On my back home from Bowling Green, Kentucky, I couldn’t pass up the chance to stop at The Great Escape’s second location. It was a smaller shop in a strip mall in Bowling Green a short distance from the highway. Given my proclivity for Bargain Bin shopping, I was hoping that this second location hosted a bunch of bargain boxes also.
I was in luck! Not only did this store have dozens of 49 cent bins, but they also had 35% off all back issues in honor of the most ludicrous shopping day of the year.
Before I got to the bargain bins, I was struck by a comic book they had on the wall. It was Marvel Spotlight #28, a book I’ve been eyeing for years. It features the first “solo” appearance of one of my favorite Marvel characters, second only to Ka-Zar, Lord of the Hidden Jungle…the Moon Knight.
It was marked at the low price of $49. With the 35% off, it would have only been $31.85. Keep in mind my monthly comic budget is (wait for it) $20. After taking a close look at the book, it appeared to easily be in what CGC might call an 8.0 or higher condition. It was the nicest copy of the book I’d seen and actually held in my hand. But with a deep breath, I put the book back on the wall and pressed on to the bargain bins. I am sure I will regret this when the Moon Knight series comes out on Fox…
At the bins, I was in luck! Although these bargain bins were not as well kept as the Great Escape in Madison, TN (many more coverless and raggedy books here) there were still some gems to be had. At 49 cents apiece, I was able to scoop up even more goodness than at the main location. Today’s haul included:
- Adolescent Radioactive Black Belt Hamsters #1-3 (EXC) (Eclipse Comics)
- Kitty Pryde and Wolverine #1-6 (VF) (Marvel Comics/Complete Mini Series)
- Silverblade #1-12 (EXC-NM) (DC Comics/Complete Mini Series)
- Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #8 (With Cerebus) (EXC) (Mirage Studios)
- Death Rattle #8 (1st Xenozoic Tales) (VF) (Kitchen Sink Press)
- King Conan #4-12 (VG-F) (Marvel Comics)
- Tarzan, Lord of the Jungle #22 (VG) Marvel Comics
- Turok, Dinosaur Hunter #1 (EXC-NM) (Valiant Comics)
So today’s total was $16.17, and I walked out with 33 comics.
The big surprises to me were Death Rattle #8 and the Silverblade series. All of the SIlverblade issues looked untouched, and if I actually had money, I’d shoot them over to CGC just because I don’t see them anywhere. The Death Rattle #8 features a sneak preview of the hit Xenozoic Tales, which would later go on to become the cult classic Cadillacs & Dinosaurs. Given that Death Rattle #8 sells for $14-16 online in even good condition, I think that paid for the trip.
What a blessing for a shopping trip. Comic budget now cashed in until after Christmas, but it’s been a fun end-of-the-year round up.
As always, I am – Wally (AKA Paint Monk)
The Lost Art of Horror (and Writing) – Part II
Horror comics were all the rage in the 1940s and early 1950s. But is there any chance they can become popular in a serious way again with modern comic readers? I’m not so sure. There are horror comics out there now that are doing well, but they have not taken the current market by storm like they did half a century or more ago.
The superhero books in the 1930s had featured horror themes, but they were always subplots. The characters like Dracula, Frankenstein and other classic monsters weren’t the focus of the issues.
Things really got started with Marvel Comics’ predecessor, Atlas Comics in the mid to late 40s. Their early Captain America comics were re-labeled Captain America’s Weird Tales (in 1949-50) and didn’t feature good ole’ Cap at all. Harvey Comics jumped on board, too, doing a makeover on vigilante crime fighter Black Cat, turning that comic into a horror book called Black Cat Mystery. Horror books sold, and sold well.
That all ended in 1954 with the publication of a treatise against horror books called Seduction of the Innocent.
Frederic Wertham, author of the book and an American psychiatrist, had determined that comic books were to blame for the corruption of American youth. Comics became the scapegoat for a generation’s misbehavior, much like “first-person shooter” video games of today. In a hearing before the US Senate, Wertham appeared and pleaded his case. The government, upon seeing his evidence and hearing a non-convincing response from comic publisher William Gaines, strongly agreed that the industry needed to “self-regulate.”
As a direct result of Wertham’s book, which generated enough alarm for parents to call for comic censorship, the industry founded the Comics Code Authority (see my earlier post “Who Else Misses the Comics Code?”) with the intention of self-policing and self-censorship of potentially “offending material.”
“Marvel Magazine Group.”
In response, many publishers scaled back their horror-related content, moving more towards science fiction and suspense stories, a trend which would continue until 1971. Some publishers, like Warren Publishing, evaded the Comics Code Authority by publishing black-and-white magazine sized books which escaped the scrutiny of the other comic books.
In 1971, the Comics Code Authority relaxed some of its own criteria, which ushered in a second “mini-boom” of horror comics. Some authorities (and myself!) believe this boom was started with Tomb of Dracula by Marvel Comics. The third installment of this series of my thoughts will talk about this book specifically, as it I firmly believe is one of the best examples of comic book storytelling in the entire genre.
Fellow industry giant DC Comics got in on the game too, with comics like Secrets of Sinister House, Ghosts, and Dark Mansion of Forbidden Love. Swamp Thing is one of the few DC Comics that began during this resurgence, and still continues in many forms in today’s industry. Alan Moore’s run on this title in the 1980s was a glimpse back into the golden past of the genre.
Tomb of Dracula would be followed by other Marvel titles containing horror stories: Tower of Shadows and Chamber of Chills among them. Like Warren Publishing, Marvel began publishing their own black-and-white magazines, too, with titles like Dracula Lives! and Monsters Unleashed.
Unfortunately, this new “boom” in horror comic books would not last. The heyday of the horror comic ended with a whimper by the early 1980s, as DC Comics, Warren Publishing and Charlton
Comics cancelled their last horror anthologies during that time.
To say that horror comics are entirely dead today would be completely wrong. Image Comics’ “The Walking Dead” has taken the world by storm and has turned into one of the most viewed TV series of all time. Other comics, like Lady Death have made an imprint on the industry. And don’t forget characters like Hellboy or the success of Blade, the vampire hunter who made his first appearance in Tomb of Dracula. Both have turned into silver screen successes.
But today, the industry is primarily about super heroes. And in many ways, that’s a great thing, and in many others, it’s kind of a shame. Brilliant minds and creators like John Jakes, P. Craig Russell and many more got their start in this genre and in the prime of horror comic books.
As always, I am – Wally (AKA Paint Monk)