Author - Artist - Voice Over Actor

Tag: education

Education of Reading Comics

When I was young, during my Elementary School and Junior High years, I was struggling with reading. It was recommended to my parents that I should take further classes and have special tutors. One such tutor was in an after-school period on campus, while another one was off campus at a place called “The Reading Game.” These tutors helped me, but there was other help that I received that would improve my education.
It was during this period of time I first discovered comic books, as mentioned in my previous post, and I was regularly reading them… and I was reading them not just looking at the artwork (and I’ll tell you about the artwork and artists in a later post).
One day when my parents are having a ‘parent/teacher’ meeting with my special reading tutor to talk about how I was doing. They brought up the fact that I was reading comics, and asked if this was a good thing or should they take the comics away to have me read “real” books.
The response from the teacher was basically: “If he’s reading comic books, then he’s reading. Don’t stop him from reading.”
So, with God’s Blessing (see last post), and that of my teachers, comic books would not be denied me.
If I had been reading Marvel Comics, I might also have learned ‘big words’ from Stan Lee’s scripts like Excelsior, but I was a DC kid.
Because of one particular comic book series I would also be learning History and Research – All-Star Squadron.


All-Star Squadron #1
All-Star Squadron #1 – Fabulous FIRST ISSUE of an All-New Roy Thomas – Rich Buckler SENSATION! — This series would be my favorite and most important comic book series that played an impacted on my education.

As stated previously, my introduction to comic books also introduced me to the parallel world of “Earth 2”, so that not only did I already know the Justice League, I also discovered the Justice Society which was originally formed in 1940, first published in All-Star Comics #3. After the Blue-Ribbon Digest that I had read, the next Earth 2 story I picked up was All-Star Squadron #5 though current in publication it was taking place in 1942. Because of that, I first imagined that Earth 2 existed only in the 1940s. Though in no time I would discover “present day” Justice Society and other Earth 2 stories, but I absolutely loved reading stories about super heroes during World War 2. This would relate to how I was also enjoying radio programs from the same time period.

All-Star Comics #3 – bringing individual heroes together for the first time as the Justice Society of America.

Roy Thomas was the writer of All-Star Squadron (and its modern-day child Infinity Inc, about the children of those original heroes), and he tried to include every Golden-Age Super Hero that DC Comics had the rights to, as they had bought properties from many of the other original publishers that no longer existed. As a former history teacher in his other life Thomas brought that into these stories. Yes, it was about super heroes fighting super villains, but he incorporated actual history into these stories. The story in All-Star Squadron began soon after the attack on Pearl Harbor and continue on. In many of the early issues the heroes met with President Roosevelt and even Prime Minister Churchill. In another reprint digest, I would learn that FDR himself brought the first heroes together as the Justice Society of America. Thomas also didn’t shy away from Executive Order 9066 in which Japanese Americans were sent to Internment Camps during the war, he wrote a story around it and the consequences of it.
Not only did I learn more about history, both in the war and on the home-front of the 1940s, through these comics than I may have in class, I also learned some of Roosevelt’s speeches and I presented one of them in a High School speech class because of the comics.
Because of the All-Star Squadron comics, I also learned to enjoy doing research. I would come to love spending time in libraries at microfilm machines, reading through old newspapers and magazines. This was part of history, but I always wanted to learn about the little events as well as the big. When I later joined the newspaper at my community college, I would use my research abilities to do articles about the history of the college itself.
I would go on to take classes in writing and art as my major, I know that my education began in the four colors pages of a comic book.


This is a continuing series on comic books as part of an assignment for Toastmasters which will result in a speech on the top of these blogs.

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

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