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83 Keith Dallas, editor, "American Comic Book Chronicles"
Media Type |
audio
Categories Via RSS |
Comedy
TV & Film
Publication Date |
Apr 22, 2013
Episode Duration |
00:34:45
It's no secret that I'm a lifetime comic book fan. I can trace my love of the form -- comics that is; women were a few years later -- back to the mid-1960s when my grandfather and I were on our way to catch a Suburban Bus back to New Brunswick, New Jersey, from the Port Authority in Manhattan and we stopped at a newsstand. He wanted a New York Daily News and he pointed me toward the comic book section so I could read something on the ride home, too. My eyes went right to the latest issue of The X-Men. I knew nothing about them -- yet -- but they looked so cool. And I remember that moment of discovery like no other. There were other opportunities to read piles of comics in the years that followed; my cousin Fred Sirotkin lived in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, and his entire basement was given over to his alphabetized collection of what I recall to be mostly Archies. KEITH DALLAS podcast excerpt: "Think about the more recent uproar when DC and Marvel raised comic book prices from $2.99 to $3.99. It was essentially the same thing in the 1960s to go from a dime to 12 cents."  And my older male cousins on my father's side, Mark and Scott Shoham, always had a stack of Marvel and DC superheroes in the basement of their Bloomfield, Connecticut, house to divert me from their more mature teen pursuits whenever we visited. In the 1970s, I built my own substantial collection of thousands of comics, less for their collectible value and more for the sheer joy of reading and re-reading. My first paid writing assignment, at age 13, was about the growing popularity of comics, produced for a Midwest hobbyist newspaper. And I wrote dozens more stories, paid and unpaid, about comics throughout high school, developing a style and speed at a very young age. All of which is my way of saying that when I heard about the first volume of TwoMorrows Publishing's new series, American Comic Book Chronicles, I had to see it. Curiously, the book starts off with the years 1960-64, skipping almost 30 years of history that came before. To be honest, that's fine with me; I was born in 1960. Did anything really exist before me? I find that hard to believe. Volume One, written by John Wells and edited by my guest today, Keith Dallas, is packed with industry anecdotes and behind-the-scenes tales of not just the birth of the Marvel Age and the rebirth of DC Comics, but it also tells many stories I hadn't read before involving lesser publishers such as Charlton, Dell, Gold Key, Harvey and ACG. Those are important because they employed so many creators -- such as Steve Ditko and Neal Adams -- who went on to be huge influences on the decades to come. Enough of me; let's talk comics!   American Comic Book Chronicles • •

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