Should I sell my comics?

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I've used old comic books as wrapping paper before. they are already brightly colored and decorative so you can reuse them with little/no craft at all.

Philip Nunez, Wednesday, 9 June 2010 18:44 (thirteen years ago) link

see, those are the kind of cool and relatively uncommon comic bks you MIGHT get some dough for

i just looked this up, btw - Jim Lee's X-Men #1, published by Marvel in 1990, apparently had a print run of 8 million copies. even assuming that every xmen fan ever bought two copies, that leaves a surplus of abt 6 million copies, by my reckoning.

Ward Fowler, Wednesday, 9 June 2010 18:46 (thirteen years ago) link

x-post to n/a

Ward Fowler, Wednesday, 9 June 2010 18:47 (thirteen years ago) link

You can always look through for uncommon things, then drop the rest off at a youth shelter as a tax writeoff.

postmodern infidel(ity) (mh), Wednesday, 9 June 2010 21:49 (thirteen years ago) link

I sold all 49 of my old comics for $25 (I think) on craigslist
none of them were worth anything

CaptainLorax, Thursday, 10 June 2010 18:23 (thirteen years ago) link

apparently each of them were worth 50c

BIG SAUS aka the porkbanger (sic), Friday, 11 June 2010 01:44 (thirteen years ago) link

random friend gave me a box filled with this kind of stuff: micronauts, rom, xmen, alpha flight, batman, superman, gi joe, image... late 80's/early 90's shit. it's a box i've gotten rid of like six times already.
I am actually literally recycling these as I read them. it feels good.

I have been forks-style since day one (forksclovetofu), Sunday, 13 June 2010 21:40 (thirteen years ago) link

it's a box i've gotten rid of like six times already.

I don't understand this bit. Can you explain please?

RR, Monday, 14 June 2010 03:59 (thirteen years ago) link

Sure: it's a box filled with comics that not only myself but like 5 million kids my age bought up when we were all around twelve or fourteen. Same era of stuff. At one point, when I pared down my collection for the first time, they were the first books I got rid of. Years later, a friend would say, "hey I'm getting rid of my comics, you wanna buy them" and i'd go over and whattayaknow: it's like 90% that generic late 80's early 90's marvel/dc/tmnt/eclipse/image shit and i say nah, it's okay but he ends up just giving them to me and it's not like I'm gonna turn down comics, right? and then eventually I pass the white elephant on to someone else and then some other guy does it again and this is like the fifth time I've gotten what feels like the same useless box of barely readable larry hama, ann nocenti, chris claremont, bill mantlo, al milgrom, marc silvestri, keith giffen, j.m. dematteis stuff. Just this once, rather than find another person to pass it along to, i'm throwing each book into the recycling bin once it makes the rounds out of the bathroom.

I have been forks-style since day one (forksclovetofu), Monday, 14 June 2010 04:46 (thirteen years ago) link

ha, i had a feeling that's what you were getting at. so many of us got into comics during that time - Batman movies/dark grim era/speculator boom, with millions of copies of X-Men #1 or Spider-Man #1 collecting dust in longboxes

Nhex, Monday, 14 June 2010 07:26 (thirteen years ago) link

Thanks for the explanation forksclovetofu.

it's not like I'm gonna turn down comics, right?

I don't think this is always a good idea.

RR, Monday, 14 June 2010 18:16 (thirteen years ago) link

i don't know if I've ever turned down a free comic, much less a free box. I'm not sure who that man would be.

I have been forks-style since day one (forksclovetofu), Monday, 14 June 2010 19:07 (thirteen years ago) link

I too have a box of 1990 era shit at my parents house. It's the only thing left there from when I was kid. Some late 80s baseball cards are in there too - lots of Barry Bonds and Mark McGwire '87 Topps rookie cards.

calstars, Monday, 14 June 2010 20:51 (thirteen years ago) link

feels like a support group...

I have 3 long boxes of 80s shit at my parents house, same crapola (goddamn Alpha Flight, New Mutants, X-Factor) with the bonus of all the Secret Wars 1&2 and Crisis on Infinite Earth bullshit.

although hidden deep within is some gold like my Phoenix-era X-Men, Frank Miller Daredevils and the complete US Eagle Judge Dredd/2000AD reprints (need to get those, Nemesis rules).

No one is too good for this album; it is better than all of us. (herb albert), Monday, 14 June 2010 22:08 (thirteen years ago) link

I feel like this is a good start for another thread.

I have been forks-style since day one (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 15 June 2010 03:31 (thirteen years ago) link

I guess I was kinda lucky in that the Finnish editions of Marvel superhero comics were generally running 2-5 years late compared to original American books. (Plus the Finnish publisher for Marvel often released earlier classic stories in various anthology titles.) So even though I only started reading superhero comics during the latter half of the 80s, I got to read stuff like Claremont/Smith and Claremont/Romita X-Men, Roger Stern’s Spider-Man, Miller’s and Nocenti’s Daredevil, etc. By the time the Finnish comics got to stuff by Jim Lee/Liefeld/etc, i.e. the ”dark age” of superhero comics, I’d moved on to Sandman, Corto Maltese and other "mature" stuff, and had mostly given up superheroes. I think Claremont’s last issue of X-Men was one of the last superhero comics I read, until I returned to them in the 00s. So I managed to miss the dark age and the speculation boom almost completely.

Tuomas, Tuesday, 15 June 2010 11:16 (thirteen years ago) link

one month passes...

(ok, i have this as a stuck bookmark, possibly becasue of a deleted spam message. just bumping this thread to see if that makes the problem go away. pay no attention to the man behind the curtain.)

koogs, Friday, 23 July 2010 08:28 (thirteen years ago) link


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