• The big news last week was that Diamond Comic Distributers declared bankruptcy. Sure enough and right on schedule, a plethora of questions from my regular customers came pouring in. Are we in trouble? Will I survive? Are comics now, truly and forevermore, dead?

    So when Franka sent me this comic I had to chuckle when I read it because I do think comic fandom, or people interested in comics, are unique in that a solid majority (more than 49.9%?) are also interested in everything around it. Whether it is a discussion on who makes the comic, how they made it, and even how they are shipped and in what boxes, these are topics you read around the internet and hear around the store. After scratching my head and really thinking about it for a moment, does any other industry have this? When you go out to buy records or cd’s (assuming you still do that), do you also inquire how their distribution channel is doing?

    Is everyone truly so interested in our business to business relationships that a disruption could actually threaten to end our store or an entire industry? What if we changed how an invoice looks or is processed?

    Look, is this a serious thing? Of course it is. And I feel bad for a lot people involved because there will be some hard consequences. But will comics survive? Yes. The industry is healthy enough, and there is still a lot of money involved, that it will be figured out. I remember when DC went exclusively over to Lunar Distribution and Marvel over to Penguin Random House, the exact same thing happened and people out to preach that the world was about to end.

    But as it turns out, we are still okay.

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  • You might have noticed but Marvel has been soliciting facsimile editions of key issues from their library for quite some time now, and DC has recently done the same. One major difference with DC is that they are really doubling down on those beautiful All-New Collectors’ Editions or Treasury Editions they released in the 70/80’s. This month alone DC solicited two: the famous Superman/Flash race and Batman’s Strangest Cases.

    I think this is quite smart of them. My customers do not have to fork over hundreds of credits for a huge oversized Omnibus to grab these beautiful, classic stories or have to engage the collector’s market, where prices are even higher for a good grade of the same comic. Previously we had the Superman/Muhammad Ali and another Batman depicting the famous duel between Batman and Ra’s al Ghul. So it does seem to be Neal Adams centric so far, and I’m not complaining in the least. I do hope DC continues this trend and so far they have been restricted to actual reprints of the Treasuries that were already released so I am curious if they will go into new territory of some classic storylines that never got the oversized treatment?

    Either way and from Franka’s comic this week, is the old trumping the new?

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