cents. I bought DC, Marvel & Charlton titles. I bought my books at Davis Trading Post in Norwood, PA. It was a news stand/tobacco store. It was across the street from the grocery store that my parents shopped at. After shopping we would go across the street & I would be allowed to get 3-4 books. My childhood was riding my bike, reading comics, watching Batman & Star Trek.
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Post by Deleted on May 9, 2015 21:20:15 GMT -5
Great Topic ...Classic Comic Forum - LinkMy first Memories of Comic Books was a Mom and Pops Country Store that doubles as a Newsstand selling comic books from DC Comics, Marvel, Dell, and a few Independents as well. When I was growing up around at the start of reading about three years before Adam West Batman TV Show hit the airwaves and seeing JLA, Green Lantern, Detective Comics, Fantastic Four, Spiderman, The Avengers, Black Panther, and Wonder Woman and the X-Men at this store that houses comic books in these stands that I fondly remembers them greatly. The store owner had over dozens of these and he constantly refill them of our favorites books and they were a dandy to see them. So, armed with the chores and allowance monies that I earned - I often buy Fantastic Four at .12 cents a pop and the others as well. The memories are still lingers and now that store is a Historical Place and now a local Museum too. It was a soda fountain as well and I often get a Root Beer Float - 2 scoops of Vanilla Ice Cream for one fat Nickel. The store stopped selling books about the time I graduated out of College in 1981. The Owner decided to close shop and I paid a visit to that store and got my last Root Beer Float and it was advertised for one fat Nickel. I visit that Museum on a monthly basis and seeing old friends there. Good Memories that last a lifetime.
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Post by coke & comics on May 9, 2015 22:20:28 GMT -5
My first comics were bought from Walgreens in late 1989. I picked up Avengers #309 and my brother got Incredible Hulk #361. They were each a dollar.
I then got a set of comics from Santa for Christmas. I know it included Silver Surfer #15 and 28. I then started buying comics mostly in comic stores. There were 3 stores in my neighborhood, though a fourth opened briefly. I was later told it was actually a front for something. But my dad would take me to stores all around the city and sometimes pick up comics. I got a lot of Marvel grab bags I think. And tried to collect Transformers and later Avengers. I never seemed too concerned that the issues were always in the middle of stories. Later in life, I would become obsessed with beginnings and endings. At the time, I enjoyed the ride.
I was not a newsstand guy. I think I barely noticed it. I went straight to the back issue bins in comic stores. It's because I was perpetually behind. I wanted the issues either preceding or following what I had, but, being 8, I wasn't necessarily able to buy things every month. I think I often forgot to check the newsstand, figuring the store didn't have the issue if it wasn't in the box. I do recall a day of revelation when the next issue was on the rack instead of in the box. And sometimes the store kept the past few months of comics on the rack.
As the years passed and I grew more certain of what I wanted, and clarified this idea that comics came out every month, rather than just all existing in the boxes, I started subscribing and receiving comics in the mail. This was my standard by 1994 or so, now being pretty obsessed with comics.
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Post by Ish Kabbible on May 9, 2015 22:57:38 GMT -5
As mentioned previously, my memories go back to the beginnings of the 1960s for buying my own comics. I recall:
Comics were delivered on both Tuesdays and Thursdays
Many times going straight to the candy store where I bought my books only to find the owner hadn't put them on the stands yet. They came in a big bundle, tied tightly by metal wire. The comics on the top or bottom of the bundle would always be damaged. The owner would get to unbinding them on his own sweet time. All you could do was look at him with sad puppy-dog eyes. If you complained, he's just tell you to scram
Not all comics would arrive at all stores. You'd need to visit several stores to make sure you didn't miss anything. I have no idea how the distribution system actually worked back then. I don't remember seeing Marvel comics consistently in 1962 or 1963 in any store
Most of the stores I went to had a luncheonette in the back. Many a time if I had extra money I'd get a malted or egg crème and sneak a comic off the rack to read while I drank. Of course they had a big candy counter, a nickel was the standard price. And of course they had plenty of magazines and newspapers. Outside would be a gumball machine, probably a mechanical pony that played a western song and rock a little tyke for a dime
At some point, I got a job helping the store put the Sunday Times sections together on Sat afternoons. No pay-you got store credit which was fine with me
Speaking of newspapers, NYC back then had at least a dozen-the now defunct ones include the Herald and The Tribune. The Times, Daily News and NY Post still survive. Some papers had a morning as well as an evening edition during the weekdays
Cigarettes went for about 35 cents a pack. Cheap smelly cigars were popular.
Paperback books could also be found in these stores selling for about 35-50 cents each. The ones with lurid covers as well as mens magazines would be on the top of high shelves. Us little ones could only fantasize as to what might be in them. I also seem to remember a series of fun,educational magazine sized books available for children called How And Why books being available. I loved the ones that dealt with Dinosaurs, Rocket ships and War stories
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Post by Deleted on May 9, 2015 22:59:03 GMT -5
The earliest comic book I remember having/buying was Batman 250 which had a 20 cent cover price and came out in the summer of '73-I was 4 and didn't start nursery school until that fall. I didn't start getting comics regularly until they had gone up to 25 cents, which coincidentally was how much I got each week for allowance for doing my chores.
Each week my dad would take me to a little drug store called Ideal Drugs which was next to the gas station we filled up the car at in a little plaza it shared with a music store (instruments not records) and a pizzeria where we would get pizza every other week or so. I would have to decide between getting a comic book or a pack of sports cards (baseball or football depending on the season) and a candy bar (card 15 cents, candy 10 cents), Usually I scanned the spinner rack for some cover that caught my eye and took that home, but if nothing caught my fancy a pack of sports cards and a candy bar (usually a roll of Necco wafers because they lasted longer) it was. This continued up through 1977 when we moved, though cover prices had increased to 30 cents (my dad let me keep making the same choice though-1 comic or cards/candy, he even sprung for the extra if I picked up a larger sized more expensive comic like an annual.
There was another pharmacy on the other side of town, which is where we had our prescriptions filled so we only went there when someone was sick. It was part of a local or regional chain called Genovese Drugs, and they did not carry new comics, but they did have a in of comics that were 5/$1 (cover price 25 cents each) that I think were unsold copies that had been taken off the shelves and "returned" for credit by a lot of other stores that Genovese had then acquired for a song and blew out at a discount to turn a profit on. They were books that were 6 months to a year out of date (so recent back issues per se) in no particular order and just thrown in a bin so oftentimes beat up in condition, but usually I got to pick out 5 when we went.
The other way I got a lot of comics at the time (well mostly after we had moved in '77) was through the polybagged 3 packs of comics that were sold at stores (in this case the grocery store we went to carried them) and if I went grocery shopping with my mom and behaved and didn't ask for anything I would usually be allowed to pick out one of the bags to take home and discover what was in the middle of the 2 books I could see. I would get several of these bags as a stocking stuffer at Christmas time too.
The only other time I would get comics would be if we were going on vacation (we would stop at Ideal Drugs (or after we moved at the Dairy Mart down the street from our new house) I would be able to get a few dollars worth of comics for the car trip, or if I was sick, my dad would bring home comics for me to read while I was laid up (I remember having the chicken pox in the summer of '76 in the middle of a 100 degree heat wave and my dad stopped at Ideal Drugs every day on the way home form work and picked up 4-5 comics for me to read that night/the next day to keep my occupied and not thinking about scratching the itches.
Then in early 1979 my mom decided I was far too preoccupied with comics and super-heroes and had an overactive imagination, so made me quit comics cold turkey. I wasn't allowed to buy new ones or read the ones I had (which lasted for 2 years and a another move to Maine) which only prompted me to focus my attention on Star Wars, sci-fi, fantasy and arcade games-during that time I discovered Edgar Rice Burroughs, Lloyd Alexander, C.S. Lewis, Tolkien, D&D, Space Invaders, Asteroids and Battlezone. Ironically, it was me getting ill and my dad deciding to bring home comics for me to read while I was sick that caused my mom to relent and keep the box of comics she had taken into custody back to me (to her credit she didn't throw them out, just kept them hidden and took them along when we moved). However, money was very tight during those years and I had zero allowance, so unless I found an odd job (or collected returnable bottles for the refund) I had no spending money to buy new comics, so purchases were few and far between (one of the random purchases I did get was Miller's DD issues 174 and 175 at a little convenience store near the park where a summer kids jobs program had put me to work cleaning up the park for a few bucks and on the upside they let s keep the returnable bottles to cash in for more money too, my friends and I stopped at the store intent on buying candy and soda with the money, but I saw the DD issues in a rack in front of the register and had to have them instead (it's always choosing comics or candy I know).
I didn't start regularly getting comics again though until '85 when I turned 16 and had my own job. What comics I did get int he intervening years were usually me taking birthday or Christmas money and getting a subscription (it's how I got most of Shooter's second tenure on Avengers and a chunk of Stern's run on Amazing Spider-Man including the Juggernaut issues). The end result was that I mostly bought comics that caught my eye rather tan particular series as a kid, with avengers being the exception, but the few ties I tried to follow a series, things like the DDD causing fill-ins (Avengers 144 to 145 comes to mind) in the middle of continued stories or a cross-over (the Avengers vs. Attuma storyline in the 150s continuing in Super-villain Team Up made it confusing as all get out as to how I was supposed to follow a story, so I just got and read a lot of random stuff.
-M
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Post by Deleted on May 10, 2015 0:42:22 GMT -5
The cartoon comics. From Disney (And they had a ton at the time. Ducktales, Rescue Rangers, Roger Rabbit, not just Mickey and Scrooge) to Kid & Play to Alf. Some of them sucked but a lot were actually pretty well done for licensed cash in kid stuff. Archie TMNT was a good one.
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Post by Nowhere Man on May 10, 2015 2:03:36 GMT -5
My earliest memories of looking at comics on the newsstand go back to the early 80's. I distinctly remember paging through Savage Sword of Conan magazines. If my mom knew what was inside the pages... Hey, it was better Conan than Playboy, right?
I had comics bought for me and given to me since I could focus enough to appreciate them (probably 1980 on) but I decided to start seriously collecting comics after getting a two-pack at a truck stop in 1986. (Iron Man and the Hulk, for the record.) Soon after this I got a hold of early collections of Iron Man: Demon in the Bottle and X-Men: Dark Phoenix Saga and I was official hooked.
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Post by Deleted on May 10, 2015 2:23:17 GMT -5
Conan and Heavy Metal were hard to come by for me. The gas station didn't carry them, the comic shop didn't carry them, the bookstore in the mall did. I rarely made my way to the mall as a kid since it was a couple towns over.
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Post by Nowhere Man on May 10, 2015 3:48:55 GMT -5
That's interesting, because my old local drugstore, of all places, carried Savage Sword of Conan on their magazine rack. I believe it was an Eckard's.
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Post by Action Ace on May 10, 2015 14:30:28 GMT -5
My newsstand was a grocery store a few hundred feet from my house. I started in the 25 cent era and most of my purchases were made from 1975-1978. Thankfully, I was a DC fan, most Marvel comics usually sold out when I went to make a purchase. If I wanted a Spider-Man comic, I bought Spidey Super Stories or Marvel Tales. My brother was the Marvel fan so he wasn't as lucky. The concept of "find out when they put out the new comics then go" eluded us. My grandmothers were fond of handing out two dollar bills for our entertainment budget. A Hershey Bar (with Almonds), six comics and a Coke made for a great summer afternoon. Now a twenty dollar bill won't cover that. Treasury Editions! Things I don't miss: "Buy it or get out!" "Don't touch 'em unless you're gonna by 'em!" "This ain't no liberry kid!" My newsstand was run by Jolly Jonah Jameson Getting part one of a story and not getting part two The DC Implosion, there was no news outlet to tell me what was going on, they just quit coming. My last comic was bought of the newsstand in December 1983. The grocery store quit carrying them in 1984 and, as far as I know, they haven't been sold in my little hometown since.
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Post by Deleted on May 10, 2015 23:16:18 GMT -5
I started reading comics when I was about 6 or 7 (so 40ish years ago).
I remember once a week after school riding my bike to the Woolworth's that was next to the Foodarama, and chaining it up outside, then going to the "magazine aisle" (still surviving in some stores today!), and then sitting on the floor next to the comic rack for HOURS and reading all the comics i could not afford to buy (and had no idea where one would go to get them anyways).
I did this for several years starting from grade 5 or so, until grade 8 or so.
No one ever asked me to not read the comics, and actually they usually said hello to me when I came in (the got to know me from being there every week)
but I never really did buy or collect, except for rare instances (usually involving a guest appearance by the Metal Men in Brave and Bold).
I remember when i was in Junior High, my Dad took me to "Roy's House of Memories" in Houston, and that was the first 'real' comic store I had ever been to. After that first visit, I pretty much stopped going to the Woolworth's, since I could go to Roy's and hit the quarter comic boxes and buy tons of back issues (back then, they were 2 for 25cents, or 10 for a dollar!
but yeah, I do have fond, fond memories, sitting indian style in the aisle at Woolworth's just reading comics for hours.
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