The PopCulteer
October 17, 2025
I wanted to take this week’s PopCulteer to bid farewell to an old friend. Last week I learned that Greg Miller, the former owner of Comic World in Charleston, passed away in late August after an accident at home. He was two days shy of his 74th birthday.
Greg was a good friend at a time when I really needed one. I haven’t written much about him in PopCult, but I did include him in my “Secret Origin.” He was very supportive of CODA, the book my brother and I published in the mid-1980s, and was a sympathetic ear when my first marriage was crashing and burning. Greg was also a big supporter of Radio Free Charleston, which I wrote about in this blog before…
At this point in the narrative, let me digress and share with you a commercial that I wrote and produced. Greg Miller, owner of Comic World on Charleston’s West Side, was a friend of mine, and he wanted to advertise on the show. It fell to me to produce a commercial on spec just to give him a rough idea what it would sound like. So I wrote this fun little exchange between a husband and wife, and started to record it. I was going to do my “wiseguy” voice, and get one of the female announcers at the station to play his wife. My boss, the aforementioned program director, Garrett Majors was supposed to do the bit at the end with all the “money info.”
Sadly, Garrett was having sobriety issues that made him unavailable. Also, the female announcers at the station were either too busy to record the spot, or they were refusing to speak to me. So I had to do all three voices myself. I figured it wasn’t too bad, since this was only a spec spot, and would never be aired.
I forgot about Greg’s sense of humor. When he found out that I did all the voices, including the woman who sounds a bit like a drag queen, he insisted that they use the rough spot on the air. I became known as “The man of a dozen voices.” You can hear for yourself.
If anybody knows Greg’s current whereabouts, leave them in the comments. I haven’t heard from him in years. (Note, I originally wrote that 17 years ago. It’s still true)
I was saddened by the news that he died, but not surprised. What surprised me was that he’d passed so recently. I hadn’t heard from him at all since the last time I saw him, probably twenty-eight years ago.
After losing his store to his ex-wife, who ran it briefly before shutting it down (leaving Charleston seriously underserved in terms of access to comic books for years), Greg became a bit of a recluse. He didn’t want to have anything to do with his former customers when they tracked him down, and nobody seemed to really know what had become of him.
I was a loyal customer and friend of Greg’s from 1982 to 1997, when I had to give up comics for a year when my mom suffered a stroke and I became her full-time caregiver. I just couldn’t get away long enough to make it to Greg’s store to pick up my comics and catch up with my buddy.
Greg was understanding and supportive of my decision to drop out of comics, and we parted as friends, with the hope that I’d be able to return as a customer some day.
During my disastrous first marriage, Greg was pretty much my only point of socialization. He consoled me through the break up, and during the worst days of my marriage, when there was no money to be had, he hired me to draw comics and stickers and things just so he could pay me in comics and keep me in the hobby I loved.
He also listened to me, and I returned the favor as his marriage crumbled.
I’m not going to take sides in that dispute. I didn’t witness anything myself, and it’s not fair to just present one side of a story I was told in confidence. I do know that there was a remarkable amount of bitterness on both sides.
Greg was so bitter that after he lost his store, he didn’t want to have anything to do comics or his former customers. His ex was so bitter that she financed, produced and starred in a feature film that seemed designed largely to paint Greg in as negative a light as possible.
Over the years that I’ve been writing PopCult, one of the questions I’ve been asked most often is “What the hell ever happened to Greg Miller?”
I mean, even people who worked for him were in the dark. He was a well-liked guy and a major presence in the local comics scene. This was the guy that sold me my copies of The Dark Knight Returns and Watchmen and special-ordered Love and Rockets and Nexus for me. There was even one time when we bootlegged a few copies of the famed AIR Pirates underground comic, but that’s a story for another time.
He has been missed by many since he left the comics scene so long ago.
I’m sad to know he’s gone. Rest in peace, old buddy.
About Comics And Me
After going almost a year without buying new comics, things improved for me. Mom stabilized and I was able to get some additional caregiver help. I also started bringing in some disposable income thanks to some magazine-writing gigs, and I decided to start getting new comics again.
I was a bit distraught to find that Comic World was gone. It was almost a decade before I found out the whole story of what had happened, but if I wanted to get new comics, I was sort of stuck. There was (and I think still is) Cheryl’s Comics in Kanawha City, but she wasn’t exactly welcoming of Greg’s customers, and it was a bit farther for me to drive.
Then I remembered that Beau Smith and Cliint McElroy, whom we almost published during the CODA days, enthusiastically endorsed Westfield Comics, a mail-order subscription service. I decided to give them a try, and I’ve been a very satisfied customer for over twenty-five years now. . I still highly recommend them. Since I’ve been a customer, I have never missed a single issue of any comic book I wanted. I’ve never been waylaid by a fellow customer who wanted to explain in detail why his taste in comics was better than mine, and I never had to worry about a comic shop disappearing overnight like The Comic Kingdom in South Charleston did back in 1977.
It’s been rather blissful, even if the new comics aren’t nearly as good as the ones that came out back when I was in the target demographic.
And that is this week’s PopCulteer. Check back for fresh content and all our regular features every day.
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