![]() ![]() Though he suffered from severe cerebral palsy, including having to use a pencil gripped ![]() Gordon Belljohn Love was a Florida-based fan who may well have been the most strong-willed of all. Love himself, the editor and publisher of RBCC. There was even a letter from former fanzine editor turned pro Roy Thomas. Bruce Berry, Tom Fagan, Ronn Foss, Russ Cochran and Roy Bonario. Though I did not know it at the time, many of those inside that issue were truly the heart and start of comic fandom: Jerry Bails, Biljo White, Bill Spicer, Phil Seuling, Rick Weingroff, Raymond Miller, D. This was an exciting, crowded world full of dealers, publishers of other fanzines, and fans who wrote articles about comics’ four-color history. The front cover was a tribute to two Golden Age heroes from Hillman Publications, Nightmare and Sleepy, drawn by then-fan Richard Buckler.Īnd, inside the issue… well… for me, it was the equivalent of what it must be like for a comics fan walking into the San Diego Comic-Con today for the first time. It was a ditto and photo-offset publication featuring approximately 90 pages stapled together. I don’t know how I heard of RBCC in the first place (likely through an ad in a comic) but when the issue, #45, arrived I was amazed. In 1964, they merged, with Love as publisher and editor. Love) and “The Comicollector” (started by Jerry Bails). The magazine was originally two separate fan publications that began in 1961, “The Rocket’s Blast” (from G.B. My awakening to all of this was an adzine/fanzine called Rocket’s Blast Comicollector. In 1966, three years after I read my first comic, I discovered there were other fans like me. Featuring Don Newton, Bernie Wrightson, Wally Wood and MORE… ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |