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The Crossover: How Free Comic Book Day Changed A Canadian College Town

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On the scene in London, we spoke to local shop owners about the big event.

There’s two unofficial rules when it comes to celebrating Free Comic Book Day in London, Ontario. Rule #1: Go to Heroes first. Rule #2: If you don’t want to wait in line, go early. At 7:30, the line will be firmly established just outside the doors, and it will have stretched down the block and around the corner by 9:00. Even after opening, visitors can expect to wait anywhere from 30 minutes to 2 hours before finally clearing the line and reaching the entrance. But once you’ve picked up your free books, it’s not time to go home: London is home to another four comic shops, working together to turn downtown into a pilgrimage destination for geeks and fans.

“We’ve watched it grow through the years, but honestly it’s been at a monstrous size for the last 5-6,” said Heroes proprietor Brahm Wiseman. “We’re essentially above capacity … we service it as very best as we can but it’s such a monster that draw is almost bigger than what we can handle.”

Wiseman quickly added that the numbers aren’t a complaint. “We try to make that part of the fun and part of the event,” he explains. Staff members often put on costumes and walk up and down the line, entertaining the crowd while handing out candy or bottled water. In many cases, they’ll find their enthusiasm mirrored by costumed customers, prompting multiple photo opportunities throughout the day. Meanwhile, London’s usual downtown commuters walk or drive by with amazed looks on their faces. Perhaps a few join the line themselves, but with the line’s end out of sight it’s difficult to tell.

Free Comic Book Day first began in 2002, when North American publishers and retailers teamed up to distribute free issues to generate interest in the comic book industry. Not all communities take part quite like London however, with four comic book shops on Dundas St and a fifth just around the corner on Richmond. On Free Comic Book Day, each store gives away “Comic Shop Crossover Passports” which can be stamped each location you visit. Completed passports are turned in at your final stop to be entered in a massive prize draw for hardcover graphic novels, statues, tabletop games, and more.

At first, each store ran Free Comic Book Day independently, relying on individual strengths to attract customers. Heroes is the largest of the five, with an estimated availability of half a million comics that encompasses everything from mainstream books to obscure indie titles. LA Mood has a modest selection by comparison, but certainly makes up for it with tabletop games, RPGs, and Magic card sales. Worlds Away boasts London’s largest back issue collection, all contained in boxes that take up a significant portion of floor space. Neo Tokyo focuses exclusively on manga and anime sales and, with the exception of stores in Toronto, is the only store in the region that doing so. But none of these are even the oldest stores gracing London’s streets; that honor goes to The Comic Book Collector, which has operated since 1979 with the support of loyal followers and their children who visit to this day.

That all changed thanks LA Mood’s Carol Vandenberg and her non-comics hobby: quilting. Businesses that provide quilting supplies often come together to host “quilt shop-hops” that transport customers from store to store, and Vandenberg saw a similar opportunity in London’s comic book scene. “I thought ‘Ohhh this would really work for Free Comic Book Day!'” Vandenberg explained. “I proposed it to a customer who frequents all the stores, he asked if anybody was interested … and we went from there.

“I think it was one of my former employees who said ‘Oh like a comic shop crossover!’ and I said ‘Yeah that’s it!'”

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The concept quickly took off, with each store seeing unprecedented growth when Free Comic Book Day. “The first year all the stores sort’ve did it on their own, and it was okay,” said Vandenberg’s husband and business partner Gord Mood, “but once we started doing the crossover together the numbers just exploded.” In 2013, the Comic Shop Crossover collected over 2000 completed passports, which doesn’t even account for customers who visited one or two locations before moving on. London Public Library also joined the event in recent years, not just to distribute free comics but to host the city’s costume contest.

Downtown businesses now unofficially recognize Free Comic Book Day with products that attract comic-collecting commuters. The City Lights Bookstore filled its window with used graphic novels. The Arts Project gallery hosted a free Comics and Graphic Arts collection. Local artisans from SillWill Studios sign their books and webcomic collections at Comic Book Collector, while DeviantArt’s OceanTANN runs a booth at Neo Tokyo. Even Forest City Coins offers free comic books each year, laying out back issues alongside collectible coins. “I think it’s part of the reason why we’ve gained so much momentum in this town,” Wiseman says. “We’re five stores strong promoting a single vision … now five stores, and a library, and downtown London pushing a massive event and promoting it.”

What’s most impressive however is the range of comic book fans attending, especially youth and teenagers. Each comic shop noted that while the stereotypical comic collector are 30-year old males, kids and women now make up significant portions of their audience, even outside of Free Comic Book Day. “There’s no typical customer,” said Worlds Away’s Brad Ashton-Haiste, who serves “kids to people over 60-70”. Wisemen describes an even split of men and women who visit Heroes, while Tim Morris at Comic Book Collector says that long-time customers are now bringing their children with them.

Neo Tokyo owner Rob Timberland adds that this influx will be a massive boon to the industry going forward. “For a long time people weren’t terribly optimistic about the superhero side of Western comics,” he explains. “With Avengers and Spider-Man and all these movies, we’ve seen the introduction of a whole new generation, and that’s necessary, that’s essential, for success in the long-term.”

The industry’s future aside, London comic book fans are just incredibly happy to have an event of their own. Its enthusiastic geek culture, periodically refreshed by students attending the local university and colleges, mean a mix of new and old faces each year. In the same day, one might see a family of Avengers, a fully mobile Dalek, and a woman quietly crocheting world maps from Super Mario Bros. 3. One Batman fan sometimes parks a working Adam West-themed Batmobile he constructed outside of Comic Book Collector, much to the delight of visitors and car enthusiasts.

At the moment, Free Comic Book Day is the closest London gets to having its own comic convention, but thankfully that’s about to change. Buoyed by the success of Free Comic Book Day, LA Mood is helping launch Forest City Comicon this October, with an emphasis on costumes, panels, board games, and video game tournaments. Very soon, London could find itself attracting cosplayers and comic fans from Toronto instead of the other way around, and it’s largely thanks to the collaboration between these stores.

“No other city does what we do in getting together for Free Comic Book Day,” Vandenberg said. “London’s unique that way.”

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To find out more, visit the shops profiled in this article: The Comic Book Collector, Heroes Comics, LA Mood Comics & Games, Worlds Away, and Neo Tokyo.


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