Ed Gosney's Blog, page 48
October 8, 2015
Cool Comics in My Collection, Episode 2
Welcome to Cool Comics in My Collection, Episode 2, where we take a look at six cool comic books I currently own, and one that I let get away. Sometimes the one I let get away won’t leave me heartbroken, especially if I made a lot of money in selling it. But this week’s escaped comic does have me singing the blues a bit.
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I welcome any comments you might have, and hope you enjoy seeing these as much as I do writing about them. And now, Episode 2…
Cool comics in my collection #8: The Mighty Thor #337, November 1983. Beta Ray Bill made his first appearance in this comic, and found that he could wield the powers of Thor! I picked this up sometime in the 90s for 50 cents, which is less than the cover price of 60 cents. And now it sells for around $40. This issue has lots of guests, besides Beta Ray Bill, that you’d recognize from the recent Marvel movies: Dum Dum Dugan, Heimdall, Lady Sif, Loki, Nick Fury, and Volstagg the Voluminous.
Cool comics in my collection #9: Captain Marvel #1, May 1968. This is one I bought around the year 2000, at Kenmore Komics in Akron, Ohio. The cover price is 12 cents, and I paid $1. A great investment, because today this issue is listed at $380. I love the galactic Marvel characters, and Captain Marvel (Mar-Vell, who is a Kree for those unfamiliar with him) is definitely one of my favorites. If you’ve seen him before, you may not recognize this earlier costume, but you’ll see later issues from me with his more familiar blue and red spandex.
Cool comics in my collection #10: The Fury of Firestorm #1, June 1982. There are three phases in my comic collecting history, and I bought this one during my second phase, while in college. I immediately became hooked on Firestorm, a hero containing two characters, Ronnie Raymond and Professor Martin Stein, melded into one. If you watch the TV series The Flash, then you are familiar with the character, but he is much cooler in the comics. Also, I later found out that Firestorm had his origins in 1978 and was able to buy those few back issues. The cover price is 60 cents, and while the current value is just $6, this was my introduction to a character I grew to love, so it is definitely a cool comic in my collection.
Cool comics in my collection #11: The Amazing Spider-Man #125, October 1973. This is the very first comic book I ever bought. I was 10 years old, soon to turn 11, and Spider-Man was magical to me. There’s a lot to like about the cover, and you can imagine how attractive those reds and yellow, along with the Man-Wolf, appear to a ten-year-old. For those who may not be familiar with the Man-Wolf, this issue is key because it tells of his origins. The only thing I’ll say is that he is the son of J. Jonah Jameson. This one has a 20 cent cover price and currently goes for $100 in the right condition.
Cool comics in my collection #12: Justice League of America #111, June 1974. I remember getting this comic at Superx Drugs in Martins Ferry, where my father was a pharmacist. It certainly caught my eye with the 100 pages splashed across the top, and the large scales containing heroes and villains. This issue contains heroes such as Aquaman, Batman, Flash, Green Lantern, Superman, Green Arrow, Speedy, Atom, and Hawkman. Some of the villains are Chronos, Mirror Master, Poison Ivy, and Scarecrow. It has a cover price of 60 cents, and currently sells for around $60.
Cool comics in my collection #13: The Infinity Gauntlet #1, July 1991. I believe I bought this sometime in 1992 or 1993, when I was serving in the U.S. Army in Atlanta (I probably got it at Titan Comics & Games). Thanos, and a whole lot of other very cool Marvel heroes, help to kick-off this mini-series. If you’ve been watching the Marvel Universe movies, you realize this is a key issue in your collection. The cover price is $2.50, and it’s currently going for $25 (although you can pick up the trade paperback version if you don’t care about owning the original).
Cool comics in my collection #14 (One That Got Away): The Incredible Hulk #182, December 1974. I distinctly remember buying this one secondhand at The Paradox Bookstore in Wheeling. People want it because it’s the third appearance of Wolverine, but the main story was really good. Hulk got himself a friend in Crackajack Jackson, fishing and eating beans together. But things didn’t end up so well when they visited his son in prison. I remember this issue was borrowed by neighborhood friends a few times, becoming a favorite. Why did I have to sell it to a comic store when I was in college? Ugh! The cover price is 25 cents, and the current value is $300.
October 1, 2015
Cool Comics in My Collection, Episode 1
I started posting “cool comics in my collection” daily on my Facebook page, and decided to collect them here, each time I hit seven of them. It may happen in a week, or possibly longer, depending on life. You’ll notice that every seventh comic I list is one that I no longer own. My collection became so large that I had to make cuts a few years ago, although I did sell some of them to a comic shop when I was in college i
n the 80s, and I regret several that I parted with (like the first Wolverine mini-series).
Before we become writers, we learn to love reading, and comic books have some great adventures, which definitely influenced the way I tell stories. At one time I really wanted to be a comic book writer, and I had two fan letters published, one in an Iron Man issue and one in an issue of Peter Parker, The Spectacular Spider-Man. I also am the proud recipient of a coveted “No-Prize,” if you are old enough to remember them.
I welcome any comments you might have, and hope you enjoy seeing these as much as I do writing about them. So here we go….
Cool comics in my collection #1: several times a week I will show you some of the cool comic books I own (maybe I’ll sometimes show you the ones I mistakenly let get away). First up is Marvel Premiere #47, from March 1979. It’s the first appearance of Scott Lang as Ant-Man (with the movie that came out, I thought this one would be fun to start with). The current price is around $140.
Cool comics in my collection #2: Here is one of my prize comics, although the condition isn’t great. The Amazing Spider-Man #121 came out in June 1973, and killed off someone important in Peter Parker’s life – his girlfriend, Gwen Stacy. I bought this from The Paradox Bookstore in Wheeling, WV, secondhand, for a measly 10 cents. Today’s current value is around $700, but condition means everything, and mine has the old subscriber four-fold. But it’s a key comic, and the price was right!
Cool comics in my collection #3: Legion of Super-Heroes #290, August 1982, which was the start of The Great Darkness Saga, featuring the awesome DC villain, Darkseid. While this issue is currently listed at just $12, it’s one of my prize comics because a friend I met my freshman year (at Ohio State) got me back into reading them after a hiatus of several years. Can you believe the cover price of just 60 cents, compared to today’s prices? They made this five issue series into a trade paperback, but I’m glad I have the original issues, buying them as they came out.
Cool comics in my collection #4: Captain America #166, October 1973, which was the first Captain America comic I ever bought. The cover definitely attracted me, because of the mummies we can see battling Cap and the Falcon. The villain is the Yellow Klaw. This comic also features Nick Fury, Dum Dum Dugan, Agent 13 (Sharon Carter), and Peggy Carter, all familiar names if you’ve been watching the Captain America movies. Again, you have to love the cover price of 20 cents. The current listed value is $20.
Cool comics in my collection #5: The Defenders #1, August 1972. I wish I could say I bought this one straight off the rack, because that would be cooler, but I didn’t get my hands on this gem until sometime around the year 2000, at Kenmore Komics in Akron, Ohio. At the time, I believe I paid around $1, a shocking 5 times the cover price! But currently, this comic is selling at $250, so I think it was a pretty good deal. And how can you go wrong when you have the Hulk, Namor, and Doctor Strange all on the cover? This is a key Marvel issue that should only keep increasing in value. Excelsior!
Cool comics in my collection #6: Ms. Marvel #18, June 1978. Another one I didn’t buy off the rack, but got for maybe 50 cents or a dollar sometime in the 1990s. This issue presents the third overall appearance of Raven Darkholme (also known as Mystique), and her first full appearance. This issue also has Beast, Namorita, Scarlet Witch, Vision, Wasp, Wonder Man, Yellowjacket, and Tiger Shark. The cover price is just 35 cents, so I didn’t pay much more than I would have in 1978. And it’s a great issue to have, with a current value of $120. Make Mine Marvel!
Cool comics in my collection #7 (One That Got Away): Superman #75, January 1992. Yes, I once owned the comic that became a media circus, because when DC announced that they would be killing off Superman, the story became big news. It wasn’t the first time the Man of Steel was killed, but the papers and TV picked up on it and everyone wanted a copy. My father actually got the coveted black bagged edition for me. The cover price is $2.50, and it’s currently valued at $18. This is the comic that started me collecting again after a decade off, continuing until 2003. As you can imagine,my collection became too large, and I had to cull the herd. And because I have the entire story in a trade paperback, I decided to part with this one at a garage sale. The issue has a great fight between Superman and Doomsday, in case you left yours sealed and never read it.

September 22, 2015
They Came From Beyond Our World
Remember watching Independence Day? You cheered as the characters played by Will Smith and Jeff Goldblum battled the alien forces. Or maybe you prefer the big screen version of the classic H.G. Wells novel, War of the Worlds. Which one do you prefer, the 1953 version, or 2005 movie with Tom Cruise?
So what other a
lien invasion movies do you enjoy? Goofy movies, like Mars Attacks, or maybe you’re more of a mash-potato mountain-building kind of fan, ala Close Encounters of the Third Kind? And let’s not forget some of those great X-Files episodes that helped build its mythology, such as E.B.E, The Erlenmeyer Flask, and Little Green Men.
We have a fascination with the stars, and often dream up other worlds and species that are not of this earth. People create fun and exciting worlds such as Star Trek and Star Wars, The Foundation Trilogy, and Dune. The technology makes us wish that we lived in those future centuries, not to mention the adventures the heroes of those universes experience.
But what we don’t want is life from another planet coming to ours and trying to invade our space. So we cheer for Merrill (Joaquin Phoenix) to “swing away” in Signs, and salute Russell Casse (Randy Quaid) for his moment of valor in Independence Day. Those are moments that tug at the heartstrings, when it looks like all hope is lost and a hero steps up to the plate. Us versus them.
Eric Tozzi’s novel, Apocalypse Weird: Phoenix Lights, brings you the thrill of man versus alien. Based on the Phoenix Lights incident in 1997, this is the alien invasion thriller you’ve been waiting for! And to top it all off, it’s currently on sale for just 99 cents! Don’t let this one slip away into hyperspace…get it now!
August 10, 2015
Practice Makes Perfect
Do you like clowns? Regardless of what you think of them, they used to be quite popular, like Emmett Kelly, who played himself in the Cecil B. DeMille movie The Greatest Show on Earth.
There are circus clowns and Shriner Clowns, birthday party clowns, Ronald McDonald, Halloween costume clowns, Pennywise from the movie It, and many other clowns, friendly and scary alike.

When I was very young, I had a clown clock that hung on my bedroom wall. The eyes moved back and forth. Yes, it was every bit as scary as you can imagine, and no, my parents actually did love me. But there it was, keeping watch over me. So indeed, I’ve been infected with clown phobia.
If you want to learn about clowns, the Internet has lots of information. But be warned: if clowns scare you, stay away. Far away!
But if you enjoy the occasional scary clown, you may want to read my newest story, Practice. You won’t regret it.
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Kendrick Nelson is living in a nightmare world in which he suspects his wife has been having an affair, but when he crosses paths with a disturbing clown at the opening of a new convenient mart, he learns there are far worse things than a cheating wife.
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June 1, 2015
Spinning Counterclockwise
Do you enjoy time travel stories? And if so, what are some of your favorites?
I’m betti
ng that many of you thought about Doctor Who when you read the words “time travel.” Or maybe you thought of the various time travel episodes in Star Trek, along and the slingshot method used in one of the movies. 12 Monkeys, both the movie and TV series, is another interesting twist on time travel, albeit it may leave you feeling a little frustrated. Have you watched the TV series Continuum? I love that time travel storyline.
Other time travel movies and books that come to mind are Looper, the Back to the Future films, the Terminator movies, Frequency, The Lake
House, Timeline, The Time Machine, A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court, If I Never Get Back, Synchronic, and Replay.
This sampling is extremely small, and while you may not be familiar with all of these, I strongly suggest you check them out if you love time travel stories.
Time travel stories are so adaptive, from apocalyptic futures to romance to just trying to set things right. I enjoy them so much I wrote my own time travel story. You might think It’s a little different from most of the time travel stories you’ve read or seen, but isn’t that what we want, to discover a new adventure? Check out Counterclockwise on Amazon today.
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Charlie Pizzetti didn’t want to be called “Grease Tub” anymore, wanted girls to like him, and wanted to be popular. And just when things seemed like they couldn’t go more wrong, Charlie discovered that he had the ability to go back and erase his stupid mistakes, to change the past and finally make something of himself.
But something goes haywire, and now Charlie finds himself in more trouble then he could ever have imagined. Will he find a way out? Has he lost his abilities? This time travel science fiction story will make you realize that sometimes the past is better left to the past.
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May 7, 2015
Why Martins Ferry?
I’ve always had a fascination with my hometown of Martins Ferry, Ohio. Situated in the Allegheny Plateau and running along the Ohio River across from Wheeling, West Virginia, the geography provided everything I needed to live out a Tom Sawyer kind of boyhood.
Remember the cave where Tom and Becky got lost? My friends and I had a cave up in the hills, too, and spent countless hours playing there. The Mississippi River is ingrained in the lives of Tom, Huck, and their friends every bit as much as the soil they ran around on, and fortunately for me and my friends, we had the Ohio River, along with Wheeling Island. While not abandoned like Jackson’s Island is in The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, the north end of Wheeling Island was empty of people whenever we road our bikes across the Aetnaville Bridge and peddled on the bike paths behind a baseball field on the island. Once there, we would play in the water and enjoy the small waves that passing barges provided. Sometimes we’d sneak some food out of our houses and picnic there. Why sneak the food? Because no way would our mothers permit us to go play in the river!
And we also played in the Orange Crik. It just so happened that the area where the coal mine runoff was located, at the corner of Indiana Street and Breitenstein Lane, was also a major gathering area for the kids in my neighborhood. Sometimes it felt as if we lived at that intersection, playing Wiffle Ball, touch football, kickball, and riding skateboards. We also played a lot of kick the can, which we called Tin Can Alley, in the alley between Indiana Street and Zane Highway. I tried to capture this feeling a little in my short story, Orange Crik. Martins Ferry tends to tug me back to my childhood, and I’m not trying to fight it.
The barn was another place we stumbled upon when we were kids. It was located up on a hill, and we took the hard way to get there, climbing upward through the woods, walking on fallen trees over streams, and at last coming to it in the middle of a large open field. We didn’t go there that often, but I made it an essential place in my Apocalypse Weird: Strange Change short story.
While I make Martins Ferry sound like an idyllic place to grow up, it wasn’t all fun and games. The neighborhood kids did a pretty good job of sticking together as friends, but we certainly had our share of squabbles. And probably like most kids in the 70s and 80s, I was on the receiving end of some bullying from time-to-time. But we dealt with it and continued having fun.
When a place becomes ingrained in you, when you’ve played there, bled there, suffered there, and had triumphs there, you feel you owe it something in return. Martins Ferry native James Wright, the Pulitzer Prize winning poet, wrote a poem about his hometown that is often anthologized, called Autumn Begins in Martins Ferry, Ohio. There is an economy of words in his poem, and you can’t help but notice the importance of high school football to the residents in this masterpiece. Want to know just how big a deal the football team is to the town? ESPN actually made a short film about it.
So what do you do when you no longer live in the place that has so many memories for you? For Martins Ferry natives, the Facebook page Memories of Martins Ferry, Ohio, is a wonderful place to explore. It’s a treasure trove of pictures, events, and old friendships being rekindled.
And that’s the answer to my “Why Martins Ferry?” question. It is for these reasons that my Apocalypse Weird fan fiction short story is centered there, and I’m thrilled that I’ve been given the opportunity to expand it into a novel. If you’re from the Ohio Valley, and more specifically from Martins Ferry, there will be places, streets, and geography you are sure to recognize. Some of the action takes place in Pittsburgh, and some in Washington, PA, and Wheeling, WV, but the heart and soul of it come from my memories of growing up in Martins Ferry.
If you want to learn more about Apocalypse Weird, click on the name. There are also a couple weeks left in the IndieGoGo Campaign , in which you can get some very cool perks for your donation.
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April 24, 2015
Something the Wind Blew In
As we near the month of May, I’m reminded that in less than two weeks, it will mark two years, on May 6, 2013, that I published my first story on Amazon. It’s a short story called, “Something the Wind Blew In,” with a post-apocalyptic setting. I originally wrote this story one evening after I read about a contest that Apex Magazine was having, a number of years ago. The call was for post-apocalyptic Halloween stories falling within a certain word length.
Unfortunately, entries were due by midnight, or some such hour, the day I found out. So I scrambled my brain coming up with an idea (and if you’ve read the story, you get that part), and sent it off with not much time to spare. I didn’t win, but ended up sending it out to a few magazines. The Weird Tales editor of the time, Ann VanderMeer, liked it, but said it wasn’t quite the right fit. She asked me to send something else to her. I sent a story called “Orange Crik,” which she didn’t like as much as “Something the Wind Blew In.”
T
hen life got in the way, I had a job change and a move, and my writing got put aside. But the catalyst for publishing on Amazon came about when I decided to buy a Kindle and discovered that you could actually publish your stories through their Kindle Direct Publishing arm. This opened a new world for me. People, at least a few people, were actually buying my short stories! And sometimes I’d offer them for free, and people all over the world were downloading stuff I’d written. Amazing. Needless to say, many more people have downloaded my stories for free than those who purchased them, but I was happy to just get my stuff out there for family and friends to have access to (although I’m happy to say that I’ve had 24 continuous months of having at least one person purchase something I’ve written). “Something the Wind Blew In” may not have 75 five-star ratings on Amazon, but many people who have read it let me how much they enjoyed it.
One of my upcoming projects will collect all of my previously published short stories, along with a novelette and a novella from my Dreamworld book, into one volume. But it will have to wait, because I’m currently working on a novel in the Apocalypse Weird universe, of which I’m very excited. And if you like the Apocalypse Weird books, you may just enjoy reading “Something the Wind Blew In.” I know the cover is bad (except for the cool picture of the sky my wife took), but I had zero experience at the time. For a post-apocalyptic scenario, it’s fun, it’s different, and it’s just 99 cents, so what do you have to lose? Just click on the link and check it out.
April 23, 2015
Apocalypse Weird: Genesis (The White Dragon Book 1)
As a fan, one of the things I love about the new Apocalypse Weird series by Wonderment Media is that while each book is “connected,” they are also different. Different authors, different territories, different styles. But thank goodness they all sport those cool Michael Corley covers!
Stefan Bolz gives us Apocalypse Weird: Genesis (The White Dragon Book 1), and once again, it holds true to form that you’re not going to get the same story you read in the other books. No doubt there are some similar occurrences going on, such as the blindness, but each author adds their own touch, and that helps keep this series interesting.
I like the mix of people Bolz gives us in Genesis (which is set on Long Island, for those who are trying to keep track of the geographical areas the Apocalypse Weird has given us). He does a nice job of introducing them and giving us enough background to care about what happens to each. And while the protagonist of the story is 18-year-old Kasey Byrne, with most of the book from her perspective, Bolz gives real personalities to the co-stars, and who can blame you if one of them becomes your favorite?
Genesis is a fast-paced book that leads us on a crazy, chaotic nightmare from suicidal dolphins to a motorcycle gang that is not what they at first appear to be. This book is hard to put down, because you keep wanting to find out what happens next. And by the time you get to the end, you just know you’re going to buy the second one in this storyline the moment it becomes available.
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April 17, 2015
Tales of Tinfoil
Sometimes I leave more detailed reviews, especially when it comes to anthologies, but I don’t want to sit here and tell you that one story is better than another, or has more meaning, or more truth—and somewhere between these pages there is truth. Some truth. Maybe just a little.
Tal
es of Tinfoil is an experience to be lived. Or read at least, because you probably don’t want to live most of these stories. Especially the last one with the crazy Doc Midnite. And although they couldn’t come out and state these things as factual, they did gave us some warnings. Staying away from pinball machines is an easy one. I’ve seen Tommy, and if you think the Pinball Wizard is someone to be leery of, then you obviously haven’t read the truth between the lines that is Tales of Tinfoil. History isn’t what we think it is, and four score and some odd years ago the President Lincoln who appeared on Star Trek was more real than the phony who gave us the Gettysburg Address.
The one story that everyone is raving about is Under the Grassy Knoll. My question is, why should this come as a surprise to us? Watch some late night cable, and learn these things before the history books get revised yet again. As for the Octopus, well, I’m still not allowed to talk about it. But you can get the book and see for yourself.
Regarding Elvis, Dolores is on the right track, folks. But you knew that all along, didn’t you?
No doubt this anthology is so entertaining that we need to keep passing the word so folks will read it. And soon. Before “they” find out and remove it. I definitely look forward to the other promised entries of this series of educational “tales.” Especially the one on so-called “hoaxes.” Will Bigfoot be in it? If not, I suspect a cover-up of some sort. For years we were shown that grainy film, then they came right out and admitted the truth that he not only exists, but came from outer space, only to be confronted by The Six Million Dollar Man.
If you never thought you’d live long enough to find out the answers to some of life’s questions, or if you’ve never questioned things and always wondered why, or if you just want to be completely entertained for a few hours, now you know that all the answers are waiting for you between the pages of Tales of Tinfoil.
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April 15, 2015
Helping to Usher In the Apocalypse (Weird)
Apocalypse Weird. It’s getting a lot of buzz these days, especially on Facebook, and also amazon.com, as the books have been garnering fantastic reviews. But the AW is getting some terrific media coverage, too, like at The Guardian.
Why am I so excited about AW? Like many of you, I read Nick Cole’s free book in the series, The Red King, and was enthralled with this BookVerse. When I found out that other writers were going to be involved and tell their own tales of apocalypse weirdness, I knew I wanted to be a part of it. The problem was, I was working on my next book project in my Dreamworld series. As most AW fans are aware, the Big Launch took place on February 23, and for the big launch, I was asked to write a piece of fan fiction that would be my own little corner of AW, albeit not cannon.
Apocalyp
se Weird: Strange Change, was the outcome of my dip into the AW pool of post-nuclear contaminated waters. And because people couldn’t get enough of this new, unique, weird universe, people read Strange Change. And liked it. The results of this brought me an opportunity to turn Strange Change into a full-length novel in the AW! I don’t think I’ve quit grinning since I got the news. There is absolutely no downside to this, but people who have read my novel, Prometheus Stumbles, have groaned a little because now they have to wait longer until the next book comes out. When readers want more, it’s a good problem to have.
Wonderment Media wants to give readers an exciting world to experience, and to help with some of the initial operating expenses, Apocalypse Weird has an IndieGoGo campaign going on that can get you some unbelievably cool collectible items. You should really check out the offerings.
But there is another way you can help out the AW, and it will only cost you pocket change, and you get something in return. My novel, Prometheus Stumbles (see “Get the Book” at this link), is on sale for just 99 cents via Kindle, but ending on Saturday. For each copy I sell during this sale, I will donate $1 to the campaign, up to the top donor level listed at the campaign of $1,000. That’s right, I’ll be taking a loss, but donating to this worthy cause in the revolution of Indie publishing. Please spread the word through Facebook shares, Twitter, blogs, and word of mouth. Thanks for your consideration!
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