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Contest Results > Grand Prize Winner
Scott Sheaffer
Westfield, Massachusetts

An ancient scholar once said that no man could step in the same river
twice because both the man and the river will have changed. In some
ways that quote reflects what Stan Lee has meant to me over the years.
I've changed and my image of Stan has changed.
 My
earliest memories of Stan go back to when I was 7 or 8 years old. I'd
just fallen under the spell of the four-color worlds of wonder called
comic books. In those days I read DC and Charlton as well as Marvel
comics, but the Marvels were my favorites. My first two comics were
DCs, but my next four were Marvels. Among them were DEVIL DINOSAUR,
CAPTAIN AMERICA and a couple of HULKs. I read them over and over and
over again.

In those early days, I didn't notice credits. When I started noticing
them, the first thing that made an impact was "Stan Lee Presents."
Later as my collection continued to grow, I started noticing the other
credits at the bottom of the page. Sure, they said, "Roy Thomas Writer"
and "John Buscema Penciler," but in the workings of my 8 year old mind,
Stan Lee was the important one. He had to be.
 In
the primeval days of my love affair with comics, the only Stan Lee
writings I actually read were a few issues of MARVEL'S GREATEST COMICS
(a mag which reprinted Stan Lee and Jack Kirby's run on THE FANTASTIC
FOUR) and "Stan's Soapbox." As I grew older, I realized Stan wasn't
creating the current comics, but had been a great writer long ago.
 More
time passed. By age 14, I was a Marvel Zombie, disdaining everything by
other publishers. I remember one time the guy at Moondance Comics (a
long gone Holyoke, Mass., comic-book store) tried to tell me about this
DC series by this guy who helped create the Marvel Universe. "No way!"
I thought or maybe even said. DC sucks and everyone knows Stan Lee's
the one who created the Marvel Universe. I gave the lowly DC series a
pass although a DC flyer with info about it was included in my bag of
comics one week.

Actually those DC flyers were in there every month. I also got copies
of Marvel's news/promotional book, MARVEL AGE. I devoured MARVEL AGE,
particularly the series of articles recapping Marvel history starting
with THE FANTASTIC FOUR #1. Icarus like, Stan Lee soared to ever
grander heights in my estimation. I bought every line of hype, and my
imagination embellished Lee even more. Stan Lee was a genius! He saved
a dying company and a dying industry by revolutionizing comics single
handed. For me, the Silver Age began with FF #1. SHOWCASE? The Flash?
Julius Schwartz? Lee portrayed three-dimensional characters instead of
two-dimensional ones. He made comics appealing to older readers. He
made comics cool. Stan Lee was the greatest, most important figure in
the medium I loved.

Idols fall though, and childhood illusions can be shattered.

It all began with a comic book, a discarded comic book, salvaged from
someone else's trash. My uncle drove a garbage truck. Now and then he'd
come across comics people had thrown away. One Christmas Eve, I think
it was 1986, he gave me a batch of these comics. They were 1970s
comics. I loved '70s comics. I still do. I spent a wondrous night going
through them. One grabbed my attention, an issue of THE ETERNALS. The
Eternals! I remembered them from my first THOR comic. I read THE
ETERNALS comic, and it hit me with a wave of creative energy and
enthusiasm like some wild Jazz jam from the Dixieland era. The same guy
wrote, drew and edited the comic. A guy named Jack Kirby.

Jack Kirby... where'd I heard that name before? The art style looked
familiar. At first I didn't like it. I thought it looked crude and
blocky, but it infected me. Within days I was feverish over the power
and energy of that artwork. And the writing! The writing exploded with
incredible ideas. But, hmmm... where had I heard that name before? Why
did that art look familiar? Eventually it hit me, Jack Kirby also wrote
and drew DEVIL DINOSAUR and my first CAPTAIN AMERICA comic. I
remembered his name had been mentioned in those MARVEL AGE articles
too. He drew many of the books, Stan worked on. He drew those FF
reprints I read. I saw Kirby credited as a co-plotter in the Marvel
Index to the Fantastic Four. To me that meant Kirby was co-writing THE
FANTASTIC FOUR with Lee. So why did Lee get most of the credit and
recognition?
 Another
batch of comics, this one from a friend's older brother, contained
KAMANDI #1. A Kirby comic from DC!! It was every bit as good as THE
ETERNALS. I scoured the back issue bins for more. Then I remembered the
DC series by that guy who helped create the Marvel Universe. It was the
1980s reprinting of Jack Kirby's THE NEW GODS. I couldn't get enough
Kirby comics. As creative as he was, it was hard to believe he didn't
also create all sorts of characters during his '60s run at Marvel.

Then I learned about the controversy. In fandom, there was debate about
who wrote the early Marvels and who created the characters. Stan Lee or
Jack Kirby? I looked at Kirby, a man who poured out concepts and
characters by the bucketful from the 1940s through the '80s. Then I
looked at Lee. The only noteworthy characters I associated him with
were created during the '60s when he worked with Kirby and Steve Ditko.
I could think of nothing before that period and nothing of import after
that period.

Stan's star fell. I despised him. For me, Stan epitomized bragging
glory hogs and company men. I actually felt angry at him, and I'd rant
about how he stole it all from Jack. My view of Stan remained this way
for years. Yet eventually, what Stan Lee meant to me underwent further
metamorphosis.
 Real
life caught up. First college and then work ate up free time. I started
reading fewer and fewer comics. Then I felt insulted when publishers
expected me to fall for multiple covers, relaunches and a number of
other gimmicks. When I glanced at new comics, they seemed to lack that
magical something I used to find in them. I fell away. Oh, for years
afterwards I kept buying comics I was going to read, "someday." First
word of booming sales drifted back to me eventually followed by news of
chaos and disaster. After two comic book suppliers closed on me, I
stopped buying.

One day in 1999 I decided to read two Fantastic Four volumes of Marvel
Masterworks. My heart melted in a welter of nostalgia. I even felt a
soft spot for Stan Lee. I wondered what had become of THE FANTASTIC
FOUR. I took a trip to a comic-book store. It was a depressing
experience. Comics had evolved into harsh, alien things. I barely
recognized my childhood friends. I bought an issue of FF, though. On a
cold, overcast day, I read it. I used to read standard-sized comics in
20-30 minutes. It took me three hours to struggle from cover to cover
through a nearly incomprehensible story in which nothing happened. If
new comics couldn't assuage my reawakened appetite for comics, I'd find
other ways. I joined a Jack Kirby discussion group on the Internet and
started buying reprints of old comics I didn't have. Stan Lee was
discussed frequently on the Kirby List. In the furious feuds, I came
down against Stan.
 Things
happened, though. I'd always been able to see what Kirby brought to the
Lee/Kirby team. I'd known about but never appreciated what Lee brought
it. I read some Golden Age Stan Lee stories, though. They weren't very
original, but Stan's ability to flesh out characters was outstanding. I
was especially moved by his take on "the misunderstood monster" in a
Frankenstein story he wrote. This theme emerged again later in the
Marvel Age and it was one reason I loved Marvel so much. I came to
respect Stan's genius as an editor even when, from a fan standpoint, I
disagreed with his decisions. Where I used to get annoyed by Stan's
endless hype, I now saw how important it was for promoting Marvel and
creating that fun, cozy atmosphere I loved as a young fan. Also, it
started reminding me of tall tales spun by a favorite uncle.

Then I heard Stan had been fired from Marvel. I realized that even with
his greater fame and fortune, he'd also been screwed by mainstream
comics' work-for-hire practices. I hoped his Internet venture would
succeed and deliver some comeuppance to Marvel. I felt bad when it
failed, and Stan got left holding the bag. I enjoyed his JUST IMAGINE
series at DC. I read his bio-auto-biography (or whatever he called it)
with advance warning of its flaws. I came away utterly charmed. Kirby
and Ditko are getting greater recognition for their roles and that's
ameliorated the feelings I had on that issue.

I think there are times Stan has claimed too much credit, but I've
discovered other times when he's been generous with credit. Besides,
I've mellowed with age and gotten a life, ya know?
 In
the beginning, I viewed Stan Lee as one of those flawless Golden Age
heroes. When I discovered he wasn't perfect and was in conflict with
other heroes of mine, I viewed him as a villain and a charlatan. Now I
see him like one of those tragically flawed heroes of myth and Marvel.
And, of course, those Marvel heroes often fought with each other, yet
we fans could admire them all, just like we can admire Lee, Kirby and
Ditko despite their differences.

My changing views reflect my own journey. I started as a wide-eyed hero
worshiper, prone to corporate spoonfeeding. I became a skeptic,
questioning earlier heroes and championing anti-establishment guys.
(That's how I viewed Kirby in relation to Marvel.) Now I hope I've
reached a point where I'm fair minded, where I can see through spin
without overreacting against it. I hope I can see where accomplishment
is overblown, and yet still appreciate it when deflated to its true
level. I hope I've become tolerant enough to accept people's weaknesses
and admire their strengths.

I've changed and what Stan Lee means to me has changed, just like the river and the man.
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