From the Author Knowledge@Wharton, University of Pennsylvania's online business journal, calls San Diego Comic-Con the “Super Bowl of pop culture”. The convention is the required pilgrimage for artists, actors, filmmakers, producers or screenwriters. Each year 130,000 fans gather, and where they...
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From the Author
Knowledge@Wharton, University of Pennsylvania's online business journal, calls San Diego Comic-Con the “Super Bowl of pop culture”. The convention is the required pilgrimage for artists, actors, filmmakers, producers or screenwriters. Each year 130,000 fans gather, and where they go Hollywood follows. News coverage weighs heavily to celebrities, even though they are outnumbered thousands to one.
The real stars aren’t the big-screen actors and showrunners but the small, bit-players roaming the halls; the attendees, whether they dress up in costumes or simply participate in any of the hundreds of panel sessions. From its early comic-book beginnings in the 1970s until today, the Con is all about superheroes and whom fans aspire to be: Better versions of themselves.
One attendee calls Comic-Con “nerd paradise”, where for a few days oddball dreamers, crazy lovers of fantastic stories and ardent superhero fans can be free; the social rules constraining them everyday no longer apply.
Everyone here has a story to tell, and “Comic-Con Heroes” tells them. Writer Joe Wilcox culminates five years of Cons by choosing a dozen attendees from the 2013 convention to profile. None is a celebrity you know, but each is a hero in the making.
You will meet an archaeologist of toys, 14-Century knight and student of artificial intelligence. You will walk The Dark Knight’s sentimental journey, ride 19th-Century bicycles and time travel with Dr. Who.
And you will learn that the best stories aren’t the ones we read or watch but those we live each day that seek to unleash the hidden hero within.
Critics Rave
Fatman calls “‘Comic-Con Heroes’ a masterpiece. Give that man the Pulitzer Prize”.
The Poker, Fatman’s nemesis, laughs so hard he splits a gut: “What...a...load...of..horse...manure. The joke is on anyone paying to read this thing”.
Supermouth can’t say enough--and we wish he would just shut the hell up-- about the “magnificent storytelling. I cried when the knight was injured in battle. Oh, sorry, was that a spoiler?"
Thorn is prickly about being overlooked, but praises the author “for capturing the essence of Comic-Con attendees dressing up to be, ahem, other superheroes”, including brother Locus.
Dr. Whom would “go back in time and make the author change a few things but TARDIT (Temporal Anomalies Rip Dinsdale In Two) is in the shop for repairs”.
More from the Author
This is high praise coming from fake superheroes (We thought speaking for Batman, the Joker, Superman, Thor or Dr. Who might lead to a Digital Millennium Copyright Act take-down notice). I’m touched by their praise, because I wrote it.
Seriously, San Diego Comic-Con is special as are all the people lucky enough to get a pass. I would tell all their stories, if superpowers let me write fast enough. Please enjoy these 12.
On July 8, 2015 this book entered the public domain.
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