Showing posts with label About Me. Show all posts
Showing posts with label About Me. Show all posts

Friday, February 11, 2011

Lo, There Shall Be An Ending!

Fantastic Four King-Size Annual, Lo There Shall Be An Ending

A hard thing for me to announce to all you Titanic True Believers, but this is the end of the blog known as Giant-Size Marvel!  After 300+ posts over the past three years, I have just run out of steam.  Lately, every time I think of something to write about, I discover that other nostalgia bloggers have covered the same material, and doing a great job of it, too!  (See my blogroll at the lower right.)  One of my favorite all-time blogs is the classic Dial B for Blog.  I admired Robby for both his taste in comics and his great design work, which I can’t hold a candle to.  Like Robby, I think some blogs should not run forever; I have said enough about Marvel Comics and it is time to move onward and upward.  You can still catch me on my other blog, Giant-Size Geek, where I discuss Marvel/DC Comics, Science Fiction, books, TV, and all kinds of geeky stuff.

I tried, in the beginning, to cover everything Marvel—modern comics, videogames and movies—and found that to be too difficult.  Writing about all the new stuff wasn’t much fun.  While there have been some bright spots in modern superhero comics, during the past few years I seem to be losing my interest and connection to them.  I keep coming back to the comics of my formative years, the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s.  I think in writing this blog, I love those comics more than ever.  And I love them in their original form, on cheap newsprint with staples or glue, even more than slick trade paper or digital format. 

Over the past week, I’ve featured some of my favorite comics covering the Silver Surfer, Doctor Strange, Marvel Monsters, the Thing, Giant-Size Marvel comics and FOOM.  There are some other articles that cover some topics which were special for me…

Amazing Spider-Man 121 Savage Tales - Red Nails intro Marvel Premiere 1 cover by Gil Kane
And a few off-beat articles that I enjoyed writing…

Judge Margarito Garza and his creation, Relampago, by Richard Dominguez Artie Simek 1975 tribute James Sime, owner of Isotope Comics (Dec 2009)
I have truly appreciated all the comments and emails that I have received.  You guys are all Keepers of the Flame, Merrily Marching in the Marvel Society of my mind, and I shall always be your Friend Of Old Marvel.  When we meet in the Great Bullpen of the sky, we shall exclaim:

Excelsior - last panel to Stan Lee Meets Silver Surfer by Mark Buckingham, 2007


Excelsior!  As Mark Buckingham illustrated in the Stan Lee Meets Silver Surfer special, the characters inspired by Stan Lee, Jack Kirby, Steve Ditko and a legion of other talented creators are truly unforgettable.  And now, one last image from the Bullpen Bulletins page to sum it all up…

Marvel masthead


Make Mine Marvel! 

Nuff Said.

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

Isotope Comics in San Francisco: James Sime, Toilet Seats, and Doctor Strange, What A Wonderful Store!

James Sime, owner of Isotope Comics (Dec 2009)

After years of reading about Isotope Comics in San Francisco and reading various interviews with the owner, James Sime, I finally indulged myself in a trip to his unique store.  James was sitting at the counter when I arrived, as friendly and enthusiastic about comics as I am.  It’s a good quality for an owner to have.  I had a brief feeling of Déjà Vu after meeting James, who is well known from CBR, Flickr, Twitter, and various podcast interviews.  Never before had I met a store owner who is well known on the Internet!

Doctor Strange costume at Isotope Comics

Within seconds of my arrival we started talking about Doctor Strange—after I spotted his costume hanging in the balcony.  We both agreed that the current Strange series is somewhat lacking.  In fact, James’ theory is that anything with the title “Strange” isn’t all that good.  There was the JMS series a few years ago where Marvel attempted to reboot the good doctor.  And if you remember the 1990s era comics where Doc split into two entities—one called Strange—this theory seems spot on!  We both agreed that Brian K Vaughan’s The Oath series was one of Doc’s finest tales.

View from balcony at Isotope Comics in San Francisco

Isotope’s interior design is equally friendly.  There are no long white boxes that you have to step over as you walk around.  It does not look like a refuge for seedy characters.  It is a store where you feel comfortable looking around at cool things  The store is brightly lit, there are comfortable seats where you can read stuff, and they have interesting graphic novels on display everywhere.  They have new comics as well as mini-comics.  There is also a selection of original art on display.

Gallery of toilet seat covers at Isotope Comics

Isotope is famous for having unique events where creators come to do signings.  James can really think out of the box and tries to make these events special—by offering limited edition pint glasses for Darwyn Cooke or scotch tastings for Warren Ellis.  James started getting these creators to create a drawing on toilet seat covers; I’m sure it started off as a lark, but now Isotope’s upper wall is covered with dozens of them.  And James has so many, he can’t display the entire collection at once.  There’s a Warren Ellis piece featuring Spider Jerusalem right next to one by Darick Robertson, and Mark Millar drawing his rendition of Superman.

Darwyn Cooke toilet seat Catwoman at Isotope Comics

This toilet seat drawn by Darwyn Cooke makes me supremely envious.  It’s just perfect and captures everything great about Cooke’s style.  I showed this picture to my wife Teresa (who is not a comics fan) and she instantly recognized Catwoman.  That’s a testament to Cooke’s ability to draw the character in an iconic form.  Teresa wondered why no one has made a business out of selling toilet seat covers with images?  There probably is one, but not with comic characters.  I’d certainly buy this one if DC made this a licensed product.  But I wouldn’t use a backhoe to steal it.

I only spent an hour at Isotope before I had to return to work.  I bought a few great collections, Northlanders (vol 1 & 2, awesome stuff) and Criminal (2 volumes).  If you work in the financial district as I do, it’s really a convenient trip.  You can get on any outbound Muni at Embarcadero, travel to the Van Ness stop, walk up to Fell, make a left and walk 2-3 blocks to the store at 326 Fell Street. 

When I was in my 20s, I always had a fantasy vision of what my ideal comics store would be like.   I always imagined a place where collections were readily available, top-notch creators would come and socialize with fans.  And perhaps share a drink or two on special occasions.  James Sime is my idol—he not only dreamed about such a place, he made it into a reality!  Nuff said!

Links:  Isotope Comics, James Sime on Twitter

Update: Comments on my old MT blog...


3 Comments

Yeah. I stumbled upon Isotope while making my way back to my dad's after a super long walk to another comic shop. I partied there at the APE Mayhem parties both nights this year. And one of my personal goals in this business is to have my own toilet seat on the Gallery Wall. No awards, no huge accolades. Just a throne.
Isotope is easily one of the coolest if not THEE coolest comic book shops I have ever been in. In a city known for its distinction of culture and art, Isotope stands tall in the City by the Bay.
I wouldn't dare piss over the woman cat on my toilet seat. And those eyes fixed upon you all the time in moments of privacy...
This guy awfully resembles ambassador Molari from the Babylon 5 series.This helps explain the alien design of the products.

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

The Comic-Book Reading Judge From Corpus Christi, Texas

Judge Margarito Garza and his creation, Relampago, by Richard Dominguez

My family moved around a lot when I was a kid; we lived in several places in California, Alaska, and in 1974, my parents moved our family to Corpus Christi, Texas.  It was a real culture shock for me to move into what they call The Bible Belt

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.

Howard the Duck 1, 1975

I was lucky to have one thing in my life remain constant: comic books.  And in those days (before specialty stores), my senses were poised to detect comics wherever I could find them.  I was like Kraven the Hunter wherever I went.  I had scoped out three places that I could reach on my bike: a drugstore, a supermarket, and a 7-Eleven.  All three received comics each week, although only the 7-Eleven specialized in monster magazines from Marvel and Warren.  One day at the supermarket, I found Howard the Duck #1 on the lower rack of the magazine stand.  I had to reach between a lady’s legs to grab it.  I had no idea about the speculation fever on this comic, it was just special to me because Howard had first appeared in Man-Thing.  Howard’s tag-line, Trapped In A World He Never Made, seemed like my life at the time.

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.

Nick Fury, Agent of S.H.I.E.L.D. 1, 1968

This was a historic occasion!  For the first time, I met an adult who was also a comic book collector!  Not only that, he was a well respected person in the community.  My enthusiasm burst out of my mouth, a constant stream of chatter about this or that character.  My Mom seemed both amused by the Judge and impressed by the store.  We talked with him about the recent Wonder Woman TV movie starring Lynda Carter.  I’m paraphrasing from 30 year old memories, but he said:  One thing about that movie didn’t work for me.  Wonder Woman is walking down the street in that outfit, and every guy just walks right by her.  If any woman dressed like that and walked by, I would definitely take a look!

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.

The Comic Reader news fanzine, cover by Frank Brunner

My money didn’t go very far in Judge Garza’s store.  I made several return trips.  Since either the Judge or his patient wife were there running things, my Mom felt safe with having me visit there.  One day I found them preparing a stack of comics for another customer, and saw an item that looked interesting.  It was a fanzine called the Comic Reader.  I had never seen a fanzine before.  It was a mystery to me how you could even buy one!  But it was fantastic, with a neat cover and loaded with news on upcoming comics.

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:

3 Comments

"my senses were poised to detect comics wherever I could find them. I was like Kraven the Hunter wherever I went."
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.

the store's name was "collector's world". as i child i saw the man my parents called simply "the judge" a nickname i thought, for the man who would always make this weekly trek through flea-markets and yards sales looking for lost of thought usless old superhero action figures. it was during a routine errand with my mom that i can vividly remember first going to what i would later simply call "the judge's place" the walls where stack with current and long forgotten comics all bagged and boarded far before it had become a staple of other comic shops. whole sections on the store just for the displaying of the judge's personal action figures, ranging from the dc and marvel of the 60's and on, from 12 inch gi joe's and orignal star-wars figures. all safe behind a clear plastic wall safe from every child and child at heart who wanted nothing more than to get their hands on them. as an aspiring comic artist myself, i owe the judge a hudge dept for opening my eyes to the wonderly huge world of comics. i remember the man himself stading taller than most, and no not because of fact i was still a very small child. no he walked around with a strength and dignity that i saw only in comic heroes. the store may have been sold but i pass by the building every now and then,it may be some "titan sporting goods" now, but as a pass it by, i do glance over at it. and for a remeber the sign and the superheroes they had painted on the side and i smile.

The superheroes painted on the side of the building! I had forgotten that, it was pretty special. I had also forgotten the name, Collectors World.
Thanks for sharing your memories of the Judge!




Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Why Amazing Spider-Man 121 is the single most important comic in my life.

Amazing Spider-Man 121

I've bought and sold (and re-bought) many classic comics in my time.  But no matter what, I've always kept my very fine copy of Amazing Spider-Man 121 lovingly protected in mylar.  I have to, it's the single most important comic that I've read in my entire life!

I think a lot of comic readers in the baby boom generation would rank this issue very highly as well.  You have to picture me in this time and place.  It's 1973.  I've been reading comics for about 4 years.  I was a huge Spider-Man fan, reading his present (in Amazing) and past adventures (in Marvel Tales).  I even had a mail subscription to ASM.  It would arrive in our mailbox, in a brown wrapper, folded in half.  Not the thing you'd put in mylar (my present copy was purchased later), but a comic you'd slide out of the wrapper and start reading as soon as you could.

Some comics are so eventful, I remember the time and place where I read them.  In this case, I had gotten out of school early to go to the dentist.  My father brought me home on a sunny afternoon (in Alaska) and I read this issue with great excitement.

You could tell ASM #121 was going to be a turning point.  Despite the cover, I never expected anyone to really die.  Certainly not Gwen Stacy--her father, Captain Stacy, had died a few years earlier.  I did know that Norman Osborn would return as the Green Goblin.  Osborn was always a ticking time bomb ready to go off.  Whenever he recovered his memories and insanity took him over, something big always happened.

Amazing Spider-Man 121 Gwen Stacy dies

By the time, I got to the end of the story, I couldn't believe what I had just read.  Sweet, beautiful, loving Gwen Stacy--the love of Peter Parker's life--was dead?  No way.  That kind of thing just didn't happen in superhero comics.  And what really got me, even at 12 years old, was the above panel where Gwen Stacy perished.  The sound effect SWIK! registered that her death was even more sick and twisted. Spider-Man killed his own girlfriend by snagging her the wrong way with his web-line.  The SWIK! and SNAP! and head bobbing that Gil Kane drew left no doubt in mind.  Peter Parker had royally screwed up.

Was Norman Osborn responsible for Gwen Stacy's death as well?  Of course.  He had kidnapped Gwen and knocked her off the George Washington Bridge.

The beautiful and twisted thing about this story is that we as readers have witnessed the truth in a way no other character in the story has.  Spider-Man doesn't realize what he's done.  Neither does Osborn.  Nor any other character in the Marvel Universe.

I still could not quite believe Gwen was dead, even with the full splash page at the very end of the story.  It took the following issue to really confirm that fact.  Nothing seemed the same after this moment.  I could believe that other Marvel characters might die as a result.  It was such a remarkable moment that Kurt Busiek and Alex Ross chose to mark the end of an era in MARVELS.

Fans of this story and Gerry Conway's classic Amazing Spider-Man will want to listen to his podcast interview with John Siuntres on Word Balloon.  Conway talks in detail about how Amazing Spider-Man #121 was created, from the initial story idea by John Romita to Gil Kane's contribution in the neck-snapping panel above.  Conway also discusses his return to comics and the Last Days of Animal Man.  I love how Siuntres interviews comics professionals--he asks the questions I would ask if I were sitting down with them.  Nuff said.

Update: Comments from my old MovableType site:


2 Comments

This was a cool article, and great inspiration for a similar post I wrote in my own blog. Wikipedia's entry on Gwen alludes to a couple of places where the truth about her death was finally known, but I'm not sure Peter ever found out. I think a story where he finally does find out would be *ahem* amazing. :)

i totally love this issue i just got it 4 days ago in near mint condition for 25 cents at a garage sale!!!!! i read it and immideatley (i dont know how to spell that) and now i have sent it to cgc to get cased so i can keep it in perfect condition i love spiderman so much i shelled out 2000 dollars for an amazing fantasy 15 that i also have cased in cgc plastic. dont sell issue 121 give it to your son on your death bed if you dont want to be buried with it that is lol