I used to feel so alone in this cold, cold world, and comics didn't fill that aching, endless void in my soul. But they helped!
Isolation, gone
Originally posted March 10, 2012
I still find it a little weird to be in a town that has comic shops, and I still think it’s a novelty to talk about comic books on the internet with people who care about them just as much as I do, if not more.
Isolation, gone
Originally posted March 10, 2012
I still find it a little weird to be in a town that has comic shops, and I still think it’s a novelty to talk about comic books on the internet with people who care about them just as much as I do, if not more.
Things haven’t always been this way, and I’m
still getting used to it.
When I was teenager and going through my
peak comic period - at a time when I was utterly obsessed with all the comics in
the world - I lived in a town of 3000 people near the bottom of the South Island of New Zealand, right there on the arse of the
world. Apart from my mate Kyle, whose enthusiasm for X-Men and 2000ad
occasionally outshone my own, the idea of talking about comics with other people
always seemed so... unlikely.
It was always fun to talk to Kyle about what
happened when Rogue went through the Siege Perilous, or what was in Kano’s
black box, but his tastes were particular, when I was into everything, and as
far as I could tell, there was nobody else in the town of Temuka who cared about
Mark Bagley and Dan Clowes in equal measure.
So I kept it all to myself. It probably
didn’t do much for my social skills, and may explain why I unload so much of
this crap on the blog now, (self awareness go!), but comics became something
internal. I got right out of the habit of talking about them with anybody,
content to live in my own little head with Black Panther and the Katzenjammer
Kids. Like Warren Ellis liked to say, when it comes to comics, we all Come In
Alone.
It wasn’t a case of never talking about
comics with people, I was always up with discussion of particular comics with
particular people, or giving specific comics to people who asked for them, but
in general, it was all internalised.
Things are a bit different now.
I first came out of that weird shell a bit
when I went to my first comic shop and talked to people.
It took me a long time to get to my first comic shop, and another decade before I could get to one regularly, and it was
only then that I meet people who also really liked Grendel comics. Go to the
same place often enough, and people remember you, and you get to talk about
stuff you have in common.
But even that became off-putting: While
there were good people, comic shops also hired people who managed to be more
socially awkward than I was, and I never got into the habit of hanging around
the shop and talking shit about this week’s new releases. I became a
grab-‘em-and-go guy. Give me my fix and I’m out the door.
And even though I was now surrounded by
like-minded geeks in the store every week, there still weren’t that many. It was
all part of the geographical isolation of living in New
Zealand, right there at the bottom of the world. They
cost three times as much as they do in America and distribution can be decidedly
dodgy, so comics have been an extremely niche market around here since the mid
1980s.
There still weren’t that many people to talk
about comic books with, down in my tiny corner of the world. So far from the
rest of the world, so far from anywhere.
All of that didn’t mean anything once I got
on the internet.
The first thing I did when I got on the
internet for the very first time was look up comic books.
This was 1995, so there wasn’t much to
choose from, and I didn’t know where to look. I remember the first thing I found
was a new review of a recent Superman comic, and I remember how chuffed I was to
soon find a comic news site that updated once a week. (I think it was called
Mania or something, and I have a vague feeling it eventually turned into
Newsarama, but I could be getting totally mixed up there.)
Then I found websites solely devoted to Alan
Davis and Matt Wagner and Kingdom Come, and that last one somehow became Comic Book Resources, and that’s when I really realised I wasn’t alone.
I got deep into the message board culture
there for a couple of years in the late nineties at CBR. There were other
places, but Alvaro’s boards (which I was just slightly stunned to discover still exist)
was a bit too Eltingville Comic Book Science Fiction Fantasy Horror And Role Playing Club, and the Comics Journal message board (which changed and changed
and died) was too Northwest Comix Collective, while CBR was just the right mix
of dorkiness, politeness and obsession for all things comics.
I posted every day and spent time in a chat
room (for the first and lat time.) I called myself Max Zero, because I really
dug Elmore Leonard’s Maximum Bob, and because I like names with x’s and z’s in
them. I got into it so much that it led to an unfortunate fan fiction phase,
which we will never speak of again. (Although I always think I’ve got another
Therapeutic Skin Jobs in me…)
And I wasn’t alone. If I’m one in a million,
that still means there is hundreds of me on the net, and I became great friends
with people I still haven’t met in real life. All those interests and
perspectives that I had were hardly unique, and it was wonderful to find people
who I could talk to about the latest Love and Rockets, or argue over the new
Justice League line-up, or be inspired to check out Akira.
That kind of enthusiasm always fades, and I
moved on from all that a while back. I last posted on CBR in 2006, and that was
after a break of a couple of years. I still post on a semi-private message board
used by those first CBR message boarders, and it’s comfortable, a nice place to
discuss things like Before Watchmen without having to make some kind of public
declaration on the issue.
But over the years, I became far more
interested in blogs. I still love nothing more than a great link blog, but I
mainly enjoy the essay-type blogs, where somebody takes the time to construct
some kind of argument, or point of view.
Which leads me back, as always to the
Tearoom of Despair. I’ve written more than half a million words for this blog
over the past couple of years, and met some lovely new people through it, and I
still feel weirdly privileged to write about the comics I love and share that
adoration with the world, especially when the people who make them get to see my
thoughts.
I never thought I’d get to talk – or write –
about this stuff, or that anybody would even give a damn.
Ellis was right, and the act of reading a comic is a solitary experience. But that doesn’t mean we can’t babble on about it afterwards, and how it was moving, or irritating, or exciting. There is a connection between everybody who ever liked Spider-Man comics, let alone anybody - like me - who obsessed over something as relatively marginal as the Infinity Gauntlet.
Sometimes I still find it hard to talk about
the things I love. Sometimes I really can’t find the words. But I’m getting
better at trying to put all those stupid feelings that comics generate into
words, and with the gently biting banter at the local shop. Because I get more chances to talk about these things, and more chances to get the attention of an audience who know what the hell I'm talking about. Because I've grown up, and gotten a lot better at small talk. And because I know I’m
not alone any more.
No comments:
Post a Comment