*Boys’ Adventure & War Comics: At the beginning of 1977, around the onset of punk music, a comic was launched that captured the zeitgeist of the times, more anarchic and anti-establishment than anything that had come before it in British comics, no more so than in the persona of Judge Dredd, the iconic anti-hero who has gone on to become legendary after debuting in issue #2. This update we’re featuring the first two issues of 2000 AD. #1 (1st Flesh, Mach-1, Invasion, Harlem’s Heroes, new Dan Dare) is a VG/FN copy, one of the nicest we’ve seen for a while with cream pages, little wear and the smallest amount of marks where the free gift was taped that we’ve ever seen; there is a small and faint water mark at the very bottom corner of the spine; excellent staples. #2 (1st Judge Dredd) also has nice cream pages, minimal wear with a few what look like foxing spots on the front and back cover margins; excellent staples. Please note there are no Free Gifts with these copies.
PICTURED: 2000 AD
#1 VG/FN £90 SOLD
#2 VG £150 SOLD
Category Archives: What’s New
British Update: Free Gift Farrago: A triumvirate of consecutive Victors from 1972 with Free Gifts
*Boys’ Adventure & War Comics: Well, football certainly was a popular subject for the Free Gift designers! Victor #575-577 promised ‘Smashing Free Gifts’, and here they are: #575 (VG) has ‘Super-Stars of 72’ plastic wallet and eight full colour footballer cards to put in it (VF); #576 (FN) has a full uncut sheet of somewhat smaller footballer colour photos (VF) and #577 (VG) has an uncut sheet of 14 football challenge cards (VF). We doubt that there are too many copies of these around with the Free Gifts still intact and unused.
PICTURED: VICTOR ALL SOLD
#575 VG WITH FREE GIFT VF £30
#576 FN WITH FREE GIFT VF £30
#577 VG WITH FREE GIFT VF £30
British Update: War Picture Library #1
*Boys’ Adventure & War Picture Libraries: It’s always nice to get a #1 issue of one of the longest running picture library titles, and this week we’re able to present War Picture Library #1. From 1958, this was one of the first comics in this format and gave rise to a lot of other similar titles from its publisher (Fleetway), rivals D C Thomson, Micron, Pearsons and lots of others. ‘Fight Back To Dunkirk’ presents well, with an unmarked cover image, decent pages and a little edge and spine wear and a small amount of staple rust.
PICTURED: WAR PICTURE LIBRARY #1 GD/VG £60
British Update: Free Gift Farrago: Whoopee! 1976
*Humour Comics: A couple of Free Gift issues from the popular humour title Whoopee this week and the year 1976. 3/4 (FN) has the Gift Horror Gripper (FN, appropriately stuck to the cover) and 14/8 (FN) has a Scarey Sticker — ooohhh… (VF).
PICTURED: WHOOPEE
3/4/76 FN WITH FREE GIFT FN £20 SOLD
14/8/76 FN WITH FREE GIFT VF £20 SOLD
British Update: Princess Tina 1970/71
*Girls’ Comics: Filling many gaps in our inventory, we’ve restocked Princess Tina with 20+ issues from the transitional period of 1970 and 1971, when the title was shifting from a more traditional younger girls’ weekly to a more teen-friendly format. Many of the regular features – ‘Ross, Student Nurse’, ‘Jackie and the Wild Boys’, ‘Barbie’, ‘Super-Girl Sandra’ and so on – were still in place, but the covers were starting to feature carefully-sanitised party and dating scenes rather than the more activity-based images of yore.
Super-Housekeeping Update
Since we’re now trading by mail order only, it gives us the chance to maintain our catalogue even more accurately. All items sold since lockdown are now being deleted within a few days of sale. We are also working through our entire catalogue to delete those items that sold pre-lockdown since files were last updated. This means that as we finish updating a file, you can rely on the catalogue for that category being (and staying) as close to 100% accurate as it is possible to get, with virtually everything available, apart from items sold in the last few days (and just a tiny amount of human error). We have now completed this exercise for the following categories from our British section:
*Annuals
*Collected Editions
All categories down to this point in our Catalogue Index have now been Super-Housekept! We will continue to post here as we make progress.
American Update: Batmania/DC Debuts: Brave & Bold #85, with 1st Neal Adams Green Arrow
*DC: Oliver (Green Arrow) Queen was dusted off by Neal Adams and given a new look and a new lease of life in 1969; he came to prominence in the famous Green Lantern/Green Arrow series by Adams, but it was here, in the Brave & the Bold #85 that Adams first revealed GA’s new look and hard-edged attitude. This pence stamped copy is tight with good staples, unspoilt cover image and decent page quality, with just minor edge wear and corner blunting.
PICTURED: THE BRAVE AND THE BOLD #85 FN+ p £50 SOLD
American Update: Harley Quinn invades Batmania! Early appearances in Catwoman and Gotham City Sirens
*DC: The original and best (we think) iteration of Harley Quinn this week in her original costume in some tough to find appearances: 3 issues of Catwoman from 2000/01 and 5 issues of Gotham City Sirens, where she co-starred with Catwoman and Poison Ivy. See our catalogue for details. Harl says: ‘What’s this about me being the fourth pillow of the DCU? I need all six pillows!’
PICTURED: CATWOMAN #83 FN+ £5.50
GOTHAM CITY SIRENS #20 FN- £6
American Update: Pre-Alan Moore Swamp Thing
*DC: Sometimes it’s difficult to remember that Swamp Thing was around a long time before Alan Moore got his teeth into him. The series that commenced in 1982 and started out as Saga Of The Swamp Thing and was the one in which Moore raised Swampy to the height of his fame (even more than the earlier Bernie Wrightson series) existed for some 19 issues before Moore, and we have most of those fresh into stock from #1, all in high grade; see our catalogue listing for full details.
PICTURED: SWAMP THING (SAGA OF THE) #1 VF/NM £15
American Update: Spider-Mania Max: High Grade Amazing #121 & #122: Deaths Of Gwen and the Goblin
*Marvel: Well, I don’t think anyone saw this coming back in 1973! In Amazing Spider-Man #121, Gwen Stacey died at the hands of the Green Goblin, and that villain perished himself in the very next issue. These landmark stories still resonate to this day, and although perhaps somewhat diluted by the return of both characters (hey kids, this IS comics!), the impact at the time was momentous and both issues still attract much collector interest. Our latest #121 is VF+, glossy with good tight staples and vivid cover colour; there are a couple of very minor pressure points near upper and lower staples that stop us grading it higher. Our new #122 is VF/NM with great cover gloss, tight staples and presents flat; just miniscule wear marks to the upper and lower right cover corners are really the only defects. Both are cents copies of course, since these issues were not distributed in the UK.
PICTURED: AMAZING SPIDER-MAN
#121 VF+ £325
#122 VF/NM £300
American Update: Mighty Marvel Firsts: Debut of Black Panther in Fantastic Four #52
*Marvel: Lee & Kirby’s Fantastic Four added to its many innovations in 1966’s FF #52, when they introduced the first black super-hero in comics. Previously, the vanishingly rare heroic black characters in comics had been either embarrassing sidekicks or ‘noble savages’, but the Black Panther was the monarch of a highly sophisticated and technologically advanced African nation, Wakanda, and was to become not only one of the FF’s greatest allies, but a mainstay of their fellow heroes, the Avengers. Following his spectacular big-screen success, T’Challa’s earliest appearances have never been in higher demand. This is a low grade and thus relatively affordable pence printed copy, with a loose centrefold and moderate-heavy spine wear, with weakness at staples and some spine roll at the top half; the top of the back cover is slightly frayed and there are a couple of small cover tears (front and back) and quite a lot of edge wear and minor creasing at edges, plus one long diagonal colour-breaking crease across the top right half of the comic, although this is not too pronounced. Page quality is okay, if a little tired and dog-eared in places. Not a copy to be too proud of, but a nice budget-conscious gap-filler on what has become a very expensive item.
PICTURED: FANTASTIC FOUR #52 GD- p £185
American Update: Slab Happy/Mighty Marvel Firsts: Daredevil #5, Debut of Matador, 1st Wally Wood art on title
*Marvel: The cover of Daredevil #5 is vibrant with colour, from the costumes of DD himself and new villain the Matador, plus the party guests in the background and the background graduated orange. A truly fitting scene for the debut of fan favourite artist Wally Wood, and the start of his short but defining stint on the series. This CGC 4.5 (VG+) unrestored blue label copy is beautiful to behold and is pence stamped.
PICTURED: DAREDEVIL #5 CGC 4.5 VG+ p £90
American Update: Spider-Mania Max: Giant-Size issues
*Marvel: In the mid-1970s, Marvel supplemented the output on its most popular titles with its Giant-Size range. These were comics of normal dimensions apart from being extra-thick with loads of pages. Usually a mix of new material and reprint, such was the case with your friendly neighbourhood web-slinger. We have issues #1-5 new into stock, often more than one copy of each with a choice of grades; as a bonus, there’s also a copy of the one-off Giant-Size Super-Heroes #1 Featuring Spider-Man, listed with the rest under Spider-Man, Amazing in our catalogue.
PICTURED: GIANT-SIZE SPIDER-MAN #1 VF/NM £60 SOLD
American Update: Strange Tales with the Torch and Dr Strange: Team-Ups/Battles, Debuts and more
*Marvel: Johhny Storm, aka the Human Torch, matches his fire to both ice and water this week, also featuring two of the earliest Dr Strange stories. In Strange tales #107, the Torch battles the Sub-Mariner in Namor’s 4th Silver Age Appearance. In #113 he meets the menace of the Plantman for the first time and also his new girlfriend Dorrie Evans. In #117 he’s up against the Eel, with Dr Strange facing ‘The Terrble Traps of Baron Mordo’. In #120, the Torch fights alongside the X-Men’s Iceman, while Doc Strange enters ‘The House Of Shadows’. Great stuff all the way!
PICTURED: STRANGE TALES
#107 GD- p £45
#120 GD- p £9.75 SOLD
American Update: A Superior Pre-Code Horror Fest: Mysteries Weird & Strange
*Horror 1940-1959: Superior was a Canadian publisher active from 1945-1956 who mostly reprinted American comics from the same time period. They also published a number of original series that were distributed in the United States. Among these were three horror titles famous for their hallucinogenic covers and accomplished Fiction House style interior art. When you see a lot of these together, they have an almost hypnotic and uncomfortable effect. Our focus this week is on issues #5-8 of one of those titles: Mysteries Weird & Strange; mid-grade fairly nice copies this time, with specific defects listed below.
PICTURED: MYSTERIES WEIRD & STRANGE ALL SOLD
#5 VG+ £175 Small upper spine split
#6 VG £150 Upper spine split
#7 VG/FN £190
#8 VG+ £175
American Update: Adventure Into Fear with Morbius
*Horror/Mystery 1960-1980s: New in this week, a consecutive run of Adventure Into Fear (listed in our catalogue as Fear, later Adventure into) from #23 to #31, the final issue, all starring Morbius the Living Vampire. Included is #24, the crossover with Blade, the Vampire Slayer.
American Update: Young Romance by Simon & Kirby
*Romance: A classic of the romance genre this week from Simon & Kirby; from 1949, Vol 2 #5 of Prize Comics’ Young Romance (also numbered as #11 in the series). A title later famously taken over by DC, ’52 pages of real life comics’, started out with a packed 15 pager by Simon & Kirby, and although there’s a lot of captions and word balloons, the King’s art style really shines through, particularly on the glorious splash page and the ironic cover. Subsequent stories by accomplished artists of the time such as Leonard Starr, Lee Elias and Bill Draut. This is a nice mid-grade copy with deep cover colour, very slight spine roll and minor corner blunting but hey, great for a 71 year old!
PICTURED: YOUNG ROMANCE V2 #5 VG/FN £52
American Update: Deadly Hands Of Kung Fu
*Vintage Magazine-Sized Comics: Tapping into the Martial Arts zeitgeist of the 1970s, Marvel’s Deadly Hands Of Kung Fu magazine starred Shang-Chi and Iron Fist, as you might expect, but also other Kung Fu stars such as the Sons of the Tiger, Daughters of the Dragon and, um, Bruce Lee (who I don’t think was copyrighted by Marvel). Lots of issues new in, including the Special Album Edition, mostly in low and affordable grades. Consult our catalogue for details.
British Update: Flash by Thorpe & Porter
*Vintage UK/Australian Reprints of US Material: Confusingly, there were two series of UK Flash in the early 1960s, the first lasting just five issues and the second just four. The first, from Strato/Thorpe & Porter, featured two early Silver Age Flash stories and a host of DC science-fiction shorts each issue. The second, from Thorpe & Porter/Top Sellers, also each featured two early Silver Age Flash stories and several Golden Age Wonder Woman stories. We have issues from both series new in; check out our catalogue listing.
PICTURED: FLASH #3 (2ND SERIES) VG+ £20
British Update: Free Gift Farrago: Wizard 1960
*Boys’ Adventure & War Comics: Just one Free Gift issue here this week, a Wizard from 1960, #1785. It comes complete with its Free Gift: ‘My Own Log Book Of Locomotives’. The comic is in FN shape, the gift has a very rusty staple, but otherwise okay; it should be noted that the sheet of glossy photos (the first set of six to stick in the booklet) are present and not cut from their sheet, although the sheet itself has become stuck to the inside rear page of the booklet.
PICTURED: WIZARD #1785 FN WITH FREE GIFT GD £25 SOLD
British Update: Starblazer: Science Fiction Adventure In Pictures
*Boys’ Adventure & War Picture Libraries: We’ve seen a great rise in interest and collectability in recent years for DC Thomson’s Starblazer from 1979. So we’re delighted to have five of the first ten issues back in stock, including the first two. Full details as always in our catalogue.
PICTURED: STARBLAZER #1 FN £20 SOLD
British Update: Joe 90/Lady Penelope
*TV & Film Related Comics: Small additions to our stocks of two fan favourite Gerry Anderson titles, Joe 90 and Lady Penelope, as listed in our catalogue.
British Update: Free Gift Farrago: Bunty 1968 x2
*Girls’ Comics: Another brace of Free Gift issues from the UK’s longest running girls’ title this week. From 1968, #561 comes with ‘Pearly Tiara’, #562 with ‘Your Very Own Badge’, complete with your initials. Both comics are VG, having suffered some creasing in storage with their gifts over the years; in addition #562 has a small cover puncture from the plastic pin of the badge. Both gifts are VF, the tiara still sealed in its plastic wallet, the badge complete with its unused sheet of initial options.
PICTURED: BUNTY
#561 VG WITH FREE GIFT VF £40
#562 VG WITH FREE GIFT VF £40
THE SQUARE MILE COLLECTION ARCHIVE
Well, now that we’ve finished listing and marketing the Square Mile Collection, we’ve archived a feature about it and listed all the comics it contained. You can read our thoughts and see images of all the comics on our Extras page here.
Some Square Mile copies are still available, but we recommend you move fast!
Super-Housekeeping Update
Since we’re now trading by mail order only, it gives us the chance to maintain our catalogue even more accurately. All items sold since lockdown are now being deleted within a few days of sale. We are also working through our entire catalogue to delete those items that sold pre-lockdown since files were last updated. This means that as we finish updating a file, you can rely on the catalogue for that category being (and staying) as close to 100% accurate as it is possible to get, with virtually everything available, apart from items sold in the last few days (and just a tiny amount of human error). We have now completed this exercise for the following categories from our British section:
*Vintage UK/Australian Reprints of US Material
*Alan Class Reprints
*Marvel UK
*Power Comics
All categories down to this point in our Catalogue Index have now been Super-Housekept! We will continue to post here as we make progress.
THE SQUARE MILE COLLECTION: GRAND FINALE
The world has changed since we acquired the Square Mile Collection towards the end of 2019. Although we’ve been listing comics from it virtually every week since November (apart from our two months of lockdown) it has of course taken us much longer than we expected to get to this momentous day when we unveil the final item. So, one final time…
This is an early Silver Age Collection from an original owner notable for the freshness and vibrancy of the cover colours and page quality; even those with minor reading and handling wear are vastly superior to the majority of comics that have been in circulation since the 1960s. The average grade is well above Fine, with many much nicer. Each comic will come branded with a special label and certificate of authenticity verifying it as part of the Square Mile Collection.
I doubt we’ll ever see a collection of this quality and vintage again, with so many key issues. In the near future, we’ll be adding a feature on this special collection to our Extras page. In the meantime, there are still a few comics available from this collection in our DC & Marvel listings which haven’t yet been snapped up, if you want to buy a piece of history. Then, of course, there’s this very last comic…
American Update: Spider-Mania Max/Slab Happy/Mighty Marvel Firsts: Amazing Spider-Man #1 CGC 6.5
*Marvel: Well, here it is, the final item from the Square Mile Collection, slabbed by CGC. Amazing Spider-Man #1 features the origin of Spidey re-told, and the first appearances of J. Jonah Jameson and the Chameleon, as well as the first ever Fantastic Four crossover. This cornerstone of the Marvel Age of Comics is a 6.5 (FN+) copy that presents beautifully. It’s a UK pence printed variant with off-white to white pages; CGC Universal grade, blue label, no restoration. The crowning glory of the Square Mile Collection and great to own for investment potential as well as for bragging about it in your collection…
PICTURED: AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #1 CGC 6.5 FN+ p £16,750 SOLD
American Update: Batmania: P-p-p-pick Up A Penguin! Batman #169
*DC: One of the definitive Batman covers of the new look this week, with Batman #169 and the Penguin in his second Silver Age appearance. Beautifully rendered by Carmine Infantino, the Dynamic Duo watch on as the Master of Fowl Play jets off from a rooftop on his jet-propelled umbrella, against a backdrop sky of the richest, most lush shade of purple that only DC’s colourists could produce. A classic for fans of the contemporary TV series. This is a cover that really needs to be unspoilt, as it is here on this lovely copy, glossy, tight and flat with excellent staples and page quality, the most minor edge wear (except for some very narrow creasing at the right edge) and a tiny chip out of the bottom right corner. For perfectionists, we also have an even nicer copy listed in our catalogue.
PICTURED: BATMAN #169 FN p £95 SOLD
American Update: DC Debuts – 1st Lobo in Omega Men #3
*DC: I make no secret of the fact that Lobo isn’t my personal cup of tea; if I was writing the DCU, he most assuredly wouldn’t be in it. However, there’s no denying that the Main Man has a certain notoriety and popularity with a certain audience, and if you’re one of them, you’re sure to want his first appearance in your collection, which came a staggering 37 years ago in Omega Men #3. A nice (!) copy, with a couple of non-colour breaking creases in the spine area and some handling wear along the top.
PICTURED: OMEGA MEN #3 VF- £30 SOLD
American Update: Spider-Mania Max: 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 is a FN pence copy of this ground-breaking item, light to moderate edge and corner wear, but clean and unimpaired cover, nice interior pages, and the squarebound spine, though slightly stressed in places, strong and intact.
PICTURED: SUPERMAN VS THE AMAZING SPIDER-MAN FN p £60 SOLD
American Update: Fantastic Four #16 with Ant-Man & Dr. Doom
*Marvel: Issues of Fantastic Four below #20 are turning up much more rarely these days, and being snapped up when they do. This beautiful copy of #16 features the villainy of Doctor Doom and guest-stars Ant-Man in one of the earliest Marvel crossovers, back when such things were still a special event. Lee & Kirby are at the height of their powers on this early issue. A tight, flat and glossy pence-printed copy with white pages and excellent staples; only minimal corner blunting and the tiniest of creases at right edge top and bottom, only visible on close inspection; there is a very faint line along about 6 cm of the right cover edge, barely visible; wonderfully fresh and unspoilt cover image.
PICTURED: FANTASTIC FOUR #16 VF- p £375 SOLD
American Update: Mighty Marvel Firsts: Debut of Juggernaut in X-Men #12 & #13
*Marvel: With Jolly Jack Kirby leaving the art chores of the X-Men after issue #11, Stan Lee realised he had to crank up the excitement to keep readers’ attention, and he certainly achieved it with this dynamic two-parter which introduced one of the X-Men’s (and the broader Marvel Universe’s) most powerful opponents, the Juggernaut! Cain Marko, the hitherto unsuspected step-brother of the X-Men’s mentor Professor Xavier, dabbled with arcane forces and was transformed into the embodiment of an irresistible force – giving him the power to crush his hated step-sibling, and his super-powered students! This two-parter reveals the origins of Professor X and the Juggernaut, and reveals some of the reasons why Xavier set about training the new generation of mutants. #12 is a decent lower graded pence stamped copy, slightly mis-cut so that more of the white spine shows towards the bottom, but apart from fine lines of edge wear and corner blunting isn’t too bad. The back cover is actually much worse, with creasing, staining and a small chip out of the edge. Staples are firmly attached and page quality is okay. #13 is a little better, pence printed, edge wear and corner blunting with a long colour-breaking crease across bottom front cover, good staples and page quality and overall a cleaner and fresher copy.
PICTURED: X-MEN
#12 GD p £140 SOLD
#13 VG- p £65
American Update: Spider-Mania Max: Amazing Annual #5, the story of Peter Parker’s parents
*Marvel: In the fifth Annual (or King-Size Special as they called it back then) of Amazing Spider-Man, Stan Lee and Larry Leiber brought us the previously untold story of Peter Parker’s deceased parents. Were they really spies and traitors? Spidey goes on an international mission of discovery and a trail that leads him to the Red Skull. We have a beautiful copy new in this week, with brilliant cover colour and gloss, no markings, tightly bound with an intact squarebound spine, sharp corners, white pages and only the most minimal wear at top and bottom spine precluding a NM grade. A gem.
PICTURED: AMAZING SPIDER-MAN ANNUAL #5 VF/NM £130 SOLD
American Update: Mighty Marvel Firsts: 1st full Taskmaster app. in Avengers #196
*Marvel: The villain of Avengers #196, the Taskmaster, is slated to be the Big Bad of the upcoming Black Widow movie. The polymath skill-pilferer 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, and this copy is high grade, with virtually no defects except for the tiniest bit of handling wear at top edge. Shiny, tight, flat, sharp and all those other adjectives we apply to really nice copies.
PICTURED: AVENGERS #196 NM- £130
American Update: Spider-Mania Max: Hey Kids! Brain-sucking symbiote! Venom: Nights Of Vengeance
*Marvel: From 1994, another complete Venom mini-series told with the usual finesse and restraint that this character is known to bring out from creators. This time it’s Venom: Nights Of Vengeance, all 4 issues now available in VF/NM or NM grade. See our catalogue for the full listing.
American Update: Atomic Sci-Fi: Space Adventures, Charlton’s famous science fiction anthology
*Charlton: From 1952, the first nine issues of Charlton’s Space Adventures science fiction anthology series. Many notable features of this series: #1 has a world on fire cover by Fago/Morales, #4 & #6 have flying saucer covers, #7 has the famous sex change story ‘Transformation’, #8 has a robot cover and #9 an A-bomb panel. A heady mix of retro interplanetary adventure from way back when. A few issues are pictured below; check out our catalogue listings for full information including condition descriptions.
PICTURED: SPACE ADVENTURES
#2 App FN £95 SOLD
#4 GD £50
#7 App GD/VG £50 SOLD
#8 VG/FN £90 SOLD
American Update: Alan Moore’s Miracleman #15 — the rarest issue
*Miscellaneous 1960 Onwards: Alan Moore’s sixteen issues of Miracleman are widely regarded as one of the great classics of modern age comics (if you count the 1980s as modern, that is). He took an ersatz Captain Marvel, invented as Marvelman in the 1950s when Len Miller’s license to reprint the captain ran out, and rebranded him as an adult super-hero for the times, in one of the greatest sequences of comics ever created IMHO. Originally serialised in Warrior Magazine, Marvelman changed to Miracleman when published by Eclipse in the USA (need I cite obvious copyright reasons?) and the series got its conclusion there, at least as far as Moore was concerned. When joined by artist John Totleben for the last issues, story and art clicked seamlessly, if somewhat horrifically. Issue #15 has the lowest print run of the series (possibly due to its gruesome content) and is regarded as the key issue featuring the conclusion of Miracleman’s mortal combat with his former sidekick Kid Miracleman — and if that sounds silly, let me assure you it isn’t. Not for the squeamish. A great copy on offer, with only the smallest spine ticks precluding a NM grade or higher.
PICTURED: MIRACLEMAN #15 VF/NM £60 SOLD
American Update: Red Circle Sorcery: Archie’s Best-Kept Secret
*Horror/Mystery 1960-1980s: It was just recently that Will provided a definitive guide to Archie’s brief Red Circle horror line (see Red Circle Sorcery: Archie’s Best-Kept Secret) where there are also lots more images, and there’s nothing I can add to comment on that superb and obscure little excursion by Archie from 1973-74, except to say that what Will’s article doesn’t tell you is how much of a bargain these comics are — we have issues #3-11 or Chilling Adventures in Sorcery/Red Circle Sorcery and #95-97 of Madhouse, the companion title, which comprises the entire 12 issue run (we also have #2 of Chilling Adventures which preceded, but is a different animal). All issues can be picked up for between £2 and £9 each, depending on grade; Will did mention how hard these were to track down, but now we’ve got ’em — in spades, with a choice of grades on most issues.
PICTURED: RED CIRCLE SORCERY
#7 FN+ £8.50
#11 FN £5
MADHOUSE #97 VF £8.25
American/British Update: The Ghost Who Walks – Again — the Phantom is here!
*Phantom: A much overdue top-up to our depleted stocks of Phantom, the ever popular jungle adventurer, all US issues this time. Many King and Charlton issues of the main American run, plus a rare King 1973 reprint and one issue of the DC Mini-Series. There’s a legion of fans out there for this character, and issues rarely stay in stock for long…
PICTURED: PHANTOM #60 FN+ p £7.75
British Update: Marvelous Alan Class
*Alan Class Reprints: A further selection of Alan Class issues reprinting classic Marvel Silver Age stories in Secrets Of The Unknown, Sinister Tales, Suspense and Weird Planets, both certificated by Alan Class himself and regular editions. Characters include: Fantastic Four, Daredevil, Avengers, Captain America, Dr Strange, Silver Surfer and Ant-Man & the Wasp. See our catalogue for more details.
British Update: Free Gift Farrago: A Warlord Triumvirate
*Boys’ Adventure & War Comics: Warlord, starting in 1974, was a late entrant by D C Thomson into the traditional British war comic stakes, but attained a popularity which endured for 12 years and 627 issues. This week we have three consecutive early issues, complete with their spiffy Free Gifts. All three comics vary from GD to VG, mostly because of the ink stacking defect quite common in this series, where an imprint of the back cover of one issue is shown to varying degrees on the front cover of the one is was stacked on before the ink was dry. Free Gifts are nice as follows: #18 has two model fighter planes of WW2, still unassembled in their original envelopes (envelopes slightly grubby, but unopened); #19 has two further such models in the same condition and #20 has a sheet of stick-on badges in pristine condition.
PICTURED: WARLORD ALL SOLD
#18 GD WITH FREE GIFT FN/VF £30
#19 GD/VG WITH FREE GIFT FN/VF £30
#20 VG WITH FREE GIFT VF £25
British Update: Going Commando Again
*Boys’ Adventure & War Picture Libraries: A further update to our stocks of the premier war-themed Picture Library, D C Thomson’s Commando, all in the 800’s, mostly in VF grade with a few FN issues; a lot of numbers previously missing from our listing. Consult our catalogue for full details.
British Update: Quirky Corner/Free Gift Farrago: Gerry Anderson’s Candy #1 1967
*TV & Film Related Comics: Undoubtedly, the most obscure Gerry Anderson comic is Candy, a Younger Readers’ series which Anderson conceived as a comic with photographed rather than drawn images. It’s the story of two dolls (Candy & Andy) who live with their guardian giant pandas (don’t ask me why). Legend has it that Anderson was hoping this set up would take the world by storm, and that he was hoping for a TV series, but frankly, given the stills which adorn the covers, the characters come across as more creepy than cuddlesome, but nevertheless the comic lasted 150+ issues, enhanced by the media presence of co-stars Topo Gigio, Tingha and Tucker, and Winnie the Pooh. The unusual landscape format of the earlier issues lends the series an added quirkiness. In recent years, the series has gone from obscure oddity to cult collectable amongst Fandersons with rising prices, although it’s by far the rarest of all the Anderson material. We doubt there are too many copies of #1 around still with its Free Gift, but we’re very fortunate to have one this week. The comic is VG/FN, with very minor spine wear, clean and unmarred; we don’t know if this issue was published with staples, but this copy has never had any. The Free Gift (Candy’s Magic Painting Book), is an unused VF/NM. I doubt you’ll get many chances to add this to your collection.
PICTURED: CANDY #1 VG/FN WITH FREE GIFT VF/NM £150 SOLD
British Update: Princess 1960-1967
*Girls’ Comics: From 1960 to 1967, Princess weekly delighted a generation of proper young ladies, with its pretention to being a ‘magazine’ – photo-covers and lots of educational, historical and how-to features. But the comic strips kept the readers coming back for more, including ‘Alona the Wild One’, ‘The Happy Days’ and (in glorious painted colour) ‘Amber Ridd, Daughter of Lorna Doone’. New in this week we have a selection from 1960 and 1963-67, including Christmas and April Fool issues and 14th August 1965, with the first part of the adaptation of John Wyndham’s ‘Chocky’.
PICTURED: PRINCESS 14/8/65 VG £4 SOLD
Clearance Corner: A Baker’s Dozen from Dragon Lady Press: Classic US Newspaper Strips; 13 volumes for just £25 post free
*Clearance Corner: In the 1980s, Dragon Lady Press produced magazine-sized collections of several of the classic American newspaper strips, usually of 60+ pages each and beautifully reproduced in crystal clear black and white. We have 13 of these volumes, all in high grade, in this week’s clearance, comprising the following strips: Mary Perkins on Stage by Leonard Starr, Secret Agent X9 by Al Williamson (x 2 different), Mandrake the Magician by Lee Falk, Tales Of The Green Beret by Joe Kubert, Smilin’ Jack by Zack Mosley, Dick Tracy by Collins & Locher, Brenda Starr by Dale Messick, Buz Sawyer by Roy Crane (x 3 different) and Wash Tubbs/Captain Easy also by Roy Crane (x 2 different). A wealth of reading with these iconic characters for just £25 post free in the UK (only). A photo sample of some is shown here.
Super-Housekeeping Update
Since we’re now trading by mail order only, it gives us the chance to maintain our catalogue even more accurately. All items sold since lockdown are now being deleted within a few days of sale. We are also working through our entire catalogue to delete those items that sold pre-lockdown since files were last updated. This means that as we finish updating a file, you can rely on the catalogue for that category being (and staying) as close to 100% accurate as it is possible to get, with virtually everything available, apart from items sold in the last few days (and just a tiny amount of human error). We have now completed this exercise for the following category from our American section:
*Magazines/Books About Vintage US Comics
and from our American/British section:
*Tarzan/E R Burroughs
*Phantom
*Flash Gordon
*Spirit
*Classics Illustrated
*Mad & Other Parody
*Undergrounds
*Memorabilia & Esoterica
All categories down to this point in our Catalogue Index have now been Super-Housekept! Thus we have completed all American and all American/British stock; British categories commence next week. We will continue to post here as we make progress.
THE SQUARE MILE COLLECTION: PENULTIMATE RELEASE
This is an early Silver Age Collection from an original owner notable for the freshness and vibrancy of the cover colours and page quality; even those with minor reading and handling wear are vastly superior to the majority of comics that have been in circulation since the 1960s. The average grade is well above Fine, with many much nicer.
We’ve been releasing comics from this amazing collection since last November and we’re down to the last two comics now, but stick around for the grand finale next week — it’s a doozy! Each comic will come branded with a special label and certificate of authenticity verifying it as part of the Square Mile Collection. Here’s this week’s (and if you think this is sensational, just wait till next week):
American Update: Mighty Marvel Firsts: Fantastic Four #5 with the Debut of Dr. Doom
*Marvel: 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 Square Mile Collection copy is typical of this pedigree, with lovely white pages and just a minimum of wear at spine and edges, very fine creases just breaking colour. A beautiful clean cover image with great gloss and colour. High resolution images are available on request.
PICTURED: FANTASTIC FOUR #5 FN- p £4,500 SOLD
American Update: DC Debuts: 1st Deathstroke in New Teen Titans #2
*DC: Slade Wilson, a.k.a. Deathstroke (also known for much of his career as ‘the Terminator’, until Arnie’s agents said the magic words, ‘Cease & Desist’) made his first appearance in New Teen Titans #2, the successful Wolfman/Perez revival of the faltering franchise. Already a hit, the New Teen Titans’ fortunes rose with those of Mr. Slade as their recurring arch-nemesis, and eventually he went on to star in several series of his own, as well as media appearances in the ‘Arrow’ TV show and elsewhere. This is a very nice copy, with a tiny non-colour breaking crease across the right top corner and minor handling wear at the spine, but tight staples, great cover colour and gloss.
PICTURED: NEW TEEN TITANS #2 FN/VF p £75
American Update: Batmania: Batman #120
*DC: A good, solid, pre UK distribution Batman comic from 1958 this week. Batman #120 features three crime mysteries pencilled by Sheldon Moldoff and cover features ‘The Airborne Batman’ with art by Curt Swan. A decent Good graded copy with edge wear and a small lower spine split, but unmarred cover image and good staples. Also available in VG as listed in our catalogue.
PICTURED: BATMAN #120 GD £50 SOLD