- Joined
- Aug 13, 2009
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- 6,093
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