Because Everyone Deserves A Golden Age
Feb. 13th, 2008 07:36 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
There's no plans at the moment for a memorial for Steve Gerber; Mark Evanier, posting on Gerber's blog, thinks the many tributes going up on the Web right now are fitting in their own right, as Gerber embraced the Web early on. There is, however, a fine group working to make sure comics creators have a financial safety net: The Hero Initiative.
Who are some of your favorite comics creators? I tried to keep it to ten, and failed miserably. But I think I'd be fair in listing (in no particular order) Stan Lee, Jack Kirby, Gil Kane, Alan Moore, Neil Gaiman, Gene Colan, George Perez, Matt Wagner, John Buscema, and Steve Gerber.
Who are some of your favorite comics creators? I tried to keep it to ten, and failed miserably. But I think I'd be fair in listing (in no particular order) Stan Lee, Jack Kirby, Gil Kane, Alan Moore, Neil Gaiman, Gene Colan, George Perez, Matt Wagner, John Buscema, and Steve Gerber.
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Date: 2008-02-13 02:31 pm (UTC)Denny O'Neil, Stan Lee, Mark Waid, Jack Kirby, Peter David, George Perez, Brian K. Vaughan, Roger Stern, Alan Moore, James Robinson.
I tend to be more influenced by writers than artists, though it's only coincidence that the two artists I include are also writers.
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Date: 2008-02-13 04:16 pm (UTC)Denny O'Neil (and his partner in crime on "Hard-Traveling Heroes", Adams)
Stan "The Man" of course
Julius Schwartz
Jack "King" Kirby
Alan "Perhaps I'll try being sorry for awhile" Moore
Steve Ditko
Marv Wolfman, without whom Crisis would've been unreadable, and who's done some wonderful work for Mainframe animation.
Neil Gaiman
Steve Gerber, because like Howard, I often feel trapped in a world I never made
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Date: 2008-02-13 04:52 pm (UTC)Stan Sakai
Lee, Kirby and Ditko (The Holy Trinity)
Jon Kovalik
Mike Kazaleh
Carl Barks
Basil Wolverton
Gaham Wilson
Will Eisner
Alan Moore
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Date: 2008-02-13 07:46 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2008-02-13 10:39 pm (UTC)* Alan Moore, because, well, c'mon.
* Neil Gaiman, for the same reason.
* Carl Barks, whose Uncle Scrooge and other work hold up today.
* Herge (Georges Remi) for Tintin
* Jim Aparo, among the most reliable of artists.
* Dick Dillin, once the consummate JLA artist.
* Eliot S. Maggin, whose storytelling always had a human touch.
* Denny O'Neil, for just plain solid writing -- obviously, the classic, short-lived GL/GA run, but much more.
* Bob Haney, whose writing was so absolutely insane that it's just plain wonderful. I'm loving loving loving the Brave & Bold Showcase collection.
* Kurt Busiek, another solid storyteller, who goes a step further to find the stories around the corner from the action, so to speak. Big plug for Astro City here.
* Stan Lee, Jack Kirby and Steve Ditko, for startin' somethin'.
* Jerry Siegel & Joe Shuster, for really startin' somethin'.
* Grant Morrison, who matches his insane genius to coherent storytelling.
* Both John Romitas. I loved JR Jr.'s Spider-Man and X-Men work in the 1980s.
* James Robinson, for Starman, a lovely, lovely series.
Ach. I'll stop now before I keep going on and on and invoke everybody ... like Will Eisner, and Paul Levitz for the best of Legion runs, and circa-1980s John Byrne (his Fantastic Four is, as far as I'm concerned, his career highlight), and Roger Stern and Gil Kane and Warren Ellis, and Robert Kanigher, and Joe Kubert and and and ...
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