by Ice Cream Jonsey » Thu Oct 12, 2023 1:28 pm
This went off the rails, but it was the Justice League thread I was thinking of, I wanted to talk about Keith Giffen.
I was at an age where I was very ready to be influenced into what I was into, what I liked, what I wanted to follow along with. I want to say it was the mid to late 1980s.
I was into PC games - I still am, for as much as I procrastinate, I do occasionally post about those. I liked George Effinger's books which I found as a teenager. I would buy comic books and have them sent to the house - Daredevil, Avengers, Captain America - but I was really just not into comics from DC until one fateful day...
I think I saw
this on a comic book stand, I can't imagine what would have made me purchase it with my own money in 1990. But cheesecake aside, it was different, it was funny. I loved the comics I was getting each month, but the concept of there being a comic each month that was just meant to make you laugh with superheros - I had simply never experienced anything like it before.
Keith Giffen plotted all of that, invented all of that with the Justice League.
He didn't specifically do the dialogue - he *brought in* a guy to collaborate with, J.M. DeMatteis. who is still with us and who I love (and who is using BlueSky, where he announced Keith's passing). The mix of comedy and drama is something that has really stuck with me and I am sad that Keith is no longer with us. 70 is far, far too young for someone with a mind like his.
I still have the comic books he did. They are in the garage. They are some of the best pure entertainment I can think of.
This went off the rails, but it was the Justice League thread I was thinking of, I wanted to talk about Keith Giffen.
I was at an age where I was very ready to be influenced into what I was into, what I liked, what I wanted to follow along with. I want to say it was the mid to late 1980s.
I was into PC games - I still am, for as much as I procrastinate, I do occasionally post about those. I liked George Effinger's books which I found as a teenager. I would buy comic books and have them sent to the house - Daredevil, Avengers, Captain America - but I was really just not into comics from DC until one fateful day...
I think I saw [url=https://dc.fandom.com/wiki/Justice_League_America_Vol_1_34]this on a comic book stand[/url], I can't imagine what would have made me purchase it with my own money in 1990. But cheesecake aside, it was different, it was funny. I loved the comics I was getting each month, but the concept of there being a comic each month that was just meant to make you laugh with superheros - I had simply never experienced anything like it before.
Keith Giffen plotted all of that, invented all of that with the Justice League.
He didn't specifically do the dialogue - he *brought in* a guy to collaborate with, J.M. DeMatteis. who is still with us and who I love (and who is using BlueSky, where he announced Keith's passing). The mix of comedy and drama is something that has really stuck with me and I am sad that Keith is no longer with us. 70 is far, far too young for someone with a mind like his.
I still have the comic books he did. They are in the garage. They are some of the best pure entertainment I can think of.