“Take
something you love, tell people about it, bring together people who share your
love, and help make it better. Ultimately, you'll have more of whatever you
love for yourself and the world.” – Julius Schwartz
Perhaps few people even know
Schwartz’s name, but he left readers with a lasting legacy by helping develop
some of our most iconic comic book “superheroes” during his lifetime. Schwartz also came
up with the concept (and title) of the Justice League of America.
Born
on this date in 1915, Schwartz (who died in 2004) was DC
Comics’ primary editor in the development of DC’s flagship superheroes Superman and
Batman. Also a literary agent, he co-founded the Solar Sales Service
Literary Agency, where he represented such writers as Robert Bloch, Ray
Bradbury and H. P. Lovecraft, including some of Bradbury's first published
works and Lovecraft's last.
He is credited with helping organize the first
World Science Fiction Convention in
1939 and is one of just a few editors to be inducted into both the Comic
Industry’s Jack Kirby Hall of Fame and the Will Eisner Comic Book Hall of Fame,
something he found almost unbelievable. “Not too many people,” he said, “ever know who the editor is.”
Writer’s Moment with a friend at httpe://writersmoment.blogspot.com
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