He could tell a story without even trying and, though it shouldn't be a major factor in appraising his worth, he could do it with a speed that no one else has ever attained. He certainly has his flaws, but I think his vision and his page design was superb. I remember one day at a WonderCon (long ago) I was talking to someone about Kirby's panel layouts and cat yronwode overheard me and quite literally thrust herself into the conversation and asked me to explain to her what I was talking about. The same observation was news to Ray Wyman, Jr. when he was here researching "The Art of Jack Kirby." I had to show him that you could identify a Kirby story simply by the upper right hand and lower right hand panels of each page. No one else so consistently directed the reader through the story as Kirby did.
I really do think that's probably the missing link. I started reading early, and had comic books in the house from an early age (thanks to Batman reruns, I'd wager), so the language, to me, is "native." It's like not being able to spot how tricks like alliteration or puns can draw a non-native speaker through a passage.
This is something I'm definitely going to investigate more.
Despite the weak perspective (it's JUST a COMIC BOOK) and the exaggerated anatomy (it IS a COMIC BOOK), he created lasting characters (and some VERY ephemeral ones, too) and influenced almost EVERY genre (including inventing some of them) in comic books. I like Kirby's art up to about 1967, then it became almost perfunctory and the faults you point out became more obvious. No one was reining him in or exercising much editorial control. Kirby always needed, IMHO, that control.
That's also a strong possibility for my dislike. Being born at the end of '73, I spent most of my life completely unaware that he did any significant work that wasn't the (irritating) Fourth World or (not to my tastes) classic Marvel.
(And it's funny, to me at least, that my favorite of Kirby's characters is Mister Miracle, who only fits into the Fourth World because Jack said so; Miracle would have fit the JSA far better than the New Gods.)
I wasn't trying to end the story, jc, but I wanted your thoughts on what I'd already written so I could take the dialogue forward.
Yes, I didn't mean to seem dismissive (though I did consider that the topic might draw some quieter people out of hiding). I had planned on being more specific eventually, but was rushing around. I also figured if anybody felt like gushing, slogging through my five pages of kinda-sorta-rebuttal wasn't going to encourage anybody to talk...
As a sidenote, I was amused by the "divergent stories" at Kirby's return to Marvel. When I read the two versions, they read identically to me, once you take into account fading memories of what was (probably) not an iconic moment at the time.
(Thanks to everybody who chimed in to "set me straight," by the way. I now have things to look for, and hopefully I can appreciate Kirby's work, whether or not I grow to like it. And yes, I know exactly how hokey that sounds. And no, I'm not drunk. I am sitting here proctoring an exam, though, and kinda hungry, which might be similar...)