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BENDIS!
03-25-2006, 05:53 AM
Spirit of superhero Sam lives on in comic, fund

By Cynthia Littleton

Sam Loeb was a superhero. He accomplished things in his 17 years that most comic book- and TV-loving teenagers only dream of. And he faced things that no kid should ever have to deal with during his three-year struggle with a rare form of bone cancer.

"Sam always taught us that life was all about 'finding the funny' in any situation," says his father, Jeph Loeb, a veteran comic book, film and TV writer.

The elder Loeb is known for penning contemporary Superman and Batman comics, including the "Superman for All Seasons" graphic novel that influenced the tone of WB Network's "Smallville" series centering on Clark Kent in his high school days. Now a supervising producer on "Lost," Jeph Loeb spent three seasons on "Smallville," where his son was a frequent visitor to the writers' room. "Smallville's" fifth-season opener in September was dedicated to Sam. So was a recent episode of "Adult Swim's" "Robot Chicken."

Sam had befriended a lot of comic book and TV writers during the time spent hanging out with his dad. And Sam was a comer in his own right, having collaborated with "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" creator Joss Whedon on a comic, "Tales of the Vampires #5," for Dark Horse Comics. Whedon had been impressed with the younger Loeb's story sensibilities while working with Jeph on the "Buffy" animated series that never got off the ground.

Sam was ready to follow up that debut by writing his own issue of DC Comics' popular "Superman/Batman" series, one that appropriately enough would revolve around teenage apprentices Robin and Superboy. He finished the story for the issue, but he ran out of time before he could see it through. Sam died June 17, two months after his 17th birthday.

His ordeal had started three years earlier with a little bit of numbness in his left leg. It was diagnosed as osteosarcoma, and pretty soon Sam had 14 inches of bone removed from his leg. He went through an intense chemotherapy regimen. His doctors believed that they had licked it, but six months later the cancer turned up in his jaw. They took more bone out of his other leg to build Sam a new jaw. And then they found small growths on his lungs that required periodic surgeries to remove them.

Sam's funeral last year drew an overflow crowd that ranged from top comic book creatives to "Smallville" staffers to his many friends at North Hollywood High School, where Sam was in the gifted-student program.

Out of shared grief at the funeral came the idea to assemble an all-star roster of comic writers and artists to finish Sam's issue. Jeph also found some solace in writing a companion piece, "Sam's Story," about a friend of Clark Kent's in Smallville who gets cancer and dies.

"Superman/Batman #26" is due out April 19. The contributors, who happen to number 26 and include Whedon and novelist Brad Meltzer, have waived their fees and royalties, and those funds are to be directed to the Sam Loeb College Scholarship Fund, established by his family at North Hollywood High. The plan is to award $10,000 a year to the student who most embodies Sam's zany-artistic-brilliant spirit, as selected by the faculty members who will never forget him. That spirit shines through in a note, reprinted in "Sam's Story," he wrote four months before his death.

"Your destiny does not lie in a hospital bed," Sam wrote. "Far greater achievements are to come."

Olivier E.
03-25-2006, 05:58 AM
:)

Ray G.
03-25-2006, 06:00 AM
Thanks for posting this, man. I'm going to be certain to pick this up. Maybe two copies.

A little OT, so I apologize, but I get the feeling this comic will be absolutely heartbreaking in both real world and comic context. A sad but appropriate symmetry, if things go down like I think they will.

BigButtPanda
03-25-2006, 06:03 AM
That is awesome....just wow. Totally going to cry....but it's so awesome that his story is being completed.

chrisfasowned
03-25-2006, 06:27 AM
that's... bittersweet. thanks, b. just e-mailed my lcs.

Guy H
03-25-2006, 05:40 PM
reading the preview of jeph and tim sales little piece about superman and sam was heartbreaking.. might be the first time i cried reading a comic..

Blandy vs Terrorism
03-25-2006, 05:43 PM
This reminds me, I need to run by my old lcs and ask them about their orders for this.

LenNWallace
03-25-2006, 05:51 PM
When I councel camp every year, I meet kids just like Sam. Dozens of them, all dealing with some of the most horrendous and debilitating heart conditions I've ever seen, and you can tell with some of them, how much things tend not to bring them down. I grew up just like them and came out on the other side. I'm the first person in the world to have survived my particular condition. (Endocardial cushion defect with a hypo-plastic left ventrical. Look it up.) By all means, I shouldn't be alive today, but every year when I go to camp, I look at kids who are in far worse shape than I ever was and they're dealing with it. They're surviving and they're just not even phased by the severity of their situation. It's fucking awe inspiring.