A collector whose piles became too big for comfort
The Lexington Herald-Leader interviewed a comics collector who came to realize his trove had become way too big, and eventually sold them off:
How did Bill Bissett know his comic book collection had gotten too big??Indeed. Especially in an era where much of this stuff has been or will be reprinted in paperback/hardcover archives, and at the same time, why won't guys like him donate their collections to museums? Because:
When he was moving, and he had to have a second truck just for his comic books.
That wake up call started Bissett on a downsizing process that whittled his collection down from 150 boxes of books to about 25 now.
At 1 p.m. Sunday, Bissett will share what he’s learned with other collectors in a presentation titled “How to Create a Collection That Doesn’t Make You Crazy” at the Lexington Comic and Toy Convention.
[...] Bissett, 60, has collected comics since he was 11 years old.
But several years ago, after decades of collecting, he said the size of his collection had become so unwieldy, it no longer brought him joy.
“I hated even looking at it,” he said. “There’s a very dangerous border between collector and hoarder.”
Bissett said he began ditching comic books if he knew he would never want to read again, trading many of them off for store credit at The Inner Geek in his hometown of Huntington, W.Va.See, here again is an example of somebody who takes the easy road and hands them over to a store where, if the back issues in question are decades old, chances are the proprietor will charge heavy sums for new buyers, who'll then sell them in turn on the speculator market. I do find it interesting that so far, the guy's jettisoning some of his back issues based on what he cares less about, more on which follows:
Now, he said he has a much more focused collection, and he’s back to enjoying his books.I still don't see why he has to buy almost everything in pamphlet format, though they do provide a photograph where he's reading a DC Finest archive of the original Silver Age Doom Patrol stories. And that, seriously, is what he should really invest in, so why doesn't he clearly emphasize that?
“If you try to collect everything, you’ll go crazy,” he said.
But Bissett said keeping his collection to a reasonable size is an ongoing process, because he enjoys reading the new material being published, and he gets new comics mailed to his home monthly.
But just because a comic comes into his house doesn’t mean it is part of the collection.
Bissett keeps boxes at the ready for things he plans to dump.
“Comics are a lot like film,” he said. “Some films are very, very thoughtful, thought provoking, you know, emotive. Others aren’t. And comics are very similar, too. There are some that are very surface, simple entertainment, and some that are very, very thought provoking.”
Bissett said it’s also important for collectors to plan ahead for what will happen to their collections after their death.Yet nowhere in the article does he or the interviewer talk about the possibility of donating to museums, this despite how much of what he's collected could since have been reprinted in paperback/hardcover formats. Which makes this all the more disappointing. So on the one hand, he may not have tried to encourage his children to try the same reading hobbies as he has, yet on the other, he won't transfer his pamphlets to museum archives either. What good is that? Yet another example of a collector who's disappointing the medium by not encouraging better formats and other approaches to how comicdom could operate going forward in this day and age.
Whether you collect comic books, action figures, coins or spoons, “you better get an exit strategy,” he said.
“Am I going to be buried in a giant sarcophagus?” Bissett joked about his own collection. “I mean, what is going to happen to all these? I doubt my 12- and 14-year-old girls are like, ‘Oh my gosh, Dad’s comics are all mine!’”
He said a New York Times article reinvigorated him to think about that topic, because it’s “almost unfair” to burden family members with a giant collection of something they really don’t want.
He cautioned that collectors planning to divest themselves of collectibles should prepare for disappointment, knowing they probably won’t get back the amount of money they invested.
Labels: conventions, history, msm propaganda, sales





