Being the full, frank and fairly
embarrassing accounting of the printed entertainments purchased by Mr Bob
Temuka during a three-week trip around the UK, a
shopping fever of such extravagance that it pushed the idea of a baggage weight
limit on international flights to the very extreme.
They were heavy as hell by the end of it
all, but it was, as always, totally fucking worth it.
***
Two
(2) short novels by Kim Newman – the expected Hound of the D’Ubervilles,
with Colonel Sebastian Moran’s hatred of all humanity proving consistently
hilarious, and Time and Relative, the novelette that kicked off the short-lived
Telos series of Doctor Who books. It was bought in a store that was only a
couple of miles from the exact spot they were filming the new series, but Time
and Relative is set right before the beginning, almost five full decades ago.
And it turned out to be unexpectedly moving, especially when the Doctor decides
that meddling in the affairs of the universe is a good thing.
Four
(4) short graphic novels by idiosyncratic (though thoroughly appealing)
creators. I got Joe Matt’s The Poor Bastard in Oxford, a signed
copy of the Originals by Dave Gibbons at Orbital in London, The Lovely
Horrible Stuff by Eddie Campbell at Gosh in London and Kyle
Baker’s Special Forces in Coventry. All of them were as cheap as chips, and they’re all lovely and
complete slices of a particular artistic vision. Campbell’s book
was, unsurprisingly, the funniest, and I chuckled happily away as I read it all
in my hotel room before the flight home.
Fourteen
(a bloody shitload) ridiculously cheap Silver and Bronze Age comics. Most comic shops don’t really make a huge effort on back issues,
and who can blame them? They take up too much valuable real estate for too
little reward, and when all the really good stuff has been reprinted over and over,
there isn’t much need for mouldy old stacks. But it also means that while back
issues older than a couple of years ago can now be harder to find, they can be
a lot cheaper when finally found. And it’s impossible to ignore those kind of
deals, like when you find a bloody shitload of Silver and Bronze Age comics in
a comic shop in Bath. All of the store’s back issues were a pound-fifty each, and I
gorged on Bronze Age Teen Titans, Star-Spangled War Stories, Legion of
Super-Heroes and World’s Finest, pre-Kirby Jimmy Olsen and issues of Inferior
Five and Prez and Shazam and one of the Justice League comics Kev was talking
about, all for the equivalent of my three colonial dollars. And there were some
real gems – the first Guardians of the Galaxy comic by Drake and Colan, and the
first issues of Omega The Unknown and the Secret Society of Super Villains,
which were both in their own ways None More Seventies, and Justice League
America #45, with some terrific Shaggy Man action. Apart from vital gap
fillers, I didn’t really bother with much back issues on this trip, but I did
go a little crazy that Tuesday afternoon in Bath.
Three
(3) recent Marvel annuals by Alan Davis. I wouldn’t
have bothered with the Fantastic Four, Daredevil and Wolverine annuals this
year, until I realised they were really a clandestine ClanDestine comic, and
I’m always up for some ClanDestine.
Thirteen
(another bloody shitload) vital gap fillers. There
are holes in any decent comic collection, missed issues and unfortunate gaps.
I’m always on the look-out for those last issues I need to complete a run, or
bring that goal a little closer. This time I found a Ronin, some Jonah Hex and
Lobo comics, four issues of Garth Ennis’ excellent Fury comics, the last Rasl
I’ve been after (couldn’t find number four anywhere), the usual Cerebus, and a
double dose of Bagge brilliance - the last trade paperback collection of Hate -
Buddy Bites the Bullet – that I’ve been after for a decade and a half and the
one issue of Reset that I somehow missed. Good times!
One
(1) issue of Zarjaz. It’s the first issue of the
2000ad fanzine I’d ever read, and it was surprisingly slick. Some inevitable
clumsiness, but also some talent that is really going places.
One (1)
hardcover edition of Strange Tales II. I already
had two-thirds of it, but it was four pounds in a shop in the Lake District.
Four
(4!) recent 2000ads I bought the 2000ads with the
last Nikolai Dante story and the end of the latest Dredd mega-epic in them
within 24 hours of arriving of Britain, and had read them within 24 hours and
15 minutes. Unexpectedly abrupt. Bit conflicted, but overall impressed. More on
this soon.
Ten
(10) older 2000ad products. Same deal with the gap
fillers. Older issues of the mothership mag, and the Megazine, and the second-last
Starlord I’m after and a Crisis I didn’t know I needed that had the last part
of John Smith and Sean Phillip’s Straitgate, which is awesomely terrible.
Gooder times!
One
(and only 1) Art of Bryan Talbot book I didn’t even
know this 2007 book from NBM publishing existed until I saw it in an Edinburgh
comic shop, but I didn’t buy it and it took me two more hours to realise that I
was being a bloody mug and I loved Bryan Talbot and I was kinda blaming him for
getting lost outside Sunderland the night before, so I went back to the shop
but it was closed so it wasn’t meant to be because I’d never seen another copy
of that book anywhere, but the very next day I was in another comic shop in
Inverness and they also had a copy, so it WAS meant to be.
Two (2)
old British comics reprinting even older Marvel stories. There is something gleefully disposable about foreign reprints of
well-known superhero follies, and while I used to think reprint comics were
inherently worthless when compared to the American originals, I now find them
charming relics of days gone by. On this trip I found the second issue of
Spider-Man weekly from 1973, full of Ditko Spiderman and Kirby Thor in blazing
single colours on the cheapest possible paper, and a Captain Britain weekly
comic from 1977, which has a lead story by Gary Friedrich and Herb Trimpe that
literally makes no sense, and some groovy Steranko Nick Fury, and they’re both
still terrific reads, with timeless stories in the cheapest of formats. They’re
still doing that sort of thing today in the UK,
packaging dozens of pages of Hulk or Deadpool or Justice League comics into
reasonably thick volumes and selling them in the major retailers. But with
slicker paper and production values and less inspiring material from just a
couple of years ago, I ended up passing on the present stuff.
One (1)
cheaparse UK comic fanzine from the
mid-nineties. We’ve all got blogs and Facebook and
twitter now, so we don’t need to fart about with fanzines anymore, but they
remain fascinating historical documents, even if they’re barely more than a
decade old. Besides interesting snippets of old and forgotten news and
long-lost interviews, I also have a huge affection for the unleashed enthusiasm
of a good (or even bad) fanzine and even enjoy it when somebody goes after a
scared cow in comics as if nobody has ever done this before.
One (1)
issue of The Dark Side: It’s a UK horror
magazine that I used to get every issue of when I left school and was getting
paid for the first time. This was the first issue I’ve bought since 1994,
mainly because it’s full of Hammer goodness.
Two (2)
issues of Empire: In contrast, Empire is the only
magazine I’ve been buying non-stop since 1994, and I still got a tingly feeling
buying it in Brit newsagents. Especially since these were the last issues I
might ever buy off the shelf, as I just got a proper subscription to the
magazine, the first time I’ve ever had a subscription to anything.
Two (2-3-4!) issues of the NME: I usually only buy
one issue of the NME every year, just to get a fair idea of what’s going on,
but this year we went to the Reading Festival, so we wanted to have a better
idea of all the hip, new stuff. Failed miserably at keeping up with all the
New, but still had a marvellous time at the show.
One (of
two dozen, most of which are post-2005) Radio Times with a Doctor Who cover. Bought from a Cardiff Newsagents the day after I went through the
Doctor Who Experience, where I actually had a little cry when I saw the 1980s
TARDIS console. The new series started while I was trapped at Heathrow Airport, which
was, as ever, impeccably bad timing.
One (1)
copy of Art Spiegleman’s Breakdowns. It’s a huge
book that actually warped the shape of my luggage, but it was only two quid,
and I’m waaay too cheap to pass up that kind of deal.
One
(1) copy of the Beano. For a mate’s kid, obviously.
Also:
More than a dozen DVDs, mostly British, but ranging
in size from single disc movies to full season box sets; two Judge Dredd
tee-shirts, and one nasty ear infection from the beach at Dubai that felt like
somebody was sticking a needle into my ear drum every day for a week after
coming home.It's the best of times!
***
Thanks to the guest bloggers who filled the
spaces here for the past month, normal service resumes this week with yet
another goddamn post about Love and Rockets, followed by the usual twice-weekly nonsense.
Nice to have you back Bob! Sorry to hear about your ear infection tho - hope that clears up soon....
ReplyDeleteWhat did you think of Kyle Baker’s Special Forces? Have you got round to reading it? Tam recommended it to me - so I got Islington to buy a copy - and am very glad I did! It's like Frank Miller if hadn't turned into a crazy person!
Okay, this is fucked up. I just began a new job in Coventry. When I came for the interview in July, I went to Forbidden Planet. I checked out the sale comics in the back. I picked up, and put down, a bargain copy of Kyle Baker's Special Forces. Three months later, you pick it up...
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