Yea, and it's not just you. Having been born in 1960, I have never really felt like a Boomer either, given that most of the defining events of that generation (Howdy Doody, Woodstock, etc) happened before I was even a teenager. Hell, the Beatles had already broken up before I turned 10.
We have been called Generation Jones, Baby X, Boomerex, and Trailing-edge Boomers by the academics when discussing this phenomenon of being on the cusp.
I used to hang out on a place called The WeLL back in the '90s, which had a section called Lost, for the Lost Generation (1960-1965). I was born in 1963 so that worked for me. My sisters were born in 1964 and 1972 and my wife was born in 1968, and I really don't think we represented two different generations between us. For that matter, Douglas Coupland, writer of the novel Generation X that kicked off decades of generational navelgazing, professional voice of GenX for a few years, was born in 1961. So was one of my exes, come to think of it.
Anyway.
The 1970s were a time when we had to figure out a lot more on our own. As a military brat, I moved around as a kid, and as far as I can remember I never got to see Star Trek regularly until 1974. I'd seen at least one episode somewhere, read a Gold Key comic or two, and I got Mission to Horatius for, I think, Christmas 1971, along with the similar Whitman TV books for Rat Patrol, Hawaii Five-O, and a couple of others. I was a lot more excited about the first two at the time.
In 1972 we moved to a town with a really good used bookstore. At first I went for cheap used Hardy Boys books (35 cents instead of $1.44!), then discovered other Grosset & Dunlop series that were no longer being published, then I burned out on the kids' book section and looked at the SF section. Hey, Star Trek 3 by James Blish, I'll try that. Within a year or two I was caught up on Blish, found the first Alan Dean Foster Logs, got The World of Star Trek, The Trouble With Tribbles, Star Trek Lives!, The Making of Star Trek... there was no looking back. But there was a lot of looking around. I'd find out about those books by spending a lot of time in bookstores. No Internet, not even Starlog for the first few years.
Oh, on the subject of not having a lot of information about things... one of the Grosset & Dunlop series I bought at my favourite used bookstore was Tom Corbett, Space Cadet. It was several years before I discovered it was based on a TV series. And then I discovered there had also been a radio show, comic books, a newspaper comic strip.... It wasn't until the Internet era that I managed to get the one book I'd been missing (around 25 years after I bought the others).
It was harder to find the things we loved in the 1970s -- or even that they existed, until we saw them -- but that made the experience that much more special. (Fotonovels!? What are these? This is so cool!)
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