Howdy, Stranger!

It looks like you're new here. Sign in or register to get started.

Options

Episode 1237 Talkback: Talking Marvel in the 60's and 70's with author Pierre Comtois

PantsPants Posts: 567
edited June 2012 in CGS Episodes & Spin-Offs
TwoMorrows Publishing has put out some great books on comics and comics history. Author Pierre Comtois joins us to talk about his books on Marvel in the 60's and 70's. (1:00:35)

Listen here.

Comments

  • Options
    John_SteedJohn_Steed Posts: 2,087
    Me likey. Thanks to earlier CGS episodes I got quite a TwoMorrows library by now. I have the tendency to read more ABOUT comics than the actual comics......and I read 1000s of comics....

    Comics history :x
  • Options
    PantsPants Posts: 567
    edited June 2012
    Here's some more information on Pierre:

    Pierre V. Comtois is a newspaper reporter writing from Lowell, MA who
    has been editing and publishing Fungi, the Magazine of Fantasy and
    Weird Fiction intermittently since 1984. Comtois’ latest book, Marvel
    Comics in the 1970s: An Issue by Issue Field Guide to a Pop Culture
    Phenomenon, was published in 2011 by Twomorrows Pubs. An earlier
    volume, Marvel Comics in the 1960s, appeared in 2009. In addition,
    Comtois has contributed fiction to many other small press magazines
    over the years including Haunts, The Horror Show, Thrilling Tales, and
    e magazine Planetary Stories. Comtois’ fiction has also appeared in
    various magazines for Cryptic Publications and Rainfall Books as well
    as such collections as Lin Carter’s Anton Zarnak: Supernatural Sleuth,
    Eldritch Blue, and various Chaosium Books anthologies. The author has
    also written a number of books including novels such as Strange
    Company and Sometimes a Warm Rain Falls; non-fiction such as Our
    Lives, Our Fortunes, Our Sacred Honor; and short story collections
    such as The Way the Future Was, The Portable Pierre V. Comtois, and
    the forthcoming Autumnal Tales from Mythos Books. Comtois has also
    found the time to contribute non-fiction articles to such magazines as
    World War II, America’s Civil War, Wild West, and Military History,
    many of which were collected last year in Real Heroes, Real Battles, a
    book published by Sons of Liberty Press. Also from Sons of Liberty is
    River Muse: Stories of Lowell and the Merrimack Valley, to which
    Comtois has contributed a personal recollection entitled “I Was a
    Teenaged Bibliophile.” For more information about the author, visit
    pierrevcomtois.com
  • Options
    PantsPants Posts: 567
    And here are links to the TwoMorrows books we discussed:

    Marvel Comics in the 1960's
    and Marvel Comics in the 1970's.
  • Options
    David_DDavid_D Posts: 3,881
    Excellent- I love those books, and had been hoping to hear an interview with Comtois. Looking forward to it.
  • Options
    matchkitJOHNmatchkitJOHN Posts: 1,030
    edited June 2012
    What critics didn't get came through from that interview. T
    he book sounds like a love letter from a fanboy to the comics he loved as a boy. That makes me want to read it even more. Doesn't sound like a dry academic tome.
  • Options
    GregGreg Posts: 1,946
    I have to to get these books. Thanks for doing the interview with Pierre.
  • Options
    rebisrebis Posts: 1,820
    At time the interview sounded like Pants interviewing himself while doing a vaudeville voice.

    AWESOME.

    ;)

    That was great fun. Loved the enthusiasm.
  • Options
    More Chris! Nice interview and interesting books.
  • Options
    Pierre was brilliant! Made me smile loads during that interiew, his enthusiasm was really infectious. And I reckon he could have carried on talking for hours and it would have been interesting as well. His books sound great too!
  • Options
    alienalalienal Posts: 508
    I enjoyed the interview! Heh-heh...well, I don't really think Pierre sounded like Pants, but I DO think he sounded like a similarly enthusiastic STAN LEE! He seemed to have similar intonation and enuciation, and strongly pronounced "s"s and "x"s at the end of words. Anyway, now I realize why my 60's and 70's comic collection isn't so big. At that time I didn't have the ability/chance to go riding around town on my bicycle looking for all the comics I'd missed. Similar to what Sal said before, I'd have been lucky to get a Luke Cage, Power Man or a Master of Kung Fu or a Marvel-Two-In-One if I missed the days when the liquor store or the drug store put their comics out.
  • Options
    SteevenSteeven Posts: 215
    I enjoyed the episode and I have to agree with Jamie on Rucka's Atticus Kodiak books. They are really good.

    That was this episode, right? I'm listening to a great big bunch of them lately and I might be confused.
  • Options
    RobAndersonRobAnderson Posts: 553
    Great episode! Really enjoyed this (and the Spidey in Bronze Age one right after...Chris is great on these episodes with you guys.)

    And I can vouch for the existence of the Marvel-Con in the 1970's. The first major convention I attended as a kid in NYC was Marvel-Con '76!

    Here's the cover and back cover of the 1976 48-page, digest-sized program, fwiw. I'll post some of the interior pages, too, over in the "Silver and Bronze Age Thread" for those who are interested.


    image
Sign In or Register to comment.