Author - Artist - Voice Over Actor

Tag: DC Special Blue Ribbon Digest

Digesting Super Heroes

“Thank you, God, for bringing Mom and Dad home safely,” my mother would always say as we drove past the hospital. Both her parents had been in a patient there a number of times, and we praised God for them returning home safe and healthy.

That hospital has held many joyful and sad memories for us. Hopefully me being born there was one of the joyful ones.

My father also worked in the lab, and my mom would walk me over to have lunch with him from time to time.

So, what does all that have to do with comic books, and super heroes? Quite a lot, actually, at least for me.

The hospital had a small gift shop where visitors could purchase flowers, snacks, or stuffed animals for the patients they were coming to see. They also had a small magazine display rack, and upon it were a few (very few) small comic books.

These were digest size books that were reprints of other already published books. Most of these digests were done by Archie Comics, about Archie, his two girls Betty and Veronica, Jughead, and the rest.

But every so often there were other digest comics. These were mostly from DC Comics (actually, I don’t remember Marvel publishing Digests like these).

I wasn’t really interested in Archie and his friends. Then one time I was there I saw a comic with a whole lot of super heroes on the cover. 33 In All. I recognized several of them: Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, and others that I knew from the Super Friends, but there were a whole lot more on this cover. I just had to have it.

DC Special Blue Ribbon Digest #11
DC Special Blue Ribbon Digest #11

Suddenly I was in love with the entire DC Universe in one single issue. (Or a single digest reprint of Justice League of America #100, #101, and #102). Here was my first exposure to so many different super heroes, and to the concept of Parallel Worlds. This was long before I ever heard the term ‘multiverse.’

Not only was there a Justice League of America, but also a Justice Society of America from an entirely different. Similar heroes to ones I was familiar with and others that were all new to me.

I was in love with absolutely every one of them.

Many years later I would become friends with the writer and editor of the book, Len Wein, and we chatted about what stories were decided to put in these digests. “Editor’s Choice,” was his answer. Gail Simone would say that Justice League of America #100 and this story would be a major impact on her becoming comic book writer as well.

Justice League of America #100
Justice League of America #100 – the comic that was reprinted in the digest that started me on the road of loving comic book super heroes.

So, to get introduced to the DC Universe this clearly was the right place.

I would be in the lobby of the hospital many times over the next months and years, as my grandparents slowly reached the end of their stories. Sitting quietly there, sometimes doing my homework, sometimes not, I really didn’t have much to do. This lonely boy fell into the eyes of the hospital’s chaplain one Father Francis ‘Frank’ Smith.

Father Smith felt sorry for this boy sitting there and went back to his own office down the hall. When he returned, he came over to me and handed me two comic books: one was an issue Superman and the other was of The Flash.

Superman #355
Superman #355 – one of the comics given to me by Father Smith.
The Flash #293
The Flash #293 another comic given to me by Father Smith.

At one point in my life as I began contemplating a career in comic books and writing and drawing super heroes, I began to wonder if God would approve of me enjoying creating stories about people with god-like powers. I would be reminded of Father Smith giving me these two super hero comics out of his own collection, and I knew it was okay and that God approved of my goals.

This would be the true beginning of my love of comic books and super heroes.

There would be many more to follow.

Being in that hospital lobby so often would result in purchasing other Digest comics and discovering other heroes, none so great as the doctors and staff who help my parents and grandparents there.

Comics & Me – Introduction

Hi All,

May this New Year be enjoyable and successful for all.

I have several goals for this New Year, mostly focusing on my career, but to start off I’ll be writing this blog and posting twice a week. Which will hopefully be a whole lot better than what it has been in the past. This first blog series is about how comic books and super heroes have influenced my career. This is also part of a Toastmasters assignment, “Writing a Compelling Blog,” which when the blog series is complete, I’ll be giving a speech about the whole experience.

Comic books and super heroes have been part of my life for, well nearly all my life. Now that I think about it, super heroes have been there long before comic books were. I’ll probably be giving away my age in this blog, but I have no problem with that.

There were several super heroes shows as part of Saturday Morning Cartoons on television at that time, most well-known of course was the Super Friends, but there were others before that. I would first discover super heroes elsewhere, starting with reruns of the 1950s Adventures of Superman starring George Reeves, and the 1960s Batman series starring Adam West. I think I enjoyed the Superman series better even if it was in black and white. I also enjoyed super heroes that I never saw, listening to the Green Hornet, Lone Ranger, and The Shadow on the radio (yes these were all reruns as well), and I enjoyed them almost more than the ones that appeared on television. Radio was the theatre of the mind; my young imagination created the worlds I heard. These radio heroes would end up playing an important part of my career down the road.

Comic books came into existence to me in an odd way. Why I had never read one up to this point I’m not really certain, though I suppose the comic book adaptions of Bible stories does count, but it’s not the same thing. Religion and how it relates to my love of comics will be in an upcoming blog account. However, I believe God had a hand in my love for comics from the very beginning.

The first comics I read I got while my grandparents were in the hospital. The gift shop sold digest sized comics, and one of them greatly interested me. This comic and the ones that followed, would be the start of everything that would follow. After that, I would be… well, I would be addicted to reading super hero comics.

This is Issue 11 of the DC Special Blue Ribbon Digest comic which began my love for comics and super heroes. Wow 33 super heroes in one comic!

I would be encouraged keep reading comics as it helped with my overall reading in school.

It wouldn’t be long after those first few comics that I would discover my favorite series to read; All-Star Squadron, and I would continue to read it until the end of the series years later. As reading comics helped improve my school reading, this series helped grow my interest in history. More on this later too.

From those early comics I read, I soon began to draw pictures. Copying some, and creating my own. It would take a lot of work, and a lot of years, but eventually I would become a professional comic book illustrator and a writer, and that all lead into the rest of my career.

Am looking forward to telling you all the crazy details of it all.

Hope you enjoy my new blog series, please comment and share.

Kevin Paul Shaw Broden
Four Names of Creativity

Len Wein – Soldier of Victory

This evening my wife, author Shannon Muir, and I will be attending the 2017 Animation Writers Caucus Annual Meeting and Award Presentation at the offices of the Writers Guild of America in Los Angeles. Events like these have always been special to us because at first it was a chance to meet our creative and literary heroes we have looked up to, then becoming fellow animation writers, and in some special cases becoming close friends.

At these annual meetings we honor a writer who has truly added to the animation industry as a writer and creator. This year our presentation must also be a memorial as the award is being given posthumously to writer extraordinaire and friend Len Wein.The outside world knows him best as the creator of Wolverine and Swamp Thing, but he is so much more especially to a little boy who had to sit for hours in a hospital lobby while his grandparents were being taken care of upstairs.

The hospital chaplain took pity on the little boy who had nothing to do on those old vinyl couches than his homework and so gave me two comic books, Superman and The Flash. They were great, and that gift meant a lot to me, but it wasn’t until I wandered into the hospital gift shop that my life was changed forever.

Along side the magazines the small shop had a few very small comic books for sell. One of which, with the JUSTICE LEAGUE OF AMERICA logo on the top and text at the bottom that read “33 Super-Stars in One Epic Adventure!” with dozens of those heroes jumping of the front and back cover, had my full attention. I convinced my mother to give me the 95 cents to purchase this copy of DC Special Blue Ribbon Digest #11.

Opening those four-color pages I found myself tumbling into a wonderful world of super heroes. Yes, I knew of Superman, Batman, and Wonder Woman from television and cartoons, but there were so many many more. Here I learned not only about the Justice League but also the Justice Society of America, and that there was an Infinite number of parallel earths where more heroes resided.

I was definitely hooked and the DC Universe was my playground from then on.

This digest turned out to be a reprint of JUSTICE LEAGE OF AMERICA #100, 101, and 102, about our heroes on a quest to find seven more heroes lost to the ages.

This great story, that put a boy on a quest to discover all the heroes of the golden age of comics, was written by the great comic book author Len Wein. I would soon be reading many more.

(An interested side note is that Len also edited the Blue Ribbon Digest that it was reprinted in.)

I was not the only one influenced by this comic; fellow comic book writer Gail Simone also marks this story as what began her path into comics.

I learned just the other day that Len himself fell in love with comics as a child while he was in the hospital as well. Though for him it was for medical treatment, but he has stated that those comics and super heroes got him through it.

Now that little boy who sat quietly in the hospital lobby wants to pay his respect to the man who sent towards a career as a comic book and animation writer. I honor you Len for all the stories you have brought to the world, and for being a friend.

Thank you.

Kevin Paul Shaw BrodenFour Names of Professional Creativity

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