Boring Comics.

Boring Comics.

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

“Paradox” (“Pearls Before Swine.”)



     At the comics shop.
     Yes – again.
     Whenever customers bring their girlfriends into the shop, the storekeeper always becomes agitated and overly animated. He upbraids the swains, the suitors, for being so lame as to bring their beauties into so low a den.
Bachelor’s Hall, Bachelor’s Hall,
I’ll always stay single, keep Bachelor’s Hall.”

“What are you doing,” he ejaculates, wiping the remnants of a greasy hoagie off onto the back of his t-shirt, “bringing these fine purebreed fillies into this foul donjon?, this debauched bachelor den of wasted male mutates? Would ye besmatter these pearls with vile dross and grit? Aye – and it seems you would.”
     “Whudsoevers bruh. Do you have the latest Birds of Prey dude?”


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     I chose Birds of Prey for my punchline here simply because it may well be the dullest comic in the creation. [A few years later I began avidly collecting this title –– Ego Scriptor.] Three female superheroes. Barbara Gordon, Black Canary and... who? I forgot.
     (“Batgirl. It’s
Batgirl.” – Damian Morgan)
     A while ago the same storekeeper was giving away DC comics “free gratis.” DC or Diamond Distributors had said it was okay for him to “title page” them. That is, to scrap ’em, and just send back the title pages. So I was tottering over the racks when he goes, “Fabian, do you want a copy of Birds of Prey without the cover?”
     I gave him such a purely disgusted, violated look that he added weakly, plaintively, “It’s free.”
     “Still,” I said. “STILL.”
      And yet. And yet.

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     Speaking of Birds of Prey, the last time I saw D. Oregon Morgan it was in London and we met at the MVE comics shop basement. Damian is always flat-broke but he also always has a pocketful of vouchers.
Sing a song of sixpence
A pocket full of vouchers.
Four and twenty copies
Of
Secret Invasion Front Line.


     I went down there and he was already in place, neck deep in slime, filth, damp rot and back-numbers. Wearing his trademark white tuxedo.
     “Livingstone, I presume.”
     “Elementary, my dear Watson.”
     “Echec.”
     “Et mat.”
     Also assembled there were a few other people –– the usual subterranean bottom-dwellers and mouth-breathers, all bent crooked, riffling in silence through the fifty pence bins in a cloud of anthrax spores. I hadn’t seen Damian in nearly a year and the first thing we said to each other was of consequence very emotional. We are friends of many years standing. We have experienced a lot together on two continents in two major capitals. Obviously overcome with feeling, Damian goes:
     “Um, Fabe, so how come Spider-Man gave away his identity in Civil War and now nobody knows who he is again?”
     I coughed and tried to explain this byzantine narrative abortion at some length.
     I didn’t succeed.
     What makes me bring this up is that Damian was all the while steadily and quite blithely building him up a pile of issues of Hawkwoman. I could not believe it.
     “Are you doing this simply to defy me, rascal?” I go. “Sirrah do you do it just to damn my eyes?
     Damo pulled up a copy of Birds of Prey, squinted at the cover condition like it was a Near Mint issue of Action Comics #1, added it to his pile, and goes, “Naturlich, my dear. What other reason could I or any man have for reading Hawkwoman?”

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * 

     One last story while I am so clearly on a roll. Then I’m out of here. A few days later we met Damian and his housemates at the launch for some Antony Gormley show at White Cube II, Piccadilly. 
     Yaaaa-essss, we’re all big art buffs. [This said in the voice of John Lydon on the Bill Grundy show.] They’re all heroes of ours, ain’t they? Oh yessss! They really turn us on. Damian and his band of ageless housemates had been in St. James’s Park that afternoon, playing Ultimate Frisbee, football golf and also their own version of badminton where you batted the shuttlecock up as high as you can and keep volleying it up as high as you can. A regular paralympics (“laff-a-lympics”). I looked at them strangely and said, “It's like Don Quixote, at the end, when they all decide to become shepherds.” 
     Something pathetic and woeful about this –  – something that seemed to suggest to me that the world will end in the next few years.
     Everybody was enjoying the free beer except me. I don’t drink beer, so I had a glass of revolting white wine from the pub nearby. Awful piss.
         Speaking of, Will Self was there.
       Anyway, the conversation was strictly pedestrian and quite obviously headed nowhere, so I decided to “pep” it up a bit during one wretchedly dull phase with a wry remark to Damian about the comics. Some observation about Franken-Castle or something equally erudite. 
   Damian pulled up his collar and withdrew from his waistcoat his pince-nez and a silver snuffbox and he heaved a big inhalation of snuff and utterly fucking ignored me.
       I drew myself up with one of those smiles that looks like its wearer might as soon burst into tears as laugh. “Do you snub me now sir?”
      “Didn’t hear what you said, Fabe.”
    “I was talking about the four-color funny-books, Damian. And I rather think you heard me damn well.
      Damian gazed into his snuffbox sadly.
      “What’s this, hey?” Damian’s boon companion Kirk said. “Do you read comics, Damian?”
     “I’ve got maybe about six back at my Mum’s, Kirk,” Damian barked haughtily, flushing and looking the other way.
       I nodded, coolly, and simply cooed: “And the cock crew thrice.”
       And you know what it did.

                                                                   “THE END.”