Add free shipping to your order with these great books
Yesterday's Stack : Reading the Comics I Read When I Was Fifteen - David Macpherson

Yesterday's Stack

Reading the Comics I Read When I Was Fifteen

By: David Macpherson

eBook | 3 November 2024

At a Glance

eBook


$4.99

or 4 interest-free payments of $1.25 with

Instant Digital Delivery to your Booktopia Reader App

In 2019, I was going to turn fifty and had my midlife crisis by wallowing in the comic books I loved as a kid.

I started buying comic books again. Not new comics. Hell no. I was keyed into old comics.The shit I read when I was a kid.

When I was a teenager in the 1980s, I spent all my money on comic books. I would go to the local shop on Saturdays and buy a large wedge of books and spend the next week reading them all.

I loved all of them, but would they all stand up?

That's when I had the notion. II would figure out all the comics I read for one month when I was fifteen, read them again and write about them.

I picked the comics published in July of 1985. No reason. I just picked it. I went through lists online and was able to come up with 35 comics I pretty much was sure I bought and read that month.

I don't own my old comics so I had to go about getting them again.

Then I began to write this with the plan of finishing it by October , 2019, when I turned fifty. That didn't happen. I didn't finish this until November.

When I was done with this, I worked on the structure and how I wanted it to be and was not happy. So I put it away with the idea that I would look at it in a few months and then get it out and published.

But then March 2020 happened, and the world shut down.

I forgot about this project. This was something from the before time and it was not part of my thoughts at all.

A few months ago, I recalled I wrote this and decided to see what I could do with it. I had written a very long introduction and several lengthy side essays. I cut all that and just kept the parts where I went through the old comics.

It is a love letter to being a kid who was hyper focused on one thing. It is also a chance to think about how we change. How we stay the same. What we remember and what we were wise to forget.

I am happy to share this with you. I am now 55 and still read old comics. Not as quickly as I used to. The writing in comics and my old eyes are in conflict. Ah well. I still dig it.

on

More in Literary Studies of Fiction

Instant Knowledge : Collins Gem - Editors of Mental Floss

eBOOK

RRP $28.59

$22.99

20%
OFF
The Dharma of Star Wars - Matthew Bortolin

eBOOK

Marvel Comics : The Untold Story - Sean Howe

eBOOK

RRP $37.39

$29.99

20%
OFF
The Hymn to Dionysus - Natasha Pulley

eBOOK