*DC: A chance to fill some gaps in your vintage Batman collection this week with eight issues from the early 100s, all pre-UK distribution between #101-115. These are all lowish grade, with tape, tears and other defects, but are all complete.
IN THIS UPDATE: BATMAN
#101 PR/FA £30 Taped spine; chipped right edge; back cover tear SOLD
#102 FA £34 Long horizontal cover tear, sealed with tape from the inside.
#103 FA £34 Bat-Hound, Movie Star. Rolled spine; tape over upper staple and lower spine. Two black felt tip characters ‘B+’ below logo, central but only over background.
#104 GD £65 (PICTURED) The Creature From 20,000 Fathoms. Reasonable copy with age wear but no specific defects. SOLD
#106 PR £18 Heavy tape around all cover edges, small corner off bottom right. Spine and staple area very ragged.
#110 PR/FA £27 Joker story. Brown tape around edges of inside covers.
#114 FA+ £35 A couple of slash/tear holes in lower cover.
#115 FA+ ££5 Worn spine with tears; 3 cm upper spine split.
American Comics Update: Justice League Of America #2-4
*DC: Three early issues of the JLA this week, classic stories near the dawn of the DC Silver Age. In #2, the JLA take on a group of evil magicians out of myth and legend; #3 features the debut of the classic foe Kanjar Ro and in #4, Green Arrow is the first new recruit for the team. Wonderful stories where, emulating their Golden Age predecessors the JSA, our heroes form into teams to tackle separate aspects of the threat in a chapter per team. I can remember the excitement I felt as a kid confronted by all these heroes in the same story! These lowish grade examples are very affordable.
IN THIS UPDATE: JUSTICE LEAGUE OF AMERICA:
#2 GD £95 (PICTURED) Small chips out top edge; spine wear; right edge wear with bottom corner creasing. Lovely colourful image with tight, firm staples, decent off-white to cream pages.
#3 FA+ £60 (PICTURED) Off both staples; long spine split over halfway up from bottom. Wear and creasing, but cover image okay. Decent off-white to cream pages, but ink stain throughout (edge top margin only).
#4 FA p £30 Taped spine; very worn edges with chipping and tears. Pages are okay.
American Comics Update: Catalogue Expansion: Wonder Woman up to #300
*DC: A huge update to our Wonder Woman stocks, running from #205 right through to #300, from the heart of the Bronze Age through to the dawn of the Modern Age., with dozens of issues new to our catalogue. Mostly high grade copies and all cents. Most issues from #272 upwards feature the Huntress in back-up stories. Includes the Giant #300 Anniversary issue and, as a bonus, the Wonder Woman Spectacular from 1978 with Hitler cover (listed as DC Special Series #9).
American Comics Update: The Good Doctor Collection/Spider-Mania: The last days of Steve Ditko on Amazing Spider-Man with Mighty Marvel Firsts
*Marvel: From the Good Doctor Collection, we present the final five issues of Amazing Spider-Man drawn by Steve Ditko. Many take the view that Ditko was peaking at the end of his run, and I certainly think that these five issues are among the best of his work. Kraven the Hunter, the Molten Man, Meteor Man (later Looter) in his debut and, significantly, the first appearance of Norman Osborn, whose prominence in the Marvel Universe has grown way beyond his Green Goblin alter ego.
PICTURED: AMAZING SPIDER-MAN
#34 VG+ p £115 Sound copy with great colour, flat, tight and fresh. Minimal edge wear, no creases, supple off-white pages, firm staples. Would grade a lot higher if not for obtrusive book shop stamp over Kraven’s figure (see scan).
#35 FN- p £95 Strong colour, tight, firm staples and supple off-white pages. Small bits of edge wear and spine ticks marginally break colour, but a nice copy.
#36 VG p £55 1st Meteor Man. A bright copy with colour-breaking reading crease, excellent staples and nice white to off-white pages. Poor production finishing has meant that the bottom cover edge is a little jagged and the bottom right edge of first couple of pages are a little proud. This doesn’t spoil the appreciation of this copy.
#37 VG+ p £95 1st Norman Osborn. Decent copy with good colour, tight staples and supple off-white pages. There is some spine wear and minor corner blunting. A faint, flat crease across the bottom right corner is barely perceptible.
#38 FN- £130 Final Ditko issue. Flat with vibrant colour cover. Square corners, no marks. Supple white to off-whie pages and great, tight staples. Tiny amounts of edge wear. Would grade higher but for a neat, tiny tear in the spine between the staples.
American Comics Update: The Good Doctor Collection: Fantastic Four #39-40: Classic Dr Doom two-parter
*Marvel: Being a childhood DC fan, I was a latecomer to Marvel, so Fantastic Four #39 & #40 were among the earliest issues I read. I remember them making a big impression despite my lack of knowledge of FF history. Deprived of their powers, the FF come up against their greatest foe, with their only ally a blind super-hero. A Blind Man Shall Lead Them – what a great title for FF #39, and what a superb brooding cover to boot. And the Thing’s hand to hand combat with Doom in #40, after he suffers the misery of not being human again. This was truly great stuff. The Good Doctor provides.
PICTURED: FANTASTIC FOUR
#39 FN- p £120 Pence stamped. Excellent cover colour and gloss. Unspoilt and unmarked image. Minor edge wear and corner blunting, with a tiny colour-breaking crease across the very extremity of top right corner. Tight and flat with excellent staples and nice off-white pages.
#40 VG p £55 Pence stamped. Decent copy with good colour, nice staples and supple off-white pages. Some creasing, mainly at spine and edges, breaking colour, corner blunting, but nothing horrible.
American Comics Update: Wolverine #1-4 Complete 1982 Limited Series by Claremont & Miller
*Marvel: Perhaps surprisingly, Wolverine had been around quite few years before he starred in his own title. (Even after this 1982 mini-series, it would be a further 6 years before Logan got his own ongoing solo title). You can’t say that Marvel were milking the character’s popularity – a phrase I thought I’d never write. But they did pull out all the stops with this mini, combining X-Men scribe Chris Claremont with super-star artist Frank Miller in this tale of the Yakuza and Wolverine’s doomed love Mariko Yashida. All fours issues are presented here as a set, all in a uniform VF/NM condition, with vivid colour, flat, tight copies, and only the most miniscule signs of having been handled. An outstanding set.
PICTURED: WOLVERINE #1-4 VF/NM Complete Set £250 SOLD
American Comics Update: Mighty Marvel Firsts: Debut of Moondragon in Iron Man #54
*Marvel: It seems the follicularly-challenged, attitude-enhanced mental marvel Moondragon has been spiking up in popularity. We speculate that the rise in interest is owing to her connection with Thanos and his merry crew, and all things Marvel Cosmic. Her first appearance in comics, however, was under a somewhat less dignified nom de guerre of Madam McEvil in Iron Man #54 (also starring the Sub-Mariner). Our latest copy is a very respectable pence printed mid-grade, flat and glossy with vibrant colour, tight staples and white to off-white pages. Small scuff marks below the upper staple and small wear at the base of the spine are the only real defects.
PICTURED: IRON MAN #54 FN p £65
American Comics Update: Let’s Visit the X-Men Reprints!
*Marvel: I’m sure everyone knows that the original series of X-Men concluded with new stories at #66, to relaunch again at #94 some years on. In-between, for issues #67-93, Marvel ran with reprints of the earlier issues. Ignored by some for many years, these have risen in popularity more recently. Collectors just have to have every issue in the numeric sequence, plus some of the earlier reprints have rather nifty new covers. We have a consecutive run of seven issues in this week from #77-83, all pence printed copies and all in pretty nice shape.
IN THIS UPDATE: X-MEN
#77 VG+ p £15
#78 FN p £19.75
#79 FN+ p £25 SOLD
#80 FN/VF p £30 (PICTURED) SOLD
#81 FN+ p £25 SOLD
#82 VG+ p £15
#83 FN/VF p £30
American Comics Update: The Bute Collection: Pre-Code Horror Fest: Journey Into Mystery
*Horror 1940-1959: From the Bute Collection, three pre-code issues of the venerable title Journey Into Mystery from 1953/54. Details below:
PICTURED: JOURNEY INTO MYSTERY
#13 VG £230 Pre-Code. Cover by Carl Burgos. Art by Burgos, George Roussos, John Forte, Myron Fass and others. Reasonable copy with unblemished cover scene. Good staples, nice off-white to cream pages. Minimal edge and spine wear (some chipping to right edge back cover). Small spine ticks, slight reading crease between staples faintly breaks colour, crease at very top right corner cover with tiny loss at extreme.
#15 GD+ £150 Pre-Code. Cover by Sol Brodsky. Art by Paul Reinman and others. Okay copy with reasonably unblemished cover scene with great image. Good staples, nice off-white to cream pages. 3 cm upper spine split. Some handling wear with minor creasing that breaks colour, particularly along the top edge and logo area. Small spine ticks and minor creasing along right edge and bottom right corner. SOLD
#17 VG+ £275 Pre-Code. Cover by Sol Brodsky. Art by Sid Check, Robert Q Sale and others. Nice copy with some gloss. Tight, firm staples and nice off-white to white pages. Very little edge wear, lies flat. Spine ticks are almost imperceptible. A very presentable copy.
American Comics Update: The Bute Collection: 87th Precinct from Dell with heroin issue
*Dell: Ed McBain’s 87th Precinct novels were adapted by NBC into a television series in 1961/62 and, in turn, Dell adapted the TV show into a two issue series. Both issues available from the Bute Collection this week. The first issue is #1309 in Dell’s Four Color series; the second is #2 (duh!), and the latter features a harrowing heroin addict story.
IN THIS UPDATE: 87TH PRECINCT BOTH SOLD
FC #1309 FN £22
#2 (PICTURED) VG £40 Heroin story; ‘Issue No.2’ written on cover in biro.
American Comics Update: Slab Happy: Humbug #3 1957 with Marilyn Monroe photo cover
*Miscellaneous 1940-1959: Humbug was a short-lived title in the late 1950s in the same satirical parody vein as Mad, with many of the same creators at work. Founded by Harvey Kurzmann, #3 of the series on offer here features art by Bill Elder, Jack Davis and Al Jaffee. Graded 5.5 (FN-) by CGC, this copy is blue label (unrestored), off-white to white pages, case perfect. The cover features a (small) photo of Marilyn Monroe.
PICTURED: HUMBUG #3 CGC 5.5 FN- £40 SOLD
British Comics Update: A Kirby and Ditko fest in Mystic #58
*Vintage UK/Australian Reprints of US Material: Len Miller’s series Mystic (and its sister series Spellbound), reprinted a plethora of Atlas and Marvel material. Issue #58 features a strong selection, including the pre-code horror of Steve Ditko’s first ever published story Stretching Things from Fantastic Fears #5 (1954), and three Big Panty monster stories by Lee & Kirby with the Hulk (Xemnu, not Bruce), Goliath (not Hank, Clint or Bill) and Gruto. Alongside these classics are several pre and post code horror tales from Atlas and Marvel. A strong, fresh copy, tightly and securely bound, with square corners and vivid colour cover. Just a little foxing and creasing to back cover, and minor foxing at page edges. A great package.
PICTURED: MYSTIC #58 FN £50
British Comics Update: This Week’s #1: War Picture Library
*Boys’ Adventure & War Picture Libraries: War Picture Library was the earliest and longest-running of the classic war-themed picture libraries. Published by Amalgamated Press/Fleetway, this first issue, Fight Back To Dunkirk, was published in 1958, and the title continued for 2103 issues until 1984. Our latest copy of #1 is a decent copy with unblemished cover image and nice pages. The single staple has the inevitable rust stains, but migration to the pages isn’t too bad. There is a tiny jagged chip out at top right cover (see scan).
PICTURED: WAR PICTURE LIBRARY #1 VG £75 SOLD
British Comics Update: True Life Library – 20 issues from 1961
*Girls’ Picture Libraries: From 1961, a further selection of Fleetway’s long-running True Life Library between #252 & #296. Superficially in lovely condition with few marks and great cover colour and page quality, these are marred only by varying degrees of staple rust; most of these have quite a bit of rust with migration and average GD/VG.
Books Update: Re-Working our Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Category: John Brunner Part 1
*Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror: We’re continuing to introduce the new layout for our books categories, with an image for each book. This week, we return to our Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror category and the works of John Brunner. Brunner was a very prolific writer from the late 1950s into the 1990s (he died in 1995) and wrote on many themes in different styles. He started out with conventional space opera, and developed into ‘hard sci-fi’, fantasy and dystopian futures; overpopulation was a subject often re-visited. Our stock is extensive enough to split into two parts – the first features among others the award-winning Jagged Orbit and a later hardcover first A Maze of Stars signed by the author, as well as a mix of other novels and short story collections. Some of this update’s books are featured here; full details as always in our catalogue.
PICTURED: ALL BY JOHN BRUNNER
THE DREAMING EARTH Pyramid 1963 1st US PB GD/VG £4
THE JAGGED ORBIT Ace 1972 2nd US PB GD/VG £4
A MAZE OF STARS Del Rey 1991 1st US HC FN in VG DJ £30 Signed by author
NOW THEN Mayflower 1965 UK PB VG £5
OUT OF MY MIND Four Square 1968 1st UK PB VG £3
Books Update: Re-working our TV/Film Tie-Ins Category: Hammer Horror
*TV/Film Tie-Ins: We’re continuing to introduce the new layout for our books categories, with an image for each book. This week, we return to our TV/Film Tie-Ins category, where the TV show or film pre-dated the book, with two mouth-wateringly rare Hammer Horror books, the elusive first UK paperback editions from 1966 and 1967, featuring John Burke’s gruesomely spine-chilling novelisations of classic Hammer films. The Hammer Horror Omnibus features a double double bill: The Curse Of Frankenstein, The Revenge of Frankenstein, The Gorgon and The Curse Of The Mummy’s Tomb. The Second Hammer Horror Film Omnibus also features tales from four films: Dracula – Prince Of Darkness, Rasputin – The Mad Monk, The Reptile and The Plague Of The Zombies.
PICTURED: BOTH BY JOHN BURKE BOTH SOLD
HAMMER HORROR OMNIBUS Pan 1966 1st UK PB VG £60 Rare first volume
SECOND HAMMER HORROR FILM OMNIBUS Pan 1967 1st UK PB GD £30 Spine faded with small splits at bottom
American Comics Update: DC Debuts: 1st Star Sapphire in Green Lantern #16
*DC: The villainous Star Sapphire was originally a foe of the Golden Age Flash, but as with so many Golden Age DC characters, was reinvented for the Silver Age. This time she was a nemesis of Green Lantern and her alter ego was Hal’s love interest (and boss) Carol Ferris. Carol was brainwashed into the role by the Zamarons, a race of warrior women out to prove men inferior (‘well, we all know that’ – Dr Evilla). The Star Sapphire concept has been much broadened by DC over the years, but never bettered, in my opinion, than these original appearances in the classic Silver Age Green Lantern series, particularly as depicted by Gil Kane. Star Sapphire debuted in #16; this pence stamped copy is reasonable with bright colours and nice clean off-white pages. The cover is off at the bottom staple and centrefold; top staple is good. Some edge wear and corner blunting, and some faint creasing over the logo, just breaking colour. The main defect which brings the grade down is that the price in the pence stamp has been covered in felt-tip pen, which has also been used to create a price in a penny-sized circle to the right of the logo.
PICTURED: GREEN LANTERN #16 GD- p £90
American Comics Update: DC 1980s sweep featuring Batmania
*DC: A sweep through the DC Universe of the 1980s, with the following titles: Action Comics #514, Batman #333, DC Comics Presents (#32 and #41, with Joker cover and story and new Wonder Woman preview), Detective Comics #496-499, Justice League of America #193 (with All-Star Squadron preview) and Super Friends #39. As always, full details are in our catalogue.
What’s Old: Slab Happy/Mighty Marvel Firsts: Fantastic Four #52 – Debut of Black Panther
*Marvel: Occasionally, we will feature an item in this What’s Old slot if we think it’s been overlooked or if, as in this case, prices have fallen from a peak and we’ve re-priced it. 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. This copy is CGC 5.0, unrestored blue label, a pence printed copy, off-white to white pages and a totally undamaged case.
PICTURED: FANTASTIC FOUR #52 CGC 5.0 VG/FN p £550 SOLD
American Comics Update: Six Of The Best: Strange Adventures
*DC: Six excellent issues of Strange Adventures, DC’s longest running science fiction series of the Golden, Silver & Bronze Ages. Between #135 & #141; three recurring features alternate in the spotlight each issue: Star Hawkins, Interplanetary Detective and his robot secretary Ilda, Space Museum, with tales of exhibits and Atomic Knights, post-apocalyptic adventures of Earth’s last armoured defenders. Take it from me, all wonderful stuff backed up by lovely little stories from DC’s best creators. All three features will be found in these low grade issues.
IN THIS UPDATE: STRANGE ADVENTURES ALL SOLD
#135 GD/VG p £13.25
#136 GD p £6.75 Restapled
#137 VG- p £11.50
#138 FA p £4.75 Creasing and tear with tape repair
#139 GD- p £6 Small upper spine split
#141 FA/GD p £6.75 Small upper spine split; water damage
American Comics Update: The Good Doctor Collection: 2nd Dr Strange in Strange Tales #111
*Marvel: Following his debut in the previous issue, Dr. Strange returned for his second outing in Strange Tales #111, where for the first time he came up against his arch nemesis-is, Baron Mordo. In just five pages, Lee & Ditko manage to create an eerie tale of atmospheric mystic adventure. There’s something unique and beautiful about these little back-ups. The lead Human Torch story is a standard tale with a villain, the Asbestos Man, who didn’t exactly go on to find infamy in the MU; we didn’t know about the deadly effects of asbestos back then, though. A low grade copy from the Good Doctor collection, with fairly severe right edge chipping, a small corner off bottom right, small spine splits top and bottom and wear and tear around the edges. Good tight staples though and reasonable page quality, with some blunting.
PICTURED: STRANGE TALES #111 FA+ £100 SOLD
American Comics Update: Spider-Mania/Six Of The Best: Complete run of Giant-Size Spider-Man
*Marvel: From the mid-1970s, Marvel had the bright idea of boosting their sales with Giant-Size editions of their most popular titles. Most of these had new material, with reprint back-ups. Giant-Size Spider-Man lasted longer than most, running to six issues, and we have all six fresh in this week as follows:
IN THIS UPDATE: GIANT-SIZE SPIDER-MAN
#1 FN+ £60 (PICTURED) Spidey & Dracula SOLD
#2 VG/FN £25 Spidey & Master Of Kung Fu. Opening pages off bottom staple
#3 VF- £26 Spidey & Doc Savage
#4 VG/FN £44 (PICTURED) Spidey & Punisher. Ballast ink at edges
#5 FN/VF £36 Spidey & Man-Thing
#6 FN/VF £19.75 Spidey & Human Torch
American Comics Update: Thor in his own title! Early issues #126-133
*Marvel: Thor took over Journey Into Mystery with #83, and some years later, the title was re-named Thor from issue #126. We have the first seven issues from that point fresh in this week, mostly in low grade. The Thor series hit the ground running with a Hercules clash leading to adventures with the Greek pantheon, before heading out into space with the Colonizers and the debut of Ego, the Living Planet.
IN THIS UPDATE: THOR
#126 GD p £55 (PICTURED) 1st issue of series. Long colour-breaking creases across cover. Good staples, slightly at the back of centre, so that the very left edge of the cover is at the back. Decent off-white to cream pages.
#127 FA p £4.25 Book shop stamps SOLD
#128 GD p £8.25 SOLD
#130 GD/VG p £13.50 SOLD
#131 GD/VG p £10
#132 VG- p £20 1st cameo Ego, the Living Planet. Price sticker over pence stamp.
#133 GD+ p £32 1st full Ego, the Living Planet. Small chip out splash page.
American Comics Update: Dazzler – Disco Diva
*Marvel: Following her debut in X-Men #130, the roller-skating mutant with the light powers Dazzler went on to star in her own series in the early 1980s (but also had a career in the X-Men subsequently). Despite being filled with denizens of the Marvel Universe, the Dazzler series seems firmly set in its period, with a feel to me of American TV of that decade, sort of like Dallas or Dynasty with super-heroes and villains. Join the fun with issues #1-27 freshly added, all in nice grades, and shown in our catalogue.
PICTURED: DAZZLER #1 VF+ £25
American Comics Update: The Bute Collection: 1943 Four Favorites with Hitler cover
*Miscellaneous 1940-1959: A real gem from the Bute Collection this week. From 1943, Four Favorites #11 published by Ace. An iconic cover featuring an animated war bond smashing Hitler and Mussolini in the chops as they stumble back over Hirohito while our titular heroes look on. That’ll be Magno & Davey, Lightning, the Unknown Soldier and Captain Courageous. Four long stories in a packed interior of very accomplished art: Magno & Davey is by L B Cole, Lightning and Lightning Girl by George Gregg, Unknown Soldier by Harvey Kurtzmann and Captain Courageous by L B Cole. The Axis forces didn’t stand a chance! We’ve graded this copy as an Apparent GD, i.e. it has some restoration. Mostly small horizontal tears at the spine have been glued, and the spine has been reinforced and rebuilt at the central staple, which is now firm. There is a 3 cm upper spine split and some flat colour-breaking creases around the cover edges. Nice clean creamy pages and strong colour cover. The price takes the restoration/repair into account. High resolution images are available on request.
PICTURED: FOUR FAVORITES #11 App GD £600
American Comics Update: Classic Our Army At War starring Sgt Rock with Joe Kubert art
*War: DC’s flagship war title was Our Army At War, most famously featuring their iconic war hero, Sgt Rock with Easy Co. Immortalised by the distinctive style of Joe Kubert, whose artwork adorns these covers and interiors. 7 issues fresh in from the classic Kubert Rock period.
IN THIS UPDATE: OUR ARMY AT WAR
#127 VG £44 (PICTURED) 2nd all Rock issue; 1st app Little Sure Shot. SOLD
#128 FA £15.75 Training and origin Rock; 1st Sgt Klopp SOLD
#129 GD- £10.75 SOLD
#156 VG p £16.75 SOLD
#157 VG/FN £20.25 Inc double page centrespread as part of story.
#158 FN £27 Book length Rock story; 1st Iron Major with origin SOLD
#163 VG+ £18.25 2nd part Viking Prince team-up SOLD
British Comics Update: Alan Class Plate Sets Final Phase: Avengers, Daredevil and more
*Alan Class Reprints: For many years now, we’ve been scouring the personal archives of legendary publisher Alan Class 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’re approaching the very end of these sets now, with just a few more to be listed. 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 as follows:
CREEPY WORLDS #125 £90 Comic GD/VG; Reprints Avengers #72 plus cover, ACG. 100 Pages SOLD
SINISTER TALES #3 £100 Comic FN; Reprints Atlas, pre-hero Marvel, 2 Kirby, 1 Ditko, 1 Frazetta-esque Torres. A very early Alan Class comic. SOLD
UNCANNY TALES #78 £75 Comic VG; Reprints Daredevil #56 inc cover, Charlton, Atlas. Extra: Colour cover proof SOLD
British Comics Update: This Week’s #1/Free Gift Farrago: Super DC #1 with all 3 Free Gifts
*Boys’ Adventure & War Comics: In 1969, DC attempted to do what Marvel had done successfully in the earlier 1960s (via Odhams) by reprinting their classic Silver Age material in a British format. Top Sellers was DC’s publisher of choice. They had Superman, Batman & Robin, Superboy and Lois and Jimmy, but one might argue that they weren’t exactly reprinting the cream of those characters’ adventures. Whatever. The experiment didn’t last long, just 14 issues, but at least they had nice original British art covers. This copy of #1 is okay, but marred by a small stain on the back cover which permeates through the rear pages. More importantly, the issue came with three free gifts, presented in a manilla envelope: a full colour Superman/Batman poster, a wristwatch calendar and a Superman Magic Disk. The complete gift package in envelope is present here, all in VF condition (the Magic Disk has half the small punch-out circles punched out, as they’re meant to be). Very hard to find all gifts present.
PICTURED: SUPER DC #1 GD WITH 3 FREE GIFTS IN PRESENTATION ENVELOPE (ALL VF) £75 SOLD
British Comics Update: A small miscellany of war, cowboy, sport and adventure Picture Libraries
*Boys’ Adventure & War Picture Libraries: Just a small top-up to this category this week, with Combat (#203 & #231), Commando (#1545), Cowboy (#288), Football (#200) and Top Three (#13). Full details in our catalogue.
British Comics Update: Rare TV Fun Pictures of Romance 1959, plus Film Fun 1945, Look-In
*TV & Film Related Comics: We lead with a quirky item. Sometime in its final year, TV Fun rebranded as TV Fun Pictures of Romance and changed to a romance/pop title. We don’t know how many issues this ran for, but we do know that the comic rebranded again as TV Fan before it finished later that year. We can tell you that the one issue we have (undated and unnumbered) resembles more an issue of Valentine or Marilyn, with exquisite artwork. For good measure in this update, we’ve included two issues of Film Fun from the scarce year of 1945, plus Look-In from 1975, 1980 & 1988. Full details in our catalogue.
PICTURED: TV FUN PICTURES OF ROMANCE GD/VG £7
Books Update: Re-Working our Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Category: Ace Doubles and more, including new additions
*Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror: We’re continuing to introduce the new layout for our books categories, with an image for each book. This week, we return to our Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror category with Ace Doubles and more. We’ve decided to list Ace Doubles at the beginning of our page, since they fit there alphabetically and collectors like to home in on them. Authors featured will also be cross-referenced in the listing. Ace Doubles are flip books and we’ll be featuring both covers per volume. Two listed to start with (one new in), and we’re also featuring this week The Long Way Home by Poul Anderson (new in) and The Alien Ones by Leo Brett, a Badger book.
PICTURED:
ACE DOUBLE: JOHN BRUNNER: ENIGMA FROM TANTALUS / THE REPAIRMEN OF CYCLOPS
Ace 1965 1st US PB GD £2.50
ACE DOUBLE: KENNETH BULMER – THE HNUTERS OF JUNDAGAI / JOHN GLASBY – PROECT JOVE
Ace 1971 1st US PB VG £3
Books Update: Re-Working our Crime, Spies & Sleaze Category: Peter Cheyney Part 1
*Crime, Spies & Sleaze: We’re continuing to introduce the new layout for our books categories, with an image for each book. This week, we return to our Crime, Spies & Sleaze category and the thrillers of English author Peter Cheyney, who flourished between 1936 and 1951. Cheyney’s works can be divided into three main series: Lemmy Caution, ersatz American detective mysteries, Slim Callaghan, a British detective based in London, and the Dark series, espionage fiction, with a more realistic approach to casual brutality and general grubbiness, these seem to have foreshadowed much of the Cold War fiction of the mid to late 1960s. All three series will be featured in our Cheyney listings, where our stock is extensive enough to split into two parts. Some of this update’s books are featured here; full details as always in our catalogue.
PICTURED: ALL BY PETER CHEYNEY ALL SOLD
DAMES DON’T CARE Great Pan 1960 UK PB VG £5 A Lemmy Caution Adventure
DANGEROUS CURVES Fontana 1957 UK PB GD £6 A Slim Callaghan Adventure
DARK BAHAMA Pan 1956 UK PB GD/VG £4 Dark series
DARK DUET Great Pan 1958 UK PB VG £6 Dark Series
DARK STREET MURDERS Avon 1950s 1st US PB VG £5 Dark Series
DARK WANTON Great Pan 1959 UK PB VG £4 Dark Series
DON’T GET ME WRONG Fontana 1957 UK PB GD £3 A Lemmy Caution Adventure
American Comics Update: DC Debuts: DC’s Enchantress Premieres in Strange Adventures #187
*DC: “The Enchantress? Isn’t she a Marvel character?” we hear you say. Well, yes & no. Amora, the Enchantress who is Thor’s most beloved enemy, is certainly the most famous bearer of that name, but DC hit back with a short-lived super-heroine in 1966, who went on to better things after fifteen years in Limbo. In Strange Adventures #187, we met June Moone, freelance artist who stumbles into the wrong corridor at a costume party being held in a castle, and gets changed into a mystically-empowered heroine charged to fight crime (as you do). Making only two further appearances in SA #191 and #200, DC’s Enchantress was forgotten until she was revived as a villain in Superman Family #204, the years of exposure to dark magic having corrupted her. Following several other guest appearances, she became a regular in the first series of Suicide Squad, transitioning to the Big Screen as the Big Bad in the Suicide Squad movie of 2016. It was a long strange journey to stardom for Ms. Moone, but it all started here, in this very respectable copy, pence stamped, tight, well-attached staples, nice off-white pages, slight corner blunting and minor spine and right edge wear. Nice bright colours.
PICTURED: STRANGE ADVENTURES #187 VG+ p £70 SOLD
American Comics Update: DC Debuts: Classic Superman inc 1st Legion of Super-Villains in #147
*DC: A run of the best of Superman (in my opinion), almost complete from #138 to #149, mostly reading copies which represent a chance to get the classics at a bargain price. Issue #147 though is a decent mid-grade copy and features the debut of the Legion of Super-Villains, Saturn Queen, Lightning Lord and Cosmic King, with the Legion of Super-Heroes appearing too. Cover is an homage to the first Legion appearance in Adventure #247. A milestone in Legion lore.
PICTURED: SUPERMAN #147 VG p £125 Nice clean copy with bright, unmarred cover image. Minor wear to spine and right edge, pence stamped, faint creasing to bottom right corner breaking colour.
American Comics Update: 4 1980s DC #1 issues
*DC: The 1980s was an exciting time for DC, with Swamp Thing, the Legion of Super-Heroes and the New Teen Titans all on creative highs. We present four launch issues from that illustrious decade, all series which went on to achieve a measure of success.
IN THIS UPDATE: ALL SOLD
ALL-STAR SQUADRON #1 VF £15 The JSA reborn
HUNTRESS #1 VF £15 A new version of the popular character
OMEGA MEN #1 VF+ £15 Interstellar super-heroic adventure
SUPERGIRL, DARING NEW ADVENTURES OF #1 VF £17.50 Classic heroine; includes Masters of the Universe preview
American Comics Update: The Bute Collection: Fantastic Four #57-60: The Power Cosmic
*Marvel: You know the one, right, where in Fantastic Four #57-60, Doctor Doom steals the Silver Surfer’s cosmic powers and uses them to defeat the FF in one of THE classic adventures of Marvel’s first family? Oh, and somewhere in there the Inhumans break free of the Great Refuge. The Bute Collection offers us four excellent high grade cents copies. These really are amongst the nicest copies of these issues we’ve ever seen. Lee & Kirby at their finest.
PICTURED: FANTASTIC FOUR
#57 VF £295 Iconic Dr Doom cover. Rich colour cover, with only very minimal signs of wear and no marks. Strong spine with firm, tight staples. Tiny dink at bottom right corner. Superb white to off-white pages. A fresh example.
#58 FN £75 A beautiful copy, with vibrant colour cover. Strong spine with firm, tight staples. Tiny dink at top of spine, but no other creases. Superb white to off-white pages. Marred only slightly by a tiny line of chipping at the bottom right edge.
#59 VF £85 A glossy, bright, colourful example with minimal wear at corners only. Ghost of a crease across bottom corner of spine. Great off-white pages and firm, tight staples.
#60 VF £115 A really lovely copy with pure white cover background. Fresh, glossy and colourful, with minimal corner blunting at spine. Firm, tight staples and supple off-white to white pages. Virtually no wear.
American Comics Update: Spider-Mania: The Totally Amazing Spider-Man Collection: Amazing #76 & #77 with the Lizard and Mighty Marvel Firsts: Amazing #78 & #79 with 1st Prowler
*Marvel: If you’re looking for really nice copies of Amazing Spider-Man for your collection, then look no further than the Totally Amazing Spider-Man Collection. All high grade; even the few that fall below VF (and most are above) are really good-looking copies – no duds here, and nearly all cents copies. Spider-Man tangles with the Lizard in a two-parter in issues #76 & #77, guest starring the Human Torch. In #78 & #79, we meet the Prowler for the first time, the young streetwise would-be hero/villain who would go on to have a regular place in the Marvel Universe.
PICTURED: AMAZING SPIDER-MAN
#76 VF+ £135 Flat and tight with great colour and just very minor handling wear. Great staples and nice off-white to white pages. SOLD
#77 VF- £85 Glossy and bright. Great staples and nice off-white to white pages. Deep black background cover; just short creasing in top right corner, barely breaking colour. SOLD
#78 VF- £195 1st Prowler. Brilliant gloss and bright colour cover. Just very minor spine and handling wear; a lovely copy. Great staples and nice off-white to white pages.
#79 FN/VF £80 Solid copy with great colour and gloss. Great staples and nice off-white to white pages. A couple of spine ticks which break colour lead to very short creases that don’t.
American Comics Update: The Good Doctor Collection: Avengers #14, #17, #18
*Marvel: 3 early Avengers issues from the Good Doctor Collection this week. In #14, the classic Avengers line-up battle for the life of the Wasp. #17 & #18 feature the inaugural adventures of Cap’s kooky quartet as they try to track down the Hulk and then come up against the Commissar behind the Bamboo Curtain.
IN THIS UPDATE: AVENGERS
#14 VG p £40 (PICTURED) Pence stamped. Decent copy with rich colour; some colour-breaking creasing across top edge and corners.
#17 VG/FN £70 (PICTURED) Nice supple copy with tight staples, good colour and gloss and very little wear. Spine slightly off centre. Faint colour-breaking crease across bottom right corner.
#18 App FN £30 Nice clean copy with short colour-breaking crease across number box. Good staples and pages. Ad page out; story complete.
American Comics Update: The Good Doctor Collection: Tales Of Suspense #81-93
*Marvel: Also from the Good Doctor Collection this week, a consecutive run of Tales Of Suspense from #81-93, starring Iron Man and Captain America. An excellent period for the title, with Stan Lee at the writing helm and Gene Colan, Jack Kirby and others on art duties. Full details as always in our catalogue.
American Comics Update: Bronze Age and later Marvel sweep
*Marvel: A sweep through the Marvel Universe of the 70s and 80s, with the following titles: Avengers (#221, #240, #241), Marvel Comics Presents (#18 with prelude by Byrne to Sensational She-Hulk), Marvel Team Up (#97, #107, #109, #123 & Annual #4), Marvel Two-In-One (#88), Moon Knight (#13), Rom (#20), Sensational She-Hulk (#2), Amazing Spider-Man (#203, 3rd Dazzler), Vision & Scarlet Witch (#1 of 1982 mini), Wolverine (#2 of 1988 ongoing) and X-Factor (#38 & #39, Inferno issues). As always, full details are in our catalogue.
American Comics Update: Strange Bedfellows: Dizzy Don & Jumbo Comics
*Miscellaneous 1940-1959: Two comics here with absolutely nothing in common except that they belong in this category. Dizzy Don from 1946 is a Canadian original and, despite being numbered #21 is the first issue. The titular character is an amateur radio detective and his stories (including the adventures of his cousin Silly Soozie) are full of crime, comedy and even science fiction. The more familiar Jumbo Comics from Fiction House (#151 1951) stars jungle queen Sheena, Hawk the pirate, Ghost Gallery and more beneath a vibrant Maurice Whitman cover.
PICTURED:
DIZZY DON #21 GD+ £35 Heavy spine roll. Small split bottom spine. Decent pages.
JUMBO COMICS #151 VG £40 Wear around staples, but attached. Average edge wear, but no other marks or creases and decent pages.
American Comics Update: The Bute Collection: Pre-Code Horror Fest: Dark Mysteries #1
*Horror 1940-1959: From the Bute Collection, the first issue of one of the more notorious series from the Pre-Code horror years. Dark Mysteries was originally published by Master Comics and had a number of infamous issues. Beneath a striking cover by Joe Orlando and Wally Wood, the art standards on #1 were maintained by Wood, Lou Cameron and others. Ghouls, ghosts and corpses aplenty. A really nice copy, with square corners (tiny dink at top of spine), no significant creases (small non-colour-breaking one across extremity of top right corner), very little wear and strong cover colour. Lovely white to off-white pages. Staples are tight at spine, if a tiny bit rusty at centre, with centrefold at top staple just coming loose. There are signs that some pencil markings above the logo have been erased. A small crayon letter remains. An outstanding copy from 1951.
PICTURED: DARK MYSTERIES #1 VG/FN £425 SOLD
British Comics Update: Mighty Marvel Firsts/Slab Happy: He is Groot! Mystic #40 reprints 1st appearance
*Vintage UK/Australian Reprints of US Material: Something rather special this week. We occasionally get issues of L Miller’s Mystic through our hands, but we’ve never had this one before, attesting to its rarity. Issue #40 reprints the first appearance of Groot, darling of the Guardians of the Galaxy, from Tales To Astonish #13, as well as the rest of that issue plus stories from Journey Into Unknown Worlds #22 (Mystic was far thicker than a standard Marvel or Atlas comic). To boot, this copy is encapsulated by CGC and graded as a 5.0 (VG/FN). Unrestored blue label, off-white pages, case perfect. Irritatingly, CGC call this Tales To Asonish #13, with a footnote that it’s actually Mystic #40, which is fortunately rather obvious from the cover. Groot, by the way, says rather more in his cover speech balloon than I believe he has uttered in his MCU career. Not cheap, but have you seen the prices on Tales To Astonish #13 recently? (NB any glare on the image is from our camera – the comic is NOT faded)
PICTURED: MYSTIC #40 CGC 5.0 VG/FN £750 SOLD
British Comics Update: UK Superboy Annuals from the 1950s and 1960s
*Annuals: 3 UK Superboy Annuals from 1954/55, 1956/57 and 1967, published by Atlas/Top Sellers, mostly reasonable shape reprinting DC classics in black and white.
IN THIS UPDATE: SUPERBOY ANNUAL
1954/55 VG £15 (PICTURED) 2nd such annual. All Superboy stories
1956/57 FA/GD £8 Superboy, Aquaman, Congo Bill etc. Spine torn; top 5 cm spine missing
1967 VG £15 Superboy, Detective Chimp. Some strips partial colour, some full, some b&w.
British Comics Update: This Week’s #1 issues: Picture Libraries x 3
*Boys’ Adventure & War Picture Libraries: Secret Agent, Football and Historical Adventure in three #1 picture library issues this week:
IN THIS UPDATE: ALL SOLD
ACTION SERIES (Gold Token) #1 GD £8 Secret Agent X-9 (pages coming loose)
TIGER SPORTS LIBRARY #1 FA/GD £10
TV PICTURE STORIES William Tell #1 GD £8 The Assassins
British Comics Update: Love Story Picture Library: 18 issues from 1969
*Girls’ Picture Libraries: This week’s release of Love Story Picture Library, the longest running romance picture library from Fleetway, comprises 18 issues from 1969, a consecutive run from #713 to #730. The series always maintained a high standard and the very accomplished art reflected the fashions and mood of the times. These new additions are in excellent condition, with little wear or creasing, all either FN/VF at £6 or VF at £7. Full details as always in our catalogue.
Books Update: Re-Working our Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Category: Ray Bradbury
*Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror: We’re continuing to introduce the new layout for our books categories, with an image for each book. This week, we return to our Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror category and several works by Ray Bradbury, that most lyrical and poetic of American authors, equally at home with science fiction, fantasy, horror and whimsy, which often all merged into one in his writing. Wonderful novels and short stories which both captured the times in which he wrote, yet also seem eternal. Highly recommended. Full details of all our Bradbury stock in our catalogue.
PICTURED: ALL BY RAY BRADBURY
DANDELION WINE Corgi 1975 UK PB VG £5
FAHRENHEIT 451 Panther 1982 UK PB VG/FN £6
THE ILLUSTRATED MAN Corgi 1960 UK PB GD £10
THE MACHINERIES OF JOY Panther 1977 7th UK PB VF £3.50
THE OCTOBER COUNTRY Ace 1961 1st UK PB GD/VG £18
SOMETHING WICKED THIS WAY COMES Corgi 1969 UK PB GD £5
Books Update: Pulp Fiction: Astounding and more, 1930s/40s
*Pulp Fiction: Four wonderful pulps added to this category this week, three Astounding from 1934, 1939 and 1940 and a Famous Fantastic Mysteries from 1943. Great evocative covers in this medium. Wirters featured include E E Smith, L Ron Hubbard, John Russell Fearn and many more, plus the fantastic art of Virgil Finlay in this Golden Age science fiction fest. More details in our catalogue listing.
PICTURED: ALL SOLD
ASTOUNDING MARCH 1934 PR £10
ASTOUNDING NOVEMBER 1939 FA £10
ASTOUNDING APRIL 1940 PR £5
FAMOUS FANTASTIC MYSTERIES SEPTEMBER 1943 FA/GD £15
American Comics Update: World’s Finest #22 1946
*DC: Beneath a charming Jack Burnley cover await stories of Superman, Batman, Green Arrow, Zatara & others. Squarebound.with intact spine (a slight lean); tiny tear at spine bottom just in from spine itself. Lovely clean white background cover with no marks, tears or significant creases. Last four pages (part of Batman story) are loose and a little ragged, but all present. Nice off-white to cream pages.
PICTURED: WORLD’S FINEST #22 GD/VG £160 SOLD
American Comics Update: DC Debuts: The Atom: 1st 3 try-out appearances in Showcase #34-36
*DC: Continuing DC’s ‘revival’ of their Golden Age super-heroes in new guises for the Silver Age, the Atom debuted in Showcase #34-36 (1961-62) before graduating to his own series. Unlike his Golden Age counterpart, who was a non-super-powered slugger, Ray Palmer was a scientist who developed a fragment of white dwarf star to be able to shrink (as you do). The one thing that strikes me on reviewing these issues for this write-up is how wonderfully well-crafted they are by Gardner Fox, Gil Kane and Murphy Anderson. Fox was obviously having a ball, using all his skills and ingenuity to come up with plots and situations to suit the modus operandi of the Tiny Titan. Kane’s pencils are dynamic, flowing and action-packed, while Anderson’s exquisite inking adds mood and atmosphere. From these initial appearances, the Atom has gone on to have a lengthy and distinguished career in the DCU. These copies are from an original owner collection, new to the marketplace.
PICTURED: SHOWCASE
#34 VG p £230 1st Atom. Bright copy with nice colours, supple off-white pages and firm staples, although there are tiny tears around the lower one. Cover virtually unmarked but for pence stamps (there are two, one below the other in the logo area, the lower one not complete). Some corner blunting, spine and edge wear, but creasing is restricted only to the edges and is unobtrusive. Approx 1 cm upper spine split. Presents well.
#35 VG- p £65 Bright copy with nice colours, supple off-white pages and attached staples, although the spine has a bit of wear in that area and all along, with many tiny spine ticks that break colour. Otherwise unmarked cover scene with some corner blunting.
#36 GD+ p £35 Bright copy with nice colours and supple off-white pages. Two sets of staples (we suspect one is a later addition), with one set off both upper and lower. 2 cm upper spine split, with spine quite worn. Otherwise unmarked cover scene with some corner blunting. SOLD