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Judge Margarito Garza and his creation, Relampago, by Richard Dominguez |
I went from having lots of friends at my old home to having none. I had to adjust to life at Hamlin Middle School, where a strange concoction of Rednecks (aka the White kids), Mexican-Americans, and African-Americans attempted to get through to high school. Compared to the Norman Rockwell-esque school I had attended in Anchorage, I was faced with kids who seemed like adults. They were selling drugs between classes and talking about wild parties the night before. Violence seemed to be ready to erupt at any minute—the Rednecks eyed the black kids with steam pouring out of their nostrils as they walked near each other. I belonged to no group. I felt like I existed in the Phantom Zone.
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Howard the Duck 1, 1975 |
All of this was happening when I was thirteen years old. I hadn’t really known anyone else my age who was as fanatical about comics as I was. I certainly didn’t know of any adults who read comics (outside of the comics professionals in New York City).
One day, I read an article in the newspaper about a special store in Corpus Christi that only sold comic books! I asked my Mom to drive me over there. I don't recall the exact location, but it was in an older suburban area, probably a house that was converted into a store. Inside were dozens of boxes of back-issue comic books. We met the owner, a Mexican-American man who was also a Judge in Corpus Christi. Judge Margarito Garza.
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Nick Fury, Agent of S.H.I.E.L.D. 1, 1968 |
His store seemed like paradise. The Judge didn’t sell new comics, only back issues, but he had all the ones I lusted after. All 18 issues of Silver Surfer were in the back issue bins, along with the Kree-Skrull War issues of Avengers, and all kinds of King-Size Annuals I had wanted to buy. The walls were adorned with posters, including some reproductions of famous comic book covers the Judge had drawn himself. The one he did for SHIELD #1 looked so interesting that it led me to Jim Steranko's work.
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The Comic Reader news fanzine, cover by Frank Brunner |
I think my Mom was worried about how much time I spent with comics. She probably remembered the newspaper articles from the 50s about Wertham and Seduction of the Innocent. The Judge did me a great favor by explaining to my Mom that comics were good for kids. Contrary to popular belief, comics had good moral values; they kept young people out of trouble. (Which was true in those days.) There it was—comics had been stamped with a seal of approval for my Mom—by the ultimate authority figure.
We left Corpus Christi in 1976 to return to California. I was relieved to get out. My parents even seemed very relieved to leave that world behind. I didn’t really miss anything about that area—except for the Judge and his wonderful store.
Note: This is an adaption of an article I originally wrote in 2006.
A reader named Corando Gallegos left a comment on my original post with their memories:
…the Judge's name was Judge Margarito Garza. Even though I grew up in Alice (a town about an hour west of Corpus Christi), my mom would come to Corpus once a month and leave us at this haven of comic books. It was located down McArdle and Airline and was there for the longest time. Unfortunately, after the Judge died awhile back the store was sold and closed and is not there anymore. My brother and I would spend all day there reading and looking for the right combination of issues we wanted. Even worse, I moved away for awhile and did not realize what had happened to this place until much later. The Judge himself was the biggest comic fan I knew and while he was strict with his customers he was fair and his store had it all! Now fortunately, there are a few places again in Corpus to buy comics but nothing like this one where you hang out lose yourself in the world of superheroes and science fiction.
Visit Judge Margarito Garza’s Wikipedia page to learn more about him and his superhero creation, Relampago!
Thank you to his friends and son Lawrence who wrote me a few years ago. Nuff said!
Update: Here are some additional comments that appeared on my previous blogging platform:
LOL!!! Thanks for your amusing reminiscing! You are fortunate in having had your mother as an ally. My own mother was a librarian, and only frowned on all my reading and collecting of lowly, stupid, ugly comics -- so I usually had to sneak out of the house for my weekly visits to a local newsstand kiosk in Oslo, where Norwegian-only editions of DC and Marvel and Disney comics were sold. In my teens, I began ordering the Real Thing by mail from a great comics store in Copenhagen, Fantask. They still exist, now doing brisk online business here in Scandinavia: www.fantask.dk.
Thanks for sharing your memories of the Judge!