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.)
Saturday, 31 July 2021
THE BIG RED SUPERMAN BOOK HAS FINALLY GOT IT COVERED...
Friday, 30 July 2021
BABE OF THE DAY - CLOVISSA NEWCOMBE...
Thursday, 29 July 2021
A1-COMICS-DVDS - NOT AS 'A1' AS YOU'D THINK... (UPDATED)
Some eBay sellers continue to disappoint me. Even ones with 100% feedback can let you down in their customer relations technique (learned from Basil Fawlty it seems), and so reluctant is eBay to take action against offending sellers with 100% feedback, they'll sometimes remove honest negative customer feedback if the seller complains, as eBay don't want to sacrifice their percentage of that seller's profits. I know that for an absolute fact 'cos it happened to me on a previous occasion.
I've got a goodly number of TV21s in the comic's various incarnations, but I was needing three to complete the first year's set. The numbers are 44, 47, & 50, and I also wanted to upgrade my copy of 52 as it had coupons missing, though their absence didn't affect any of the story pages. I saw a seller on eBay by the name of a1-comics-dvds (run by Wayne Green), who was selling 18 TV21s for around £199.99. Amongst them were 44, 50, & 52, so I contacted him and made him a specific offer - £20 each for the three issues he had that I wanted.
He accepted, asking me for my email address so that he could send an invoice, and I sent it to his email address which was listed in his business details, and sure enough, an invoice arrived. (Call me thick, but it never occurred to me that he was proposing an 'outside eBay' transaction until he later described it as such, as I was too eager to pay him so that he'd send the comics.)
He'd described them as 'very good/fine, complete, no cut-outs, no scribble', but when they arrived, one was defaced by a felt marker on the cover, which had also been absorbed into pages 2 & 3. Now I don't know about you, but when a comic is said to have no scribble, I take that to mean it has no defacement by pencil, pen, felt marker, or any other kind of writing implement, and I don't consider myself unreasonable in that view.
I contacted Wayne Green (that's his name remember) and explained the situation, suggesting that a small partial refund of £3 or £4 would suffice in compensating me for my disappointment in finding that particular issue not as described. (Incidentally, 52 wasn't great overall either, with multiple splits on the spines of almost every page, but I subtracted the pages with coupons and transferred them to the copy I already owned.) Only 50 was in a condition that came near to matching the seller's description.
No doubt emboldened by the fact that he wouldn't have any negative eBay feedback to contend with, the seller 'declined' to accord me a small refund, and came up with all sorts of excuses for not doing so. Remember, he'd accepted my offer of £20 per comic, but now claimed that #50 was worth around £50 and the other two worth only about a fiver each, so if he refunded me a few quid, he'd lose his profit on one of the 'lesser' issues. While it's true that some sellers do indeed ask high prices for better condition copies of the 50th issue (on account of The Daleks being on the cover), it can still be obtained for a more reasonable price from time-to-time.
The simple fact is that, in this particular case, he was indulging in retroactive financial gymnastics in trying to ascribe different values to different issues, as he'd accepted my clear offer of £20 per issue. That means, even if he was getting less money on #50, he was gaining more on #s 44 & 52, which considering that his description of condition was inaccurate (if not fanciful), he was still coming out well ahead on the deal - especially as he's avoided paying eBay's percentage.
He said that if I was so dissatisfied with the entire transaction, I could return all three comics, but I'd only expressed disappointment about one comic, not all three. He also said if he were in my position, he'd return all the comics even if it meant losing a little money in doing so.
So look at the images and judge for yourself. I'd say the defacements are pretty pronounced for a comic that was described as having 'no scribble', wouldn't you? Totally unreasonable seller in my opinion, not prepared to consider things from the buyer's point of view. A small partial refund of £3 or £4 (no big loss considering he'd avoided eBay fees remember) would've ensured I'd have bought other items from him from time-to-time, but there's no chance of that now.
So just goes to show - you can't even always trust some sellers with 100% feedback to behave reasonably, ethically, or decently. Just thought you should know in case you ever consider buying anything from him.
FANCY A FUN TIME...?
I can remember where and when I first laid eyes on Hanna-Barbera's Fun Time #1 as if it were yesterday. 'Twas on the counter of W. & R. Holmes sometime near the end of October or beginning of November in 1972. I seem to recall being surprised to see that it 'incorporated' Yogi and His Toy, as that suggested Fun Time was a pre-existing comic instead of a new first issue. I guess I'd stopped buying that particular weekly by then otherwise I'd have known about Fun Time prior to seeing it on sale. (Maybe I did, but have just forgotten since.)
Anyway, I bought it, but goodness knows for how long. Did I purchase all 22 issues (according to one of Denis Gifford's comics catalogues) or did I abandon it before then? Dunno to be honest, but the first cover always reminds me of Holmes, and in particular standing in front of that counter back in the day. That's why I bought a replacement recently on seeing it on eBay, so that I can once again enjoy the cool interiors of a much loved, much missed, long-gone shop from my childhood and teenage years - even if only in memory.
Any other Crivvies do that? Buy back issues simply to remind themselves of where they were when they bought the original, rather than because of the merits (if any) of the comic itself? If so, feel free to express yourselves in the you-know-where.
Tuesday, 27 July 2021
POST FROM THE PAST: THE SAINT ANNUAL COVER GALLERY...
Copyright relevant owner |
SPIDER-MAN GOES BATS...
WEREWOLF BY NIGHT #32 FACSIMILE EDITION - INTRODUCING MOON KNIGHT...
Reassuring to see that Marvel are still publishing their Facsimile Editions, as testified to by Werewolf By Night #32 popping through my liltin' letterbox this morning. Moon Knight makes his debut appearance in this issue, so it's undoubtedly a collectors' item on that basis alone. Don't recall ever having the original back in the day, but it's good to finally add this handsome honey of a mag to my collection 46 years later.
One gripe is that I feel the barcode box is needlessly prominent and could easily be less intrusive on the cover, as it's been on a few (but not all) previous editions. That aside though, even if you own the original mag, it'd be a good idea to grab this facsimile to have a reading copy to hand for whenever you want to dabble in its delights, o dedicated disciple of daring and dynamic drama!
Incidentally, the original issue of this facsimile goes for a variety of sky-high prices on eBay, the most expensive starting bid being £22,810.39. Do you think the seller will ever get that, considering far cheaper issues are available, though still in the thousands? (Having said that, some are in the hundreds, but that's still a hefty price.)
Monday, 26 July 2021
THE RISE AND FALL OF THE TRIGAN EMPIRE VOLUME THREE...
Copyright REBELLION |
Just arrived at Castel Crivens this morning, Volume III of The Trigan Empire from Rebellion's Treasury Of British Comics imprint. With art by Don Lawrence and Miguel Quesada, and stories by Mike Butterworth, this is a handsome edition that belongs on the bookshelves of every serious collector of British comics at their best. Available now direct from Rebellion, you can obtain your copy by clicking here. I trust they won't mind me borrowing their images as - back cover aside - I'm too lazy to scan my own copy, even if I could open it wide enough to do so. (Which I can't without damaging it.)