Scott Edelman
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Meeting Congressman John Lewis, the real hero of SPX

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  comics, SPX    Posted date:  September 16, 2013  |  No comment


I spent Sunday at SPX—the Small Press Expo—in Bethesda, Maryland. (Actually, its location seemed more like Rockville to me, but I guess at some point parts of Rockville started to be called North Bethesda because the Bethesda name helped the area sound posher.) I had fun wandering the packed dealers room and picking up comics by cartoonists who are doing the more personal kinds of work mainstream publishers have for the most part abandoned with their constant focus on superheroes, superheroes, superheroes.

But as much as I enjoyed all that, the highlight of the day was attending a panel on March: Book One, which focuses on the life of civil rights pioneer John Lewis, and then getting a chance to meet the congressman and pick up an autographed copy of his book (which he created with co-writer Andrew Aydin and artist Nate Powell). In case you don’t know, Lewis was one of the 13 original Freedom Riders, helped plan the March on Washington, and is the last surviving speaker from that day.

JohnLewisScottEdelman

Here we are together right after I shook his hand and thanked him for his courage and sacrifice. (more…)

Can someone please tell me when Avengers #1 and X-Men #1 REALLY went on sale?

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  comics, Marvel Comics, The Avengers, X-Men    Posted date:  September 12, 2013  |  7 Comments


I can remember exactly where I was when Avengers #1 and X-Men #1 went on sale, because it was the same day, I only had 12 cents on me, and could therefore only buy one.

I had to choose between them. Can you feel my pain? Imagine my horror?

AvengersXMen1

It was 1963, and I was 8 years old. I was in Joe and Morty’s Brooklyn candy store on Avenue P a few blocks off Ocean Parkway. I visited there nearly every day, not just for comics, but to stay fueled on egg creams and cherry lime rickeys, and to pick up those unfiltered Lucky Strikes my mother needed.

In any case, though I’m 100% certain where I encountered those issues, I can’t say for sure when I encountered them. Only that it wasn’t September 10. Because school had not begun, it was still summer, and in any case, though both books were cover-dated September, comics always went on sale in advance of their cover dates, that date only being an indication to the retailer when comics should come off sale.

And yet … (more…)

Download a free comic book story I wrote in the ’70s

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  comics, Marvel Comics, my writing    Posted date:  August 7, 2013  |  No comment


Remember that 5-page Thanos story I wrote way back when dinosaurs still walked the Earth? The one that, surprisingly, ended up being part of Marvel’s Free Comic Book Day promotion last April?

Well, a digital copy is available as a free download right now through both the Marvel app (if you’ve got it) or simply via the company’s site.

FinalFlowerFCBD

I have no idea how long the offer will last, so if you want to check out the sort of thing I was writing in 1977, without having to haunt comics shops in search of a copy of Logan’s Run #6, then now’s your chance.

It’s a Bird, It’s a Plane, It’s Logo Theft!

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  comics, DC Comics, Superman    Posted date:  July 27, 2013  |  No comment


Drew Friedman has posted many scans relating to “It’s a Bird, It’s a Plane, It’s SUPERMAN,” a 1966 Broadway musical I could have seen (hey, I was eleven and lived in New York) but never did. I’d never run across the souvenier program book before, but the instant I saw the cover posted there, I noticed something very odd.

If you’re as big a Silver Age comics fan as I am, you’ll notice it, too.

Take a look.

SupermanMusicalSouvenirProgram

Did something inappropriate leap out at you? If you read comics back in 1966, you’d have immediately recognized that something was very, very wrong. And that is … (more…)

Here’s how to acquire super-strength (according to Superman#1 anyway)

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  comics, DC Comics, Superman    Posted date:  June 18, 2013  |  No comment


Yes, I exercise—in fact, today was my 45th consecutive day of walking at least 10,000 steps/5 miles (assuming my new Fitbit Flex can be trusted, that is).

But according to this suggestion from way back in Superman #1 (which DC Comics has been giving away free via its iPad app as part of a Man of Steel promotion), I’m doing exercise all wrong!

Superman1Exercise

I hope it’s not too late to change my ways.

Time to start hefting furniture over my head, I guess …

Hey, don’t forget Murphy Anderson!

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  comics, DC Comics, Murphy Anderson, Neal Adams, Superman    Posted date:  June 15, 2013  |  No comment


Have you seen the cover to the latest issue of Entertainment Weekly? It features a huge image of Superman zooming at the reader, above two other smaller Superman drawings plus photos of five actors who’ve played the part in movies and on TV.

EntertaimentWeekly06212013

Does the main drawing look familiar to you? It did to me.

(more…)

Intriguing 1966 DC Comics house ad

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  Batman, comics, DC Comics, Joe Kubert, Marvel Comics    Posted date:  May 21, 2013  |  2 Comments


While I was over at my sister-in-law’s house Sunday night, I happened to notice a stack of old comics on the coffee table and picked up this one—Detective Comics #350 (April 1966)—because who could resist a Batman drawn by Joe Kubert or those Go-Go Checks?

DetectiveComics350April1966

The house ads in the issue were as much fun as the stories (which is often the case), and I was particularly intrigued by this one, in which DC claimed it sold “twice as many comics as any other competitor” and “almost as many as all other comics combined.” (more…)

Thanos, Free Comic Book Day, and me

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  comics, Marvel Comics, my writing    Posted date:  April 28, 2013  |  1 Comment


Next Saturday is Free Comic Book Day, which means that if you wander into a comics shop on May 4, 2013, you might just walk out with a comic book written … by me!

But how is that possible? I haven’t written any comics in decades. How could I possibly have anything in a comic handed out on Free Comic Book Day?

Blame Thanos!

Bill Hall of The Daily Kirby let me know today (beating out Marvel Comics, who’s yet to alert me) that my back-up story from Logan’s Run #6, which starred Thanos and Drax the Destroyer, will be reprinted in Infinity, Marvel’s giveaway for Free Comic Book Day. All because Thanos is now a big deal due to his appearance at the end of The Avengers movie.

InfinityMyThanosStory

The freebie is described as follows: (more…)

Hulking out in Chicago

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  comics, Marvel Comics, Sharon Moody    Posted date:  April 9, 2013  |  No comment


As Irene and I walked south down Chicago’s Michigan Avenue Saturday, I happened to look to the left at just the right moment to spot the Hulk looking back—because this print by artist Doug Bloodworth was hanging in a gallery window.

HulkDougBloodworth

Here’s a clearer version of the piece, with the image not obscured by the glare of the street lights.

(more…)

The first and last time I saw Carmine Infantino

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  Carmine Infantino, comics, Mark Hanerfeld, obituaries    Posted date:  April 5, 2013  |  No comment


The first time I saw Carmine Infantino was at my first comic book convention back in 1970. Or so I assume. After all, he was one of the Guests of Honor there. But being for the first time in the presence of my tribe, I was in a daze, so much of that weekend is a muddled explosion of joy, and I don’t specifically remember meeting him.

The last time I saw him was forty years later at the funeral of Mark Hanerfeld, coincidentally the guy without whom I’d never have made it to that first convention. We chatted a bit, mostly about Mark.

I have no great anecdotes to share about the man who drew the first comic book of the Silver Age, and whose work both in that issue and for decades to come imprinted itself on my soul. I wish I did. And you can find the details of his life and plenty of examples of his talent elsewhere.

But I thought the least I could do to say thanks at a time like this was to share his biography as printed in the program book for that 1970 con which changed my life …

CarmineInfantino1970ComicCon1

… as well as the back cover, which featured his artwork.

(more…)

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