Neal Adams has died. In many ways he illustrated my youth. He was crucial in changing the way comic books look and how the comic industry treat its talent, using his significant influence to bring about changed conditions on behalf of the generations which preceded him and those that came after.
Neal Adams was the rock star in comics when I first skated in for a look-see. He was a young yet mature talent, the beginning of a wave of talents who would soon enter the field and supplant the hoary veterans who had been manning the battlements of comics since the earliest days. The thing about Neal Adams is that he didn't draw comics like anyone else, his work was much more realistic in many ways, infused with a drama and depth of field which had not been the standard of a field which rewarded stalwart abstraction. Adams was an illustrator who turned to comics, but he did so with a dedication and a relish which made him a favorite of editors and fans. He broke at DC, doing a few things here and there on the outer edges and I first found him on Deadman in Strange Adventures, a weirdo comic if there ever was one. About this same time, he got a gig on Batman in The Brave and the Bold. I think the breakthrough for Adams for me was when gave us a new Green Arrow. Here was a hero who had been the very definition of bland for much of his days and now he was suddenly the interesting guy at the dance, dangerous and quixotic and draw very, very well. With Denny O'Neil as the writer Neal Adams had Ollie Queen hook up with another hero on the rocks named Hal Jordan (Green Lantern) and the duo changed comics pretty much. Next Adams took on the whole of the Bat-mythos and redefined the series which had struggled a bit since the wonderful TV show had mired it in a light-heartedness which was not really core to the character. Batman was fucking scary when Neal Adams drew him. And like all great talents eventually Adams switched teams and joined Marvel for some highly memorable issues of The X-Men, The Avengers, and Amazing Adventures starring the Inhumans. By this time Neal Adams had a ticket to ride where he wished and he became one of the guys who kept telling us all that comics could be more. Turns out he was right.