thestonesfan
A Client of Ron Kuby
So here I was yesterday, donating blood, and I was reading Alan Moore's "Watchmen". If you aren't familiar with it, you should be, as it's a true literary masterpiece, and the esteemed Polymath will no doubt attest to that. Anyway, one of the workers saw it and asked "What comic book is that?" I told him, and he proceeded to tell me about his childhood comics that he has since thrown away. Not condescendingly or anything, but I could tell he linked comics to being a kid.
Which is no doubt appropriate, if you're living in 1964. It amused me that if this guy actually decided to read "Watchmen", it would probably be over his head, and here he was concluding that comics are juvenile. Not that they aren't okay for kids, in fact, I think they need to get in touch with the younger audience again. But any adult with an imagination should appreciate them as an artform, and frankly, comics just get no love.
So how do you think of comics? Do you read them? Did you? Do you hold them at the same level as "real" books? Personally, I feel a good comic story is more impressive than a good novel, because it must succeed on two levels, story and art.
Which is no doubt appropriate, if you're living in 1964. It amused me that if this guy actually decided to read "Watchmen", it would probably be over his head, and here he was concluding that comics are juvenile. Not that they aren't okay for kids, in fact, I think they need to get in touch with the younger audience again. But any adult with an imagination should appreciate them as an artform, and frankly, comics just get no love.
So how do you think of comics? Do you read them? Did you? Do you hold them at the same level as "real" books? Personally, I feel a good comic story is more impressive than a good novel, because it must succeed on two levels, story and art.