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Comic book memories ------------------- I often start off my phlog posts by offering greetings to any new sundogs at the Zaibatsu, but goodness, there have been so many new signups lately that this hardly even seems feasible this time!. This place is thumping! A warm welcome to you all, I already love a lot of what you guys have uploaded. Keep it coming! So, Spider Man creator and general Marvel bigwig Stan Lee died earlier this week. I am not, and never have been, a huge comic person, so I'd be lying if I said this had had much of an effect on me personally. But it's not quite as if I had no idea who the guy was, and in fact his name played some small but strangely influenial role in my childhood. Sometime in the early 90s I would guess, on a long, multi-day family holiday roadtrip to one of the Eastern states of Australia (probably Queensland, where all the big amusement parks are), in an attempt to keep me entertained in the back seat my Dad stopped at a second hand book store somewhere in what seemed like the middle of nowhere and bought me what I can only describe as a fuck-off stack of comic books. At least a foot deep. In my memory they came in a plastic shopping bag, but that can't be right, the weight would have destroyed it, I think. This was some totally disorganised random pile of comics that they place probably just wanted to be rid of and priced at bargain. There were all sorts in there, but definitely a lot more Marvel stuff than DC stuff, and possibly more Marvel stuff than anything else (although there was a healthy dose of Phantom in there). I especially remember there being a lot of G.I. Joe comics in there, which I think I probably enjoyed the most because I was already familiar with a lot of the characters from toys and the cartoon show. During that trip I devoured all those comics, and not just the actual comics themselves but all the weird and wonderful crap that was also in there. All of the adverts, all of the letters from fans, all the instructions on how to join the various fan clubs, all the interviews with the artists, etc. And that was where I learned the name Stan Lee, and also his catchphrase "'Nuff said". He must have had some kind of regular column or something that I got to read a lot of. I am astonished at how well this stuff has stuck with me for years despite being of almost no value and never getting exercised, with me having been totally uninvolved in comic book fandom of any kind (well, alright, except manga, but that's hardly relevant here) for decades since this early exposure. I can tell you, without any shadow of a doubt, that one of the various ranks/titles/whatever one could achieve in some Marvel fanclub, somehow (by referring your friends?) was Keeper of the Flame. There must have been a dozen of those titles, but that's the only one which is indelibly stamped in my memory to this day. This is pretty much the full extent of my knowledge of and connection to Stan Lee. I have no idea if he was "a good person" in any larger sense at all and I don't want to make any bigger a deal of his passing than is appropriate. But it's kind of sad when someone connected to happy childhood memories, even in a fairly nebulous way, dies, so...Rest in Peace, Stan.