*Clearance Corner: Our second initial lot for Clearance Corner comprises our entire stock of the above 3 vintage Marvel reprint titles, which all started in the 1960’s. We’re discontinuing stocking these to make room in our boxes for the large number of original Marvel comics coming into our hands. This bargain selection of 72 issues includes:
Marvel Tales #5, #6, #10-14, #16-19, #22, #23 x2, #25-28, #31, #35-77 & #95
Marvel Collectors’ Item Classics #1 x 2, #2, #3, #4 x2, #5
Fantasy Masterpieces #3-4
In an average VG/FN condition, a small number a little tatty, many better, with a price guide value in excess of £300. Available for £30. These may be collected from our shop or posted (UK only) for an additional postage charge of £13.50. SORRY, THESE HAVE NOW SOLD
Clearance Corner (3): Lot of 27 Fantasy Paperbacks
*Clearance Corner: Our final selection for this initial visit to Clearance Corner comprises 27 vintage fantasy paperback novels, as follows:
Raven 1-5 by Richard Kirk
11 Blade novels by Jeffrey Lord
7 novels by Karl Edward Wagner
Messenger of Zhuvastou by Andrew J Offut
Wandor’s Journey by Roland Green
The Dark Straits of Reglathium by Mike Sirota
The Baalbak Quest by David J Kelly
All are in decent, very readable condition. Available for just £5. These can be collected from our shop or posted (UK only) for a postage fee of £13.50.
American Update: Kanjar Ro Double Header!
*DC: The debut and second appearance of the notorious Justice League/Adam Strange foe Kanjar Ro. First up, Justice League of America #3, with his first appearance, GD p at £65, spine split at bottom by a couple of inches, but otherwise nice black background cover. Secondly, in the comic often referred to as Justice League of America #3.5, but in reality Mystery In Space #75, Kanjar Ro tackles Adam Strange AND the JLA, giving readers a chance to see the World’s Greatest Super-Heroes as rendered by the great combo of Carmine Infantino and Murphy Anderson. MIS #75 is GD/VG p £20, also with lower spine split. Classic outer space adventure from 1961/62!
American Update: DC Silver/Bronze Sweep – All-Star to Demon!
*DC: Our progressive alphabetical top-up of the DC Universe continues with a selection of new items in All-Star (Wally Wood and Paul Levitz’s superlative 70’s revival), Aquaman (stunning Nick Cardy artwork), Atom (including #29, featuring the Atoms of Two Earths!) Batman: the Killing Joke (7th printing of Moore & Bolland’s notorious work), Brave & Bold (including #60, with the debuts of both the Teen Titans team name and their distaff member, Wonder Girl!), Crisis On Infinite Earths, DC Special, DC Special Blue Ribbon Digest, and last but not least, Jack Kirby’s rhyming denizen of the underworld, the Demon! For details of issue numbers, grades and prices, see our catalogue.
American Update: Marvel XX Month Begins with the Scarlet Witch in X-Men #4
*Marvel: Throughout April, we’ll be celebrating the women of Marvel, each week spotlighting the first appearance of a classic character from the dawn of the Marvel Age, in an event we’re calling ‘Marvel XX’, which you can interpret either as kisses or chromosomes, or both! We are delighted to commence with X-Men #4, in which Wanda, everybody’s favourite Scarlet Witch, appeared for the first time as a member of the Brotherhood of Evil Mutants! The crimson-clad conjuress (though erroneously depicted as a Emerald Empress on this very cover) has been a mutant and a mage, an X-Man and an Avenger, a hero and a villain, and a bunch of other stuff besides, including being the alleged offspring of a bewildering variety of people as new writers take over. But however many retcons she endures, she remains one of Marvel’s most popular leading ladies. This issue, of course, saw the premier appearances of a few other folks as well: the super-swift Quicksilver, for many years Wanda’s brother but now maybe not (long story, Google if you’re bothered), Mastermind, the Toad, and indeed the Brotherhood of Evil Mutants itself! It’s an extremely attractive FN+ p copy with vibrant, deep, unfaded cover colour, and only very fine stress lines at the spine. On sale for £500.
American Update: Thor #132 – 1st Ego, The Living Planet!
*Marvel: A rising star in the comics firmament, is Thor #132, in which Ego, the Living Planet first appeared, opposing the titular Thunder God and the might of Tana Nile and the Colonizers; the reason that this issue, nice though it is, has rocketed in price of late is the appearance of Ego in the forthcoming second Guardians of the Galaxy movie, in which – SPOILER SPOILER SPOILER – he is revealed to be the father of Star-Lord. And for those of you wondering how the hell that could work? – (baffled shrug). Be that as it may; this cents copy is an extremely desirable FN/VF at £100 – jump in now before the speculators start circling!
American Update: Fantastic Four First Appearances, and other Early Events!
*Marvel: Marvel’s First Family, the fabulous Fantastic Four, is the focus of this update, as we add early issues and first appearances into our inventory. Among these “FFFirsts” are: #15, with the first appearance of the maniacal Mad Thinker, and his Awesome Android; #19, with the debut of Rama-Tut, the time-twisting pharaoh who at various times has been suspected of being Kang, Immortus, the Scarlet Centurion, Doctor Doom, and Millie the Model (well, we wouldn’t be surprised…); #22, with the debut of Sue Storm’s Force Field power, beginning her transformation from token chick into a fully useful member of the team; #28, with the first X-Men/Fantastic Four fracas; #29, with the classic “It Started On Yancy Street” tale; #30, premier of Diabolo and #35, which brought us the ever-delightful Dragon Man! Issues #15 (GD/VG p £50), #19 (VG p £68), and #28 (VG+ p £65) are depicted; for price details on the others, please see our catalogue.
American Update: Spider-Mania continues! Amazing #101-150
*Marvel: Our massive updates to everyone’s favourite wall-crawler continue this week with a range of Amazing Spider-Man from #101-150, most issues from that period new in, in many cases in a choice of grades. A largely non-distributed in the UK period, in which Spidey tangles with the Hulk, the Green Goblin and many other regular dance partners, as well as debuts of new rogues’ gallery members Morbius, the Gibbon, Man-Wolf, the Grizzly, Cyclone, the Jackal and others. Also significant in this period is the Clone Saga, featuring the first appearances of Ben Reilly (Peter Parker clone) and the Gwen Stacy clone.
American Update: From Beyond the Grave to the Vault of Evil – Charlton, DC and Marvel horror restocked!
*Horror/Mystery 1960-1980’s: A significant update for this popular category sees major top-ups to Charlton – Beyond the Grave, Ghostly Haunts, Ghostly Tales, Ghost Manor, Haunted, Many Ghosts of Doctor Graves, Midnight Tales, Monster Hunters, Professor Coffin, Scary Tales and Tales of the Mysterious Traveler – and to Marvel, with new entries for Chamber of Darkness, Tower of Shadows, Crypt of Shadows (because you can never have too many shadows…), Tomb of Darkness and Vault of Evil. Rounding it out, a DC update to Weird Mystery Tales, one of the 1970’s titles launched in the wake of the company’s success with revitalising their horror line. Mostly in mid-range affordable grades, these offer a chance to see work by some of the stars of the comics business – including Ditko, Buscema, Sutton, Newton, Smith and Zeck – either in their early days or, in the case of Charlton, subjected to least editorial control!
American/British update: More Classics Illustrated!
*Classics Illustrated: A further selection now added to our stock of this evergreen popular title, both American and British editions. The American editions include the Adventures of Marco Polo, The Man Who Laughs, The Time Machine & Faust. British editions include Moby Dick, Caesar’s Conquests, Romeo & Juliet, The Pathfinder and, star of this update, a rare copy of #14 Westward Ho! 3rd printing (Australian edition) with new British cover FN/VF at £57. Many other issues also included — check out our catalogue listings for full details.
British Update: Pow & Wham
*Power Comics: Just a handful of additions to this popular category for both Pow and Wham, including a low grade Pow #2.
British Update: Complete run of Buster softcover annuals 1962-1978 plus lots of extras
*Annuals: We’re delighted to present a complete run of Buster softcover annuals from the very first, 1962 up to 1978, after which a more conventional hardcover format was adopted. Because of the softcover printings, these are much scarcer, particularly in nice grade, than virtually all of their contemporaries. Buster presented a unique blend of humour and adventure, and as if to emphasize that, we also have a few extras: Buster Books of Gags (1970), Spooky Stories (1975) and Thrills (1962). The first Buster Annual is a nice VG+ at £60; consult our catalogue for grading and pricing information on the subsequent volumes. Not content with that, we also have several more additions to our Humour Annual sub-category: Cor & Cor Book Of Gags from the 1970’s, a facsimile edition of the first Dandy Annual from 1939, and Whizzer & Chips and Whoopee.
British Update: Off On A Comet – Part 1
*Boys’ Adventure & War Comics: The long-running weekly Comet is extensively refreshed with almost all issues from 1952 (when it shrank down to an ersatz-US smaller size) to the end of 1954. This period covers the debuts of radio star Dick Barton (who goes to outer space from #247 on), and the first appearances of long-running mainstays Strongbow the Mohawk (from #264) and Claude Duval (from #270). Also present are Buffalo Bill, Billy Bunter, and several popular series not called ‘Bill’! This is the first part of a substantial Comet collection we have acquired in affordable mid-grades and which represents the biggest cluster we’ve ever seen here at 30th Century during our years of trading – an ideal opportunity to fill those gaps in your run! Collectors should note that a previous owner has deleted the original numbers in pen and added his own numbering system, but we have accurately recorded the true numbers on our pricing labels on the bag enclosing each issue. Watch out for a further instalment from 1955 onwards coming soon!
British Update: Put a Jag in your tank!
*Boys’ Adventure & War Comics: IPC/Fleetway’s third ‘big cat’ title, Jag, launched boldly in 1968 with a tabloid+ size that, while exciting to the young readers, was a devil for newsagents trying to display it. Many reputedly never even put copies on sale and the large size made it easily damaged. As a consequence, copies of Jag are generally rare and seldom high grade. We have a nice selection new in from the 2nd issue 1968 through to the ante-penultimate in 1969, including the first appearance of Football Family Robinson, who would go on to a longer career in Tiger. As a bonus, we also have the scarce 1968 Jag Football Special, FA/GD at £17.50.
British Update: Gerry Anderson titles in TV & Film Related
*TV & Film Related Comics: A small update to four titles in this popular category: Countdown, Joe 90, TV Action and TV Century 21 are all refreshed with just a few copies of each title.
British Update: Cor! 1970-1974 – from the second to the, er, second-to-last!
*Humour Comics: The hugely popular weekly Cor! was, with Whizzer & Chips, instrumental in revitalising the humour comics scene at IPC/Fleetway in the late 60’s/early 70’s. With its 1970 launch, it brought a plethora of new stars to the scene, several of whom, after Cor itself fell by the wayside, continued their career into a revitalised Buster. But here we have 130+ issues from the prime of its run, from the second ever issue in 1970 to 1974’s penultimate number, in affordable mid-grades. Join Gus Gorilla, Ivor Lott and Tony Broke, Hire-A-Horror, Andy’s Ants (if only they’d called him Adam…), Kid Chameleon and TV super-stars the Goodies for fairly hi-octane fun and frolics!
British Update: June Busts Out Again: 1961 to 1962
*Girls’ Comics: One of the most popular girls’ weeklies in our inventory is the long-running June, and we’re pleased this week to add in many issues from 1961 and 1962, its first and second year of publication. These are so old, they’re even before the “And School Friend” era! We open with the 5th of May 1961, and close this selection with 1st September 1962 – by no means a complete unbroken run, but a substantial quantity of hard to find early issues, in acceptable mid-grades, averaging GD/VG. Originally conceived as a low-rent version of Princess, June was initially heavy on photo-covers, ballet, and features on the Royal Family, but swiftly broadened its remit to attractive line-drawn covers of the series featured within, including “Nurse Valiant”, “Diana’s Diary”, “Wendy’s Private Witch”, and yes, persistent lame ballerinas galore! An affordable chance to see the early years of one of the Grand Old Ladies of British Girls’ Comics.
British Update: Jackie 1960’s/1970’s — Poptastic! (With Problems!)
*Girls’ Comics: A Poptastic Update! Big additions to our stock of that most angst-ridden of all girls’ comics/magazines, the long-running and fondly-remembered Jackie, with its mixture of pop, comic strips and teenage girl lifestyle. We get a lot of women of a certain age browsing in our shop going ‘ooh and ‘ahh’ over these, and everyone remembers the problem pages, right? Fill yer kinky boots with this new selection of several issues from 1965 and then dozens from 1971-1976, greatly enhancing our existing inventory.
Books Update: Short Stories For SF Fans
*Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror: A great selection of single author short story collections have just joined our shelves. Authors include Harry Harrison (The Best Of ..), Walter M Miller Jr (A View From The Stars), Larry Niven (Tales Of Infinite Space), Frederik Pohl (Digits And Dastards), two from A E Van Vogt (Away And Beyond and The Far-Out Worlds Of ..) and (previously a glaring omission from our catalogue) James Tiptree Jr (Ten Thousand Light Years From Home).
What’s Old: The Adam Strange Trilogy in Showcase
This week in our What’s Old feature, where we spotlight items from our existing stock you might have missed, we are proud to present, tying in with our Kanjar Ro double-header, the first three appearances in Showcase #17-19 of Adam Strange, Guardian Of The Spaceways. The creation of Gardner Fox with Mike Sekowsky, archaeologist Adam Strange was transported each issue to the exotic planet of Rann, where, together with the lovely Alanna, he defeated threats to two worlds. His first three appearances are offered here in appealing low-mid grades. His debut in Showcase #17 is FA/GD at £140 with light repair work at the spine. #18 is GD- at £55 and #19 is GD/VG at £100. After this trilogy, Adam Strange became a regular in Mystery In Space from #53 onwards.
Housekeeping Update
On a regular cycle, we sweep through our entire stock to delete sold items and keep our listing as up to date as possible. We’ve just finished deleting sold items from the following files in our American section:
*Horror 1940-1959
and in our British section:
*Rupert
*Boys’ Adventure & War Comics (R – S)
As of the time of writing, these categories are bang up to date, with every item listed available.
The Reign of 30th Century Comics Starts Now!
At last – our masterplan for world domination. In true gloating megalomaniac style we can reveal how we will have taken over the planet by midday today!
At this very moment our customers worldwide will be using their combined skills to deceive, inveigle and obfuscate in order to bring down legitimate governments and install 30th Century puppet regimes in their place.
How was this achieved? you ask. Dr Evilla and her minions have been working tirelessly in the shop’s top-secret sub-basement, constructing a labyrinth of dark conspiracy by placing subliminal messages on the cover of every comic we sell, causing all our customers to rise up and revolt at the appointed hour.
Why are we telling you this now? Because by the time you read this it will be TOO LATE!
Aha ha ha!!!!
American Update: The World’s Finest Team!
*DC: A pair of uncommon vintage World’s Finest issues this update, predating UK distribution of the title; issue #75 is the first to be Code-Approved (not that we suspect previous issues would have had much trouble…) and features the well-loved (by the editors) theme of one hero having pangs of jealousy because his sidekick is seeing another hero on the side (more innocent times, right?); in a respectable FA/GD at £45. Issue #94 retells the origin of the Superman-Batman team, and is FA at £25, the predominant issues being some scuffing and discoloration around the Batman figure on the cover, and some back cover fragility. Green Arrow and Tomahawk add to the vintage fun and action in these quaint classics.
American Update: Action & Adventure!
*DC: New stock this week for two of DC’s most respected and celebrated anthologies: Action Comics, birthplace of Superman, has a slight top-up, from the Pre-distribution issue #180 to the 1960’s Batman crossover #344, including the hard-to-find #300. Adventure, meanwhile, spans issues #175 to #452, including several pre-distribution Superboy-led issues, and later top-ups with the Legion of Super-Heroes, Supergirl and Aquaman as the respective lead features. Issue #178 (pictured), in GD/VG at £52, is a typical example of early Superboy wackiness, with Aquaman, Johnny Quick and Green Arrow also featured!
American Update: “The Old Order Changeth” – Giant-Size X-Men #1 and X-Men #94!
*Marvel: In the distant days of 1975, the X-Men, once mainstays of the Marvel Universe, were a spent force. Reduced to a bi-monthly reprint comic and occasional guest-appearances, the merry mutants were without a home to call their own. Then two of Marvel’s young turks of the time, Len Wein and Dave Cockrum, changed all that. In Giant-Size X-Men #1, the original X-Men were captured, and Professor X assembled a team of international mutants, some known to the readers (Sunfire, Banshee, and Wein’s own creation, Wolverine, who had made his debut in Hulk #181) and some brand new (Storm, Colossus, Nightcrawler and Thunderbird), and sent them out to rescue their mutant brethren. The ‘New’ X-Men were an instant hit, and with issue #94 of the X-Men ongoing, the team was restored to all-new adventures, and on their way to becoming the multi-media stars they are today! We are delighted to have the first two appearances of the ‘New’ X-Men in stock the Giant-Size #1 is a splendid VF at £500, with only a slight miscut (an original printing irregularity, not an attempt at restoration) preventing us from grading it still higher. X-Men #94, first appearance of the new team in the title, is an attractive FN+ at £225. Neither of these issues was ever distributed in the UK, so their already uncommon status is exacerbated by their scarcity on this side of the pond. SORRY, THESE HAVE NOW SOLD
American Update: Spider-Mania continues! Amazing #6, #8, #10, #11 & #13 in nice grades
*Marvel: Well, your demand for the early adventures of Spider-Man seems insatiable – bless your hearts – so we’ve obtained yet more vintage Lee/Ditko classics! We commence with Amazing Spider-Man #6, the debut of the Lizard, one of Spider-Man’s more tragic foes, in FN- at £350. Issue #8, the fondly-remembered ‘Tribute to Teen-Agers’ issue guest-starring the Human Torch, is FN+ at £265. #10, VG+ p £135, brings us the first appearance of the Enforcers – one of whom, the Ox, would go on to a more sustained criminal career as a solo act. Issue #11 features the second-ever appearance of Doctor Octopus, who vies with the Green Goblin for the position of Spidey’s #1 foe; this copy of #11 is a FN- p at £190, but would grade still higher if not for the fact that someone in the past has used a small portion of the inside front cover to do a sum! Last but far from least, a glorious FN/VF p #13 at £460, with the first appearance of the Duke of Deception, Mysterio! Mid to high-grade early issues, each with special significance in the life of our favourite wall-crawler; we anticipate demand for these to be keen, so get your orders in early!
American Update: The Earliest Avengers – Unleashed!
*Marvel: Early issues of the Avengers, Marvel’s mainstay superhero team, always sell briskly at 30th Century Comics, and we are pleased to welcome most of the first ten back into stock. Issues #2, #3, and #5 to #10 between them bring us the debuts of the Space Phantom, Zemo and His Masters of Evil, Kang, Wonder Man and Immortus, as well as the villainy of the Enchantress and the Executioner, the lethal Lava Men, and the Savage Sub-Mariner. In a range of grades from #2’s PR/FA to #6’s FN+, this selection will appeal both to the collector and the investor among our clientele. See our catalogue for full grading and pricing information.
American Update: Iron Man inc key issues
*Marvel: A small update to the Golden Avenger, with a range of new issues in from #7 upwards, all pence copies in superior grades. Key issues included are #54 (FN+ p £25) 1st Moondragon and #128 (FN/VF p £25) classic alcoholism cover (as pictured).
American Update: Marvel Team-Up & Two-In-One Annuals
*Marvel: We present almost complete sets of the Annuals of Marvel’s two key team-up titles of the 1970’s/80’s: Team-Up (mostly starring Spider-Man) and Two-In-One (starring the Thing). Guest stars galore, as you would expect, including the X-Men, the Hulk, Power Man & Iron Fist, Daredevil, Alpha Flight, Nova, Black Bolt and many more. For cosmic fans, the key issue here is Marvel Two-In-One Annual #2 (VF £30) by Jim Starlin, where the Thanos Saga is concluded.
American Update: Warren and other Magazine-Sized Comics:
*Vintage Magazine-Sized Comics: Warren leads the way in the latest update to this very popular category, with Comix International, Harvey Kurtzmann’s satirical mag Help! from the early 1960’s and a clutch of Vampirella. These are backed up a stray Haunt Of Horror from Marvel, #1 of Atlas Seaboard’s Devilina and a real curiosity from 1954 by Atlas: 3D Tales Of The West #1 and only (FA £14, without glasses).
American Update: Tomb of Dracula Key Issues – #1 and #10 (1st Blade!)
*Horror/Mystery 1960-1980’s: One of the more spectacularly successful entries in Marvel’s 1970’s diversification was Tomb of Dracula, the meticulously-crafted horror series which had a villain – Bram Stoker’s classic vampire – as a series protagonist. We have two key issues of this highly-acclaimed series new in: #1, never distributed in the United Kingdom, in which the Lord of Darkness was introduced to the Marvel Universe, and #10, with the debut of a character who would go on to his own comic-book and cinematic successes – Blade, the Vampire Slayer! (No relation to Buffy of the same ilk.) The #1 is an affordable GD+ at £15, sound and complete, generally good appearance, with only a tiny cover chip from the lower right-hand corner precluding higher grade; the #10 is a VG+ p copy, decent with light to moderate spine creasing but very presentable interiors and an unimpaired cover scene, on sale at £50. SORRY, THESE HAVE NOW SOLD
American Update: American Esoterica! Steranko History of Comics, Vintage Overstreet, and Rich Buckler 1967!
*Magazines/Books About Vintage US Comics: Three unusual items in this category, beginning with the scarcest: in 1967, a fledgling Richard Buckler produced his own stripzine featuring among others, ‘Mysto’, ‘Space Guardian’, and ‘Excalibre’, original heroes created with an eye to getting an eventual job in comic books. Unlike thousands of others, Rich actually made it, becoming a mainstay illustrator at both DC and Marvel throughout the 1970’s and 1980’s. Issue #2 of his stripzine “Intrigue” is new in, in FN at £25. With, at most, a couple of hundred copies produced, this is ideal material for blackmail or embarrassing him at convention signings! Moving on to more mass-produced items, we have also acquired the fifth edition of the Overstreet Comic Book price Guide from 1975; this edition celebrates the Edgar Rice Burroughs Centenary with a new (well, it was then) Joe Kubert Tarzan cover – VG at £10. And not one, but two, copies of 1972’s Steranko History of Comics. This tabloid-sized dome gave a detailed history of the development of early comic books. This volume focusses on the output of the Fawcett and Quality publishers of the 1940’s, with copious illustrations and extensive quotes from interviews with the artists and writers, many more of whom were around than, alas, remain with us today. Despite its flaws, it remains one of the authoritative works on the history of our beloved art form – and some of us have been waiting an awful long time for volumes three to six, so get your finger out, Jim! Two copies of Volume 2 new in, a Fine at £15 and a GD at £8.
American/British Update: Tarzan-related comics (UK and US) stampeding in!
*Tarzan/E R Burroughs: Edgar Rice Burroughs’ most famous creation, Tarzan, strides the fantastic jungle that never was once more! We have new stocks in of the American series of Korak, Son Of Tarzan (Gold Key), Tarzan himself (from DC, a range between #209 – the third DC issue – and #238, including 100-pagers) and Tarzan Family, the anthology that featured not only Tarzan and Korak, but also other ERB creations such as John carter and Pellucidar! On the UK side of events – Tarzan being one of those iconic characters published all over the globe – we have the 1974 Tarzan of the Apes graphic novel with (then) new art by Burne Hogarth (pictured), as well as new entries for the Westworld Tarzan Grand Adventure comic from the 1950’s, the 1977 Tarzan Weekly (early issues including the second and third), the Tarzan Monthly series from Byblos – both the 1977 and 1981 launches – and a 1981 Summer Special!
American/British Update: Flash Gordon Miller Digests
*Flash Gordon: From 1962, Len Miller’s ‘tenpenny’ series of digests launched a number of series, some wholly new, and some featuring repackaged American material. One such was the Flash Gordon series, pocket-sized reprints of the classic comic strip – with, we suspect, some totally unauthorised fill-ins by other artists (Yes, Mick Anglo Studios, we are looking at you…) when the continuity didn’t seem to quite gel. The contrast between the slick lines of the syndicated material and the ‘padding’ bits was… marked, to say the least, adding to the unique charm (charm? Yes, we’ll go with that) of this distinctive repackaging. Issues #2 and #4 new to our listings.
British Update: Batman, Horror, Sci-Fi, Romance and more in UK/Australian Reprints
*Vintage UK/Australian Reprints of US Material: A real mixture of material in this most eclectic of categories, with several issues of the Australian K G Murray Batman series, a Black Magic & a Frankenstein, three digest-sized Miller items, Marvel Tales with Atlas sci-fi, and Space Adventures, #2 with Charlton Blue Beetle and #3 with Ditko and other Charlton sci-fi. Also, a Miller Spellbound with two of Marvel’s Human Torch stories (inc cover) & one Thor and a Young Love from Top Sellers. A selection of cover images below; consult our catalogue for full grading and pricing information.
British Update: Three Power-Packed Premieres – Fantastic, Pow and Terrific #1’s inc Free Gift Farrago!
*Power Comics: 1967 was the year of expansion for the upstart Power Comics Group; having established Wham and Smash! as more traditional comics weeklies with eventually a smattering of US material, they cashed in on the super-hero craze of the 60’s by launching Pow! in January as a ‘hybrid’ – still mostly Brit fare, but with Spider-Man and Sgt. Fury front and centre – then February’s Fantastic #1 was almost all Marvel, with a small percentage of UK-originated stories n the back, followed in April that year by Terrific in the same format. We have copies of all three debut issues new in: the Pow #1 is PR/FA – generally respectable, though extreme spine wear, but with a partial free gift, the Web-Centre Spider-Matic Gun! The Gift is worn, particularly around the ‘trigger’ area, and lacks the disc-projectiles that came with it originally. Comic and partial Free Gift available for £35. Our Fantastic #1 is a GD/VG at £30, and Terrific #1 VG at £30; illustrations of all are reproduced below. SORRY, THESE HAVE NOW SOLD
British Update: Here Comes the Summer – We Hope! Victor Summer Special!
*Boys’ Adventure & War Comics: In the hope of invoking more reliable good weather, we’re doing a quick and breezy update with the Victor Summer Special for 1983 – a bit ‘modern’ for us ordinarily, but as any aficionado of Victor knows, the 1960’s lasted until around 1990 in that series, so the familiar strips – ‘Tough of the Track’, ‘Morgyn the Mighty’, ‘Cadman’, ‘Joe Bones’, ‘Hammer Man’ and the gang – are presented in the familiar timeless style. An attractive Fine copy, on sale for £15. SORRY, THIS HAS NOW SOLD
British Update: Fleetway Picture Library Holiday Specials
*Boys’ Adventure & War Picture Libraries: A selection of high grade Fleetway Picture Library new in this week for Air Ace, Battle & War, Fleetway’s popular war-themed titles. Mostly in lovely VF condition, these span the 1970’s and 1980’s.
British Update: Quirky Corner: Space Patrol – Gold Token adaptation of Roberta Leigh’s TV series!
*TV & Film Related Comics: A genuine rarity in our ‘Quirky Corner’ this update, an adaptation of the 1962/3 TV series ‘Space Patrol’. Created by Gerry Anderson alumna Roberta Leigh (who had co-created two early Anderson series, ‘Twizzle’ and ‘Torchy’), ‘Space Patrol’ (not to be confused with the American series of the same name) in which agents of the United Galactic Organization – Captain Larry Dart and his Venusian and Martian chums, Slim and Husky – have adventures in the future of 2100. Although a ‘Space Patrol’ strip ran in TV Comic weekly, this title – also known as issue 12 of Gold Token’s ‘Super Mag’ series – appears not to reprint that, but to be original material, to the best of our knowledge. (As opposed to most of the ‘Super Mag’ series, which were reprints of American comics.) As far as we know, this is the only full-length comics adventure of the U.G.O. lads, and it’s complete with central flyer for the Gold Token series and – most importantly – the clip-and-save gift tokens neither clipped nor saved. FN at £30.
What’s Old: Avengers Annual #7 with Thanos
Housekeeping Update
On a regular cycle, we sweep through our entire stock to delete sold items and keep our listing as up to date as possible. We’ve just finished deleting sold items from the following files in our British section:
*Vintage UK/Australian Reprints of US Material
*Boys’ Adventure & War Comics (L – Q)
As of the time of writing, these categories are bang up to date, with every item listed available.
Coming Attractions
April is Marvel XX Month at 30th Century! What’s that? Find out next week!
American Update: From the 60’s to the 80’s – DC #1’s – Demon, Metal Men, Plastic Man, Swamp Thing, and New Teen Titans!
*DC: Five fabulous first issues from DC this update, kicking off with the Demon, Jack Kirby’s creation, featuring Jason Blood as the tortured soul who moves from Arthurian times to the modern day. The Metal Men, foreshadowing the ‘artificial intelligence’ revolution, fought the Missile Men in their premier issue after a successful Showcase run. Plastic Man, the Golden Age hero originally published by Quality Comics, returned to publication after a cameo in, of all things, Dial H For Hero. Wein and Wrightson’s acclaimed horror hero Swamp Thing gained his own series after premiering in House of Secrets #92. Wolfman and Perez’s New Teen Titans debuted in their own series following their ‘pilot’ in DC Comics Presents #26. Demon #1 is FN at £20; Metal Men #1 FA/GD p £25, but generally a VG+ copy with only one torn & taped interior page lowering the grade; Plastic Man #1 is FN p £20; Swamp Thing #1 FN/VF £55, with only minor corner and edge wear precluding a still higher grade and New Teen Titans #1 is FN/VF £30. Images of all five may be seen below.
American Update: Spider-Mania! Amazing Spider-Man #298-300 – the Venom trilogy!
*Marvel: Something a little less vintage in this week’s Spider-Mania feature. While we tend to favour crumbly old comics for crumbly old folks like ourselves, we do make exception for titles or issues of exceptional importance and popularity, and the ‘Venom Trilogy’, Amazing Spider-Man #298-300, leading up to the first full appearance of Venom, is one such example. Having debuted in Secret Wars #8 as a semi-sentient blob which configured itself into Spider-Man’s new costume (no, really), the ‘symbiote’ became a regular feature in Spidey’s own series before being revealed as a malevolent alien parasite which revealed its true agenda in this very issue! 298, with the first brief appearance of Eddie Brock (the man who would become Venom) and the beginning of Todd MacFarlane’s run as artist, is VF+ p £28; #299, with the first cameo of Venom himself, is VF/NM p at £27; and the big one – the first ‘Full Venom’ – is VF+ p at £115. SORRY, THESE HAVE NOW SOLD
American Update: Steranko’s Nick Fury, Agent of SHIELD – Iconic premier issue!
*Marvel: When Marvel’s distribution system expanded in 1968, the ‘double-feature’ books were spun off into their own series, and Jim Steranko, who had been attracting fan attention with his rendition of SHIELD in Strange Tales, took out all the stops with SHIELD’s first ‘solo’ issue, creating an atmospheric cinematic masterpiece which crystallised the height of the Cold War era and the ‘super-spy’ craze prevalent in the Sixties. Topped with perhaps Steranko’s most famous cover image, this beautiful copy is FN+ at £50. SORRY, THIS HAS NOW SOLD
American Update: 2 low grade FF debut issues — Silver Surfer/Galactus & Black Panther
*Marvel: Two issues with three premier appearances this update: Fantastic Four #48, which featured not only the debut of the planet-devouring Galactus, but also of his herald, the Silver Surfer, and FF #52, which brought the world the hereditary defender of Wakanda, the Black Panther! Both these highly desirable issues are seldom found in affordable grades, but this pair buck the trend; the FF #48 is FA/GD p at £60. With moderate cover wear and creasing, but no serious image impediment, it has clean decent off-white interiors, but two additional staples have been added by an over-zealous previous owner. The #52 is FA p at £55, with light to moderate cover creasing, good interiors, and a previous pencil/crayon price in the centre of the cover image which someone has attempted to erase, without complete success. Nevertheless, despite their drawbacks, they are affordable and decent copies of two Marvel Milestones. SORRY, #48 NOW SOLD
American Update: “Okay, Axis, Here We Come!” – Early Non-Distrib. Invaders issues!
*Marvel: In 1975, Roy Thomas, notorious aficionado of the Golden Age, launched one of his pet projects – ‘untold tales’ of the Golden Age Timely/Atlas heroes set in the days of World War II. Banding Captain America & Bucky, the Sub-Mariner, and the original Human Torch & Toro together as the Invaders, he kicked off (including spin-offs and crossovers) more than 50 issues of all-new ‘old’ adventures, and a series of revivals which has continued into the 21st Century. We are pleased to have not one, but three different copies in stock of Giant-Size Invaders #1 – the ‘prequel’ which ran into the ongoing comic, and introduced the team to the world. One of them, with an unverified Roy Thomas signature on the front cover, is FN/VF at £20. We also have the first three issues of the on-going back in, with the premier issue being FN+ at £20. Giant-Size Invaders #1 and Invaders #1 & 2 were never distributed at all in the UK, and are therefore proportionately rarer here than in the ‘New World,’, so having these all come along at once is quite serendipitous.
American Update: Along Came A Spider-Woman
*Marvel: After a successful try-out in Marvel Spotlight, the first incarnation of Spider-Woman, Jessica Drew, was launched in her own series in 1978, which lasted a respectable 50 issues (far more than most Marvel series these days!). Offering traditional super-heroics, with guest stars such as Spider-Man and the X-Men, the Spider-Woman series also had a horror/dark magic edge to it as witnessed by the unique and twisted rogues’ gallery she soon established. Issues between #5 & #42 fresh into stock, including #37 with the first appearance of X-Force’s Siryn.
American Update: Love For Sale! – DC, Charlton, Marvel Romance top-up!
*Romance: We’re always looking for love here in the 30th Century, and we’ve acquired enough now to put out an update for aficionados of the strange and contorted way comics presented relationships, from the 1950s to the 1970s. From DC, we offer Girls’ Romances – a title that would have a very different vibe today – from Charlton, a dollop of I Love You with side dishes of Romantic Story, Secret Romance and Soap Opera Romances; and Marvel steps up with Love Romances and the silly, but exquisitely illustrated, Our Love Story. To round it out, a vintage romance title from Realistic Publishing of the 1950’s, the appropriately-entitled Realistic Romances #2, with such true-to-life dilemmas as “Kissless Honeymoon”, “Fatal Romance”, and “Deadly Triangle”. Read the stories that helped the battle of the sexes carry on for generations!
American Update: A medley of classics – EC, Buck Rogers, Frazetta’s Johnny Comet and more!
*Modern Reprints: A cornucopia of vintage classics this update, leading off with two of the handsome hardcover EC Archives series from Gemstone Publishing. Full-colour and with dustjackets, these are among the nicer of the many reproductions of the EC line, and these two volumes – Shock SuspenStories and Weird Science – are two of the most acclaimed titles. Continuing the science-fiction theme, we have the 1981 paperback of Gray Morrow’s striking run on the Buck Rogers newspaper strip, Kirby and Wood’s Sky Masters of the Space Force, and on a lighter note, John Byrne’s ‘comedy robot’ strip of the 1970’s, Rog 2000. And bringing it back down to Earth, we present western adventure with the Cisco Kid, hot rod hijinx with Johnny Comet and an unfeasible bevy of shapely ladies illustrated by Frank Frazetta, and two anthologies, Buried Treasure and Standard Comics, which collect vintage works from Kirby, Kubert, Wood, Toth, Meskin and more.