real Calculus comes before complex calculus. And when learning real calculus, the topics that will be especially useful in complex calculus are power series and path integration. It helps also to focus on the actual definition of the Riemann integral as approximated by sums. We have a bad tendency in real calculus of ignoring the actual meaning of the integral, and just reaching immediately for an antiderivative, i.e. relying too much on the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus. This only works because in real calculus we are always working on intervals, which are contractible sets. In complex calculus we do frequently work on contractible open sets like discs, but we also work on more complicated ones like punctured discs. In those sets, the FTC is often not available, i.e. antiderivatives often do not exist globally, (e.g. for 1/z in the punctured unit disc) and you have to rely on the actual definition of an integral, not just finding an antiderivative. Other topics that do not arise in real calculus focus on the geometry of sets in the plane and the extended plane, "conformal mappings". A key feature of complex analysis arising from the fact that all complex differentiable functions are "analytic", i.e. have local power series representations, is the principle of analytical continuation, i.e. that an analytic function is determined along any path just by its values near the initial point, and the open mapping principle, the image of an open set is always again open. So you must learn some topology, open sets, closed sets, and connectedness and simple connectedness. One bonus is that almost all books on complex analysis are good. The subject is so beautiful and coherent it is apparently hard to explain it badly. Churchill is a classic, my favorite beginner's book is Greenleaf, and favorite (but succinct) theoretical book is Cartan. Lang is also good. Well they are all pretty good, if in different ways. The last chapter of Courant's classic real calculus text, vol.2, is a brief but clear introduction to complex calculus.