*Alan Class Reprints: For many years now, we’ve been scouring the personal archives of legendary publisher Alan Class (who is still very much with us) and with his full co-operation, releasing for sale sets of the original printing plates that were used to print the covers of his comics from 1959-1989. We have now reached the final phase of these plate set releases, which will last us into 2022. These sets are time-consuming to prepare, so our release schedule will be staggered. But the good news is that all the sets we have left are among the best, either featuring a classic Marvel comic reprint, or else a very early fantasy/mystery issue. So, this final phase represents your last opportunity to add one or more of these unique pieces to your collection. Each set comprises the lead printing plates used in the original comic’s colour printing, a copy of the comic printed with these plates and a signed certificate of authenticity signed by Alan Class himself. These are packaged in a special protective presentation case. Several sets (as noted) have additional historical artefacts such as colour proofs, interior page plates, printers’ photostats etc. (Please be aware that these weigh a lot and postage will be expensive. Also note that due to the onerous paperwork required for customs declarations following Brexit, we can no longer post these Plate Sets outside the UK.) Three new sets this week, details as follows:
SINISTER TALES #104 £70 Comic: GD/VG; Reprints Amazing Spider-Man #70 inc cover, ACG, Atlas.
Extra: Cover colour proof SOLD
SUSPENSE #60 £65 Comic: GD; Reprints Daredevil #8 by Wood inc cover, Atlas, 1 Chameleon, 1 Young King Cole, 1 Target SOLD
SUSPENSE #99 £75 Comic: VF; Reprints Avengers #60 (Hank & Jan wedding) inc. cover plus Daredevil #47, Charlton, Atlas. Extra: Colour cover proof SOLD
30CC
British Update: Early Super-Detective Libraries
*Boys’ Adventure & War Picture Libraries: Four issues from the first ten of the famous Super-Detective Library series, all in nice condition, featuring Harry Lime: the Third Man, a story by E. Phillips Oppenheim and two by Edgar Wallace. Great art from the early 1950s.
PICTURED: SUPER-DETECTIVE LIBRARY
#4 VG/FN £45 The Return Of the Third Man SOLD
#6 VG/FN £27.50 The Door With The 7 Locks SOLD
#7 VG £25 The Treasure House Of Martin Hews SOLD
#10 VG/FN £27.50 The Black Abbot
British Update: Love Story Library x 20
*Girls’ Picture Libraries: IPC/Fleetway’s Love Story Library (later Love Story Picture Library, to distinguish it from the numerous all-text series), featured picture strip romances for young women (and nostalgic housewives), frequently beautifully illustrated. It ran a respectable 1600+ issues between 1952 and 1976, and our latest additions are 20 newly listed between #275 & #322. From a newsagent’s unsold stock, these would grade FN if not for the pernicious staple rust of long term storage, which, although not harming the stories themselves, is a little heavy in places, bringing most of these down to a GD/VG grade, although a few very nice ones grade higher with little rust.
PICTURED: LOVE STORY LIBRARY #318 VG SOLD
Books Update: Six Of The Best: Sexton Blake Library
*Crime, Spies & Sleaze: Often dubbed ‘the poor man’s Sherlock Holmes’, there’s still no doubting the popularity of Sexton Blake, who has probably had far more fiction written of him than the world’s greatest detective. This week, we have added six digests from the famous Sexton Blake Library. These are picture library sized, but mainly text. The series ran from 1915 to 1968.
PICTURED: SEXTON BLAKE LIBRARY
#440 GD/VG £6 Fear Is My Shadow by Martin Thomas SOLD
#441 FA £3 No back cover; A Cold Night For Murder by Martin Thomas
#442 GD £5 Guilty Party by Rex Dolphin
#444 GD/VG £6 Desert Intrigue by James Stagg
#448 GD £5 Bred To Kill by Martin Thomas
#459 GD/VG £6 Date With Danger by Martin Thomas
Ho ho ho! Christmas & New Year Arrangements
We thought it Timely (if not Marvelous) to advise you of how we’re operating over the upcoming festive period.
To order in time for Christmas, UK orders must be placed by 4 pm on Saturday 11th December. As long as they’re paid for by 4 pm on Tuesday 14th December, they’ll be posted on Wednesday 15th December. Royal Mail advise that these should be delivered in time for Christmas. (Delivery times vary outside the UK, so we’re not giving dates for these.) After this, we won’t be posting again until Wednesday 29th December.
Our weekly Newsletters will continue up to and including 11th December, after which they’ll be taking a two week break, returning on Saturday 1st January. You can of course place an email order at any time, and we will fill your order and bill you to fit in with the above postage dates.
We shall be using the time to catch up with the assessment of several collections that are awaiting valuation, so that when the Newsletter returns on 1st January, it should feature bumper updates going forward.
American Update: DC Debuts: 1st DC Captain Marvel in Shazam #1 – Double Cover issue
*DC: For many years largely overlooked by collectors, the 1973 Shazam! series – DC’s reboot of the original Captain Marvel, who was put out of business by a protracted lawsuit from DC in the ’50s – has had mixed success in its publication history, but was given a shot in the arm by the recent fun movie. In 1973 C.C. Beck, co-creator of Fawcett Comics’ Captain Marvel, teamed up with contemporary writers to produce new stories of ‘The Big Red Cheese’. Beck was followed by other distinguished artists such as Kurt Schaffenberger and Bob Oksner, creating lighter, friendlier but imaginative adventures. This copy of Captain Marvel’s DC debut is characterised by a rare double cover i.e. a comic which has had two covers attached to it in the production process, normally, as here, resulting in the outer cover bearing the brunt of the wear while the inner retains a great look. Outer cover edge wear and creasing; inner cover minor wear and creasing, with great gloss. Nice clean pages.
PICTURED: SHAZAM #1 VG- (outer) VF- (inner) £60 SOLD
American Update: Batmania: Batman #1 reprinted in Tabloid Famous First Edition 1975
*DC: In the mid-1970s, DC reprinted some of their most famous and iconic comics of yesterday in Tabloid size form under the heading ‘Famous First Edition’. F5 of that series featured a facsimile reprint of Batman #1 from Spring 1940, the famous landmark issue that also included the first appearances of the Joker and Catwoman. This copy is a little grubby with some edge wear, particularly at upper right corner, but it’s a snip of a price for such an historic item.
PICTURED: FAMOUS FIRST EDITION #F5 GD/VG £20 SOLD
American Update: The Good Doctor Collection/Mighty Marvel Firsts: Daredevil #1 1964
*Marvel: It’s been nearly three years since a copy of Daredevil #1 has graced our catalogue, so we’re particularly pleased to unveil the Good Doctor copy of the sightless swashbuckler’s debut this week as the first of the fourth title in this collection to be released. After the successes of the Fantastic Four and Spider-Man, Stan Lee enlisted his old colleague, Bill Everett, to co-create this acrobatic avenger of the streets. Sporting a yellow and red costume intended to evoke the jester-style livery of the 1940s Daredevil, young Matt Murdock lost his sight but gained phenomenal sensory powers to compensate, using them and his athletic skills to avenge the murder of his father… and the rest was history. This very nice cents copy has great cover colour and gloss, firm tight staples and decent off-white/light tan pages. Edge wear is minor, the worst of it being a 3 cm lower spine split. There is a tiny impact mark between the ‘E’ and ‘D’ of the logo and small graffiti on the faces of Matt Murdock and Foggy Nelson in the lower right cover panel, but no other cover markings, with a clean white background. A good-looking copy. High resolution images are available on request.
PICTURED: DAREDEVIL #1 VG £3,600 SOLD
American Update: The Good Doctor Collection/Spider-Mania: Amazing #7 with the Return of the Vulture
*Marvel: It’s not often in these modern times that a single digit numbered issue of Amazing Spider-Man turns up less than £300, but here’s one come along from the Good Doctor Collection right now. Amazing Spider-Man #7 features the return of the Vulture, one of Spidey’s earliest foes. This cents copy has plenty of flaws: spine roll, a loose centrefold, a small biro figure ‘6’ on the cover by the Vulture’s head, long vertical colour breaking cover crease and lots of similar smaller ones, edge wear and worn spine, ragged right edge pages, back cover tears and a small front cover tear bottom right; the most significant defect is a jagged finger-size section missing from the bottom of the spine (see scan). For all that, it is otherwise complete, the colours are good and the page quality acceptable. Certainly a great gap-filler for the budget conscious.
PICTURED: AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #7 GD- £260
American Update: The Good Doctor Collection: Every Issue of Avengers from #126 to #150
*Marvel: We conclude this week’s visit to the Good Doctor Collection with a long run of Avengers, complete from #126 to #150. A popular and in-demand period, originally not distributed in the UK, including the debut of Hellcat in #144. Full details as always in our catalogue. More from the Good Doctor next week!
PICTURED: AVENGERS #144 FN/VF £50
American Update: Spider-Mania/Slab Happy: Spidey Double-Header in 9.8
*Marvel: We don’t see CGC 9.8 grades too often in vintage comics, so it’s really a nice coup to have Amazing Spider-Man #192 & #193 new into stock this week, both in this NM/M grade. Both are unrestored blue labels, with undamaged cases. #192 has Off-White to White Pages, #193 White Pages. It’s a two-part story featuring Professor Smythe and The Fly.
PICTURED: AMAZING SPIDER-MAN BOTH SOLD
#192 CGC 9.8 NM/M £105
#193 CGC 9.8 NM/M £140
American Update: Pre-Code Horror Fest from ACG: Adventures Into The Unknown and Forbidden Worlds
*Horror 1940-1959: With Adventures Into The Unknown, the publisher ACG produced the first ongoing horror comic from 1948, followed by Forbidden Worlds in 1951. Whilst not exactly overlooked, these titles are perhaps not as infamous as some of the output of later publishers, although its tales of vampires, werewolves, zombies, mummies and other monsters are every bit as gruesome as some of their famous competitors, and the art standards are more than competent. Three nice mid-grade examples for your consideration this week:
PICTURED:
ADVENTURES INTO THE UNKNOWN #13 VG/FN £80 Pre-code
ADVENTURES INTO THE UNKNOWN #25 VG- £48 Pre-code; staples loose on back cover SOLD
FORBIDDEN WORLDS #18 VG+ £59 Pre-code.
British Update: John Wayne is Big Leggy
*Vintage UK/Australian Reprints of US Material: Around about three decades before Haysi Fantayzee’s ‘homage’, John Wayne was knocking ’em dead in the US with his own title from Toby Press, reprinted here in the UK by World Distributors. Always a popular series for Western buffs, we have three early black and white reprints new in this week, all in nice shape: #2, #3 & #5. See our catalogue for details.
PICTURED: JOHN WAYNE #2 VG £12
British Update: It’s jolly old Captain Britain (1st series)
*Marvel UK: Marvel UK’s unprecedented and experimental attempt to broaden their readership by generating a new British hero, Captain Britain, was the subject of much controversy, not least because he was created by two Americans (Chris Claremont and Herb Trimpe) who, from the evidence presented here, had never met an English person, and whose interpretation of the UK’s manners and mores made the Austin Powers films look like documentaries. Be that as it may, the character endured to become a respected icon of the medium, and these issues are now attracting keen collector attention. Many issues of the first series new in this week, between #3 and #39, the final issue inc #19 (1st Lance Hunter, aka ‘Mr. Mockingbird’ from Marvel’s ‘Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.’ television series) several guest shots from Captain America and the 2nd Betsy Braddock appearance in #9.
British Update: Lion 1953 3rd Quarter Jul-Sep
*Boys’ Adventure & War Comics: This week, all 13 issues of Lion, the ‘King Of Picture Story Papers’ from the third quarter of 1953. From an original owner collection, these average a nice uniform VG at £5 each, with one or two higher or lower. The inevitable rusty staples are not too much in evidence with only minimal bleed. As Lion succinctly put it in one of their straplines: ‘School, War, Detective & Adventure Picture Stories.’ See our catalogue for full details.
Newsletter Update
Due to unforeseen circumstances involving illness, we won’t be listing any new stock this week, but expect to have stock updates to this page again on Saturday 27th November, which will be featured in our newsletter on that date.
Orders may still be placed from our catalogue at any time, and those received by 4 pm on Saturday 20th November will be filled as usual on Sunday and despatched as ususal next Wednesday.
Ho ho ho! Christmas & New Year Arrangements
We thought it Timely (if not Marvelous) to advise you of how we’re operating over the upcoming festive period.
To order in time for Christmas, UK orders must be placed by 4 pm on Saturday 11th December. As long as they’re paid for by 4 pm on Tuesday 14th December, they’ll be posted on Wednesday 15th December. Royal Mail advise that these should be delivered in time for Christmas. (Delivery times vary outside the UK, so we’re not giving dates for these.) After this, we won’t be posting again until Wednesday 29th December.
Our weekly Newsletters will continue up to and including 11th December, after which they’ll be taking a two week break, returning on Saturday 1st January. You can of course place an email order at any time, and we will fill your order and bill you to fit in with the above postage dates.
We shall be using the time to catch up with the assessment of several collections that are awaiting valuation, so that when the Newsletter returns on 1st January, it should feature bumper updates going forward.
American Update: 1st Superman/Flash Race in Superman #199 plus Free 2nd Race Bonus
*DC: Well, in my school playground, the burning question was ‘who was stronger, the Hulk or the Thing?’, but, being a little more cerebral, the question of ‘who was the Fastest Man Alive, Superman or the Flash?’ was somewhat more to my taste. Jim Shooter and Curt Swan attempted to answer that in Superman #199 beneath a fabulous Carmine Infantino/Murphy Anderson cover. What was the outcome? Well, no spoliers here – suffice it to say this story spawned several sequels, the first being in Flash #175. Alongside this serviceable copy of Superman #199 we’re throwing in a copy of Flash #175 absolutely free (quite frankly, it’s a pretty water-stained and damaged copy which isn’t really good enough to sell, but is complete). Superman #199, pence printed, has spine and edge wear and handling wear with some colour-breaking creases (long one across top right cover). Centrefold loose at bottom staple and small label removal scuff over Comics Code box. Some stain marking to edges and rear cover.
PICTURED: SUPERMAN #199 GD p £50 (with free Flash #175) SOLD
American Update: House Of Mystery Tabloid: Limited Collectors’ Edition C23
*DC: The House Of Mystery entry into DC’s tabloid range is a wonderful package; not only do you get seven superb stories by the very best of 1940s horror artists: Neal Adams, Bernie Wrightson, Gil Kane, Alex Toth, Jack Sparling and Segio Aragones (!), with their art on wonderful display in this tabloid size, but it’s also chock-full of games, cartoons, a 3D mystery cut-out, features and pin-ups. This GD/VG copy has some spine wear and stress marks (black background), colour-breaking creases in the corners of both front and back covers, and some tanning on the inside covers, but we’ve seen worse… An uncommon item.
PICTURED: LIMITED COLLECTORS’ EDITION C23 GD/VG £20 SOLD
American Update: DC Debuts: It’s A Jungle Out There: Rima the Jungle Girl complete series
*DC: Although the jungle girl series was at its peak in the 1940s and 50s, there was a mini-revival in the 1970s. Over at Marvel they had Shanna the She-Devil, and DC contributed Rima the Jungle Girl, who was different in that she was a denizen of the South America jungle (fortunately, they must have had a good hairdresser there as well…). With gorgeous covers from Joe Kubert and fabulous interior art by Nestor Redondo over Kubert’s layouts, this fine series deserved longer than its seven issue run. But you can now check that out for yourself since we have all seven issues fresh into stock, nearly all in NM or close grade. All as listed in our catalogue.
PICTURED: RIMA THE JUNGLE GIRL #1 NM £23 SOLD
American Update: Mighty Marvel Firsts: Debut of Phoenix in X-Men #101
*Marvel: The Claremont & Cockrum New X-Men was already a critical hit when #101 turned up, and in a dramatic turn of events, Jean Grey, former weak sister of the team, was elevated into a powerhouse when a cosmic ray storm seemed to transform her into the entity known as Phoenix – and a major, ultimately tragic, story arc for the X-Men began. The legend was somewhat tarnished in later years by Marvel’s back & forth position on whether Jean actually was the Phoenix, or whether the Phoenix force just manifested itself in her form (with a swingin’ new costume), but nevertheless, this remains a key and highly sought after issue. An outstanding copy of this key issue new in this week in very high grade. Pence printed, flat, tight, glossy, vibrant, supple, and all those other adjectives applicable to the best quality. Square corners, white pages, firm staples. There are just the very slightest stress marks at the spine (just a couple) and a tiny crease mark at the bottom right corner which just stopped us awarding an even higher grade. High resolution images are available on request.
X-MEN #101 VF+ p £600
American Update: The Good Doctor Collection: Avengers #2 & #3
*Marvel: Two gems from the Good Doctor Avengers selection lead our foray into his treasure trove this week. Avengers #2 pits our heroes up against the Space Phantom, is the issue where the Hulk cuts out (he didn’t hang around long!) and presents Hank Pym for the first time in his Giant-Man guise in the title. In #3, the Hulk returns (that was quick!), but this time an an ally of the Sub-Mariner and an adversary of the assemblers. Early issues of key Marvel titles are getting harder and harder to get at affordable prices, but here are two such examples within relatively easy financial reach.
PICTURED: AVENGERS
#2 VG p £280 Pence printed, great cover scene with bright colours, tarnished only by a very small tear at mid-spine around Giant-Man’s elbow, and a similar sized tear near Thor’s Hammer hand with no loss. 1 cm split at bottom spine. Staples tight and firm, decent pages, only slight blunting at corners. The back cover has a ragged corner off the top which looks like it was caused by some type of moisture damage from which there are stains but no rippling. A copy that presents well. SOLD
#3 GD p £140 Pence printed, a worn copy with lots of small colour-breaking creases at edges; some page edges are ragged due to several centre wraps being loose from staples, but an honest copy with no cover markings. SOLD
American Update: The Good Doctor Collection/Mighty Marvel Firsts: Debut and Origin of Him (later Warlock) in Fantastic Four #66 & #67
*Marvel: As befits its status as the premier series of the Marvel Universe, the Fantastic Four has launched many secondary careers of the FF’s foes and friends who first appeared as guest-stars, then graduated to their own series. The Silver Surfer, the Inhumans, the Black Panther and many others have debuted this way, and in Fantastic Four #66 & #67, we were introduced to a mysterious cocooned figure who emerged the following issue as ‘Him’, a being of almost godlike power. Later, he would be named Warlock and would enjoy a chequered career of critical acclaim, but haphazard commercial success, coming into his own with Jim Starlin’s controversial series of the 1970s. Adam Warlock is scheduled to appear in the Guardians Of The Galaxy 3 movie in 2023. These two issues see the first appearance of the character, though he was not fully revealed until the second half of the two-part story.
PICTURED: FANTASTIC FOUR
#66 GD/VG £40 An okay copy with a fair bit of spine and edge wear, including colour-breaking creases. There is a biro squiggle over the ‘F’ in Fantastic and a 2 cm tear to the right edge without loss. Staples are attached, but are not tight; some tanning to page edges. SOLD
#67 VG- £130 A sturdy and supple copy with some colour-breaking creases across cover corners; other wear is minimal. Nice cover colour and gloss; good pages with tight, firm staples. SOLD
American Update: The Good Doctor Collection/Spider-Mania: Every Issue of Amazing from #240-251
*Marvel: We wrap up this week’s Good Doctor releases with another run of high grade Amazing Spider-Man, running from #240-251, many NM copies. Dominated by Spidey’s new bête noir, the Hobgoblin, this run also features the Vulture, the Mad Thinker and his Awesome Android and the Kingpin, as well as a poignant tale in #248’s ‘The Kid Who Collects Spider-Man’. Several issues shown below:
AMAZING SPIDER-MAN
#248 NM £44
#249 NM- £40
#250 NM £60
#251 NM- £47
American Update: Slab Happy: Wolverine #1-4 Complete 1982 Mini-Series by Claremont & Miller
*Marvel: A 30th Century first this week. We’ve had the complete Wolverine 1982 mini for sale as a set before, but we’ve never yet sold a complete slabbed set of anything. Here it is! Perhaps surprisingly, Wolverine had been around quite few years before he starred in his own title. (Even after this 1982 mini-series, it would be a further 6 years before Logan got his own ongoing solo title). You can’t say that Marvel were milking the character’s popularity – a phrase I thought I’d never write. But they did pull out all the stops with this mini, combining X-Men scribe Chris Claremont with super-star artist Frank Miller in this tale of the Yakuza and Wolverine’s doomed love Mariko Yashida. All fours issues are presented here as a set, all CGC graded, unrestored blue label, white pages, perfect cases. #1 and #4 are 8.0 (VF); #2 and #3 are 7.5 (VF-). A great opportunity to add a prestigious series to your collection.
PICTURED: WOLVERINE (1982) COMPLETE SET 1-4 £255 (NB sold as set only) SOLD
#1 8.0 VF
#2 7.5 VF-
#3 7.5 VF-
#4 8.0 VF
American Update: Mighty Marvel Firsts: 1st full Taskmaster app. in Avengers #196
*Marvel: The polymath skill-pilferer the Taskmaster has proved one of the more popular characters from the later 20th Century Marvel Universe, achieving the status of reluctant anti-hero through nuanced and well-written stints in the series Avengers: The Initiative and Avengers Academy. Having made a menacing last page cameo in the preceding issue, #196 is the Taskmaster’s first full appearance. This superior pence printed copy is glossy and supple with white pages and tight firm staples. Slight handling wear at the spine and edges keeps the grade from being really high, but there are no colour breaks in the vivid cover image and this copy presents very well.
PICTURED: AVENGERS #196 FN/VF p £70 SOLD
American Update: Mighty Marvel Firsts: Tales Of Suspense inc. Debut of Modok
*Marvel: A small update to Tales Of Suspense this week between #51 (1st Scarecrow) and #95 in a mixture of grades. Most of these issues are shared between Iron Man and Captain America. Included is #94, the first appearance of the ever-popular Modok, and a couple of Cap’s WW2-set adventures before he moved into a contemporary setting.
PICTURED: TALES OF SUSPENSE #94 GD+ £40 1st Modok; a decent enough copy marred by a small scuff near the Comics Code Box and a couple of small and mostly unobtrusive stains on the cover. SOLD
American Update: Panic & Frontline Combat from EC
*EC: A small update to two very different EC titles this week. Panic is a satirical treat in the (varicose) vein of Mad; Frontline Combat features gritty stories of conflict and combat. Low grade copies now listed: Panic #6 FA/GD £17, Panic #7 FA+ £15, Frontline Combat #15 GD £20. The same top-notch creators as across the EC line.
American Update: Atlas Seaboard titles with a raft of #1 issues
*Miscellaneous 1960 Onwards: A chunky top-up to our stock of Atlas Seaboard comics published in 1975. In the 1980s and 1990s, new universes were quite commonplace (Valiant, Ultraverse, Defiant etc), but back in 1975 a whole new comic group launch competing with DC & Marvel was quite a bold and innovative move. Sadly, this project helmed by Marvel’s founder Martin Goodman was doomed to failure, and none of the 28 comic and magazine titles lasted more than 4 issues, despite having stellar names involved such as Wood, Ditko, Chaykin, Adams, Heath, Severin, Toth and more. A nice selection of Atlas Seaboard titles new in this week, including the Destructor, the Grim Ghost, Morlock 2001, Phoenix, Planet Of Vampires and Weird Suspense (featuring the Tarantula), many #1 issues among them. See our catalogue for our full listings of all our Atlas Seaboard stock.
PICTURED:
GRIM GHOST #1 FN+ p £6
PLANET OF VAMPIRES #1 VF p £11.75
British Update: Wham! 1966 with Fireworks and Christmas issues
*Power Comics: More this week from our original owner Odhams Press Power Comics collection. Launched as a frank Beano imitator in 1964 by Leo Baxendale (who had himself defected from Beano that same year), Wham! evolved into a fine mix of home-grown humour and adventure strips, together with reprints of popular American Marvel heroes. This update features issues from October – December 1966 #120-133, includig the Fireworks issues and TWO Christmas issues (yes, they had two separate Christmas issues that year!) dated 24th and 31st December. Includes Fantastic Four reprints from #3 upwards. Full details in our catalogue.
PICTURED: WHAM ALL SOLD
#125 VG £9 Fireworks issue
#132 GD £9 1st Christmas issue
#133 GD/VG £10.50 2nd Christmas issue
British Update: Modesty Blaise and Rogue Trooper from Titan
*Collected Editions: Strange bedfellows from Titan publishing this week. Top Traitor, the third volume in Titan’s most recent complete publication of Modesty Blaise’s adventures from the London Evening Standard is long out of print and difficult to get; here in a lovely copy with very little sign of wear. Stalwart of 2000 AD, Rogue Trooper is here in Book One of his adventures, the first Titan edition collection from 1986 with a couple of creases to front and back covers, but still very nice.
PICTURED:
MODESTY BLIASE: TOP TRAITOR VF £25 SOLD
ROGUE TROOPER BOOK ONE: FN £10 SOLD
British Update: Combat Picture Library
*Boys’ Adventure & War Picture Libraries: A large update this week to Micron’s Combat Picture Library, several dozen issues ranging from #544 to #792, from the early to mid-1970s. These are from a newsagent’s uncirculated stock, have never been read, and mostly come in at a high grade VF condition.
British Update: Free Gift Farrago: Mandy from 1974/75
*Girls’ Comics: Two Free Gift issues of Mandy this week with a difference. Both #396 (1974) and #439 (1975) promised a lucky dip of Free Gift, each with one possibility of several enclosed. I’m sure there’s a lot of you out there anxious to collect all the various gifts, so just for you, I’ll specify that #396 appears to have a ring (it’s still in its sealed envelope, but that’s what if feels like), whereas #439 has a Zodiac Medallion (also in its sealed envelope, but we’re fairly sure of that since it can be seen through the envelope a bit). Both comics are FN, both gifts at least VF.
PICTURED: MANDY
#396 FN WITH FREE GIFT VF £35 SOLD
#439 FN WITH FREE GIFT VF £35 SOLD
Books Update: The Well At The World’s End by William Morris
*Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror: Two books in the famous Pan Ballantine Adult Fantasy series this week, although it’s really one long novel divided into two volumes. William Morris was a bit of a Victorian Renaissance Man; although probably best remembered today for his designs, he had fingers in many other pies too, and it’s his skills as a novelist that concern us here. In his introduction, series editor Lin Carter makes the case for Morris to be considered the founder of heroic fantasy novels, and cites this as his best. The Well At The World’s End is a classic quest novel with the young hero making his way in a strange and unknown world learning and growing as he goes.
PICTURED: by William Morris BOTH SOLD
THE WELL AT THE WORLD’S END VOL 1 2nd UK PB 1973 VG/FN £6
THE WELL AT THE WORLD’S END VOL 2 1st UK PB 1971 VG £6 Some cover creasing
Ho ho ho! Christmas & New Year Arrangements
We thought it Timely (if not Marvelous) to advise you of how we’re operating over the upcoming festive period.
To order in time for Christmas, UK orders must be placed by 4 pm on Saturday 11th December. As long as they’re paid for by 4 pm on Tuesday 14th December, they’ll be posted on Wednesday 15th December. Royal Mail advise that these should be delivered in time for Christmas. (Delivery times vary outside the UK, so we’re not giving dates for these.) After this, we won’t be posting again until Wednesday 29th December.
Our weekly Newsletters will continue up to and including 11th December, after which they’ll be taking a two week break, returning on Saturday 1st January. You can of course place an email order at any time, and we will fill your order and bill you to fit in with the above postage dates.
We shall be using the time to catch up with the assessment of several collections that are awaiting valuation, so that when the Newsletter returns on 1st January, it should feature bumper updates going forward.
American Update: Batmania/DC Debuts: 1st Silver Age Catwoman in Lois Lane #70
*DC: In 1966, with Batmania sweeping America, the Batman TV show was in full swing and it seemed you couldn’t pick up a DC comic without Batman being involved. Even here, in Lois Lane #70, the Caped Crusader and Robin make an appearance, but the show is stolen by one of his most famous foes, Catwoman, making her first entrance into the Silver Age of Comics. For good measure there’s also the Penguin and plenty of Superman too (natch!) in this book-length tale of villainy, crime, magic and impersonation. All beautifully rendered at the hands of Kurt Schaffenberger, who knew how to tell a story! A lower graded pence stamped copy, retaining good cover colour and gloss, but a bit grubby with blunt corners, a very small upper spine split and some colour-breaking creases to the right edge. Staples and pages are okay. Someone has biro’d in three of the white squares in the DC Checker heading.
PICTURED: LOIS LANE #70 GD- p £115 SOLD
American Update: Undersea Adventure with the Sea Devils
*DC: I have a soft spot for this series, inasmuch as it’s one of many that featured the classic quartet line-up of scientist/leader, his strong best friend, his girl and her kid brother. Here, Dane, Biff, Judy & Nicky were engaged in undersea adventures at the hands of Robert Kanigher (writer) and Russ Heath (artist). The Sea Devils had undersea adventures for three issues of Showcase and 35 of their own series. I think they may have stumbled across more lost civilizations than Tarzan did in Africa (and that’s going some!), and a monster lurked within every coral reef. Their early adventures were often mind-warpingly wild as was the case with a lot of ‘Barking’ Bob Kanigher’s output, and the art by Russ Heath was superlative (you could really believe these adventures were happening underwater). Later, after the departures of the creators, subsequent hands provided more ordinary fare, though competently done for the most part. A selection of issues by Russ Heath and later artists between #2 and #21 added to our catalogue this week.
PICTURED: SEA DEVILS #2 GD/VG p £30 SOLD
American Update: Superman Vs Spider-Man – Ground-Breaking Tabloid Crossover from 1976
*DC/Marvel: In 1976, after some delicate negotiations, the two major publishers decided to pool their talents and create a team-up between their two iconic characters which proved too big for a regular-sized comic – so the tabloid-sized format, as seen in Marvel’s Treasury Editions and DC’s Limited Collectors’ Editions, was co-opted for this epic event! While Wizard of Oz is technically the first Marvel/DC co-production, that’s really just DC piggybacking onto a project Marvel had already produced, to avoid litigation (long story, Google it if you’re bothered). This was the first true collaboration between the titans of the comics industry, and it’s a tribute to the organisation involved that Superman and Spider-Man (as well as guest villains Lex Luthor and Doctor Octopus) are note perfect in this mega-sized saga. This pence printed copy is for the budget conscious; structurally sound with a good spine, it is overall a little grubby, with some long colour-breaking creases near the right cover edge and a little finger-sized scuff mark/water stain towards the bottom of that edge. Staples are good and inside pages just a little tanned at the edges.
PICTURED: SUPERMAN VS THE AMAZING SPIDER-MAN GD+ p £35 SOLD
American Update: The Good Doctor Collection/Mighty Marvel Firsts: Debuts of Silver Surfer and Galactus in Fantastic Four #48
*Marvel: One of the most sought-after Marvel Comics of the 1960s is Fantastic Four #48, which introduced the Silver Surfer, a cosmic-powered being the equal of the combined FF… and the Surfer’s master, Galactus, an entity of even more monstrous might! Both became major figures in the Marvel Universe, with the Surfer repenting his role as Galactus’ herald and choosing the side of justice, while Galactus’ insatiable hunger drives him ever onwards to more heinous acts. This Good Doctor Collection copy is pence printed and in beautiful condition, with vibrant colour cover and a totally unmarked cover scene. Corners are fairly sharp, and staples firmly attached at spine and centrefold. Wear is minimal, mostly restricted to the top edge, but very narrow. There are small handling marks at top corners resulting in tiny creases. Pages are a lovely white to off-white, nearer the white end of that scale. Covers and pages are both beautifully supple and fresh. Just to the right of the Fantastic Four logo there is a soft, barely discernable crease of about 4 cm, with just a hint of a colour break. An iconic Silver Age comic in fabulous condition, which would be a high point of many a collection. High resolution images are available on request.
PICTURED: FANTASTIC FOUR #48 FN/VF p £3,750
American Update: The Good Doctor Collection/Spider-Mania/Mighty Marvel Firsts: Debut of Black Cat in Amazing #194-195
*Marvel: Many folks say – with justification – that Felicia Hardy, the Black Cat, was a Suspiciously Similar Substitute for DC’s Catwoman, created to give Spider-Man a ‘beloved enemy’ vibe and increase the romantic tension in the series. Probably true; but nevertheless, the Black Cat rapidly stepped away from her derivative roots, primarily owing to her low level probability manipulation – subconsciously causing ‘bad luck’ for people who opposed her – and the fact that although she’s frequently done heroic and noble things, she’s never completely shed her criminal ways. These copies of the Black Cat’s debut in Amazing Spider-Man #194 & #195 come from the non-distributed ‘wilderness years’, so there are no pence variants of this issue. #194 is VF, with just the odd spine stress mark and tiny top right corner dink (no colour breaks) precluding an even higher grade. #195 is a sharp NM copy, with just the very tiniest signs of handling wear.
PICTURED: AMAZING SPIDER-MAN BOTH SOLD
#194 VF £295
#195 NM £85
American Update: The Good Doctor Collection: Every Issue of Avengers from #101 to #125
*Marvel: We conclude this week’s visit to the Good Doctor Collection with a long run of Avengers, complete from #101 to #125. Many famous storylines included in this period, involving the Grim Reaper, the Sentinels, Magneto and the X-Men, the debut of Mantis in #112, the Avengers/Defenders War, the Collector, Zodiac and an appearance by Thanos in #125. Full details as always in our catalogue. More from the Good Doctor next week!
PICTURED: AVENGERS #112 FN- p £40 1st Mantis
American Update: Silver Surfer #1 1968
*Marvel: Following his debut in Fantastic Four #48, Norrin Radd, Herald of Galactus, gained popularity as a recurring guest star, and his status was confirmed when Marvel launched the Silver Surfer’s own series in the double-sized format in 1968. This premier issue featured, for the first time, John Buscema’s illustrations on the Surfer, a body of work generally acknowledged to be among his finest, and presented also for the first time a 38 page account of the Surfer’s origins, plus (in the back) a 13 page tale of the Watcher, detailing the reasons behind the Watcher’s oath of non-interference. The first run of the Surfer’s solo series has achieved cult status, with the first seven double-sized issues in particular being keenly sought out. This copy of #1 is a lowish FA/GD grade, a cents copy without pence stamp, with a decent, strong cover image. The spine is split down to the upper staple and again at the bottom, although it is attached to the first page, the first four leaves being separated from the staples on this glued squarebound (i.e. the spine was glued as printed, with the staples holding the pages within). Other than that there is minor creasing at edges, a few breaking colour along the right edge. All things considered, it holds together well, and presents nicely with good eye appeal.
PICTURED: SILVER SURFER #1 FA/GD £275
American Update: Slab Happy/Spider-Mania: Amazing Spider-Man #160 9.6
*Marvel: A lovely CGC 9.6 (NM+) copy of Amazing Spider-Man #160 for your consideration this week. CGC Universal grade, unrestored, with a perfect case and white pages. Featuring the re-appearance of one of Spidey’s earliest foes, the Terrible Tinkerer, and, as far as I can remember, the only cover appearance of the short-lived Spider-Mobile.
PICTURED: AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #160 CGC 9.6 NM+ £70 SOLD
American Update: Strange Tales #136-150: Nick Fury before Steranko, End of Ditko on Dr. Strange
*Marvel: A selection of Strange Tales this week between #136-150, featuring Nick Fury, Agent of SHIELD from his second story onwards, in a period before Jim Steranko took over with his defining run, but featuring sterling work from Stan and Jack and others, as well as the culmination of Steve Ditko’s long run on Dr. Strange (he finished with #146), including the debut of Eternity in #138. Mostly cheap and cheerful reading copies, but packed full of entertainment. See our catalogue for full details.
American Update: Pre-Code Horror Fest: Atlas’s Adventures Into Weird Worlds
*Horror 1940-1959: Atlas certainly provided a high standard of work in their horror fare, nowhere more so than in Adventures Into Weird Worlds, which ran for 30 issues from 1952-1954, and was rich in the depiction of the genre by many fine artists. Three issues new in this week to tempt you:
PICTURED: ADVENTURES INTO WEIRD WORLDS
#6 FA+ £45 Pre-code; covers detached, spine and edge tears with small chips out, staples firm at centrefold, nice pages.
#16 GD/VG £73 Pre-code; reading and edge wear not too bad at all; tiny unobtrusive cover scuff; staples attached at cover and centrefold, nice pages.
#17 GD+ £62 Pre-code; spine fairly worn and a little weak; edge and corner wear with the odd small tear and crease; staples attached at cover and centrefold, nice pages.
American Update: Warren’s Creepy #1-10
*Vintage Magazine-Sized Comics: This week the first ten issues of Creepy, Warren’s famous black and white horror magazine of the 1960s-1980s. The roster of artists recruited for this extravaganza reads like a Who’s Who of the best horror artists of the time: Frazetta, Adams, Jones, Brunner, Ploog, Corben, Wrightson, Ditko, Wood, Toth etc. Every issue available from #1-10 in a mix of grades (#1 is only Fair, with covers detached and separated), but many in superior condition.
PICTURED: CREEPY
#2 FN/VF £43 Frazetta cover and art
#9 VF+ £66 Fan club sketch by Wrightson (1st published art); Frazetta cover and art; Ditko, Wood, Toth.
British Update: Alan Class Plate Sets Final Phase: Spider-Man, Nick Fury, Thor, Human Torch, Kirby, Ditko, Steranko, Wood
*Alan Class Reprints: For many years now, we’ve been scouring the personal archives of legendary publisher Alan Class (who is still very much with us) and with his full co-operation, releasing for sale sets of the original printing plates that were used to print the covers of his comics from 1959-1989. We have now reached the final phase of these plate set releases, which will last us into 2022. These sets are time-consuming to prepare, so our release schedule will be staggered. But the good news is that all the sets we have left are among the best, either featuring a classic Marvel comic reprint, or else a very early fantasy/mystery issue. So, this final phase represents your last opportunity to add one or more of these unique pieces to your collection. Each set comprises the lead printing plates used in the original comic’s colour printing, a copy of the comic printed with these plates and a signed certificate of authenticity signed by Alan Class himself. These are packaged in a special protective presentation case. Several sets (as noted) have additional historical artefacts such as colour proofs, interior page plates, printers’ photostats etc. (Please be aware that these weigh a lot and postage will be expensive. Also note that due to the onerous paperwork required for customs declarations following Brexit, we can no longer post these Plate Sets outside the UK.) Three new sets this week, details as follows:
SINISTER TALES #98 £65 Comic: GD (covers cleanly detached); Reprints Amazing Spider-Man #63 inc cover, Charlton, ACG. Atlas. SOLD
SUSPENSE #94 £95 Comic: FN+; Reprints Nick Fury, Agent of SHIELD #4 inc Steranko cover, Human Torch story from Strange Tales #102 (1st Wizard by Kirby), pre-hero Marvel (1 Ditko), 1 Web, Atlas. Extra: 1 interior plate (SHIELD splash) SOLD
UNCANNY TALES #26 £85 Comic: FA/GD (Cover partially detached); Reprints Thor Story with Loki from Journey Into Mystery #96 inc Kirby cover, Daredevil #6 by Wood, pre-hero Marvel , Atlas, 1 Ditko, Charlton, 1 Williamson. Extra: 2 interior plates inc Thor splash and Daredevil page by Wood SOLD
British Update: Lion 1953 2nd Quarter Apr-Jun
*Boys’ Adventure & War Comics: This week, all 13 issues of Lion, the ‘King Of Picture Story Papers’ from the second quarter of 1953. From an original owner collection, these average a nice uniform VG at £5 each, with one or two higher or lower. The inevitable rusty staples are not too much in evidence with only minimal bleed. As Lion succinctly put it in one of their straplines: ‘School, War, Detective & Adventure Picture Stories.’ See our catalogue for full details.
British Update: A Miscellany of Boys’ Picture Libraries inc War At Sea #1
*Boys’ Adventure & War Picture Libraries: A sprinkling of different titles in this popular category this week, including Cowboy Comics/Picture library (#75, our earliest in stock), Pearson’s Picture Stories of World War II (#26), Private Eye Picture Stories also from Pearson’s (illustrated below), War Picture Library #5, War Picture Library Special Extra (1969, our earliest) and War At Sea (several issues including a low grade #1).
PICTURED: PRIVATE EYE PICTURE STORIES #15 VG £5 SOLD
British Update: Love Story Library x 20
*Girls’ Picture Libraries: IPC/Fleetway’s Love Story Library (later Love Story Picture Library, to distinguish it from the numerous all-text series), featured picture strip romances for young women (and nostalgic housewives), frequently beautifully illustrated. It ran a respectable 1600+ issues between 1952 and 1976, and our latest additions are all in the two hundreds, 20 newly listed between #251 & #274. While copyright dates were not a legal requirement back then, we estimate these to date from the late 1950s. From a newsagent’s unsold stock, these would grade FN if not for the pernicious staple rust of long term storage, which, although not harming the stories themselves, is a little heavy in places, bringing most of these down to a GD/VG grade.
PICTURED: LOVE STORY LIBRARY #262 GD/VG £4.50