The Amazing World of Comics: For Anyone, Anywhere, Anytime

As Comic-Con begins, why comics are for everyone, regardless of age.

Jayaprakash Satyamurthy
India
Published:
From the front cover of <i>Superman vs The Amazing Spider-Man: The Battle of the Century</i>, Marvel and DC Comics, 1976.
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From the front cover of Superman vs The Amazing Spider-Man: The Battle of the Century, Marvel and DC Comics, 1976.
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So Comic-Con is here. This convention for lovers of comics books and graphic novels (aren’t they the same thing?) will be held over the weekend in Delhi. Here, a 38-year-old reader of comics has a conversation with his younger selves about comics.

The setting: A vague interstice of space and time. Somewhere between the panels, beyond the fourth wall.

Me, at 6: Spider-Man and Superman wear pretty much the same colours, but they never fight crime together, why is that?

Me, at 16: It’s because one’s Marvel and the other’s DC. What are you, stupid?

Me, at 6: You’re stupid! I also like Tinkle, especially Kalia the crow and Suppandi. Suppandi is silly!

Me, at 16: That’s all so passé. Superhero comics now are so much more dark, and gritty, and real. And Tinkle is for kids!

Is Tinkle really only for kids? (Image: Suppandi, a much-loved character featured in Tinkle comics)

Me, at 6: But comics should be fun!

Me, at 21: They can. But they can be a lot more, too. Look at Marjane Satrapi’s comics on life in Iran, or Rutu Modan’s comics on life in Israel. They bring the stories of people in other times and places to life in a way maybe only sequential graphic narratives can.

Me, at 16: ‘Sequential graphic narratives’? What are you, some kind of hipster?

Me, at 21: Look, here’s Scott McCloud. This’ll explain a lot of things. (Breaks time barrier, hands out copies of Understanding Comics by Scott McCloud)

A panel from Scott McCloud’s Understanding Comics: The Invisible Art.
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Me, at 6: And I really like Misha magazine! It has comics about fairytales from Russia!

Me, at 21: Yes, that’s exactly the kind of thing I mean!

Me, at 16: Fairytales? Oh, grow up!

Me, at 38: Hang on, dude, check these out. (Breaks the time barrier and hands out copies of Fables)

Me, at 21: Hey, that’s like Sandman!

Me, at 16: Sandman?

Me, at 21: (Breaks the time barrier and hands out copies of Sandman)

Me, at 16: My mind is blown.

All ten parts of the acclaimed Sandman series of graphic novels by Neil Gaiman.

Me, at 6: Hey, can I see?

Me, at 38: Sure, why not. After all you’re not going to turn out any more messed up than I am, and besides we aren’t your parents. You got any of those old copies of Tinkle to spare?

(Everyone breaks the time barrier. They sit around reading comics.)

(Half an hour later.)

Me, at 6: Hey, anyone into action figures?

(Fade to 4-colour incandescence.)

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