*Marvel: From the Good Doctor Collection this week, three classic issues of Journey Into Mystery with Thor; all are nice clean mid-grade issues. Listed in our catalogue under ‘J’.
PICTURED: JOURNEY INTO MYSTERY
#105 VG+ p £48 Pence printed. The Cobra and Mr Hyde. Bright copy with just minor edge wear. Beautiful unmarked and unspoilt cover.
#106 VG- p £33 Pence printed. The Cobra and Mr Hyde. Small amount of edge wear and corner blunting. Name in ink on ‘Mystery’ in logo. SOLD
#108 VG p £42 Pence printed. Loki and Dr Strange. Minor edge and handling wear. Tiny bit of rust on top staple. Beautiful unmaerked and unspoilt cover.
Category Archives: What’s New
American Comics Update: Six Of The Best: The Invincible Iron Man
*Marvel: Six issues of Iron Man added this week, between #56 and #63, where Shellhead takes on Fangor, the Mandarin, the Unicorn, Firebrand, Whiplash and Dr Spectrum. What a busy little Avenger he was! All pence printed copies.
IN THIS UPDATE: IRON MAN ALL SOLD
#56 FN- p £10.25
#57 VF- p £11
#58 VF- p £11
#59 FN p £6.75
#62 VF p £12.50
#63 FN p £6.75
American Comics Update: Pre-Code Horror Fest: L B Cole Miasma: Blue Bolt Weird Tales #111 1953
*Horror 1940-1959: L B Cole was one of the most famous of Golden/Atomic Age cover artists. He drew in a variety of genres, and was artistic director at Star, illustrating 95% of the company’s covers; his lurid, feverish style, almost hallucinogenic, graced horror, science-fiction, jungle and romance alike. Star took over the venerable title Blue Bolt in 1949 (previously it had been a classic anthology title starring the titular character, with much work by Simon & Kirby, Everett etc, lasting throughout the war years and beyond). The title on the cover changed to Blue Bolt Weird Tales with this issue, #111, although the indicia remained as Blue Bolt. #111 was the last to feature Blue Bolt himself regularly, and the emphasis of the series had changed to horror, according to the zeitgeist of the time. Indeed, the title was rebranded as Ghostly Weird Stories from #120 onwards. In #111, with the usual mix of new and reprint material, the stories are either horror or science fiction with strong horror overtones. But of course it’s the wonderful L B Cole cover for which these issues are prized, here a face of horror surrounded by ghouls, skulls, guttering candles, a snake, a demon and clutching hands emerging from dark water. This is a very decent copy, with just very minor spine ticks and a couple of creases in the top right corner which do not break colour. The vivid colours pop out from the solid black background. The spine has a lower cover split of less than 3 cm. Staples are tight at the spine, but the centrefold is detached. Pages are a supple off-white to cream. High resolution images are available on request. PICTURED: BLUE BOLT WEIRD TALES #111 VG £900 SOLD
American Comics Update: Six Of The Best: Adventures Into The Unknown
*Horror/Mystery 1960-1980s: Adventures Into The Unknown from ACG was the earliest ongoing horror title, starting in 1947. It’s the Silver Age incarnation that concerns us here, when the horror of pre-code had given way to the more whimsical fantasy/mysteries for which ACG became known in the 1960s.
IN THIS UPDATE: ADVENTURES INTO THE UNKNOWN ALL SOLD
#114 GD- p £4
#126 VG p £7.25
#127 GD- p £3
#128 GD p £3.50
#135 GD/VG £4
#141 FN £8
British Comics Update: Free Gift Farrago: Hurricane #1 with Free Gift
*Boys’ Adventure & War Comics: Now at a reduced price: Hurricane #1, complete with its Free Gift, one of the rarest of all accompanying gifts. In February 1964 Fleetway/IPC released Hurricane, a companion to their highly successful Valiant. Featuring in the lead a lightly comedic bruiser – ‘Typhoon Tracy, as opposed to ‘captain hurricane’ in the lead slot, Hurricane ploughed the expected row of adventure, war, sports and historical strips, but allocating several of them a longer run (5 pages, rather than the two or three that were the weekly standard), and with its slightly larger size, seemed to be aiming a little higher age-wise. The most famous alumnus of Hurricane, apart from Tracy himself, was ace racing driver ‘Skid Solo’, who had a decades-long career after Hurricane’s eventual absorption into Tiger. Because it had a regrettably short run, a mere 63 issues, Hurricane is highly sought after today, and this first issue, in a gleaming Fine condition, is made extra precious by the presence of the Free Gift which originally accompanied it – a punch-out cardboard model of the TSR2 fighter plane, not punched out (in this instance), but still in its original ‘flat’ form, albeit with the card having sustained a light horizontal fold at some time; the original rubber band used to launch it is missing (but easily replaced).
PICTURED: HURRICANE #1 FN WITH FREE GIFT VG £150 SOLD
British Comics Update: Dandy 1947 – new and improved!
*Humour Comics: Continuing our policy of providing more information for Beano and Dandy, we have a new batch of Dandy in this week from 1947. That year is now annotated with details of strip and prose debuts: HM Wizard, Mr G Whizz (#341), Smudge (#349), Cinder Eddie (#351) and Curly’s Two Ton Kitten (#353). We also have the Fireworks and Christmas issues for 1947. Full details as always in our catalogue.
PICTURED: DANDY #359 GD £50 Christmas issue
Books Update: Re-Working Our Crime, Spies & Sleaze Category: The Name Is Bond
*Crime, Spies & Sleaze: This week’s featured books need no introduction from me. Ian Fleming’s iconic creation is known worldwide thanks to the hugely successful movie franchise, but James Bond got his start in novels, so it is in this category that these books belong. And let me tell you, the books are darker and deeper than the films, less gadgety and more visceral. We have nine of the thirteen Fleming books in our listings, all in a superb Pan uniform livery, which is the edition from the 1960s that I grew up with.
PICTURED: ALL BY IAN FLEMING ALL SOLD
JAMES BOND: CASINO ROYALE Pan 1964 17th UK PB VG/FN £6
JAMES BOND: DIAMONDS ARE FOREVER Pan 1963 13th UK PB FN £7
JAMES BOND: DR NO Pan 1965 18th UK PB FN £7
JAMES BOND: FOR YOUR EYES ONLY Pan 1964 12th UK PB VG £6
JAMES BOND: FROM RUSSIA WITH LOVE Pan 1966 21st UK PB FN £7
JAMES BOND: LIVE AND LET DIE Pan 1965 18th UK PB GD £4
JAMES BOND: THE MAN WITH THE GOLDEN GUN Pan 1967 2nd UK PB VG £6
JAMES BOND: THE SPY WHO LOVED ME Pan 1968 2nd UK PB VG/FN £6
JAMES BOND: YOU ONLY LIVE TWICE Pan 1966 3rd UK PB VG £6
Books Update: New: A Long Time Ago… The First Star Wars Novel
*TV/Film Tie-Ins: Hot on the heels of the first Star wars film in 1977, came the novelisation, also by George Lucas. This is the very first UK printing, which includes over 16 pages of colour stills from the film. This is in excellent shape, with only minor signs of handling wear.
PICTURED:
STAR WARS by GEORGE LUCAS Sphere 1977 1st UK PB FN £25
Books Update: Re-Working Our Children’s Books Category: Bessie Bunter, The Sword In The Stone and more
*Children’s Books: We’re continuing to introduce the new layout for our books categories, with an image for each book. This week, we return to our Children’s Books category to conclude our Re-Working exercise (including one new addition). Bessie Bunter At Cliff House School is the only novel of Billy’s sister written by Frank Richards (as Hilda Richards in this instance). although there are other Bessie novels under his name written by others). Terry’s Only Term by Ethel Talbot is a girls’ school story: two sisters, two schools, mystery and adventure. The Sword In The Stone by T H White (new in) is the first of his Arthurian novels published as a stand-alone: the boyhood of Arthur, the Once and Future King. From now on, all further listings in this category will be for books that are new in.
PICTURED:
HILDA RICHARDS (FRANK RICHARDS): BESSIE BUNTER OF CLIFF HOUSE SCHOOL Hawk 1991 UK HC VF £6
ETHEL TALBOT: TERRY’S ONLY TERM Blackie Undated circa 1940 1st UK HC FN £10
T H WHITE: THE SWORD IN THE STONE Armada 1971 2nd UK PB GD/VG £4
Christmas & New Year Trading Dates
It’s never too early to plan and do your Christmas shopping. Here’s a list of relevant dates for our trading during the festive period.
Saturday 9th December: Last day for orders for pre-Christmas delivery. You need to place your order no later than 4 pm. Orders placed after this deadline will not be posted until the New Year. This is also the day we shall be issuing our last Newsletter before Christmas.
Wednesday 13th December: Last posting before Christmas for all orders placed by 4 pm on Saturday 9th and paid for by 4 pm on Tuesday 12th December.
Saturday 30th December: Newsletter resumes. All orders placed after 4 pm on 9th December (up to 4 pm on 30th) will be filled this weekend and bills issued on 31st December 2023.
Wednesday 3rd January 2024: Posting for all paid orders outstanding.
American Comics Update: Tabloid Headlines: Superman Vs Muhammad Ali
*DC: You’ve heard of the Rumble in the Jungle? You’ve heard of the Thriller in Manila? Now, get ready for the Uproarium in the Emporium as we bring you Superman Vs Muhammad Ali in the Treasury-sized All New Collectors’ Edition C56. Highly sought after by both comic and boxing enthusiasts, this one-off issue is gorgeously illustrated by the incomparable Neal Adams, whose art looks amazing at this size. This is a nice mid-grade copy, with moderate spine wear and corner blunting, solid, tight staples and supple off-white to cream pages. Presents well with great colour. Small creases at top edge (front and back) do not break colour. It’s been a while since we last had one of these, but it won’t be here long, so float like a butterfly and get your order in, or you’ll be stung by a bee.
PICTURED: ALL NEW COLLECTORS’ EDITION C56 VG/FN £150 SOLD
American Comics Update: Batmania/DC Debuts: Batman #313, 1st Tim Fox, Future State Batman
*DC: It’s a funny old game, this hobby. You can have a perfectly good issue of Batman, featuring a tussle with one of his major foes (Two-Face) which has been around for 40 years and only accumulated a modest value, then suddenly, overnight, DC announce that a hitherto minor character incidentally introduced in that very issue is to become the new Batman in their Future State storyline, and the collectors and speculators go wild. The Future State hoo-hah has cooled now, of course, and prices have fallen from two years ago, but the first appearance of Tim Fox (#313) is still more highly valued than those issues around it. Our copy is in lovely condition, with just a tiny amount of edge wear.
PICTURED: BATMAN #313 VF £65
American Comics Update: Six Of The Best: The Atom, the World’s Smallest Super-Hero
*DC: Six quality issues of the Atom this week, from towards the end of his Silver Age run, with highly imaginative stories by Gardner Fox and stylish artwork from Gil Kane and Sid Greene. Guest appearances by the Golden Age Atom and Hawkman (2 issues each) with a cameo from Hawkgirl.
IN THIS UPDATE: AtOM ALL SOLD
#29 VG p £17.50 Golden Age Atom guest stars.
#30 GD/VG p £6.75 Small cover scuff
#31 VG £8.25 Hawkman guest stars
#35 VG+ p £7.50
#36 VG- p £9 Golden Age Atom guest stars.
#37 VG- p £6.50 Hawkman guest stars
American Comics Update: Spider-Mania: Amazing Spider-Man #16 – Early Spidey/Daredevil crossover
*Marvel: We’re always happy to welcome an early Spider-Man issue illustrated by Steve Ditko (the only ‘proper’ Spider-Man artist, excellent later contributors notwithstanding), and this one’s a bit special, featuring as it does the first guest appearance of the then-fledgling Man Without Fear, Daredevil, and, we believe, his only guest-appearance in his original black & gold costume! Teamed with Spider-Man against the menace of the Ringmaster (against whose hypnosis DD’s blindness gives him an unexpected immunity) and his Circus of Crime. Sadly, this is a low-grade pence printed copy, a bit of a wreck in fact. Tape has been applied to the front cover a little above the bottom edge, sealing a long tear, and there are further strips of tape on the front cover by the logo and number box, repairing what seems to be a small, previously detached chunk. The copy is worn and tired with lots of colour-breaking creases and some tears; small chips out at top and bottom spine. Wear around the staples, but they are still attached and firm at centrefold. Pages are okay with the occasional dog-ear and small chip out of margin only. The comic is pretty much complete and great as a gap filler or affordable copy if you’re rabid for early Spidey and on a tight budget.
PICTURED: AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #16 PR/FA p £150
American Comics Update: The Good Doctor Collection: 4 Kirby Captain Americas
*Marvel: Four splendid consecutive cents issues of Captain America by Lee & Kirby this week, the last releases from the Good Doctor Collection for this title. All four are beautiful copies with high gloss, great colour, staples and pages, no significant defects and grade determined by the amount of minimal wear present. Part of Kirby’s wonderful run on this title after Cap acquired it to himself with #100.
PICTURED: CAPTAIN AMERICA
#105 FN/VF £35
#106 VF+ £65
#107 FN/VF £50
#108 FN/VF £40 Unverified signature by Kirby on lower splash margin SOLD
American Comics Update: Hulkinued: 2nd Groot in Hulk Annual #5
*Marvel: Continuing our Hulkinued feature! A breakout character from the cinematic smash-hits, Guardians of the Galaxy and the Avengers, Groot, together with his ‘guardian’ Rocket Racoon, unexpectedly became the heart of the film – not that scripter Chris Claremont had any inkling of events when in 1976 he pit old Jade-Jaws against a variety of ‘Big-Panty Monsters’ from the pre-Marvel days! In rapid succession, our chartreuse champion fought Xemnu, Goom, Taboo, Diablo, the Blip and, yes, Groot, in his first on-panel experience since 1960’s Tales to Astonish #13! This is a nice copy with great gloss and colour, supple white to off-white pages and firm staples. The spine shows to the front cover, as is not unusual for annuals from this period, which veer more towards flat than squarebound. Only extremely minor handling wear. To Be Hulkinued…
PICTURED: HULK ANNUAL #5 VF £65
American Comics Update: Marvel #1 (and more): Complete run of Nova #1-24
*Marvel: In 1976, the House Of Ideas came up with Nova, designed originally to be an ‘everyman’ character like Peter Parker/Spider-Man, but quickly developing into a cosmic ‘soldier’ more akin to DC’s Green Lantern – luckily, DC’s lawyers didn’t notice the parallels! Although the original run lasted a mere 25 issues, Nova has returned many times to the Marvel Universe, and where he shines is in the protracted cosmic crossovers of which Marvel is so fond. Every issue from #1 to #25 fresh into stock this week, so you can fill your gaps, or, if you’re quick, scoop up the entire run. Full details as always in our catalogue.
PICTURED: NOVA #1 FN/VF p £50 Nice glossy pence printed copy with firm staples and supple off-white pages. Very minor spine and corner wear with a tiny colour-breaking crease across the very extremity of the bottom right corner. The top edge has been dinked at some point in its history, resulting in a narrow colour-breaking crease of approx 2-3 cm on an otherwise quite lovely copy.
American Comics Update: The Bute Collection: Pre-Code Crime: Who Is Next?
*Miscellaneous 1940-1959: A real oddity from the Bute Collection this week. Issue #5 of Who Is Next? from 1953 was the only issue of the series (Standard had a habit of starting their series with #5 issues); there never was a second issue. Borderline very noir crime with strong horror overtones, the multi-story format boasted a grim strangler on the loose with victim cover by George Roussos; interior art is by Toth, Sekowsky, Cardy and Andru, so a very strong artistic line-up for these tales of madness and horrific murder. Quite a rarity – we’ve never seen this issue before. Strong, intact cover image with good colours. Staples are firm at centrefold, with lower staple secure at spine; upper staple is off back cover. Upper spine cleanly split almost halfway down; lower spine has 4 cm split. Small chip off top spine, but little creasing. Pages are a nice off-white to cream, turning to very slight tan at edges.
PICTURED: WHO IS NEXT #5 GD £250 SOLD
American Comics Update: Six Of The Best: A Miscellany Of Charlton Horror
*Horror/Mystery 1960-1980s: Six issues of various Charlton horror/mystery series from the 1960s and 1970s. Lots of Ditko in most of these, including an Atom Bomb cover.
IN THIS UPDATE: ALL SOLD
BEYOND THE GRAVE #5 VG p £4.75
BEYOND THE GRAVE #6 FN p £6.75
CREEPY THINGS #6 FN p £4.75
HAUNTED LOVE #4 FN p £6.75
MANY GHOSTS OF DR GRAVES #35 VG p £4.75
STRANGE SUSPENSE STORIES #2 (1968) VF £16.75 (PICTURED) Ditko Atom Bomb Cover
American Comics Update: The Bute Collection: A Miscellany of Vintage War
*War: Four mostly very low grade examples of vintage 1950s war comics from the Bute Collection this week.
IN THIS UPDATE: ALL SOLD
CAPTAIN STEVE SAVAGE AND HIS SECRET SUPER-JET #3 PR £5 Covers detached and separated; brittle. (Avon 1950)
FROGMAN #1 PR £7 Cover almost entirely split (Hillman 1952)
GI JOE #8 PR £5 Saunders painted cover. Covers detached and separated; some brittleness. (Ziff-Davis 1951)
YOUNG MEN (ON THE BATTLEFIELD) #13 GD/VG £27 (PICTURED) (Atlas 1951)
British Comics Update: First ‘New’ Captain Britain in Marvel Super-Heroes Monthly
*Marvel UK: Following his original 39 issue weekly run and his stint as a perennial guest of the Black Knight in Hulk Weekly, the good Captain was brought back from limbo in 1981 by Dave Thorpe and Alan Davis, the latter of whom redesigned Captain Britain for his ‘second chance’. Davis gave the Captain the Union Jack inspired outfit he wears today, and replaced CB’s lithe physique with a hyper-muscularity based on the comic-strip hero Garth, an exaggerated superhuman ideal. The political analogies by writer Thorpe proved unpalatable to Marvel UK management, and he was later replaced by then-neophyte Alan Moore, whom the powers-that-be thought might be less controversial (Good luck with that…). This run introduced the Crazy Gang, Opal Luna Saturnyne, Gentleman Jim Jaspers and other characters who would prove instrumental to the Captain’s legend. This debut issue of the new Captain Britain is Marvel Super-Heroes Monthly #377, a splendid high grade glossy issue with virtually no flaws but for a few short spine ticks which do not break colour.
PICTURED: MARVEL SUPER-HEROES #377 VF £50 SOLD
British Update: 2 Misty Annuals
*Annuals: 2 consecutive Misty Annuals new in, in lovely shape, virtually as good as new. All the atmosphere of the supernatural girls’ weekly, with some pages in full or part colour. Glorious painted covers by Shirley Bellwood.
PICTURED: MISTY ANNUAL
1979 VF £25
1980 VF/NM £30
British Comics Update: Battle Picture Library 1964
*Boys’ Adventure & War Picture Libraries: If you’re looking to fill gaps in your Battle Picture Library collection, this update’s for you, with more than 30 issues newly added from 1964 between #143 and #183. Nearly all these issues were missing from our listings, and nearly all are in pretty nice shape, clean, bright and unmarked, with just degrees of staple rust defining grade. Full details as always in our catalogue.
Books Update: Re-Working our Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Category: Ace Doubles
*Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror: We’re continuing to introduce the new layout for our books categories, with an image for each book. This week, we return to our Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror category with Ace Doubles. We’ve decided to list Ace Doubles at the beginning of our page, since they fit there alphabetically and collectors like to home in on them (and we know you’re out there!). Authors featured will also be cross-referenced in the listing. Ace Doubles are flip books and we’ll be featuring both covers per volume. Two further editions this week. The E C Tubb one is of particular interest since it features the first two volumes in his long-running and celebrated Dumarest saga.
PICTURED: ACE DOUBLES
BRUCE W RONALD: OUR MAN IN SPACE / JACK SHARKEY: ULTIMATUM IN 2050 AD
Ace 1965 1st US PB GD £3
E C TUBB: THE WINDS OF GATH / DERAI Ace 1973 2nd US PB VG £6
Books Update: Re-Working Our TV/Films Tie-Ins Category: Star Trek Fotonovels with New Additions
*TV/Film Tie-Ins: We’re continuing to introduce the new layout for our books categories, with an image for each book. This week, we return to our TV/Film Tie-Ins Category and the Star Trek Fotonovels. This includes some new additions to this range. Each volume features a classic Star Trek episode presented as a series of 300 stills with word balloons. Included is the first of the series The City On The Edge Of Forever, arguably the most famous episode of them all written by Harlan Ellison. Published by Bantam in the US in the late 1970s; some were distributed in the UK by Corgi and bear their brand. All in fabulous condition; many are as good as new. Author’s details are given in our catalogue.
PICTURED: ALL SOLD
STAR TREK FOTNOVELS
#1: THE CITY ON THE EDGE OF FOREVER Corgi 1977 1st UK PB VG/FN £12
#4: A TASTE OF ARMAGEDDON Bantam 1978 1st US PB VF/NM £10
#5: METAMORPHOSIS Bantam 1978 1st UB PB VF/NM £10
#6: ALL OUR YESTERDAYS Bantam 1978 1st US PB FN £7
#7: THE GALILEO 7 Bantam 1978 1st US PB VF/NM £10
#9: THE DEVIL IN THE DARK Bantam 1978 1st US PB FN £7
Books Update: Re-Working Our Children’s Books Category: Billy Bunter Part 2
*Children’s Books: We’re continuing to introduce the new layout for our books categories, with an image for each book. This week, we return to our Children’s Books category and the adventures of Billy Bunter. First appearing in the Magnet #1 (1908), Billy Bunter was originally a minor character in the stories of Greyfriars School, but as time went on and the stories grew in popularity, author Frank Richards (Charles Hamilton) realised the comic potential of his most famous creation, so much so that after the Magnet ceased publication in 1940, Bunter was the starring figure in his own series of novels from 1947 to 1967. Our stock comprises mainly Hardback novels, a mix of originals, all with dust jackets, including some first editions, and the 1990s faithful facsimiles produced by Hawk Books. This is our second and final update for Billy Bunter for the time being. The ‘Fat Owl Of The Remove’ has now passed into legendary status as an icon of English literature, so here’s your chance to get acquainted with his antics. Yarooh!
PICTURED: ALL BY FRANK RICHARDS (More complete information in our catalogue)
BILLY BUNTER #18: LORD BILLY BUNTER Cassell 1959 2nd UK HC VG £20
BILLY BUNTER #21: BILLY BUNTER AFLOAT Cassell 1957 1st UK HC VG/FN £25
BILLY BUNTER #24: BUNTER OUT OF BOUNDS Cassell 1959 1st UK HC VG/FN £35
BILLY BUNTER #32: BILLY BUNTER’S BODYGUARD Cassell 1962 1st UK HC FN £35
BILLY BUNTER #35: BUNTER THE STOWAWAY Cassell 1964 1st UK HC FA/GD £18
BILLY BUNTER THE BOLD Armada 1968 1st UK PB VG £5
American Comics Update: The Bute Collection: World’s Finest #25 1946
*DC: Leading this week’s selections from the Bute Collection is World’s Finest #25, 1946. An amusing Jack Burnley cover typical of the period, featuring Superman, Batman & Robin. In these early days for the title, Superman and Batman appeared in separate stories and had a variety of back-ups, in this case Green Arrow, Zatara, the Boy Commandos and others in its 76 squarebound pages. This well-worn copy is a lower grade example; the spine is split and taped from the top down around 7cm. This split applies also to several of the opening pages. The rest of the spine is okay, as is the cover image, apart from a little grubbiness and a quite faint book store stamp at the centre. Wear around the edges, and page edges are a little tanned. Pages otherwise solid enough. A big package for a relatively small price.
PICTURED: WORLD’S FINEST #25 FA/GD £75 SOLD
American Comics Update: Six Of The Best: Blackhawk (Inc. New Secret Identities)
*DC: In issue #230 of the long-running Blackhawk series our international aviator team gave up their team uniforms to become a bunch of super-heroes, unforgettable for probably all the wrong reasons: who could forget Dr Hands, the Listener, M’Sieu Machine etc? Anyway, we have six issues to offer: #230 itself plus a few before and a few after, to get some perspective.
IN THIS UPDATE: BLACKHAWK ALL SOLD
#224 FN £6.25
#226 GD- £2.25
#230 VG/FN p £5.25 New secret identities
#231 VG/FN p £5.25
#235 VF p £11.75
#238 VF- £7
American Comics Update: The Good Doctor Collection: Spider-Mania/Mighty Marvel Firsts: Amazing #50 with debut of Kingpin and iconic cover
*Marvel: By the time of Spider-Man’s 50th issue, ‘new’ artist John Romita had made the series his own, and this milestone number was marked with the debut of a new villain, the Kingpin – so long associated with Daredevil, in the post-Miller years, that younger readers are unaware that he originated in Spider-Man’s Rogues’ Gallery! The cover of #50, with Peter temporarily abandoning his Spider-Man identity, has become etched in the minds of a generation, endlessly imitated and ‘homaged’, in comics and other media. The Good Doctor Collection copy is towards mid-grade, pence printed, with a strong cover image, great colour and some residual gloss. The staples are firm at spine and centrefold, and the pages are a nice off-white. There is some corner blunting, including a tiny colour-breaking crease at the extremity of the bottom right cover corner. Edge wear is minor except for a tiny chip out central top. Some signs of reading and handling wear, but nothing too serious.
PICTURED: AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #50 VG p £375 SOLD
American Comics Update: Hulkinued: Mighty Marvel Firsts: Debut of Wendigo in Hulk #162
*Marvel: I always liked it when at the end of the Hulk’s strip in Tales To Astonish, the caption ‘To Be Hulkinued’ was used, so I thought it was time to revive it for a new feature spotlighting key issues of the ever Incredible Hulk. This week, the first Wendigo appearance in Hulk #162. The Wendigo is a cannibalistic monster of the American/Canadian north, associated with winter, cold and forests. Its spirit takes over being to being, one at a time. We have a nice pence printed copy, with a clean, vibrant cover, off-white pages and firm staples. Minor corner blunting and a couple of very short creases/ticks at the spine (not breaking colour) are the only defects. From an original owner collection and new to the marketplace. To Be Hulkinued…
PICTURED: HULK #162 VF- p £95
American Comics Update: Marvel #1: Red Sonja, She-Devil With A Sword
*Marvel: Following her guest appearances in Conan the Barbarian, demand for a Red Sonja solo series mounted, and after a trial run in Marvel Feature (second series) the ‘revised’ version as redesigned by Frank Thorne gained her own series in 1977, notorious chain-mail bikini and all (that’s gotta chafe, hon). Despite the skimpier clothing, Thorne’s Sonja was often more scary than sexy, as Thorne often drew her with intense expressions that bordered on the deranged, for a very mixed message indeed. This is a lovely pence printed copy of #1, flat, tight and glossy, with just the most minimal handling wear at spine.
PICTURED: RED SONJA #1 VF+ p £55 SOLD
American Comics Update: Six Of The Best: X-Men #157-162
*Marvel: Six consecutive issues of the X-Men from #157-162, all in reasonable shape, with art by Dave Cockrum and others. Includes the first appearance of Rogue in the X-Men title (#158) and a Wolverine solo story (#162). A nice run of stuff!
IN THIS UPDATE: X-MEN ALL SOLD
#157 VF £7.50
#158 VG/FN £8.25 1st Rogue in X-Men title
#159 VG+ £4
#160 FN £5
#161 FN/VF £6.25
#162 FN/VF £10.25 Wolverine solo story
American Comics Update: The Bute Collection: A Timely Intervention: Blonde Phantom
*Miscellaneous 1940-1959: We’re re-visiting a gem from the Bute Collection this week. From 1948, a Timely/Marvel issue of the Blonde Phantom, #17. If there’s another costumed heroine who fights crime in floor-length evening gown and high heels, I can’t think of her. Beneath a dynamic cover (possibly by Mike Sekowsky), you get three clever mystery stories with stylish and accomplished art by Syd Shores and Vince Alascia, chronicling the adventures of prim secretary Louise Grant who transforms into the glamorous Blonde Phantom to fight crime and solve mysteries. The ‘filler’ story this issue is nothing less than a tale of Namor and Namora by Bill Everett (what a filler!). What a great package! This is a very respectable copy with unmarked cover, apart from quite minor edge and spine wear and a tiny nick central cover top. The staples are firm at spine and centrefold and the supple pages are a nice off-white to cream. There is a 4.5 cm lower spine split and slight tanning to inner cover edges. Heck, I’m not 75 and I don’t look this good! High resolution images are available on request.
PICTURED: BLONDE PHANTOM #17 VG- £550 SOLD
American Comics Update: The Bute Collection: Pre-Code Horror Fest: Sundry Strange Stories
*Horror 1940-1959: Two Pre-code horrors from Fawcett in the Bute Collection this week, with similar titles. To add to the confusion, they’re both #3. Also, they have in common that they’re both misprinted/mis-cut to some degree.
PICTURED:
STRANGE STORIES FROM ANOTHER WORLD #3 GD £145 Pre-code from 1952. Stunning skeleton painted cover by Norman Saunders. Accomplished gruesome fare on the interior. The cover is mis-cut and fitted on to the interiors at an angle (we’re pretty sure this is an original printing defect). See scan. Cover image unaffected. Apart from a few chips out of the splash margin and one interior page margin, plus a small bottom spine split, everything else is pretty good, with firm staples, great colour, decent off-white pages just tanning at the edges.
STRANGE SUSPENSE STORIES #3 VG £150 Pre-code from 1952. Great headless figure cover from George Evans. Accomplished interiors by Evans, Bernard Baily and others, a gruesome fest. Cover may be mis-cut at a slight angle; certainly the interiors are misprinted at that angle, but are unspolit with all margins in place. Unmarked cover, firm staples, nice supple off-white pages.
British Comics Update: Beano 1964 – New and improved
*Humour Comics: Continuing our policy of providing more information for Beano and Dandy, we have a new batch of Beano in this week from 1964. You may remember that we now annotate with strip debuts – just one in our new stock for this year, but it’s a good ‘un. The long-running Billy Whizz debuted in #1139. Around 20 other issues new in from this less common year. Full details in our catalogue.
PICTURED: BEANO #1139 GD/VG £25 1st Billy Whizz
British Comics Update: Love Story Picture Library: 27 issues from 1969/70
*Girls’ Picture Libraries: This week’s release of Love Story Picture Library, the longest running romance picture library from Fleetway, comprises 27 issues from 196970, between #771 & #800. The series always maintained a high standard and the very accomplished art reflected the fashions and mood of the times. These new additions are mostly in excellent condition, with little wear or creasing, all FN to VF. Full details as always in our catalogue.
PICTURED: LOVE STORY PICTURE LIBRARY
#788 VF £7
#792 FN/VF £6
Books Update: Re-Working Our Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Category: Arthur C Clarke Part 2
*Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror: We’re continuing to introduce the new layout for our books categories, with an image for each book. This week, we return to our Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror category and the second part of our listing for the works of Arthur C Clarke. Clarke was a scientist as well as a writer and is known as a prophet of science fact, in particular due to his predictions of communication satellites. Most famous of course for 2001: A Space Odyssey (included here), you would expect to find a fair amount of hard science in his works – what you might not expect is the engaging and entertaining style in which he wrote. His novels are real page turners that you don’t want to put down.
PICTURED: ALL BY ARTHUR C CLARKE
ISLANDS IN THE SKY Penguin 1982 UK PB VG/FN £4
THE OTHER SIDE OF THE SKY Corgi 1963 1st UK PB GD £6
PRELUDE TO SPACE Four Square 1962 UK PB GD £4
THE SANDS OF MARS Pan 1964 UK PB VG £5
2001 A SPACE ODYSSEY Arrow 1970 3rd UK PB GD £8
2010: ODYSSEY TWO Granada 1983 1st UK PB GD/VG £4
Books Update: Re-Working Our Crime, Spies & Sleaze Category: Evans-Fear
*Crime, Spies & Sleaze: We’re continuing to introduce the new layout for our books categories, with an image for each book. This week, we return to our Crime, Spies and Sleaze category for five more thrillers. Two from the American publisher, Graphic Mystery 1956, This Kill Is Mine by Dean Evans and The Corpse Next Door by John Farris, both cop/gangster/chick tough thrillers with attractive and stylish cover art by the British artist Oliver Brabbins. Then two by the celebrated American novelist William Faulkner, Sanctuary and Wild Palms, both cited as great entry points for his body of work. Finally, a tense crime drama set in France, The Killers by William H Fear, a rare UK 1st PB.
PICTURED: ALL SOLD
DEAN EVANS: THIS KILL IS MINE Graphic Mystery 1956 1st US PB VG £4
JOHN FARRIS: THE CORPSE NEXT DOOR Graphic Mystery1956 1st US PB VG £7
WILLIAM FAULKNER: SANCTUARY Signet 1950 12th US PB FA £4
WILLIAM FAULKNER: THE WILD PALMS Signet 1950 5th US PB GD £5
WILLIAM H FEAR: THE KILLERS Digit 1964 1st UK PB VG £7
American Comics Update: DC Debuts: Pre-Code Horror Fest: Phantom Stranger #1 1952
*DC: As rare as hen’s teeth! In 30+ years of flogging comics, we’ve never had a copy of #1 of the first series of Phantom Stranger through our hands before. In 1952, he appeared from nowhere, without explanation or origin to be DC’s mysterious omniscient and omnipotent being of mystery. Despite numerous theories in the DCU, no concrete information has ever been revealed about his true nature. Edited by Whitney Ellsworth, and created by John Broome and Carmine Infantino, the debut issue had the finest creators of the time working on it in a number of horror/supernatural stories. Whilst perhaps not as Pre-Code horrifically as the fare of other less polished publishers, the Phantom Stranger made up for that in the quality of substance and style of his stories. Make no mistake, this is a low grade copy that has suffered much restoration. There are amateurish colour touches along most of the spine and along all the front cover edges. A 3 cm x 2 cm chip is missing from the central right cover edge, which has been patched, colour touched and secured by tape; a corresponding but smaller chip is out of the splash page (virtually margin only) with smaller tears to later page edges in the same place. There are two further pieces of tape along the inside front cover bottom edge. The cover right edge had spidery colour-breaking creases and there is a small faint mark, possibly a ‘6’, over the logo. Tiny spnie split at top, very small chip out of spine at central back cover. Staples are tight at centrefold and secure at spine, with top staple a little loose. Page quality, except as noted, is a pleasing off-white. So, a rough-ish copy, to which we have awarded an Apparent grade, but when will you see another? High resolution images are available on request.
PICTURED: PHANTOM STRANGER #1 App FA £540 SOLD
American Comics Update: Batmania: Joker #1 1975
*DC: Daringly, in 1975, DC awarded the Joker his own title, (in defiance of the Comics Code, which said that villains couldn’t be shown to triumph) and even now, decades later, it remains the Clown Prince Of Crime’s only on-going series. Not that it ‘on-went’ for long, stopping at #9. But what was a Bronze Age curio has now become a much sought-after short series with one of the hottest characters in comics. We have the first issue newly in stock: #1, pitting ‘Mr. J.’ against fellow villain Two-Face. It’s a slightly above mid-grade copy, pence stamped, nice colour and reasonable gloss, tight, firm staples and decent off-white to cream pages. There is very minor edge wear, notably a tiny nick out of right edge near the top and a faint colour-breaking crease up from the bottom edge across the Penguin, but very presentable.
PICTURED: JOKER #1 VG/FN p £50 SOLD
American Comics Update: Six Of The Best: Early Adam Strange in Mystery In Space
*DC: One of the most well-received articles posted here during lockdown was the one I wrote on Adam Strange, the interplanetary adventurer, my favourite DC science-fiction hero. So, we’re delighted to present half a dozen of his earliest adventures in Mystery In Space, starting with #62 and running patchily up to #70. The finest examples of this sort of thing ever produced, IMHO, and with the best creators. These are mostly lower graded reading copies, providing excellent budget entertainment.
IN THIS UPDATE: MYSTERY IN SPACE ALL SOLD
#62 FA p £7.75 Large corner off back cover
#64 FA p £7.75
#67 FA p £7.75 Off top staple; bookshop stamp
#68 PR p £4.25 Bookshop stamps, taped spine. Corner off bottom left front cover.
#69 PR p £4.25 Cover detached and separated
#70 PR/FA p £6 Restapled
American Comics Update: The Good Doctor Collection/Spider-Mania: Amazing #301
*Marvel: From the Good Doctor Collection this week, a very nice copy of Amazing Spider-Man #301, popularly known as the ‘negative’ version of #300 due to Spidey being back to his original costume plus the white background. This high grade copy is near pristine, with glossy pure white cover, vibrant colour, near white pages, tight and flat; only the very most minor signs of having been handled, but really, virtually as good as new.
PICTURED: AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #301 VF+ £60 SOLD
American Comics Update: Marvel #1s: Science Fiction TV & Film Titles
*Marvel: in the 1970s and 80s, Marvel did a lot of adaptations of science fiction TV and film. Three such this week, all spawning series of different lengths.
PICTURED:
BATTLESTAR GALACTIICA #1 VF £22
LOGAN’S RUN VF+ p £25 SOLD
STAR TREK #1 VF+ £15
American Update: Tabloid Headlines: Holiday and Team-Up Marvel Treasuries
*Marvel: This week’s featured items in our Tabloid Headlines extravaganza have more Marvel characters than you can shake a stick at! They did two Giant Super-Hero Holiday Grab-Bags to celebrate Christmas: the first, Marvel Treasury Edition #8 from 1975 has seasonal (and not so seasonal) stories for Spider-Man, the Hulk, Dr Strange, Nick Fury and Luke Cage; the second, #13 from 1976, has stories of Spider-Man, the Avengers, the Thing, the Hulk, Silver Surfer and Daredevil with original framing sequences starring just about the whole Marvel Universe. In between there was #9, Giant Super-Hero Team-Up, reprinting (more clashes than team-ups) classics of Sub-Mariner and the Thing, Thor and the Hulk, Daredevil and Captain America, Spider-Man and the Silver Surfer. Great super-size holiday reading for the upcoming festive season, and all in tip-top shape!
PICTURED: MARVEL TREASURY EDITION ALL SOLD
#8 VF £20 Giant Super-Hero Holiday Grab-Bag
#9 VF/NM £20 Giant Super-Hero Team-Up
#13 VF+ £20 Giant Super-Hero Holiday Grab-Bag
American Comics Update: Complete Set of Weapon X (Wolverine) from Marvel Comics Presents by Barry Windsor-Smith
*Marvel: In Marvel Comics Presents #72-84 (1991), the story is told of Wolverine before the X-Men. Writer and artist Barry Windsor-Smith mesmerizes with Wolverine’s defining origin. Once, a man named Logan was codename Weapon X. A shadowy enclave controlled his animalistic rage, transforming the mutant into an adamantium-laced berserker and a ghost of a man. Lots of other Marvel super-stars in each issue of this anthology title as well, of course. This complete set averages FN/VF, shows signs of having been read, but retains gloss and lustre.
PICTURED: MARVEL COMICS PRESENTS #72; COMPLETE SET #72-84 AV. FN/VF £60 SOLD
American Comics Update: The Bute Collection: Fantastic Four #95 to #111
*Marvel: A long run of Fantastic Four from the Bute Collection this week, with every issue from #95 to #111 (excluding #110). A transitional period, with the final issues drawn by Jack Kirby before the artistic torch was passed, first to John Romita and then John Buscema. Stan the Man stayed at the typewriter. Full details as always in our catalogue.
American Comics Update: Archies from the 1960s/70s
*Archie: We’ve recently come across a huge stash of vintage Archie comics, which we shall be working our way through over the coming months, providing the first updates to this category for quite some time. We commence this week, with issues of Archie himself, Archie As Pureheart The Powerful (a wacky super-hero version of the eternal American teenager), Archie Giant Series and Archie’s Joke Book. Over 20 issues added to our catalogue, with more to follow as time allows.
PICTURED: ARCHIE AS PUREHEART THE POWERFUL #2 GD £6 SOLD
American/British Comics Update: The Spirit Is Willing…
*Spirit: All our ‘Characters’ categories are listed in our American/British section, since nearly all of them are published in US & UK editions. The Spirit, being all US, is an exception. Three new entries this week. From Fiction House, #5 (and final) of their series from 1954, an all-Eisner issue including cover; and from 1966/67, both of the Harvey giant issues, where a small amount of new material augmented re-coloured reprints of classic strips from the Spirit sections of yesteryear – and given that the original Spirit stories ran an average of 6-8 pages, that’s a lot of reading!
IN THIS UPDATE:
SPIRIT (Fiction House) #5 FA/GD £40 (PICTURED) Covers detached, but otherwise decent copy.
SPIRIT (Harvey)
#1 GD/VG £10 SOLD
#2 VG £11.50 SOLD
British Comics Update: Pre and Post Code Horror Fest UK: From L Miller: Mystic, Spellbound & Voodoo
*Vintage UK/Australian Reprints Of US Material: Perhaps often overlooked in the annals of UK horror reprints (probably because these weren’t published until the 1960s), it should not be forgotten that Len Miller’s Mystic, Spellbound and Voodoo reprinted quite a bit of Atlas Pre-Code horror stories (as well as Post Code and pre-hero Marvel Big Panty Monsters, and work from many other publishers as well). A treasure trove of delights await within these volumes, including plenty of work by Kirby and Ditko. Star of the show is the one-off Mystic Bumper Book, an oversized (21cm x 27cm) tome, with stiff covers and an annual’s worth of pages.
IN THIS UPDATE:
MYSTIC #25 VG/FN £18.50
MYSTIC BUMPER BOOK VG £30 (PICTURED) Stiff covers, T&P stamp, minor cover creasing. SOLD
SPELLBOUND #61 VG/FN £16
VOODOO #1 GD/VG £30 Printing defect affects one panel on either side of one page.
VOODOO #7 FN £20
British Comics Update: Debbie & Spellbound 1978 with the Supercats
*Girls’ Comics: in 1978, when the spooky title Spellbound folded after 69 issues, it was merged into the long-running Debbie with issue #258, and the title for a while was known as Debbie and Spellbound. Something of the atmosphere and features of Spellbound were carried across with supernatural stories, but most notably the stars of Spellbound, the Supercats, moved across for more space-faring super-heroine adventures (and chances to join the Supercats club!). Our heroines stayed put until issue #272, where they finally bowed out. We have the complete Supercats in Debbie & Spellbound new in this week; please see our catalogue for details.
PICTURED: DEBBIE (& SPELLBOUND) #258 GD £2.50 1st Debbie and Spellbound; 1st Supercats in title. Small central spine split.