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Lists Are Terrific

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Aren't they just? Tom Spurgeon compiled a list — which really is a towering work of obsession, go and read it right this minute now — of 50 Things That Every Comics Collection Truly Needs. Here's the meme version.

Leave Plain = Things I don't have
Make Bold = Things I do have
Italics = I have some but probably not enough (optional)
Underline = I don't agree I need this (optional)

1. Something From The ACME Novelty Library (I keep meaning to buy the sketchbooks, but I have a couple of the bookshelf-busting issues. And Jimmy Corrigan.)

2. A Complete Run Of Arcade

3. Any Number Of Mini-Comics

4. At Least One Pogo Book From The 1950s

5. A Barnaby Collection

6. Binky Brown and the Holy Virgin Mary

7. As Many Issues of RAW as You Can Place Your Hands On

8. A Little Stack of Archie Comics (Not so common in Britain. I have Archie Vs. The Punisher, but that's not really the same thing.)

9. A Suite of Modern Literary Graphic Novels

10. Several Tintin Albums

11. A Smattering Of Treasury Editions Or Similarly Oversized Books

12. Several Significant Runs of Alternative Comic Book Series (Nothing much beyond a bundle of early-200s Cerebus.)

13. A Few Early Comic Strip Collections To Your Taste (Gasoline Alley, Thimble Theatre, Dick Tracy, some Krazy Kat.)

14. Several "Indy Comics" From Their Heyday

15. At Least One Comic Book From When You First Started Reading Comic Books (Gerry Conway/Sal Buscema issues of Spectacular Spider-Man.)

16. At Least One Comic That Failed to Finish The Way It Planned To

17. Some Osamu Tezuka

18. The Entire Run Of At Least One Manga Series (Eagle, mentioned a couple of posts down. This may be sort of a cheat, since it's incredibly short for a manga.)

19. One Or Two 1970s Doonesbury Collections

20. At Least One Saul Steinberg Hardcover

21. One Run of A Comic Strip That You Yourself Have Clipped

22. A Selection of Comics That Interest You That You Can't Explain To Anyone Else

23. At Least One Woodcut Novel

24. As Much Peanuts As You Can Stand

25. Maus

26. A Significant Sample of R. Crumb's Sketchbooks

27. The original edition of Sick, Sick, Sick.

28. The Smithsonian Collection Of Newspaper Comics

29. Several copies of MAD (I bought some reissues of the first few issues. Lovely art. I think I gave up before it got funny.)

30. A stack of Jack Kirby 1970s Comic Books

31. More than a few Stan Lee/Jack Kirby 1960s Marvel Comic Books

32. A You're-Too-High-To-Tell Amount of Underground Comix

33. Some Calvin and Hobbes (The only C&H I don't have is a book that accompanied a museum exhibit, with reproductions of original art and thoughts from Watterson. GOSH! had a few the last time I was down that way.)

34. Some Love and Rockets

35. The Marvel Benefit Issue Of Coober Skeber

36. A Few Comics Not In Your Native Tongue

37. A Nice Stack of Jack Chick Comics

38. A Stack of Comics You Can Hand To Anybody's Kid

39. At Least A Few Alan Moore Comics

40. A Comic You Made Yourself

41. A Few Comics About Comics

42. A Run Of Yummy Fur

43. Some Frank Miller Comics

44. Several Lee/Ditko/Romita Amazing Spider-Man Comic Books

45. A Few Great Comics Short Stories ('In Pictopia', 'The Man' by Vaughn Bodé, 'Street Code' by Jack Kirby. The minute I see a copy of Mazzucchelli's 'Big Man', I will buy it.)

46. A Tijuana Bible

47. Some Weirdo

48. An Array Of Comics In Various Non-Superhero Genres

49. An Editorial Cartoonist's Collection or Two

50. A Few Collections From New Yorker Cartoonists

All-Time Top 10 Comic Books

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  1. The Life and Times of Scrooge McDuck
  2. The Ballad of Halo Jones
  3. Cerebus: High Society
  4. Daredevil: Born Again
  5. The Cowboy Wally Show
  6. American Born Chinese
  7. Death: The High Cost Of Living
  8. The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers
  9. Top 10 Season 1
  10. Heartland

DISCLAIMERS: I may do a separate list for comic strips so there are no newspaper comics here. I've stuck to things which are clearly one discrete story (Top Ten) or available in a single volume (Freak Brothers). Heartland is only 60 pages or so long and you can find it in the Rake At The Gates Of Hell collection of Hellblazer comics. All of these were originally published in English, which is partly a function of my not being terrifically well-versed in foreign material, and partly because I couldn't pick a single favourite Tintin or Asterix volume and couldn't be bothered to find links for multi-tankobon manga series. (If you like, you can pretend Eagle by Kaiji Kawaguchi is in there at number 11.)

So! A good positive start to the new site. I'm Stu West; I'll be your host. Let's play Blockbusters.

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