I have been a big fan of comic book mythology for as long as I can remember. My dad was the one who initially got me into comics as much as I am today. To start with, I had the same interest in Superman, Wolverine, and Batman as any other young boy my age. But then the event that started my love affair with DC Comics happened: My dad came home from a yard sale with the entire collection of DC's
Who's Who. For those of you who have never heard of
Who's Who, its basically the
DC Encyclopedia for the 1980s. It was released in a monthly issue format, totaling out to twenty-six issues of encyclopedic knowledge about the DC Universe. Not only did this series explain exactly who Aquaman was by detailing such important things as his real name and powers, even going into detail about his fictional history, but it even showcased minor characters like Fastback (A turtle with Flash-like speed abilities) and Nemesis (Ironically enough, a good guy). Because of my age, I did not get these books until the mid-nineties, so most of the information was out of date, as half of the characters had died and came back at least once. (Superman? Hal Jordan? I'm looking at you guys.) I eventually pieced my own knowledge together over the years of buying issue after issue of comics and reading them from cover to cover many times over, carefully absorbing every word like a sponge. Because of this infatuation (And maybe that I was not very attractive due to acne, braces, and coke-bottle glasses before they were considered "cool".) I did not date very much until I was seventeen. This was a magic time; Comics were suddenly cool and I suddenly got way too attractive for my own good. I met a girl named...well her name isn't important, but she's pivotal in all this too. You see, my knowledge was still pretty limited back then until she got me the
DC Encyclopedia for Christmas. It was filled with up to date info-nuggets for my consumption, and I was convinced I would never find anything better. Then along came Wikipedia. Not only is it up to date, but it is
always up to date because it is updated at least weekly. (Even I have contributed.) Unfortunately, my golden age of comics was about to end. I was still of the mind that even though I had a limitless source of knowledge, I still had to buy my monthly issues of series that I cared about. This ended with the release of the long awaited series
52.
52 was a weekly series that ran for, you guessed it, 52 weeks. A
year of weekly trips to the comic store, just waiting to see what new juicy revelations will be dropped this week. As much as I absolutely loved the storylines featured in
52, I couldn't wait for it to end. At $2.50 per issue just for this one series, my comics loyalty was getting expensive. As the series drew closer to an end, those rat bastards dropped another bomb on us: After
52 was over, a new weekly series entitled
Countdown was to begin, leading to DC's biggest crossover event ever,
Final Crisis. I took the news decently enough, but when the newest issue of
52 came out, it happened. I had told myself, and a woman I was seeing, that I would officially stop buying individual issues of comics if I could correctly guess the identity of Supernova, a central character in the series. I said with her as my witness that Supernova was either Michael Jon Carter (Booster Gold, "dead" since
52, Issue 1) or Ted Kord (Blue Beetle, dead since
Countdown to Infinite Crisis) returned somehow from the dead. And wouldn't you know? Michael was never dead in the first place and was Booster Gold
and Supernova
at the same time.
I guess I just know comics way too well. Since this tragic event, I've only been purchasing collected editions. They're cheaper in the long run, and I still get my fix.
Now, it doesn't end there. I'm hoping to carry on my love of comics to the next generation of nerds
with the series I'm working on,
Messengers. Not only am I hoping to keep comics going, but maybe even jump on the new bandwagon that comics seem to be on nowadays. Movies. Ever since
X-Men (or some would argue
Blade), comic-based movies have been coming out fast enough to make me poor all over again. Now a lot of people will probably read this and ask about the
Batman movies, or the
Superman ones as well. I will admit that yes, they were popular, but they didn't kick off a spandex trend quite like
X-Men did. Hollywood is even starting to go with independent books, like
Hancock and
Invincible, with just as much success as movies like
Iron Man and
The Incredible Hulk. With
Watchmen soon to be released, the hype is astounding not only for this movie but all other comics movies slated for the future.
This trend of comics love shows no signs of stopping, and I could not be happier.
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