- Joined
- Aug 13, 2009
- Messages
- 6,032
Anyone else grow up reading these in the '60s and '70s? I recently offloaded my "Commando" stash, a large heavy box full of them that had spent four decades or so gathering dust in my late Mum's loft, and the oldest of which dated back to 1971.
I confess I had great fun re-reading a few of them before I sold them off, it was great nostalgia, even though through older & wiser eyes you realise that they glorify, glamorise and sanitise the horrible business of war to a toe-curling, embarrassing degree. But my pals & I were avid readers & collectors when we were kids and from the age of (roughly) 8 to 14, I just couldn't get enough of them. Stirring titles, great stories, inspirational heroes, seriously cool artwork – they had the lot.
At one stage it got to the point where my Mum laid down the law and said I wasn't to buy any more because she thought I was getting "obsessed" with them and "wasting" all my pocket money on "those ridiculous war books", and a big family row ensued (my Dad was more lenient because sometimes he enjoyed reading them as well). But after leaving it a few weeks to wait for the dust to settle, I secretly started buying them again and carried on adding to my ever-growing stash on the quiet.
A few years later I'd grown out of them so into the loft they went, and instead I (cough) started accumulating a different secret stash (shuffles shiftily in chair) that had to be concealed from my Mum (mainly with titles like "Mayfair", "Knave" and "Fiesta") ….. but that's another story .
Around the same time there was a rival series called "War Picture Library" and "Battle Picture Library" from another publisher. Similar kind of thing and sometimes the stories were a bit darker, like when the story's main hero would end up getting killed (which rarely if ever happened in the "Commando" stories). I had a few of those too but was very much a "Commando" brand loyalist.
Great memories of growing up back in the days when there were still only two genders and no-one was offended by anything.
- Steve
I confess I had great fun re-reading a few of them before I sold them off, it was great nostalgia, even though through older & wiser eyes you realise that they glorify, glamorise and sanitise the horrible business of war to a toe-curling, embarrassing degree. But my pals & I were avid readers & collectors when we were kids and from the age of (roughly) 8 to 14, I just couldn't get enough of them. Stirring titles, great stories, inspirational heroes, seriously cool artwork – they had the lot.
At one stage it got to the point where my Mum laid down the law and said I wasn't to buy any more because she thought I was getting "obsessed" with them and "wasting" all my pocket money on "those ridiculous war books", and a big family row ensued (my Dad was more lenient because sometimes he enjoyed reading them as well). But after leaving it a few weeks to wait for the dust to settle, I secretly started buying them again and carried on adding to my ever-growing stash on the quiet.
A few years later I'd grown out of them so into the loft they went, and instead I (cough) started accumulating a different secret stash (shuffles shiftily in chair) that had to be concealed from my Mum (mainly with titles like "Mayfair", "Knave" and "Fiesta") ….. but that's another story .
Around the same time there was a rival series called "War Picture Library" and "Battle Picture Library" from another publisher. Similar kind of thing and sometimes the stories were a bit darker, like when the story's main hero would end up getting killed (which rarely if ever happened in the "Commando" stories). I had a few of those too but was very much a "Commando" brand loyalist.
Great memories of growing up back in the days when there were still only two genders and no-one was offended by anything.
- Steve