OMAHA, Neb. (WOWT) – A Lincoln area CEO is ready to auction off a Spider-Man comic book collection worth hundreds of thousands of dollars to help educate people on how to feed the hungry around the world.
This isn’t the first time Nate Blum has made a sacrifice to educate the public about a worthy cause. First Alert 6 first met Blum in 2017 when he was being fitted for an artificial eye after donating his glaucoma-damaged one to science for medical research and education.
“I’ve always hoped that my experiences could somehow help educate,” Blum said.
Comic books tackle serious global issues
Eight years later, Blum continues to educate through comic books he’s written, creating his own superheroes.
“It’s a worldwide adventure. I’d say it’s like Indiana Jones meets Captain Planet,” Blum said.
These books target young children around the world, focusing on serious issues.
“And we don’t sugar coat things, right. We talk about climate change in this book and we talk about the fact that people don’t have enough to eat in this book. In this book we talk about how farmers can’t grow a grain if they don’t have a market to sell it,” Blum said.
The high-nutritional grain is sorghum. Blum has traveled the world talking about its importance.
“These grains we know can address not only our changing climate right but can also address the health needs and the food security for these regions,” he said.
“We develop systems in which these communities can learn not just how to grow grain and grow it more efficiently, right but how to actually create a product with it or semi-finished product,” Blum said.
Collection started in small town Nebraska
To fund his mission, Blum plans to auction off his Spider-Man comic book collection of more than 2,000 copies from the first edition on. He started collecting the books when he was a young teenager.
“I’m from York, Neb. — small town. At the time, we had a Pamida, and I remember walking in seeing the comic book rack there,” Blum said. “The very first issue I bought which I still have was a Web of Spider-Man, No. 96. I think it was the Hobgoblin holding Spider-Man up, and I was hooked ever since then.”
Blum placed more than $100,000 worth of comics on the table. He’s hoping the entire collection will bring in big dollars to support his Sorghum United Foundation.
“We’re asking probably a little more than the collection is worth at $1.5 million because it’s a tax deduction but two because of the good work it’s going to allow us to do,” Blum said.
Blum said selling one set of comic books to continue spreading the word of the importance of feeding the hungry through another comic book is worth the sacrifice of his Spider-Man collection.
“How I look at it is if you are in a position to do something good, you can do something good and still take care of your family, do the things you need to do,” Blum said. “You are put in that position to do something good, you have a responsibility to do it.”
Blum is taking bids on his Spider-Man collection now. Serious bids only can be sent to nate@sorghumunited.org. Blum’s books are available on Amazon.