Our summer of ♥ continues, as Jason Rodriguez tells us why he ♥’s Page 22. Jason’s the editor of several comic projects, like the upcoming Postcards (due in stores July 24), Elk’s Run, Kill All Monsters and Western Tales of Terror. More info on his work and upcoming appearances can be found on the Eximious Press blog.
Take it away, Jason …
Page 22 [peyj twuhn-tee-too] n. – The last page in a serialized comic book; not necessarily the 22nd page. The name comes from the standard comic format of 22 pages of content and 10 pages of ads.
There used to be this Mom & Pop store called Louie’s on Henry Street between Carroll and President in Carroll Gardens, Brooklyn. As kids, we’d stop there everyday after school because Louie’s had everything a kid liked more than homework: DJ Boy and Operation Wolf, boxes upon boxes of Joyva Jelly Rings, quarter waters, and comic books. I’d spend a small portion of my allowance on chocolate and sugar water and arcade games; the rest would go to a comic book that caught my attention. G.I. Joe, Transformers, and the occasional Spider-Man – even some of the more embarrassing comics like Mad Balls, Popples, and the Get-along Gang occasionally made their way home with me. I never had a desire to collect consecutive books. I never felt like I had to pick up the next Batman comic. I spent many years of my childhood perfectly satisfied with purchasing a comic book, reading it, enjoying it, and then deciding what book I was going to pick up next.
Until Page 22 knocked me upside my head.
