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A cascading cornucopia of cool comics, crazy cartoons, & classic collectables - plus other completely captivating & occasionally controversial contents. With nostalgic notions, sentimental sighings, wistful wonderings, remorseful ruminations, melancholy musings, rueful reflections, poignant ponderings, & yearnings for yesteryear. (And a few profound perplexities, puzzling paradoxes, & a bevy of big, beautiful, bedazzling, buxom Babes to round it all off.)
Thursday, 12 December 2019
MIGHTY MARVEL COLLECTORS' EDITIONS CHECKLIST - ON SALE NOW!
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The Magneto story sounds interesting enough to make me pick this up...
ReplyDeleteThen this post has done its job, CN. I do so like feeling useful.
ReplyDeleteKid, do you (or any other readers) have any comics that you dig out and read each Christmas?
ReplyDeleteI always make a point of reading Adventures of Superman 462 and 474, which are Christmas themed, as well as a Superman issue called Metropolis Mailbag from the early 90s - can't remember the issue number though.
Other than those I like the Lobo Paramilitary Christmas Special and Action Comics 672, which is not christmassy, but feels that way to me as I remember reading it once Christmas morning in the 90s when no-one else was awake!
There are no US comics that I can think of that I read each Christmas, DS, although I have at least a couple of DC Christmas Specials. However, I've recently started adding to my collection of UK Christmas issues, like Valiant & Smash, Lion & Thunder, etc., which I'll probably dig out and at least browse through nearer the big day. One thing I do like doing is looking at Christmassy Annual covers, like the Shiver & Shake one for 1976, and the Knockout one for 1973. They really capture the mood of the season for me, from my inner child's point of view.
ReplyDeleteBritish comics always did do Christmas much better than American ones, to be fair.
ReplyDeleteI would also add to my list the 1981 Topper annual, which was a Christmas present in 1980, and led to me pretending to be Nick Kelly in the school playground (on my own, as no-one else seemed to know who I was talking about).
What? Nick without Cedric? Unthinkable! There was only a couple of pals I had as a kid that played at Superheroes with me, DS. One was John Fidler, who was Robin to my Batman, and the other was Philip Marshall, who was Power Man to my Wonder Man (or maybe it was the other way around). There are only two occasions I can think of when other kids decided to give it a try out of boredom. One was in school, during a playground break, when a few pupils agreed to be my Superman robots (naturally I was Supes), but they spoiled it by walking about like robots and just couldn't get it when I told them they were just to 'act natural'.
ReplyDeleteThe other time (and I'm not sure about the precise sequence of the two events) was when some neighbourhood kids wanted to be superheroes and asked if they could play with me. I was Thor, but whatever roles they were assigned (by me), they just couldn't get that I was the only one who mimicked stamping his wooden cane on the ground to become Thor, with accompanying sound effect of thunder. They all did it!
After a short while it was mutually agreed that they should go back to playing football (or whatever), and I'd be the sole superhero of the area. 'Twas best that way.