*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 throughout 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.) Just one set this week, but it’s a rather special one. The run of Creepy Worlds reprinting early Fantastic Four issues are particularly prized.
CREEPY WORLDS #37 £225 Comic FA; cover (fairly cleanly) detached; much wear and tear and creasing; dog-eared. Reprints Fantastic Four #6 inc cover, Charlton, Atlas (1 Ditko, 1 Wood). Extra: Colour cover proof (torn and stained). SOLD
Category Archives: What’s New
British Update: Lion – King of Picture Story Papers 1954
*Boys’ Adventure & War Comics: I’ll let you into a little secret. Before I discovered American comics in the early 1960s, I was an avid young reader of British comics, specifically Lion for thrills and adventure and Dandy for laughs. I used to look forward every week to the latest issue of each thumping on to the mat inside our door. This batch of Lions fresh in this week though are a little before even my time. We have almost every issue from April 1954 from to the end of the year. From an original owner collection, these are lovely copies in a well-preserved state, all VG or VG/FN; staple rust, the curse of this title, is at a minimum with virtually no migration. Captain Condor, Sandy Dean, Stowaway on the Sea-Hawk, Fighters of the Desert Patrol and many more adventurous types await you within. Full details as always in our catalogue.
British Update: Air Ace & Battle Picture Libraries
*Boys’ Adventure & War Picture Libraries: Small updates to early-ish issues of two of Fleetway’s big three this week, with four issues of Air Ace (#15, #29, #57 & #108) and seven of Battle (#22, #45, #61, #102, #164, #165 & #168). Full details as always in our catalogue.
British Update: This Week’s #1: Giggle – short-run humour weekly from 1967
*Humour Comics: 1967’s Giggle was an odd launch for Fleetway, primarily translated European reprints with only a smattering of new material, the slightly-taller size was an odd format, and the whole exercise seemed to be a test run – possibly a cost-cutting measure – to see if Euro-reprints (which Fleetway had been partially using for many years) could sustain their own weekly. If so, then the answer was ‘no’ – or possibly ‘Non’ as after a couple of months it settled down to the more conventional size, and after 38 issues was absorbed into Buster, leaving Giggle as an odd cul-de-sac in the promenade of British comics history. Nevertheless, a genuine rarity, and this copy of the premier issue is in nice tight shape.
PICTURED: GIGGLE #1 FN £40 SOLD
American Update: Justice League of America #4 – Green Arrow Joins
*DC: In his issues of Justice League of America, author Gardner Fox often used a science fiction or fantasy setting, influenced no doubt by his novels in those genres. This gave many of the issues a unique flavour beyond that of standard super-heroics. #4 (1961) is no exception, with adventure on alien worlds where Green Arrow becomes the first hero to join the team since its inception. Beneath a classic cover from Murphy Anderson (his run of covers on this title is a joy to behold), Mike Sekowsky shows his versatility, handling the wide cast of characters with flair and distinction. This is a very nice pence stamped copy, with a small arrival date in pen at the top of the cover diamond, but no other marks and strong, vivid colour. Moderate spine and edge wear, with tiny bits of colour break only. Excellent off-white pages. Printed without a lower staple; upper is tight and firmly attached.
PICTURED: JUSTICE LEAGUE OF AMERICA #4 VG+ p £125 SOLD
American Update: Superman’s Girl Friend: Half a Box of Lois Lane
*DC: A huge update of dozens of issues of Lois Lane this week, from #30 all the way up to the final issue #137 plus Annual #2, including many issues previously missing from our listing. Witness all Lois’ schemes to marry Superman and her other wacky adventures from Silver Age through to Bronze. Full details in our catalogue, which now boasts our best selection of Lois Lane ever.
American Update: The Totally Amazing Spider-Man Collection: Mighty Marvel Firsts/Spider-Mania/Slab Happy: Amazing #25
*Marvel: This week’s first visit to Spider-Mania ticks all the boxes. Amazing Spider-Man #25, from the high grade Totally Amazing Spider-Man collection, is a CGC 8.0 (VF) cents copy, unrestored blue label, perfect case, off-white to white pages. It features the first of several cameo appearances of Mary Jane (her face was not shown until #42), as well as the debuts of Professor Smythe and his Spider Slayer, the first incarnation of which was a marvellously fluid Ditko invention. Virtually every issue of Amazing from these early years was a landmark!
PICTURED: AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #25 CGC 8.0 VF £650
American Update: The Good Doctor Collection: X-Men Vs the Avengers in X-Men #9
*Marvel: From the Good Doctor Collection this week: It had already been a busy time for Marvel’s newest team, the merry mutant X-Men, when, in issue #9 of their own series, they faced up against the might of the Avengers, although, truth be told, it was more of a skirmish here than a battle royale, as the real threat in this issue was the mysterious Lucifer. Still, there’s nothing quite like Lee & Kirby pitting two teams of their creations against each other! This is a decent pence stamped copy with a good cover (a few short soft creases which do not break colour) and fairly minor edge and spine wear and corner blunting. Staples tight at spine and centrefold and excellent off-white pages.
PICTURED: X-MEN #9 VG+ p £310 SOLD
American Update: The Good Doctor Collection: Steranko A Go-Go: Nick Fury, Agent Of SHIELD
*Marvel: We kick off a new feature this week showcasing the Silver Age Marvel super-hero work of Jim Steranko, one of our favourite artists and one of the most innovative. His storytelling, both words and pictures, sums up the spirit of the late 1960s, and his all too brief body of work has always left his fans clamouring for more. We turn first of all to the Good Doctor Collection for the first seven issues of Nick Fury, Agent of SHIELD, which Steranko very much made his own when taking it over a couple of years earlier in Strange Tales, before the series acquired its own title in 1968. In my opinion, these seven covers (and the interior art he did for #1-3 & #5) constitute his finest work. All the Good Doctor copies are superior grades and have strong visual appeal without significant defects. More Steranko coming soon!
PICTURED: NICK FURY, AGENT OF SHIELD
#1 VF- p £125 SOLD
#2 VF p £55
#3 FN- p £25 SOLD
#4 FN+ p £90 SOLD
#5 VF £65 SOLD
#6 FN p £35 SOLD
#7 FN p £30 SOLD
American Update: Captain America #109 — Cap’s Origin
*Marvel: Soon after the inception of Cap’s debut Silver Age series (#100), Stan and Jack chose to retell his origin in #109. With its distinctive cover of Cap bursting through a newspaper front page dated 1941, this issue has steadily risen in collectability. Our latest copy is pence stamped, in nice structural shape, with a strong colour image on the dynamic cover, flat with no creases, tight, firmly attached staples and good, off-white to cream pages. There is a tiny chip out at bottom right cover corner and the interior covers are moderately tanned.
PICTURED: CAPTAIN AMERICA #109 FN- p £100 SOLD
American Update: The Force Is With Us: Mighty Marvel Firsts: Star Wars #1
*Marvel: Well, here it is, the very first Star Wars comic from 1977. The 1970s Marvel Comics series of Star Wars isn’t commonplace in the UK, many of the issues having been completely non-distributed in Britain, and the rest having only low circulation here in the Old Country. Adapting the beginning of famous first movie courtesy of Roy Thomas and Howard Chaykin, the continuing popularity of the franchise has seen the prices soar on this issue in recent years. This flat, glossy copy of #1 presents well, with firm tight staples, sharp corners and excellent off-white pages. Wear is restricted to a few very short, minor stress marks at the spine, which do not break the black colour background. A lovely 30 cent copy of the first printing.
PICTURED: STAR WARS #1 VF+ £235 SOLD
American Update: Spider-Mania: Amazing Issues between #164 & #175
*Marvel: Nine issues of Amazing Spider-Man fresh in this week in the above number range, featuring the Kingpin, the War of the Reptile Men with Stegron and the Lizard, the villainy of Dr Faustus, a guest appearance by Nova, the debut of the Rocket Racer, the Molten Man, the Punisher and the Hitman. All in very affordable grades — see our catalogue for details.
American Update: Master & Wings: Two Early Anthologies
*Miscellaneous 1940-1959: Two anthology titles this week. First up, from Fawcettt, Master Comics #128 (1952), featuring Captain Marvel Jr, Nyoka the Jungle Girl, Western hero Tom Mix and others. Secondly, from Fiction House, Wings #107 (1949), one of the later issues with a plucky aviatrix cover, featuring Captain Wings, Suicide Smith, the Ghost Squadron and others.
PICTURED:
MASTER COMICS #128 FN- £49 Nice solid copy with Danish price stamped on cover.
WINGS COMICS #107 FA £10 Okay copy except for insect damage throughout bottom margin and on back cover.
American Update: Pre-Code Horror Fest: L B Cole Miasma: Blue Bolt Weird Tales #114 with Classic Zombie Cover
*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). By the time we got to the #114, Blue Bolt himself was long gone 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. Contents include three stylish horror shorts by Jay Disbrow plus three reprints of Fox horror tales including ‘The Mummy’. But it’s the wonderful L B Cole cover for which this issue is prized, showing a zombie-like denizen underwater in the swamp. A reasonable copy with a little spine white, front cover off top staple with the upper spine partially split for top 5 cm. Gruesome cover scene unimpaired (small arrival date stamped on ‘R’ in logo), with just tiny creasing to bottom right cover corner. Edge wear is minimal and page quality a decent off-white to cream. High resolution images are available on request.
PICTURED: BLUE BOLT WEIRD TALES #114 GD/VG £650 SOLD
British Update: Mighty Marvel Firsts: Captain Britain #8 – First Betsy Braddock (later the X-Men’s Psylocke)
*Marvel UK: In 1976, Marvel UK’s first attempt to generate a British-based super-hero was placed into the hands of Chris Claremont and Herb Trimpe, whose comic-opera interpretation of the UK has become a source of hilarity for generations. But after a shaky start, CB became inextricably linked with the mainstream Marvel Universe, not least because of his psychic sister, Betsy, who – years later and after many, many changes – turned Japanese and became the X-Men’s scantily-clad ninja mind-warrior Psylocke. As you do. This is Betsy’s first appearance in Captain Britain Weekly #8, a copy in VG/FN condition, rather decent considering the flimsy stock of the Marvel UK weeklies, with no creases or marks, tight with excellent, firmly attached staples and flat with just a suggestion of a slight curl at the spine. The puzzle pages have been completed, but in faint pencil only. Nice white to off-white pages and sharp corners.
PICTURED: CAPTAIN BRITAIN #8 VG/FN £175 SOLD
British Update: Eyrie Tales: Selections from Eagle Volumes 11 and 12 (1960 and 1961)
*Boys’ Adventure & War Comics: One of the icons of British comics’ history, Eagle started up in 1950; every issue of its twenty year run starred Dan Dare, its most famous son. We’re always selling lots of Eagles, and we’re delighted to have added a smattering of issues from Volumes 11 and 12 this week, all in VG or FN grade. Consult our catalogue to fill your gaps!
British Update: Six Of The Best: Super-Detective Library featuring Lesley Shane and others
*Boy’s Adventure & War Picture Libraries: Six more classics from the famous Super-Detective Picture Library series this week, many starring female detective Lesley Shane, but also with a tale by Edgar Wallace and more. From an original owner collection, the condition on these is very consistent.
PICTURED: SUPER-DETECTIVE LIBRARY
#24 VG £15 Lesley Shane: The Phantom Of Dracos Island
#25 VG/FN £17.50 Diamonds To Burn
#26 VG/FN £17.50 Lesley Shane: The Phantom Of The Flying Fort
#27 VG/FN £17.50 Lesley Shane: Jungle Manhunt
#30 VG/FN £17.50 The Fatal Feather with Edgar Wallace’s Three Just Men
#32 VG/FN £17.50 Lesley Shane: The Case Of The Secret Archer
British Update: This Week’s #1: Solo: Short-lived TV anthology from 1967
*TV & Film Related Comics: Released in 1967, Solo, the companion paper to TV Tornado, featured a line-up of film and TV tie ins with guaranteed star power -‘Sgt Bilko’, ‘Mary Poppins’, and the hugely popular ‘Man From UNCLE’. Oddly, the powers-that-be decided to go with Disney’s ‘Scarecrow of Romney Marsh’ as the lead cover feature. Nevertheless, these leads plus lesser lights – ‘Seaspray’? ‘Run, Buddy, Run’? – provided ample entertainment, though it could be argued that the multitude of Disney cartoon strips brought the reading age down a bit. Despite its quality, Solo never achieved very wide circulation, and copies are seldom seen. Our latest copy of Solo #1 is in lovely shape, with white pages, firm staples and little to no wear. Sadly without the Free Gift, but still the nicest copy we’ve seen.
PICTURED: SOLO #1 FN £95 SOLD
British Update: A Small Miscellany of Girls’ Picture Libraries
*Girls’ Picture Libraries: Just a handful of new items in this category this week, the star of which is Schoolgirls’ Picture Library #6. The remainder all have felt tip pen prices in circles on the covers: the lesser seen Dream (#20), Picture Romances (#566 & #567) & Star Love Stories (#341).
PICTURED: SCHOOLGIRLS’ PICTURE LIBRARY #6 FA/GD £17.50
American Update: DC Debuts: A Classic! Flash Of Two Worlds: Flash #123
*DC: We’re very pleased to have back in stock one of the most significant DC Silver Age issues. When Barry Allen took over the mantle of the Flash, he acknowledged the original, Jay Garrick, as his inspiration – but only by the medium of comic books he’d read in childhood! It wasn’t until Flash #123, when Barry’s heroic career was well established, that he, and the readers, discovered Jay Garrick wasn’t mere fiction, but was the hero of a parallel world, along with his comrades in the Justice Society of America! This was the first historic meeting between the two Scarlet Speedsters, and opened the interdimensional door to the entire Earth 2 legend, with the Justice Society of America and in due course their heirs and imitators, brought to new generations of readers! Writer Gardner Fox and artist Carmine Infantino were at their respective peaks, and this is one of the most sought-after DC landmarks of the Silver Age. Not so much a debut for Jay Garrick, of course, but certainly one for the Earth 2 concept, which features fundamentally in DC’s heritage. This copy is pence stamped, but otherwise with a clean, unmarked cover (tiny bit of grubbiness near spine); wear is restricted to very few stress marks at the spine and staple area; corners are only slightly blunted and there are no cover creases, apart from very faint reading wear along the spine. Staples are tight and flat at spine and centrefold and the page quality is remarkable, supple and almost white. A copy that would grace your collection. High resolution images are available on request.
PICTURED: FLASH #123 VG/FN p £850 SOLD
American Update: Green Lantern’s Light: 10 issues new in
*DC: An update to our stocks of the Emerald Gladiator, mostly towards the lower end of the grading spectrum, between #26 and #75, including two Star Sapphire appearances (#26 and #41), 1st Black Hand (#29), 1st Katma Tui (#30) and Sinestro clash (#52). See our catalogue for full details.
American Update: Batmania inc Giants with 1st Arkham
*DC: Just a small dose of Batmania this week with three issues from the 70s, including two Giants, as follows:
IN THIS UPDATE: BATMAN
#216 VG p £8
#218 FN- p £18.25 Giant; Batman’s Crime File
#258 FN- p £16.25 100 Pages; 1st mention of Arkham SOLD
American Update: Spider-Mania: The Totally Amazing Spider-Man Collection: Amazing #34: Kraven the Hunter
*Marvel: From the high grade Totally Amazing Spider-Man Collection this week, a lovely copy of Amazing Spider-Man #34, in which Spidey faces off against Kraven the Hunter for the second time. Beneath a dynamic Steve Ditko cover which just screams action and movement, Stan and Steve are both at the height of their powers portraying this tale of pathos, irony and adventure. Typical of this collection, this cents copy is beautiful, with a crisp white background cover, virtually no corner blunting, staples tight at spine and centrefold, no creasing and virtually no wear. The pages are off-white and of great quality. Flat, tight, glossy, reflective and delightful. The only slight snagette is a small stamped ’25’, faintly showing though the webbing above the logo close to the masthead, but this is quite tough to spot.
PICTURED: AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #34 VF £340
American Update: The Good Doctor Collection: The Complete Wally Wood Daredevil #5-11
*Marvel: Leading off the selections from the Good Doctor Collection this week are all seven issues of Daredevil drawn by Wally Wood, surely one of the all-time great comic artists. Wally didn’t hang around on Daredevil for too long, but it was his time on the title that truly defined the character, co-creating many of DD’s most famous foes (and the Matador!), as well as designing the red costume by which DD would become known ever since in the epic classic that pitted DD up against the Sub-Mariner. This selection completes all the releases of issues of Daredevil from the Good Doctor Collection.
PICTURED: DAREDEVIL
#5 FN £200 (ABOVE) 1st Matador. Vibrant cover colour and gloss. Minor spine and edge wear, very faint suggestion of subscription crease. Tight staples, nice white pages. SOLD
#6 FN+ £165 1st Mr Fear. Tight and glossy, with excellent white to off-white pages. A couple of small, soft, non-colour breaking creases at top left and bottom right cover. A minimum of wear. SOLD
#7 VG p £250 (ABOVE) Classic battle with the Sub-Mariner; debut of red costume. Pence stamped, with unspoilt cover image, staples tight at spine and centrefold and excellent white to off-white pages. A few colour breaking spine ticks and a reading crease, also colour breaking, along most of the length of the spine. A couple of colour-breaking creases across the logo top right corner and a tiny one across bottom right corner. But a solid enough, presentable copy. SOLD
#8 VG+ p £70 1st Stilt Man. Pence stamped, but otherwise unmarked cover. Minor wear at staples, tiny lower spine split, tight, firmly attached staples. Horizontal crease across part of bottom edge just breaks colour. Nice off-white pages; soft crease top corner back cover. SOLD
#9 FN- £65 Solid ‘Pop Art’ copy, with only minor handling wear. Staples firm at spine and centrefold, nice off-white pages. SOLD
ALSO IN THIS UPDATE:
#10 App VG- p £30 1st Organizer & Ani-Men. Ad page out; story OK
#11 App VG- p £16.25 Ad page out; story OK.
American Update: The Good Doctor Collection: Mighty Marvel Firsts: Three Early Fantastic Fours: #11, #13, #14
*Marvel: Also from the Good Doctor this week, three highly collectable issues of Marvel’s flagship title, the Fantastic Four. In #11, a two story issue, there’s ‘A Day In The Life’ story plus the FF meet the Impossible Man in his first appearance. #13 features not only the debut of the Red Ghost and his Super-Apes, but also the first appearance of the Watcher. In #14, the FF come up against the Sub-Mariner one more time, also featuring the Puppet Master.
PICTURED: FANTASTIC FOUR ALL SOLD
#11 GD+ £140 Vivid and rich colour cover, staples a little loose at spine but firmly attached at centre, nice off-white pages. Moderate spine wear, minimal edge wear. 2 cm tear at right edge below issue number. Faint mug ring centre cover.
#13 FA/GD p £140 Pence printed. Book shop stamps, some cover staining. Off both staples.
#14 GD/VG p £100 Pence printed. Nice unspoilt cover image with some corner blunting; a little tired. Reasonable staples, pretty well attached. Pages are off-whitish, with margin chip out of splash page.
American Update: Mighty Marvel Firsts: Legion of Monsters in Marvel Premiere #28
*Marvel: After a one-off black & white magazine in 1975, Legion of Monsters, used up a rag-bag of separate inventory stories starring Frankenstein’s Monster, Dracula, Manphibian and other horror heroes, someone at Marvel decided that the title was nifty enough to merit a further outing, and therefore the bizarre and otherwise inexplicable Marvel Premiere #28 came about. Unlike the Legion of Monsters one-shot, which featured unrelated stories, Marvel Premiere #28 brought Ghost Rider, Man-Thing, Werewolf By Night and Morbius the Living Vampire together as an actual team, albeit one even more mismatched than the Champions! From the team of Bill Mantlo and Frank Robbins, it’s… everything you might expect! For decades discarded in bargain boxes everywhere, this issue has acquired white-hot collector’s status in the last decade. Our latest copy is pence printed, glossy, sharp and colourful, with staples tight at spine and centrefold and off-white to creamy pages. There is one tiny colour-breaking crease across the bottom right cover corner extremity and a few minor stress marks along the spine, but a superior copy with an unmarked cover.
PICTURED: MARVEL PREMIERE #28 VF- p £185 SOLD
American Update: Marvel’s Space-Born Super-Hero: Captain Marvel
*Marvel: Not a lot of people know this: Mar-Vell, agent of the Kree Empire, began his career as a copyright-saving device when another 1960s publisher put out a ‘Captain Marvel’ comic which appeared to threaten the entire Marvel trademark. A new character was rapidly created, and after test appearances in Marvel Super-Heroes #12 and #13, launched into his own magazine in 1968, the year of the great Marvel expansion. In the series’ 62 issues, the character went through a lot of changes, reflected in this selection between #7 and #43, including #34 by Jim Starlin (FN p £20), which featured the debut of Nitro and is the issue in which Captain M. contracts the cancer which eventually kills him. Please consult our catalogue for full details.
American Update: Pre-Code Horror Fest: Atlas Uncanny Tales
*Horror 1940-1959: Just a couple of entries this week for Uncanny Tales from Atlas, the Marvel forerunner which had a consistent standard for horror in the 1950s, with many fine artists. #19 has Dick Briefer, Mort Lawrence and many others; #23 has Bob Forgione, Mort Lawrence and again, many others. Lots of clever little stories in both of these.
IN THIS UPDATE: UNCANNY TALES
#19 GD/VG £75 (PICTURED) Pre-code. 2 cm top spine split, off top staple. Moderate wear and small tears to cover edges.
#23 PR £13 Pre-code. Covers detached and separated, with chips out.
British Update: Alan Class Plate Sets Final Phase: Ant-Man, Daredevil and more
*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 throughout 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:
ASTOUNDING #5 £50 Comic VG; Reprints Charlton, 1 Ditko story, 1 Captain Midnight
ASTOUNDING #81 £55 Comic FA/GD ; Reprints Daredevil #59 inc cover, ACG. Extra: Colour cover proof (grubby and torn, with chip out at bottom) SOLD
CREEPY WORLDS #43 £60 Comic VG-; Reprints Ant-Man story from Tales To Astonish #42 inc cover, Atlas. SOLD
British Update: Cowboy Adventure Library
*Boys’ Adventure & War Picture Libraries: Micron’s Cowboy Adventure Library lasted a whopping 1026 issues from 1964 to 1985. Despite this, they don’t seem to turn up very often, and we suspect the print runs may have been small. After a long spell without any in stock, we’re delighted to welcome this week a huge batch of more than 80 issues fresh in between #190 and #333, dating from the 1960s. With colourful, glossy covers, each with distinctive lettering, these are eye-catching yet inexpensive. All now listed in our catalogue. Examples shown below.
PICTURED: COWBOY ADVENTURE LIBRARY
#307 VG £2 SOLD
#308 GD/VG £1.75 SOLD
British Update: This Week’s #1: Free Gift Farrago: Star Wars #1 with X-Fighter
*TV & Film Related Comics: In our #1 slot this week, the first issue of Marvel’s UK version of Star Wars Weekly, complete with Free Gift: a press-out and assemble model of an X-Fighter. The comic is in pretty good shape, with just minor spine and handling wear. The unused gift is still attached to its backing sheet, except that the top piece has come cleanly loose, but is still present.
PICTURED: STAR WARS #1 FN/VF WITH FREE GIFT FN £100
British Update: Be My Valentine 1963
*Girls’ Comics: A further update to our stocks of the long-lived (1957-1974) Valentine comic this week, with most of the issues from the first half of 1963 added, including the Valentine’s Day special issue for that year. A delightful mix of romance strips and pop music content, typified nowhere better than the cover stories which portrayed a comic strip based on a hit song from the pop charts of the time. Mixed condition on these; inevitable rusty staples abound, but generally decent. Full details as always in our catalogue.
PICTURED: VALENTINE 16/2/63 GD £9 Valentine’s Day issue.
British Update: Love Story Library: 20+ issues from #500-520 complete – a Swingin’ Sixties Selection
*Girls’ Picture Libraries: A run of Love Story Library this week from #500 to #521 from 1964, featuring every issue in that sequence. These are a delight, with lots of Carnaby Street influenced covers and outlandish storylines including perky young witches, creepy Christmasses, go-go girls and other groovy chicks. Bright, upbeat and hugely enjoyable, with colourful eye-catching covers and often striking interior art. These new additions average GD/VG to FN, only flawed by a degree of staple rust, and would otherwise grade a full grade higher than stated. Full details as always in our catalogue.
PICTURED: LOVE STORY LIBRARY #506 GD/VG £3.50
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. These six are from the early 1960s.
IN THIS UPDATE: SEXTON BLAKE LIBRARY ALL SOLD
#490 GD £5 Hunt The Lady by Desmond Reid
#495 GD/VG £6 Dead On Cue by Desmond Reid
#502 GD/VG £6 The Weak And The Strong by Arthur Kent
#503 GD £5 (PICTURED) High Summer Homicide by Arthur Kirby
#505 GD/VG £6 White Mercenary by Peter Saxon
#507 VG £7 Killer Pack by Wilfred McNeilly
American Update: Their Name Is Legion: 3rd Appearance in Action Comics #267, with debuts of three Legionnaires
*DC: Our Legion of Super-Heroes feature is back this week as we present the Legion’s third appearance in the Supergirl story in Action Comics #267, where the Maid of Steel not only meets the three Legion founders and attempts to join the group, but also encounters the first three Legionnaires to appear after the three founders: Chameleon Boy, Colossal Boy and Invisible Kid. Did Supergirl make it on to the team? You’ll have to read this classic tale to find out. A lower-graded pence-stamped copy with much spine wear and colour-breaking cover creasing, but reasonably bright with nice colour, good tight staples and excellent white to off-white pages.
PICTURED: ACTION COMICS #267 GD+ p £65
American 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. High resolution images are available on request.
PICTURED: AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #50 VG p £525
American Update: Mighty Marvel Firsts: Tales of Suspense #75 – Debuts of Sharon Carter (Agent 13) and Batroc the Leaper
*Marvel: The Captain America half of Tales of Suspense #75 introduced not one, but two, characters who were to factor largely in the life of the Star-Spangled Avenger. One was Batroc the Leaper, the savate-stomping stereotype who has unexpectedly kick-boxed his way into the hearts of fandom, who know him with affectionate derision as ‘Batroc Zee Leapair’; the other was Sharon Carter, a.k.a. Agent 13 of SHIELD, in this story a nameless young woman whose innocent appearance conceals a deadly skill set – and who became the second love of Cap’s life. Superficially, a decent pence printed copy, flat with little wear, no creasing, staples tight at spine and centrefold and supple creamy pages. The inside front and back covers are moderately tanned (but not brittle) just around the edges, and this shows to a small degree along the top and right edge of the front cover.
PICTURED: TALES OF SUSPENSE #75 VG p £70
American Update: Pre-Code Horror Fest: EC’s Haunt Of Fear x3
*EC: Recognising quality when we see it, we’re always pleased to welcome original ECs to our catalogue (they usually don’t hang around for long!). This week, three issues from the Haunt Of Fear, one nice mid-grade plus a couple of cheapies. Art by Graham Ingels, George Evans, Jack Davis, Jack Kamen and others from EC’s stable of the best contemporary talent. EC set the benchmark for Pre-Code Horror.
IN THIS UPDATE: HAUNT OF FEAR ALL SOLD
#16 (2nd #16 1952) VG £165 (PICTURED) Pre-Code; reasonably colourful and glossy cover, firm, tight staples, minor cover creasing which does not break colour., nice off-white to cream pages, tiny chip out bottom spine, small nick above lower staple with no loss.
#23 PR £18 Pre-code; all content there (just about), but brittle spine is crumbling apart with several chips missing.
#24 PR/FA £25 Pre-code; tatty spine split down to upper staple and at bottom. Chips out top edge.
British Update: Free Gift Farrago: Lion 1954 x 3
*Boys’ Adventure & War Comics: It seemed like the publishers of Lion had an endless supply of Free Gift albums to give away on subjects of fascination to schoolboys. Having said that, the Free Gifts for May 1954 don’t seem to turn up very often, so we’re very pleased to have all three consecutive issues with gifts available this week as follows:
PICTURED: LION ALL SOLD
8/5/54 VG/FN WITH FREE GIFT VG/FN Wonders Of Space Travel Album £35
15/5/54 VG/FN WITH FREE GIFT VG/FN Daring Deeds of World War II Album £35
22/5/54 VG/FN WITH FREE GIFT VG/FN Speed Marvels Album £35
British Update: This Week’s #1: Schoolgirls’ Adventure Library
*Girls’ Picture Libraries: In 1963, Micron (publishers of Combat Picture Library, among many others) entered the schoolgirl market with Schoolgirls’ Adventure Library, which ran for a very respectable 63 issues to 1965. Here we have the very first issue: ‘Penny, Pop-Star Pupil’, catching the zeitgeist of the day. A decent enough copy, with some spine roll and edge and corner wear, and a small scuff over the story title, but solid and integral.
PICTURED: SCHOOLGIRLS’ ADVENTURE LIBRARY #1 GD/VG £30
American Update: DC Debuts: Flash #139, 1st Professor Zoom
*DC: After #123 (‘Flash of Two Worlds’, as if you need telling), and the premier issue (#105), probably the most in-demand issue of the Silver Age Flash is #139, which featured the first appearance of Professor Zoom, the Reverse-Flash, Barry Allen’s super-swift nemesis from the far-flung future, whose appearances in the popular Flash television series have caused his early appearances to zoom (sorry) upwards in value. We are delighted to welcome a very affordable low grade copy of the Reverse-Flash into our inventory. This pence-stamped copy has more than moderate spine wear, is off bottom staple with a 4 cm lower spine split. Plenty of cover creasing, some long, some short, some breaking colour and some not, and wear at edges, with a couple of short back cover tears. Small label removal scuff mark over Comics Code Box. Still, staples firm at centrefold, good cover colour and decent pages. A half decent reading copy of a key issue.
PICTURED: FLASH #139 FA+ p £100 SOLD
American Update: Quirky Corner: Lois Lane #106: ‘I Am Curious (Black)!’
*DC: Lois Lane has had many mad moments – wacky bodily transformations, marrying random aliens/robots/villains, and convoluted and extreme schemes to entrap the Man of Steel into matrimony – but one of the maddest was her 106th issue – and the thing is, the creators weren’t even trying for the crazy! By this point, the writers were trying to make Lois more socially relevant, so she started embracing ‘issues’, and the issue here was racial tension. Now, younger readers won’t recall that in 1970, there was a controversial and sexually explicit film on release called ‘I Am Curious (Yellow)’ – writer Bob Kanigher, having apparently heard the title without grasping the context, stole this for the story’s title, ‘I Am Curious (Black)’, thereby bewildering, disappointing and offending multiple factions at once. Lois, having become suddenly aware of racial disparity – (precisely zero black people having appeared in her book until this point) uses Kryptonian ‘Transformoflux-Mold’ technology to turn herself into a black woman, and investigates Metropolis’ ‘Little Africa’ ghetto – from the inside! To be fair, the intentions were benign, and there are actually a couple of good points and good lines buried in there, but the overwhelming ham-fisted and cringe-making patronage of the issue has made it a bit of a cult item among connoisseurs of bad comics. This mid-grade pence-stamped copy has great colour cover and gloss, nice pages and little wear with two notable exceptions: it’s off top staple (although the centrefold is firmly attached), and the edges of the bottom right cover corner are a little crumpled with multiple colour-breaking creases A… classic of its kind?
PICTURED: LOIS LANE #106 VG p £100 SOLD
American Update: Superman’s Pal, Jimmy Olsen – Cheap as chips!
*DC: A chance to sample the wacky world of Jimmy Olsen with a few low grade copies that don’t cost the Earth (not even a tiny bit of it!) #52 FA p £3.25, #105 GD p £3.25, #107 GD p £3.25, #109 FA p £1.75, #112 GD p £3.25. Full details in our catalogue.
American Update: The Good Doctor Collection: Mighty Marvel Firsts: Debut of Dr. Doom in Fantastic Four #5
*Marvel: One of the highlights of the Good Doctor Collection leads off our Marvel updates for this week. With the fifth issue of the flagship title of the Marvel Universe, the FF met the Big Bad: Victor Von Doom, Monarch of Latveria, a scientific genius who had to hide his disfigured features behind a metal mask (and went in for a whole suit of armour to boot). Doom started out here, and went on to become not only the FF’s arch-nemesis, but arguably the major villain of the entire MU. This low grade cents copy presents reasonably well, with a largely unspoilt cover with good colour, staples attached at spine and top centrefold (off bottom centrefold) and decent off-white to creamy pages. The spine is worn with colour-breaking nicks becoming tiny holes, and there are very small and unobtrusive pieces of tape at top, middle and bottom spine. Edge wear along the bottom and right edges with small colour-breaking creases. Small sealed tear middle right edge sealed with tape on inside cover, and what I assume is the previous owner’s name in (small) pen close to the right edge. There is a small corner off upper left back cover and a small stain lower left back cover. The same name (plus one other) appears in biro in the upper margin of the splash page. High resolution images are available on request.
PICTURED: FANTASTIC FOUR #5 GD- £4,450
American Update: The Good Doctor Collection: Tales To Astonish #93 – Classic Hulk/Silver Surfer Clash
*Marvel: We kick-off the Good Doctor selection of Tales To Astonish with a favourite issue. Sentinel of Galactus, Norrin Radd, aka the Silver Surfer, became a hugely popular guest character following his early appearances in the Fantastic Four, and one of his most sought-after guest-shots – still prior to the premier issue of his ongoing series – is Tales to Astonish #93, in which the Surfer and the Incredible Hulk face off, courtesy of Stan Lee and Marie Severin. Cosmic power and epic action with a poignant ending – and a Sub-Mariner story, too! Even though it’s the Surfer’s twelfth appearance, it’s his first crossover with the wider Marvel Universe, outside of the Fantastic Four series. A nice mid-grade pence-printed copy, flat and tight with good cover colour and some gloss, firmly attached staples and nice off-white to white pages. Minor corner blunting and edge handling wear, but no significant defects.
PICTURED: TALES TO ASTONISH #93 VG+ p £85
American Update: X-Men #5: ‘The Angel Is Trapped’
*Marvel: X-Men #5 marked the very swift return of the Brotherhood of Evil Mutants (now, there’s a slick bit of nominative determinism for you), following their debut in the previous issue. The Scarlet Witch however was still suffering from the same bout of colour blindness that afflicted her on the cover of #4, where she was also dressed in emerald. You’d have thought that the clue was in her name… Anyway, a merry romp ensues between Prof X’s mutant band and Magneto’s misfits. This is a lower-graded cents copy, with a couple of small chips out of the spine and edges, and a fair amount of both colour breaking and non-colour breaking creasing, but the colours are reasonably bright, the staples firm at spine and centrefold and the cover image unmarked. Pages are a reasonable creamy colour.
PICTURED: X-MEN #5 GD £165 SOLD
American Update: Mighty Marvel Firsts/Slab Happy: Angry Bird – Savage She-Hulk #1
*Marvel: Let’s be honest, on the face of it, the She-Hulk sounded like a really lame idea when we first heard of her — what was to follow? Hulk-Hound, the Hulkmobile, Planet Hulk? But intermittently chartreuse lawyer Jen Walters has gone on to become one of the most enduring and endearing characters in the Marvel Universe, with creators such as John Byrne and Dan Slott providing charm, wit and (mostly) intelligent humour in her own series and during tenures with the Avengers and the Fantastic Four. There wasn’t too much trace of that in Jen’s first series, the Savage She-Hulk, when it saw the light of day back in 1980 and she was as angry as her cousin (though didn’t burst out of quite as much of her clothing, thanks to the exigencies of the Comics Code Authority) but Savage She-Hulk #1 – by the legendary creators Stan Lee and John Buscema – is where Jen’s illustrious career got its start. And very soon, Shulkie will be bursting on to our screens in her own TV series, so a good time to invest in her first appearance. Non-distributed in the UK, so there are no pence copies. This copy is graded by CGC as 9.6 (NM+), unrestored blue label, case perfect, white pages.
PICTURED: SHE-HULK #1 CGC 9.6 NM+ £400 SOLD
American Update: The Totally Amazing Spider-Man Collection: Spider-Mania: Mysterio returns in Amazing #24
*Marvel: We turn again this week to the Totally Amazing Spider-Man Collection for our dose of Spider-Mania. The TASM Collection is devoted exclusively to Amazing Spider-Man and covers almost every issue of Amazing from as early as #12 right up to around #800, which we are working through and releasing as quickly as we can. The notable feature of the TASM Collection is that all issues are high grade, averaging VF/VF+. In Amazing Spider-Man #24, Spidey is again threatened by the master of illusion and trickery Mysterio, in a tale of madness and hallucination. A lovely cents copy with great cover colour and gloss, sharp corners, tight firm staples and off-white to white pages. Just the slightest wear along the bottom edge with a slight nick precludes an even higher grade.
PICTURED: AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #24 VF £350 SOLD
American Update: Hither Came Conan…
*Marvel: A chunky update to the John Buscema years of the mighty-thewed Conan the Barbarian, with fresh issues in between #25 and #72 (almost every issue) plus a handful of later stragglers. As always, full details in our catalogue.
British Update: Six Of The Best: Planet Stories & Red Comet, reprinting Planet Comics
*Vintage UK/Australian Reprints of US Material: The US Planet Comics is probably the most famous and iconic science-fiction comic from the 1940s and 1950s. In the early 1960s, the UK Atlas publishers produced the quarterly Planet Stories, reprinting material from Planet Comics in crisp black and white within original UK colour covers. Strips such as Star Pirate, Auro Lord of Jupiter, Mysta of the Moon, Gale Allen and many more reached a whole new audience. The companion title Red Comet, with much the same idea, is rarer still. We have 5 Planet and 1 Red Comet fresh in this week in lovely condition, as detailed below:
PICTURED: PLANET STORIES ALL SOLD
#2 FN/VF £25
#3 FN £20
#4 FN/VF £25
#6 FN/VF £25
#9 FN £20
RED COMET #5 FN £25 SOLD