WORKING -- Charles Henderson
-- Story by Mathis Winkler; photo by Sean Hiller
HE IS
Selling you Spiderman.
SUPERHEROES ARE BEST
Charles Henderson was 3 years old when he saw his first Looney Tunes
cartoon with Bugs Bunny. Just two years later, he started collecting
comic books.
Today, the 24-year-old is a big fan of quiet guys like the Incredible
Hulk -- guys who go out and save the world.
“They are larger than life,” Henderson said. “They right wrongs.
Persons just ordinary like Peter Parker -- he can be Spiderman and
everyone respects him.”
Henderson does discriminate between heroes, however. A faithful
follower of Marvel Comics, one of the two largest comic publishers, he’s
less inclined to admire protagonists from rival firms like D.C. Comics.
“I really can’t say that I’m a big fan of Superman,” he said. “I’m not
much of a D.C. guy. I’ve read Marvel all my life.”
FIRST EDITIONS FIRST
Henderson, who works twice a week at Superior Comics in Costa Mesa,
spends most of his time filing back issues in one of dozens of containers
that fill the center of the store.
That’s actually how he got the job in the first place, he said. The
owner was looking for someone to keep comics in order.
“We’re supposed to ask people politely to put [books] back,” he said.
“One man took all Superman [issues] out and put them back completely out
of order. That’s the reason we have filers.”
The filing system’s pretty easy, Henderson added. Earlier issues come
before later ones, with special editions or annual issues at the end of
each section.
One of the store’s biggest sellers is a book titled “Preacher.”
“It’s a story about a guy who looks for God and encounters dark things
on the way,” Henderson said. “It’s been discontinued, though, so that
will change.”
CAN’T GET ENOUGH
Henderson said he’s checked out other stores in the area, but still
prefers the one where he works. Instead of money, the owners pay him with
comic books.
“Five to 10 [books], maybe more,” he said, adding that he usually
chooses the cheaper ones for $1.25 since he can take more of those. “It
depends on how much I’ve earned.”
He also helps to color cartoons drawn by his father. The subject of
his father’s artwork, however, is a secret.
A visit to a convention at the Shrine Auditorium in Anaheim, where
comic buffs meet to exchange and sell their treasures, is something
Henderson wants to do.
And, maybe, just maybe, he’ll open his own store some day.
“My mom said that I have enough comics to open a store,” Henderson
said, adding that he has about 2,000 books stored in boxes at home. “At
some point in the future, I might.”
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