Ah memories...
I've told this story somewhere on-line but I can't recall where...
Each summer my parents would drag me to northern Ontario for a week or two for a vacation.
The 6-8hr trip (longer when the vehicle would fail which happened a few times) they would let me load up on comics along the way. I mostly bought Scrooge McDucks, the odd Donald or Beagle Brothers and Marvel Fun and Games. (I was young, shoot me.) Up north I'd read all of my cousin's Archie Digests.
In the summer of 1979 I went with a dollar to the local milk store that still had a spinner rack. Remember those?
I stood at the rack a good while. I wanted value for my money. The first book I picked out was
Ghost Rider #26 which had Dr Druid fighting GR on the cover. Later I'd learned he was a holdover from the Atlas era. I would collect every appearance of GR including the western reprints which I immediately fell in love with. Dick Ayers was amazing on the book! I still love them!
My second pick was another Archie digest -
Archie's Super Hero Comics Digest #2 to be exact! Neal Adams' Black Hood cover hooked me and inside along with Pureheart and Superteen there was a bunch of strange heroes I'd never seen before -
The Shield, The Fly, The Jaguar, The Hangman , Black Jack, Steel Sterling, The Fox and my favourite - the poor henpecked Web.
These were mostly campy SA Mighty Comics reprints of Paul Reinman material along with a Simon & Kirby Pvt. Strong. The much more modern Black Hood story by Gray Morrow knocked my socks off. I would always wonder if there were any more done. There wasn't. But from that initial exposure I always had a soft spot for the MLJ heroes. I quickly learned about Mighty Comics/Radio Comics and the Mighty Crusaders buying every used copy I could find which wasn't easy. I then found the Belmont Books reprints at a convention for $2 each and then one day I found perhaps the biggest influence on my GA comics tastes -
The Overstreet Price Guide of 1981 with L.B.Cole cover art. I'd never heard of Cole but he was Good!
By this time I was aware of GA books but hadn't been bitten by the bug yet. But once I got a look at all those fantastic postage stamp cover repos inside I was hooked! I pored over that guide for hours with a magnifying glass. And the one book I wanted the most to read?
Silver Streak #6 - what a cover!
A classic Cole horror drenched vision that scared me but also seduced me with its gore. Who was this Claw? The guide told me he was the foe of DareDevil. But not the Marvel one - an older hero with a super cool costume that used boomerangs!
Other covers that hooked me - Pep #9, Detective #1, Action #52, Master #27, Mystery Men and Fantastic Comics both #3...
All of these were also featured in a remaindered copy of Richard O'Brien's
Golden Age of Comic Books that I found at a Coles Bookstore that has long since gone out of business. A short history of comics with 40 full colour repos of the above covers 'suitable for framing.' Eisner, Fine, Wolverton, Novick, Raboy, Cole, Biro, Everett, Beck, Harry G Peter all in colour and I didn't have to get a headache just to look at them! Best $2.99 I ever spent.
I never got to see the giant DC and Marvel books people here have mentioned until decades later. In fact I went after the 60s X-Men books before I did the GA. Marvel had a reprint series - Amazing Adventures - that reprinted half an original #1-10 book and tossed in a later origin story from the later X-men issues. You'd need to read two issues to finish the SA book but they were just Great! But they stopped the title on #8 of the originals. It took me until the 90s to finally read the whole run of the X-Men. By then I was reading Byrne on the title, Miller on Daredevil and Perez on Avengers and later Teen Titans books. But I drifted away from comics by the mid 90s and the era of Image Comics.
Then in 1999 I finally got onto the internet and found such great sites as Steve Rogers'
'The Golden Years', Shawn's MLJ focused
'Gold Comics', PR's
'Good Guys and Gals of the Golden Age', and Bill Nolan's
'Prescription for Excitement!' as well as several Yahoo groups. I learned about a LOT of old publishers, heroes and artists that I'd only seen hints of in that Overstreet Guide or across the tables at conventions. And i met other collectors like myself that loved those old books. One particular older friend let me read his entire EC collection where I developed a taste for 50s horror and crime comics. Kamen became a name I looked for and that eventually led me to Matt Baker whom I consider among the very best of the genre.
GA comics have been a wonderful hobby for me and through them I've met a great number of fellow fans whom almost all of them seem like very decent people. Some have become quite close friends to me like LoftyPilot Dan here whom I've known since 2004, and Phabox whom I've known even a bit longer than that. Both wonderfully nice guys always ready to help out when they can.
And I've met many new people here on GAC which has become a focal point for me. Despite being confused by the site at first (where are the books anyways??... oh There! D'oh!) I soon found it a daily destination for me and while I still had unlimited bandwidth I uploaded several gigs of scans to help the cause. When Aussie asked for help after 'the big crash of March 2008' I knew I wanted to do my bit and you guys have been stuck with this ugly monkey ever since!
Sorry to ramble on - I hope that everyeone - especially the newbies - will chime in and join the fun.
-Yoc