Daily Bummer: Steve Gerber on Simon And Shuster, And How To Help Peter David

superman_comics_logoIt will be a quiet day here at Crisis On Infinite Midlives, as most of our contributors will be meeting us shortly to participate in a team building exercise. This will involve being at the bar next to our local comic store, where they know me by name and ask me to stop building my own teams by cutting and pasting panels from different new releases, meaning that, if all goes well, our local SWAT Team will have the chance to learn to work together as a closer unit.

So just a couple of quick things today: first off, 20th Century Danny Boy has just republished an article, initially written for Rolling Stone by Howard The Duck creator Steve Gerber back in the mid-70s, about the fall into destitution of Superman creators Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster prior to Warner Bros. making the deal to pay them an annual pension for life… not for any legal reasons, but to try and win a PR victory despite making millions off a character that Siegel and Shuster created back in the 30s and sold for $130.

Rolling Stone never published the article, but Gerber updated it in the mid-80s and published it in Wap, a fanzine run at the time by Gerber, Frank Miller and Steven Grant, and this is the first time it’s seen the light of day since then. It’s a pretty harrowing story about how the big comic publishers routinely fucked and burned most of the creators who invented the characters we still read and love to this day, and how many of them died penniless, despite publishers making millions off of their creations (and don’t think it doesn’t still happen on some level; ask Ed Brubaker how much input he had over the movie script for The Winter Soldier). It’s one hell of an article, somewhat disturbing, and yet another reason why I’m perfectly happy to be sitting on the sidelines writing about comics rather than actually writing them. Well, that and my utter lack of talent in writing plot, story or characterization.

And in the spirit of helping out comic creators going through a bad patch: we reported earlier this week that X-Factor, Captain Marvel, Incredible Hulk and Star Trek writer Peter David had suffered a stroke while on vacation in Florida. David’s wife Kathleen has been posting daily updates on his condition on David’s Web site, and yesterday she posted a way for fans to help him out with, despite his having health insurance, what will probably be some not insubstantial co-payments:

peter_david_headshotNow HOW YOU CAN HELP

Even though we have health insurance we have co-pays and the like. And since this stroke fell at the end of the year, we have all the new co-pays to deal with (I can honestly see those of you who have had to deal with this nodding your heads). And there are things that the insurance company just won’t cover (more head nodding). So we are at the beginning of what is going to be a very expensive year even though we are only 4 days in.

The most direct way is to buy his books from Crazy 8 Press (via ComicMix) or from Amazon or Barnes and Noble websites. These are books that he gets the money from directly and the most per book.

The specific books and where you can get them are listed on David’s Web site, but I can tell you that last night I picked up Pulling Up Stakes and Pulling Up Stakes 2 – a story about a vampire hunter in a town chock full of the bastards (vampire hunters, not necessarily vampires) – for $.99 cents and $2.99 respectively, via my Nook and the Barnes & Noble eBookstore. Four bucks to help out a guy who wrote some of the best Hulk stories ever, and getting what sounds like a pretty good story (haven’t had a chance to read it yet) to boot, isn’t that much of a price to pay, especially considering I paid twice that much to spend about 20 minutes watching Peter Parker die in a puddle of piss just a week and a half ago.

Yeah, I know subjects like comic creators huddling in poverty and facing down big medical bills is a bummer, but it’s important to know the background of a hobby like comics, one that tends to immerse so many of us and take up so much of our lives. But it is a bummer, hence our Home Office team building exercises. So if you’ll excuse me, it’s time to go build some morale… morale being the French word for “liver damage.” Don’t wait up.