Geerdes was born in Sioux City, Iowa, United States, and was the oldest of three children. He grew up in Lincoln, Nebraska[1] and was an avid collector of Batman, Superman, and Bugs Bunny comic books. When Geerdes was in his mid-teens, his father died after a long illness. Geerdes worked in a number of small jobs at cafes, hotels, and grocery stores in the Lincoln area.[2]
Geerdes enlisted in the U.S. Navy in 1954 and served a 4-year tour.[1] He served on the USS Chemung[3] and visited numerous ports from Australia to Japan. San Francisco became his new home at the end of his Navy tour.[2][4]
College years
In 1958, Geerdes enrolled at San Francisco State College and received his B.A. in literature. He continued his enrollment at SF State College to complete a M.A. in English.[4] Geerdes enrolled at the University of California, Berkeley, to study for a doctorate in English literature. His dissertation was complete, but he was more interested in the growing political movement at Berkeley than completing his last few classes.[1][2]
Geerdes got a teaching job in 1965 in the English department at Fresno State College. His classes were mostly for the freshmen student body, covering standard college literature. Geerdes left Fresno State College after nearly three years to teach at Sonoma State College in their English department, an appointment which had ended by 1972.[1][4]
Geerdes's Comix World newsletter began in 1973[4][6] and ended in 1984.[3] The newsletter focused on newly released books, artists, and related activities. By 1980, Comix World was being mailed to every state in America and 14 countries.[1]
Geerdes started the Comix Wave newsletter in 1983, which concentrated on the “newave” era with minicomics.[6][8][9] Minicomics were self-published books by the artists, and many new artists were inspired from Geerdes's newsletters to publish their own work.[10]Comix Wave ended regular publication in 1995. He worked with numerous people in this new era of underground comics, such as Kevin Eastman, Jim Valentino, Par Holman, Bob Vojtko, David Miller, Brad Foster, and many others.
The last publication Geerdes wrote for was the Anderson Valley Advertiser from 1995 to 1997.[3] He was a frequent contributor, writing about aspects of his life and his observations of current events.
Geerdes's photographs have appeared in numerous publications after his death in 1997. The Underground Comix Family Album by Malcolm Whyte, from 1998, has 50 of Geerdes' photographs of the people associated with shaping the underground comix business.[4] A book about San Diego Comic-Con, Comic-Con: 40 Years of Artists, Writers, Fans, & Friends also published some of Geerdes's photographs.[11]The Snatch Comics Treasury from Apex Joint Ventures reprinted Robert Crumb's work while adding some photographs from Geerdes.[12]
Geerdes shot the cover photograph for Michael Corrigan's hybrid memoir, Confessions of a Shanty Irishman (America House, 2001).
^Dowers, M. (2010). Newave! The Underground Mini Comix of the 1980s. (1st ed., pp. 152-153). Seattle, WA: Fantagraphics Books. ISBN978-160699313-2.
^Kennedy, J. (1982). The Official Underground and Newave Comix Price Guide. (1st ed., pp. 15). Cambridge, MA: Boatner Norton Press. ISBN0-9606654-3-9.
^Erling, G. (1982). A Personal History. The official underground and newave comix price guide. (1st ed., pp. 36). Cambridge, MA: Boatner Norton Press. ISBN0-9606654-3-9.
^Comic-Con: 40 Years of Artists, Writers, Fans & Friends. (2009). (1st ed., pp. 54-55). San Francisco, CA: Chronicle Books. ISBN978-0-8118-6710-8.