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Sunday, 10 July 2016
PART FORTY-SIX OF FAVOURITE COMICS OF THE PAST - BATMAN #320...
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The one time my memory was way off was with DC's Spectre #1. I seemed to remember reading it at my grandparents' house during spring break, in April or May. But it was cover dated November-December 1967, so it would have been on sale in September. Maybe I am conflating it with some other comic, possibly Justice League #46 and/or #47.
ReplyDeleteSome DC comics were sold in bagged three-packs back then, and those may have been copies that had gone unsold individually. So, in some cases, my memory might be off by a month or two, because, for example, I may have bought World's Finest #158, Aquaman #29, and Detective #354 in June when they were originally on sale in April or May.
TC, it doesn't help if, like me, you sometimes bought the same issue twice, several months apart. I'd do this sometimes because I'd maybe cut figures out of my original copy (or given it to a pal), then I'd see it again in all its pristine newness on the spinner-rack and simply have to own it again. Because distribution was spotty in Britain at the time, comics often turned up again months or years after they'd first gone on sale here.
ReplyDeleteI would have sworn that I read the Complete Fantastic Four in my old house in 1976..... but it came out two years after we moved. Definitely not a MWOM or Titans read.
ReplyDeleteCFF came out in September '77, CN, so that would mean you moved in 1975. (Or '74 if you think the comic came out in '76.) Funny how the mind can play tricks like that, eh?
ReplyDeleteI was watching a "Horizon" special on how we store long term memories in the brain a few months ago and it said the brain is simply not built to remember all things 100% ( or anywhere near that) and that what we may think is a correct memory is between 20% to 100% incorrect. The brain will only ever store certain things and fill it out with other memories ( it will recall the comic you bought/, perhaps the shop you bought it in , but perhaps not the correct year or who you were with at that time etc)- overall the facts are there but not in the right order hence the disconnect and when we dont question it, it i only because we accept that version which the brain gives us as that is never always 100% (but is close enough as few folk want to or need to recall it all) - It was amazing the facts folk got wrong on major event they witnessed (events that were clarified re TV footage etc)
ReplyDeleteI think the first time we remember something it's probably reasonably accurate because it's closer to the event, but the next time we remember it, we're actually recalling our first remembrance of it, the next time the second, the time after that the third, etc. So it's like photocopying a picture, then photocopying the photocopy, ad infinitum. So years later, the memory is like a 400th generation memory.
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