*Miscellaneous 1940-1959: We’re really proud to present one of the rarest and most obscure American comics we’ve ever come across, from publisher H C Blackerby. Overstreet Price Guide lists two issues: #1 & #2, but there is no evidence online that #1 actually exists. GCD lists only this issue, #2, and there don’t appear to be any records or photos of #1 online. The Gerber Photo-Journal Guide Guide has #2 listed as a scarcity value of 8 (11-20 copies exist). Features super-hero, detective, science fiction, comedy/horror: Pioneer, Planetarian, Dick Royce, Michael Morgan & others. A solid, attractive copy with bright colours. Some wear at staples, but firmly attached. Small 1 cm spine split at bottom. Clean, off-white pages. A very rare opportunity to own this obscure item.
PICTURED: SHARP COMICS #2 VG+ £400 SOLD
American Comics Update: The Bute Collection: Pre and Post Code Horror Fest: Six Of The Best: Uncanny Tales inc Spidey Prototype & Double Cover Issue
*Horror 1940-1959: Also from the Bute Collection this week, another dip of the toe in the water of the high quality Atlas 1950s horror line, with four Pre-Code and two Post-Code issues of Uncanny Tales, all in fairly nice shape, and featuring both a Spider-Man prototype story and one issue with a prized double cover.
PICTURED: UNCANNY TALES
#15 VG/FN £135 Pre-Code. Brodsky, Sinnott, Andru, Fass and others. Nice black background unmarked cover, tight, firm staples and off-white pages. Faint reading crease at spine, very minor edge wear and a couple of short spine ticks and that’s it. SOLD
#18 VG+ £125 Pre-Code. Heath, Forte, Colletta, Powell and others. Solid and intact copy with tight, firm staples and off-white pages. Unmarked cover, minor edge wear and corner rounding; some colour bleed through on to inside covers. SOLD
#25 VG- £80 Pre-Code. Benulis, Colletta, Tartaglione, Sekowsky and others. Nice dark background cover, tight, firm staples and off-white pages. Faint horizontal crease across middle of cover just breaks colour; also several colour-breaking creases in bottom eight corner, but a solid copy.
#26 GD £110 Pre-Code. Spider-Man prototype story. Maneely, Benulis, Ayers, Greene and others. Cover off bottom staple, staples rusty. Water damage has caused a ripple effect to the bottom half, but intact and colourful enough.
#37 Double cover. Outer VG/FN Inner: FN/VF £195 Burgos, Forgione, Ayers, Drucker, Sinnott and others. Beautifully preserved due to double cover. Both covers have rich colour with a few soft creases which don’t break colour (less on inner), some minor spine wear on outer, fresh gloss on inner. Tight, firm staples and supple off-white pages. SOLD
#41 VG+ £70 Burgos, Ayers, Andru, John Severin, Forte, Wildey and others. Solid copy with tight, firm staples and off-white pages. Minor spine and edge wear; slight foxing towards bottom edge.
British Comics Update: Spellbound #41 from L Miller, reprinting 1st Ant-Man by name and in costume
*Vintage UK/Australian Reprints of US Material: A great package here from L Miller from 1963. Spellbound #41 reprints the first Ant-Man story by name and in costume from Tales To Astonish #35, following Hank Pym’s debut in TTA #27. Reproduced in great quality crisp black and white, showcasing the classic Kirby art. As if that wasn’t enough, there’s also a whole load of mostly pre-code Atlas horror stories from (mostly) Adventures Into Weird Worlds. A beautiful flat copy with only minimal wear and an excellent unmarked cover; just slight rust to staples.
PICTURED: SPELLBOUND #41 FN/VF £150 SOLD
British Comics Update: This Week’s #1: Swift 1954 x 2
*Boys; Adventure & War Comics: Swift, from the publishers of Eagle, was like a junior version of that illustrious comic, aimed at a slightly younger readership (but not as young as their kiddies’ title Robin). Our good friend Win Wiacek describes Swift more fully in our Extras section here. We have not one, but two very similar copies of Swift Volume 1 #1 available for your consideration this week as follows:
PICTURED: SWIFT
Volume 1 #1 March 1954 GD/VG £40 Copy A. Solid unfolded copy with small edge tears and a bit of spine wear.
Volume 1 #1 March 1954 GD/VG £40 Copy B. Solid copy that has been folded with minor spine wear.
British Comics Update: 4 Beanos from 1945, our oldest in stock
*Humour Comics: Beanos from the war years have always been hard to come by, so we’re thrilled to present four issues from 1945. Cover starring Big Eggo, and with stalwart regulars Lord Snooty and his Pals, D C Thomson managed to pack a whole host of humour and adventure strips plus illustrated text stories into the meagre 12 page count for this year.
IN THIS UPDATE: BEANO 1945
255 FA £20 3 cm horizontal tear at spine, a bit grubby with lower spine crease. Edge wear with other small edge tears. Some foxing. SOLD
262 VG £40 (Pictured) Nice clean copy; small tear on bottom edge of back cover.
264 VG £40 (Pictured) Nice clean copy; small margin crease lower right corner.
267 GD £30 Reasonable copy with some spine and edge wear. Some foxing.
Books Update: Re-Working our TV/Film Tie-Ins Category: The Expert, Get Smart, The Girl From U.N.C.L.E.
*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. Some TV shows of varying fame this week: The Expert (BBC 1968-1976) was possibly the first of many TV series based on the work of a forensic pathologist; as far as we know, there is only one novelisation. Get Smart featured the comedy spy adventures of Maxwell Smart (Don Adams) and Agent 99 (Barbara Feldon), in a hit US TV series co-created by Mel Brooks; there were nine novelisations published, with two in our listings. The Girl From U.N.C.L.E. was a popular spin-off from ‘Man From’ with Stephanie Powers and Noel Harrison; just two US paperbacks, but four UK (inc one reprinted from the US); we have two of those as well.
PICTURED:
THE EXPERT by BERNARD PICTON Sphere 1976 1st UK PB VG £3
GET SMART: GET SMART ONCE AGAIN (#3) by WILLIAM JOHNSTON Tempo 1966 1st US PB, 2nd printing GD £5
GET SMART: MISSED IT BY THAT MUCH! (#5) by WILLIAM JOHNSTON Tempo 1967 1st US PB
VG £8
THE GIRL FROM U.N.C.L.E.: THE BIRDS OF A FEATHER AFFAIR (#2) by MICHAEL AVALLONE Souvenir Press/Four Square 1967 1st UK PB, 2nd printing GD £5
THE GIRL FROM U.N.C.L.E.: THE GOLDEN BOATS OF TARADATA AFFAIR (#3) by SIMON LATTER Souvenir Press/Four Square 1967 1st UK PB GD £15
Books Update: Re-Working our Pulp Fiction Category: Amazing Stories & American Eagles
*Pulp Fiction: We’re continuing to introduce the new layout for our books categories, with an image for each book. This week, we commence the only category where this process has not already started: Pulp Fiction, featuring the classic pulp magazines of the 20th Century, so-called for their paper quality. Just two entries to start: Amazing Stories from 1950 (new in), the classic science fiction pulp title, and American Eagles 1949, derring-do among plucky aviators.
PICTURED:
AMAZING STORIES 1950 FEBRUARY VG £15 SOLD
AMERICAN EAGLES 1949 WINTER VG £7 UK Edition SOLD
Technical Update: New Search Facility
We now have a new search facility on the site, shown at the bottom of the menu bar on the left of each page. If you’re not sure which of the categories in our Catalogue Index to look in for the comic title you want, just use the search facility in the menu bar to the left. Type in the title of the comic you’re looking for and you’ll be given a list of categories that contain references to that title. For books, type in the name of the author or title of the book you’re looking for and you’ll be shown the categories that contain that. Please note that we are in the process of converting our book categories to a new layout featuring an image for each book. Some categories are not yet complete, and the search facility only works on books in the new layout.
American Comics Update: The Bute Collection: Batmania: Batman Annual #2 1961
*DC: The Bute Collection brings back fond memories for me this week with the Batman Annual #2 from 1961, one of the earliest Batman comics I must have read growing up. Batman & Robin’s ‘Thrilling Action Roles’ particularly resonate for me, be it the ‘Underseas Batman,’ ‘Jungle Batman’, ‘Lord of Batmanor’ ‘Super-Batman’ or any one of these wonderful stories reprinted from the 40s/50s. Best of all perhaps is the 1962 Batman calendar pin-up at the centre, and the Batman Family portrait on the back cover. A splendid package, and one we don’t see too often. This copy is not in the best of shape; pence-stamped, the front cover has bene reinforced with extra staples – otherwise it would be split for most of its length. The spine, other than that, is quite good, just small splits at rear top and bottom. Colour cover is very vivid; there is a handwritten biro price on the ‘N’ on ‘Batman’ in the logo. Pages are cream/tan, with one or two rough edges, but nothing brittle. Great reading value.
PICTURED: BATMAN ANNUAL #2 GD- p £40 SOLD
American Comics Update: Their Name Is Legion/Six Of The Best: Adventure Comics between #311-320
*DC: We continue our Legion of Super-Heroes spotlight with six more classic early stories from Adventure Comics, just after the Legion started their own feature there and, by this time, had more or less taken over lead feature and cover billing. Full of Legion lore: the Legion of Substitute Heroes, Satan Girl, Hitler, Nero & Dillinger (!), the outlaw Ultra Boy (including the first major role for Phantom Girl), Mutiny and Dev-Em. All from a mostly high-grade collection, some really nice-looking copies of these beloved adventures.
IN THIS UPDATE: ADVENTURE COMICS
#311 FN £24
#313 FN/VF p £34
#314 VF p £46 (PICTURED)
#316 VF- £45 (PICTURED)
#318 FN+ £32
#320 FN- £22.50
American Comics Update: Mystery In Space #92-102
*DC: Sadly, when editor Julius Schwartz left his two DC science-fiction titles in 1964 to concentrate on Batman, they were never the same again. He took his star creators with him, and those brought in to replace them by new editor Jack Schiff were simply not of the same standard. True, Space Ranger, who shared the title with Adam Strange from #92-102 was not really different to when he had been edited by Schiff over in Tales Of The Unexpected, but the Adam Strange strip lost all its ingenuity and wonderful art. Competent enough tales, and the split book approach between the two heroes was novel, but the series limped along like this for 11 issues before Ultra the Multi-Alien took over. By that time, the writing was on the wall for Mystery In Space… For those wishing to investigate this backwater of the DCU, we have all 11 issues of this sequence fresh in in a variety of grades; full details as always in our catalogue.
American Comics Update: The Bute Collection/Mighty Marvel Firsts: Debut of the Skrulls in Fantastic Four #2
*Marvel: From the prestigious Bute Collection. In the second ever appearance of the Fantastic Four, we met the race of shifty shapeshifters who were to become one of the FF’s, and the Marvel Universe’s, greatest nemeses: the ‘Skrulls From Outer Space!’, as the cover had it. (In case readers got them confused with the Skrulls from Penge West…) Still a half-way house between proper super-heroics and the ‘Big Panty Monsters’ that had been a staple of the company, the non-costumed FF looked at this stage almost as bizarre as their extra-terrestrial opposition. This historic issue is a low grade pence printed copy. The cover is plagued by colour-breaking creases, particularly in the lower half, although the cover image remains pretty good. The spine is heavily worn with many splits and the staples are off the front cover. There is an old piece of tape inside the front cover up from the bottom edge which attempts to repair a small tear. There are small amounts of tape also on the bottom right corner of 1 interior page. The comic is complete, although it should be noted that the Thing pin-up page has, at some time, been torn out and replaced fixed by tape that is now old and rotting so that the page is now loose. The comic is well worn and feels old and thin; .the pages are unmarked, if a little grubby and beset by nicks and small tears. The second ever ‘proper’ Marvel Comic with the debut of a major antagonist, this copy represents the chance to pick up a major key issue at a price that won’t require a mortgage. High resolution images are available on request.
PICTURED: FANTASTIC FOUR #2 PR/FA £650 SOLD
American Comics Update: Spider-Mania/The Totally Amazing Spider-Man Collection: Amazing #26 & #27: Crime-Master/Green Goblin two-parter
*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. A wonderful Lee & Ditko two-parter this week in Amazing #26 & #27, where Spidey comes up against the Crime-Master (an old foe in a new guise) and, of course, his primary nemesis of the time, the Green Goblin. I can remember buying #27 in a newsagent’s as it came out, my first issue of Amazing. Ditko’s hoodlums on the cover were dressed in such an old-fashioned way, I remember wondering if this was set contemporaneously or historically. Ah, balmy days!
PICTURED: AMAZING SPIDER-MAN
#26 VF- £350 Great cover colour and gloss, unmarked. Staples tight and firm at spine and centrefold. Square corners, supple off-white pages. Very minimal wear, just very slight chipping to lower cover right edge and miniscule and infrequent spine ticks that are barely noticeable.
#27 VF- £325 Great cover colour and gloss, unmarked. Staples tight and firm at spine and centrefold. Supple off-white pages. Square corners, except bottom left which has a little rounding. Very minimal wear, just a few tiny spine ticks.
American Comics Update: The Good Doctor Collection/Mighty Marvel Firsts: Classic Tiger Shark two-parter in Sub-Mariner #5 & #6
*Marvel: From the Good Doctor Collection this week, two nicely-graded copies of classic Sub-Mariner issues featuring the artwork of John Buscema at his very best. The villainous Tiger Shark debuted in #5 and his story played out into #6 (with its dynamic cover). Many copies of #5 we’ve seen have faded colour on the interior pages (presumably the ink was running low at the printers!), but not this one. These early issues of the Silver Age Namor’s series are something really special.
PICTURED: SUB-MARINER BOTH SOLD
#5 FN/VF £100 Glossy and vibrant, with rich colours. Square corners with only very minor edge wear. Staples firm at spine and centrefold. Pages are supple off-white. There is what appears to be a vertical reading crease near the spine between the staples which very faintly breaks colour.
#6 VF £90 Glossy and vibrant, with rich colours. Staples firm at spine and centrefold. Pages are supple off-white. Only the tinest signs of wear, mainly minor rounding at top and bottom spine.
American Comics Update: The Good Doctor Collection: Tales To Astonish #71-89
*Marvel: Also from the Good Doctor Collection this week: From the mid-1960s and the thrilling era of the Marvel ‘split book’, where two lead features shared a title, we present every issue of Tales To Astonish from #71 to #89 starring Sub-Mariner and the Incredible Hulk. There was always something fast-paced and exciting about these 10-12 page continued stories and these two Marvel favourites were at their best during this period. Mostly in very respectable mid-grades (sometimes higher), full details will as always be found in our catalogue.
American Comics Update: Spider-Mania: Spectacular Spider-Man #51-63
*Marvel: A further instalment of Peter Parker, the Spectacular Spider-Man, as it was then known, featuring every issue from #51-63. Full details as always in our catalogue.
American Comics Update: The Bute Collection: National Comics 1946-1949
*Miscellaneous 1940-1959: Four issues of Quality’s National Comics from the Bute Collection this week, one of the most esoteric anthologies of the period. Cover featuring circus sideshow man the Barker and his weird chums, other regulars included policewoman Sally O’Neill in stylish crime noir adventures, more crime with the masked Whistler, costumed hero Quicksilver (no, not the one you’re thinking of), humour with Granny Gumshoe, the elderly detective, Steve Wood, waterfront detective, mischievous toddler Lassie and lots of other comedy strips. All four copies fresh in are in very decent condition for their age, solid copies with little wear or creasing.
IN THIS UPDATE: NATIONAL COMICS
#54 VG £35
#69 FN £37 (PICTURED) Gill Fox cover
#72 FN £37
#74 GD/VG £19 Penultimate issue; structurally the same as the others, but graded down due to a stacking ink defect on the cover.
British Comics Update: Slab Happy/Pre-Code Horror Fest UK: Adventures Into Weird Worlds #1
*Vintage UK/Australian Reprints of US Material: In the early 1950s, a small number of horror comics (around 40) were produced by a variety of UK publishers reprinting US pre-code horror stories in black and white. Just as in the USA, these became notorious and subject to censorship which led to their discontinuation. There’s a lot of information online about the banning of UK horror comics if you want to know more, and I particularly recommend a youtube video by Canadian Dave Dustin (Hi Dave!) on the subject. These UK horror comics have become both extremely rare and much sought after in recent years, and we’re delighted to have one new in this week. Adventures Into Weird Worlds #1 was published by Heritage Productions and distributed by Thorpe & Porter; it’s undated but believed to be 1952. (There’s rumoured to be a #2, but we have no proof of this). It features the content and cover of the US Adventures Into Weird Worlds #8 from Atlas, as well as content from #6, Spellbound #5 and Astonishing #15. Artists include Dick Ayers, Jim Mooney and Jack Keller, with a Bill Everett cover. Close to impossible to find, this is the only copy in the CGC census. (NB Annoyingly, CGC refer to this as #8, since it reprints the cover to the US #8, but it’s not that — it’s clearly #1). Blue label unrestored Universal Grade, cream to off-white pages, case perfect.
PICTURED: ADVENTURES INTO WEIRD WORLDS #1 CGC 4.5 (VG+) £250 SOLD
British Comics Update: Ranger 1965/66 with Trigan Empire — all issues reduced in price plus complete run from #2-40 new in!
*Boys’ Adventure & War Comics: Although being the birthplace of Don Lawrence’s rightly celebrated Trigan Empire, the large format Ranger had a lot of other things going for it as well: nice paper quality, glorious painted covers and lots of other beautifully executed strips such as H. Rider Haggard’s King Solomon’s Mines & Allan Quartermain, Treasure Island , Space Cadet and many other stories of war, western, science fiction and historical adventure in a mix of colour and black and white. It had a short life of 40 issues before being subsumed into Look & Learn, but we have all issues fresh in from #2-40 from its 1965/66 run. Plus we have knocked about a third off of our Ranger prices. Consult our catalogue for details, where the reduced prices are now shown.
PICTURED: RANGER 25/9/65 VG £10 2nd issue SOLD
British Comics Update: This Week’s #1s: Three Western Themed Picture Libraries
*Boys’ Adventure & War Picture Libraries: Not one but three Picture Library #1 issues for your consideration this week, all Westerns and all uncommon.
PICTURED:
PICTURE STORY POCKET LIBRARY #1 VG £20 World Distributors. Gunlaw: Man Without A Gun. Featuring Matt Dillon from the TV series Gunsmoke with James Arness photo cover. Decent copy with relatively minor wear. Rusty staple with minimal migration.
WESTERN ADVENTURE LIBRARY #1 GD/VG £25 A rarity from Micron – we’ve never seen this before. Features the story Secret Witness. Reasonable copy with small crescent-shaped tear out of bottom rear cover.
WESTERN PICTURE LIBRARY #1 FN £30 Pearson. Fetauring Mustang Gray and the Texas Rangers in Comanche War Drums. From 1958, a really nice copy in great shape.
British Comics Update: Love Story Library: 17 issues from 1963/64
*Girls’ Picture Libraries: This week’s release of Love Story Library (later Love Story Picture Library), the longest running romance picture library from Fleetway, comprises 17 issues in the 400’s number range from 1963/64. 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 decent condition, with little wear or creasing in most cases, the grades mainly determined by the amount of staple rust. Full details as always in our catalogue.
Books Update: Re-Working our Children’s Books Category: Monica Edwards
*Children’s Books: We’re continuing to introduce the new layout for our books categories, with an image for each book. This week, we return to our Children’s Books category, and the works of one of the most evocative children’s authors, Monica Edwards. She wrote her children’s novels between 1947-1969 and produced just over a novel per year, so there is a substantial body of work, divided between two series: Romney Marsh (Kent/East Sussex) and Punchbowl Farm (Surrey). Children’s adventures in nostalgic settings with a lot of horsey themes, these are superbly crafted gems which appeal to women of a Certain Age (those I know are fervently passionate about them). We are delighted to have such a good representation of her books on our shelves, mainly hardcovers (all with dustjackets protected by removable archival film) plus a few vintage paperbacks. Not the easiest author to collect (they are rare and highly prized), but those so inclined will find tracking them down most rewarding. Some examples are shown here; please check our catalogue for our full stock listing:
PICTURED: ALL BY MONICA EDWARDS
THE COWNAPPERS Collins Children’s Book Club 1960 UK HC FN £45 With DJ (VG)
DOLPHIN SUMMER Collins Children’s Book Club 1963 UK HC FN £40 With DJ (FN)
THE HOODWINKERS Collins Children’s Book Club 1962 UK HC VG £35 With DJ (VG)
THE NIGHTBIRD Armada 1963 1st UK PB GD £20
NO GOING BACK Collins 1960 1st UK HC FN/VF £95 With DJ (VG/FN) in archival cover (taped on inside)
OPERATION SEABIRD Collins 1957 1st UK HC FN £75 With DJ (VG)
SPIRIT OF PUNCHBOWL FARM Collins 1956 UK HC FN/VF £70 With DJ (VG/FN)
Books Update: Spider-Man & Hulk paperbacks reprinting early issues
*Comic Strip Books: Two 1978 paperbacks new in this week, reprinting Amazing Spider-Man #7-13 and Hulk #1-6 in full colour. A great way to enjoy these classic stories at a fraction of the price available in other reprints!
PICTURED: BOTH SOLD
AMAZING SPIDER-MAN VOLUME 2 by STAN LEE Pocket Books 1978 1st US PB GD/VG £9
Reprints Amazing Spider-Man #7-13 in full colour. Spine cracked; some edge wear.
INCREDIBLE HULK by STAN LEE Pocket Books 1978 1st US PB GD £9
Reprints Hulk #1-6 in full colour. Lots of cover creasing, but glossy and intact.
Taking A Break
We’re taking a short break next week, after filling orders received up to 4 pm today (11th) and posting them next Wednesday. There will not be a Newsletter next Saturday, but it will be back on 25th Feb. After this Sunday 12th, we’ll next be filling orders on 26th. You may of course continue to place orders at any time; we will acknowledge them and reserve items for you wherever possible.
American Comics Update: DC Debuts: 1st Sinestro in Green Lantern #7
*DC: Although DC missed a trick by not including him on the cover, let me assure you that Green Lantern’s arch nemesis, Sinestro, does indeed make his first appearance within Green Lantern #7 (1961). Steeped in Green Lantern lore, the lead story introduced the renegade Green Lantern who would go on the plague the Emerald Gladiator throughout his career. This is a nice flat pence printed copy with strong colour and supple off-white to cream pages. The cover is off at bottom staple, but firmly attached at top, with both staples tight at centrefold. There is some edge wear, but nothing bad, with some thin colour-breaking creasing just in the very bottom right corner. There’s a tiny tear at the top of the spine, and a 1.5 cm one at the bottom. Tiny red ink mark centre right cover. A clean copy that presents well from an original owner collection new to the market.
PICTURED: GREEN LANTERN #7 GD/VG p £350 SOLD
American Comics Update: Flash #129: Golden Age Flash plus JSA
*DC: The sequel to the classic ‘Flash Of Two Worlds’ from Flash #123, which established the existence of Earth-Two, where the heroes of the Golden Age lived on, and co-starred the Jay Garrick Flash alongside the Silver Age Barry Allen, #129 elaborated on this legendary premise. Barry and Jay teamed up again to take on the threat of the Trickster and Captain Cold, and we saw, in flashback, the first Silver Age appearances of many of the JSA members. Comics don’t come much better than this. A gleaming pence-printed copy, unmarked with bright, glossy colours, firm staples and nice supple off-white to cream pages. Edge wear and corner blunting are minimal with tiny nick at top of spine. From an original owner collection new to the market.
PICTURED: FLASH #129 VG/FN p £95
American Update: The Good Doctor Collection/Spider-Mania: Amazing #8
*Marvel: A superb offering from the Good Doctor Collection this week with Amazing Spider-Man #8. In this special ‘Tribute To Teenagers’ issue, your friendly neighbourhood wall-crawler tackles the Human Torch, the Living Brain and Flash Thomspon (poor Peter just wasn’t getting along with anyone that month!) Single digit Spideys need very careful consideration these days for budgetary purposes, but this nice copy offers a cheaper option than most in its grade. Pence printed, with very strong colours and totally unmarked cover. A small number of spine ticks just break colour, but only very faintly. Corners are fairly sharp, staples are tight and firm at spine and centrefold. Supple pages are off-white (perhaps just a hint of cream). This will look very nice in your Spidey collection. High resolution images are available on request.
PICTURED: AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #8 FN- p £500 SOLD
American Comics Update: The Good Doctor Collection Hulkinued: Hulk Annual #1 with iconic Steranko cover
*Marvel: The final Hulk item from the Good Doctor Collection is the classic Hulk Annual #1. 1968 saw Jade-Jaws’ first-ever Annual, a 50 page extravaganza by Gary Friedrich and the talented Marie Severin in which our favourite not-so-jolly green giant travelled to Attilan and fell out with Black Bolt, leader of the reclusive race of super-beings known as the Inhumans. Needless to say – spoiler alert – wannabe usurper Maximus is behind the hostilities, and has assembled his own band of rebel Inhumans to further bedevil our hero. Featuring a striking Steranko cover (arguably the most iconic Hulk image ever), this is a pretty good copy. The spine, so often a problem with these squarebound issues, is totally intact, the cover colours are vibrant and the staples firm. Pence stamped. The pages are supple and off-white. There is just a hint of a reading crease at the spine and a tiny amount of wear along the centre right edge and bottom right corner.
PICTURED: HULK ANNUAL #1 FN- p £195 SOLD
American Comics Update: The Bute Collection: Fantastic Four Annual #1
*Marvel: From the Bute Collection this week, and from 1963, the first Fantastic Four Annual. We don’t see this one turn up too often, so are delighted to have a fresh copy new in. In the lead story, the Sub-Mariner and Atlantis invade New York in a 37 page epic. There’s also an expansion of the FF’s first meeting with Spidey and a reprint of their origin from their first issue, plus a rogues’ gallery and other features. A decent pence printed copy with spine and edge wear, a long colour-breaking reading crease at spine, a tiny chip out top right corner by Comics Code box, a colour-breaking crease of about 2 cm across bottom right corner, and one or two short colour breaking horizontal creases at spine. Staples are virtually okay if a little rusty; final page is coming loose from bottom staple. Faint pencil/narrow crayon line vertical across Namor’s bofy. The spine is intact except for the top 1.75 cm, where it is split; it looks like a patch has been placed just over the top spine area (not on the front or back cover), so we have considered this may be amateur restoration and given this an ‘Apparent’ grade. A reasonably attractive copy of this relative rarity.
PICTURED: FANTASTIC FOUR ANNUAL #1 App VG- p £175
American Comics Update: Six Of The Best: Kull The Conqueror
*Marvel: Robert E Howard’s second great male barbarian hero, Kull the Conqueror, was granted his own series in 1971, and benefitted from great art by Andru and Wood initially, then John and Marie Severin, then Mike Ploog. Six issues fresh in, including #1.
IN THIS UPDATE: KULL THE CONQUEROR ALL SOLD
#1 VG p £10
#7 VF p £7.50
#8 FN/VF p £6
#9 VF p £7.50
#10 FN+ p £5.25
#11 VF p £6
American Comics Update: The Bute Collection: Pre-Code Horror Fest: Beware #12 (1952)
*Horror 1940-1959: There were two Pre-Code Horror series that bore the name ‘Beware’; it’s the first from Youthful in 1952 that concerns us here. Truth be told, this first series ran to only three issues (#10-12), previously being named Fantastic and from #13 on, changing its name to Chilling Tales. Beware #12, from the Bute Collection, has four accomplished tales of horror beneath a striking man- fights-off-monster grabbing-chick cover. Body snatchers, evil children, monsters, rats and zombies all await you within. A vivid yellow background with strong colours on this vibrant, unmarked cover. Minor corner blunting, but very little wear – just a miniscule corner off cover bottom right. One small tear with no loss right edge of cover (about 1.5 cm) with similar on one internal page. Pictured below. As is evident in the scans, the comic is slightly mis-cut (not trimmed) and not quite square; this is fairly common in comics of this age from some companies. High resolution images are available on request.
PICTURED: BEWARE #12 VG/FN £500 Pre-Code. SOLD
American Comics Update: All-Star Western with Johnny Thunder and Madame .44
*Western: By the time DC’s All Star Western reached its final issue, #119 1961, Johnny Thunder was headlining, but sharing his strip with Outlaw Queen Madame .44. Ostensibly a criminal, the lady in white was in reality a goodie and heading for the long term with Thunder when this series ended. As a back-up, Super-Chief, the native American with super-powers, takes on aliens in the Old West, as you do. Lots of secret identity shenanigans in both stories. Exquisitely crafted by Gardner Fox, Gil Kane and Carmine Infantino, and edited by Julius Schwartz, so you knew you were getting a great package. A lovely bright copy with great colour and beautiful pages, cover is only slightly marred by some numbers written lower left near the spine, not impinging on the image.
PICTURED: ALL STAR-WESTERN #119 VG/FN £30 SOLD
British Comics Update: Batmania! UK 1960s Batman Annuals
*Annuals: Four UK versions of Batman annuals published in the 1960s available this week, all in fairly low grade, but with bumper reading value! All feature classic Batman strips and John Jones, Manhunter from Mars or other contemporary DC features in black and white.
IN THIS UPDATE: BATMAN ANNUAL ALL SOLD
1959/60 FA £25 (PICTURED) Joker story and debut of Ace the Bat-Hound. Cover fixed on by brown tape. Edge wear with some scuff marks.
1960/61 PR £8 No spine. Front cover detached. Lots of edge wear and significant tape and scuff marks.
1962/63 FA/GD £12 Small bits of spine missing. Small tape and scuff marks. Fair bit of wear.
1967 GD £10 Spine present but a little scuffed. Corner and minor edge wear; small markings on cover.
British Comics Update: This Week’s #1: Courage 1956
*Boys’ Adventure & War Comics: Something of a rarity in this week’s #1 slot. Courage and Pluck were two monthly story papers launched by the publisher L Miller in 1956. Both lasted just three issues, their lack of popularity due to their infrequency and/or their 6d price tag. Rarely seen and virtually forgotten today, we have a Courage #1 for sale this week in very nice condition, with just some minor age marking to the spine and cover margin. Sporting a great sci-fi full colour cover believed to be by Mick Anglo, this contains illustrated text stories with western, sports, sci-fi and adventure themes with one short comedy picture strip. There can’t be many of these around — we’ve never seen one before!
PICTURED: COURAGE #1 VG/FN £40 SOLD
British Comics Update: Cowboy Comics (later Cowboy Picture Library) #11-50
*Boys’ Adventure & War Picture Libraries: Famous later, following a name change to Cowboy Picture Library, this title started out in 1950 as Cowboy Comics, originally published by Amalgamated until Fleetway took over. It lasted a very respectable 468 issues until 1962. We have almost all issues between #11-50 freshly available this week, when the title alternated between Buck Jones & Kit Carson (although I did notice Tim Holt in #20). A surprising number of cowgirls featured on many of the covers, as well as totem poles (go figure). Low grade but rarely seen, these all have taped spines with varying degrees of rust stain at the staple and migration to match, but are all complete. Grades are FA to FA/GD; prices £7-8.
PICTURED: COWBOY COMICS #11 FA £7
Books Update: Re-Working Our Crime, Spies & Sleaze Category: The Saint by Leslie Charteris
*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 Saint by Leslie Charteris. Immortalised by Roger Moore on TV in the 1960s, Simon Templar is a smooth international adventurer/detective, getting involved in cases all over the world. Our paperback selection is published by both Pan and Hodder, and consists of short (and longer) stories in each volume.
PICTURED: THE SAINT by LESLIE CHARTERIS ALL SOLD
THE BRIGHTER BUCCANEER Pan 1969 3rd UK PB FN £6
FOLLOW THE SAINT Hodder 1959 UK PB GD/VG £5
THE SAINT GOES WEST Hodder 1968 UK PB GD £3
THE SAINT SEES IT THROUGH Pan 1963 UK PB GD £4
SENOR SAINT Pan 1966 UK PB VG/FN £4
TRUST THE SAINT Hodder 1964 UK PB VG £5
American Comics Update: The Bute Collection: Task Force X – The Suicide Squad
*DC: “What?” you youngsters incredulously cry. “There was a Suicide Squad without Harley Quinn in it?” Oh yes, ye of little faith. Travel back with us to the early days of Brave & Bold, wherein a team of non-costumed specialists – astronomer Hugh Evans, physicist Jess Bright, medic and intermittent psychic Karin Grace, and manly leading man Rick Flag Jr. – tackled meteor storms, dinosaurs, giant lizards, giant monsters – actually, mostly just freakishly big critters – in exotic locales. Written by Barking Bob Kanigher, the stories were short on logic but heavy on the pulse-pounding action, sleekly illustrated by the team of Andru & Esposito, and are fondly remembered today – particularly since Flag and Grace popped up in significant roles in later incarnations of the Squad. Four of the six original Suicide Squad adventures fresh in from the Bute Collection this week, missions 3-6 from Brave & Bold #27 & #37-39.
IN THIS UPDATE: BRAVE & BOLD
#27 GD/VG p £48 (PICTURED) Solid copy with good colour, pages and staples. Tiny splits at either end of spine. A few tiny creases in bottom right cover corner break colour.
#37 GD p £17.75 Lots of small tears and creases at spine and edge wear elsewhere; bookshop stamps. SOLD
#38 VG+ p £35 Solid copy with just minor edge and spine wear.
#39 FA/GD £11.75 Rusty staples. Off top staple. Great cover image. Wear along top edge.
American Comics Update: The Bute Collection/Quirky Corner: Fantastic Four #110 Green Printing Error Variant
*Marvel: The Bute Collection brings us a quirky oddity this week. Perhaps one of the most infamous printing errors occured with Fantastic Four #110. Two of the 4 ink colours (magenta, cyan, yellow and black) used to create all the colours on the cover (they are mixed at various percentages) were applied to the wrong plates before printing. It appears that a relatively small number of these ‘green printing variants’ were circulated before the error was corrected on the majority of the print run. Some copies must even been exported, since our example here bears a pence stamp. The copy shown on the left here is the corrected ‘regular’ version. Below is the error version. Perhaps a great acquisition for the FF fan who has it all. The story, by the way, is a real doozy featuring Agatha Harkness, Annihilus and the Negative Zone. Both regular and variant are available; high resolution images for the green error variant are available on request.
PICTURED: FANTASTIC FOUR
#110 (above) FN+ p £23 Regular edition. Pence stamped. SOLD
#110 (below) FN- p £575 Green Printing Error Variant. Pence stamped. Nice copy with good (if odd!) colours and gloss. Firmly attached staples, supple off-white pages. Minor edge wear and very slight corner blunting, with a small dink at the spine bottom where a tiny crease across the very edge just breaks colour.
American Comics Update: Mighty Marvel Firsts: Debut of Thanos (& others) in Iron Man #55
*Marvel: Key issues don’t come much more key these days than Iron Man #55, wherein the cosmic arch-villain Thanos, nemesis of Marvel’s Cinematic Universe, made his first appearance, the brainchild of fan favourite writer/artist Jim Starlin. Thanos has of course gone on to plague Marvel’s heroes in comics and movies ever since, but here is where it all started. This landmark issue also features the debuts of Drax the Destroyer, Mentor, Eros (later Starfox of the Avengers) and Kronos. This pence printed copy is rather nice, with brilliant colours and gloss, firmly attached staples, and supple white to off-white pages. Printed very slightly askew, with the base of the spine showing a slightly wider white edge than the top. It would grade significantly higher were it not for a faint coin-sized stain at the right edge between the logo and a Blood Brother’s head. Fortunately, this does not really detract from the cover image. There are also a couple of tiny biro letters in the price box below the ‘6p’.
PICTURED: IRON MAN #55 VG/FN p £365 SOLD
American Comics Update: The Good Doctor Collection: Mighty Marvel Firsts: Debut of Alpha Flight in X-Men #120/121
*Marvel: Never distributed in the UK (and causing a calamitous and expensive gap in many collections), X-Men #121 featured the full debut of Wolverine’s old battling buddies Alpha Flight, Canada’s own super-hero team. Snowbird, Sasquatch, Northstar and company were all destined for longer lives and greater notoriety in the Marvel Universe at large, including several series of their own mag, but here’s where it all kicked off, as artist and co-plotter John Byrne brought his own characters into the franchise! From the Good Doctor Collection, not only do we have X-Men #121, the first ‘Full Flight’, as it were, but also #120, in which readers were ‘teased’ with captivating cameos before the unveiling in #121!
PICTURED:
X-MEN
#120 VF p £100 Glossy and very nice; just a few spine ticks, one narrowly breaking colour. Minor reading wear.
#121 VF+ p £135 Glossy, brilliant white cover; just extremely minor handling wear. SOLD
American Comics Update: The Good Doctor Collection Hulkinued: Hulk #141-176
*Marvel: Lots of Hulk from the Good Doctor Collection this week, most issues between #141 and #176. As well as numerous encounters with foes old and new, there are significant first appearances here. #141 has the first Doc Samson, #142 the first Samantha Parrington iteration of the Valkyrie, and #168 the first Harpy. Turn your fellow collectors green with envy as you stock up on your Hulk goodies.
PICTURED: HULK
#141 VG+ p £42
#142 VF+ p £90
American Comics Update: Spider-Mania: Spectacular #28-50
*Marvel: We turn to the Spectacular Spider-Man for our Spidey fix this week, and issues #28-50 inclusive. Starting out with Frank Miller art on #28, this run features plenty of Spidey’s favourite foes, but perhaps is better known for its collection of new and quirky enemies. Nearly all in VF or better grade, all cents copies. As always, full details in our catalogue.
American Comics Update: DC Debuts: Early Spectre Silver Age Issues
*DC: In the wake of the Justice League/Justice Society crossovers, interest was revived in the 1940s heroes of the JSA, and one of several tryouts was the Spectre, a literal ghost who wandered the Earth, battling evil with mighty supernatural abilities. Brought back for a solo tryout in Showcase #60, by the superb team of Gardner Fox and Murphy Anderson, the Ghostly Guardian’s powers were elevated to almost godlike levels, to the point where the writer must have strained to come up with credible opposition for him – but the epic clashes between mystical and demonic forces pioneered ‘cosmic’ themes in comics. Two more Showcase issues followed (#64 here) before the Spectre launched his own series shortly afterwards.
IN THIS UPDATE:
SHOWCASE #60 PR/FA p £27 Re-stapled, long spine split and long back cover tear. Cover image okay, but not a nice copy.
SHOWCASE #64 VG p £35 (PICTURED) Decent copy with spine and edge wear, short colour-breaking vertical crease bottom third cover centre.
SPECTRE #1 GD- p £20 Worn spine with small tear at top (slight loss); biro prices (small) on cover. SOLD
American Comics Update: Pre-Code Horror Fest: Atlas Adventures Into Terror x2
*Horror 1940-1959: From 1952/53, two uncommon issues of Atlas’s Adventures Into Terror at the height of the Pre-Code phenomenon. #14 has art by Gene Colan, George Tuska, Dick Ayers and others beneath a Sol Brodsky cover. #16 has a distinctive Russ Heath cover with interior art by Joe Maneely, Sam Kweskin and others. The Atlas high standards are to the fore.
PICTURED: ADVENTURES INTO TERROR
#14 FA/GD £65 Pre-Code. Intact cover image, with spine mostly split and cover hanging on. Small stain bottom cover centre. Decent pages.
#16 GD+ £110 Pre-Code. Front cover off bottom staple. Strong cover image with vivid colour. Wear at edges, but decent pages and not too bad. SOLD
British Comics Update: Alan Class Plate Sets Final Phase: Spider-Man, Daredevil & Avengers
*Alan Class Reprints: For many years now, we’ve been scouring the personal archives of legendary publisher Alan Class (who is still very much with us) and with his full co-operation, releasing for sale sets of the original printing plates that were used to print the covers of his comics from 1959-1989. We have now reached the final phase of these plate set releases, which will last us throughout 2022. These sets are time-consuming to prepare, so our release schedule will be staggered. But the good news is that all the sets we have left are among the best, either featuring a classic Marvel comic reprint, or else a very early fantasy/mystery issue. So, this final phase represents your last opportunity to add one or more of these unique pieces to your collection. Each set comprises the lead printing plates used in the original comic’s colour printing, a copy of the comic printed with these plates and a signed certificate of authenticity signed by Alan Class himself. These are packaged in a special protective presentation case. Several sets (as noted) have additional historical artefacts such as colour proofs, interior page plates, printers’ photostats etc. (Please be aware that these weigh a lot and postage will be expensive. Also note that due to the onerous paperwork required for customs declarations following Brexit, we can no longer post these Plate Sets outside the UK.) We’re approaching the very end of these sets now, with just a few more to be listed. Three new sets this week as follows: ALL SOLD
CREEPY WORLDS #111 £90 Comic FN; Reprints Amazing Spider-Man #61 plus cover, Atlas, Charlton, 1 Jaguar
SUSPENSE #117 £100 Comic FN+; 100 Pages; Reprints Avengers #75 (inc cover) & #76, ACG, Charlton. Extra: Colour cover proof, with small tear taped.
UNCANNY TALES #76 £60 Comic GD (contents detached from covers); Reprints Daredevil #54 plus cover, Atlas, Charlton SF. Extra: Colour cover proof.
British Comics Update: Put A Tiger In Your Tank 1967
*Boys’ Adventure & War Comics: 12 issues of the long-lived Boys’ weekly Tiger from 1967 between January and November fresh in this week. Prior to this, we hadn’t has any issues new in for this year for some time. Throughout its history, Tiger (original home to Roy of the Rovers) always had strong sporting associations and indeed in later decades, virtually became a comic of sport-related strips, but here in 1967, Roy, Skid Solo, Johnny Cougar and other sporting stars rubbed shoulders with war and adventure strips such as the Robot Builders, Nelson Lord TIGER Agent, the Black Archer, Typhoon Tracy, Saber King Of The Jungle and many more. A classic British comic at its best! Mostly £3-4 each. As always, please see our catalogue for details. ALL SOLD
British Comics Update: This Week’s #1/Six Of The Best: Valiant Picture Library #1-6
*Boys’ Adventure & War Picture Libraries: Not just #1, but in fact the first six issues of this celebrated Picture Library series from Fleetway this week, dating from 1963. Subjects ranged from war to western to historical adventure. All in pretty nice shape.
IN THIS UPDATE: VALIANT PICTURE LIBRARY ALL SOLD
#1 VG £20 (PICTURED)
#2 GD/VG £8
#3 FN £20
#4 FN £10
#5 FN £10
#6 VG/FN £9
British Comics Update: Over 30 True Life Library newly listed
*Girls’ Picture Libraries: More than 30 issues of True Life Library newly added to our catalogue, between from #651-700. The standard of art by mainly European illustrators is very accomplished. These are lovely items, their appeal enhanced by the fact that they are from a newsagent’s reserve stock, never sold or circulated, with white pages, bright covers and very little if any rust in the staple areas. Full details as always in our catalogue.
PICTURED: TRUE LIFE LIBRARY #691 FN/VF £5.50
Books Update: Re-Working our Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Category: Banister-Blaylock
*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 re-listings for authors from Banister-Blaylock. All three branches of this category are represented, from relatively obscure pulp era and later science fiction authors such as Manly Banister, Ben Barzman, Barrington Bayley and Eando Binder, through to more famous authors such as Lloyd Biggle Jr (including a new-in Nebula Awards anthology edited by him) and Michael Bishop with his tour de force time travel novel No Enemy But Time, then on to horror from Charles Beaumont with an uncommon collection of stories (The Edge) and fantasy from Peter S Beagle (The Last Unicorn) and James Blaylock. There’s even a genre hybrid: the excellent A Scent Of New-Mown Hay from the wonderful John Blackburn which combines science fiction and horror; highly recommended. Several are pictured here. Full details as always are given in our catalogue.
PICTURED:
ECHO X by BEN BARZMAN Paperback Library 1964 2nd US PB GD £3
THE LAST UNICORN by PETER S BEAGLE Pan Ballantine 1971 1st UK PB FA/GD £15
THE EDGE by CHARLES BEAUMONT Panther 1966 1st UK PB GD/VG £15
NEBULA AWARD STORIES 7 by LLOYD BIGGLE JR (Ed) Panther 1974 1st UK PB VG £10 (NEW IN)
MENACE OF THE SAUCERS by EANDO BINDER Belmont 1969 1st US PB FN £8
NO ENEMY BUT TIME by MICHAEL BISHOP Sphere 1983 3rd UK PB VF £5
A SCENT OF NEW-MOWN HAY by JOHN BLACKBURN New English Library 1968 1st UK PB VG £7
Books Update: The Avengers: Deadline by Patrick Macnee
*TV/Film Tie-Ins: A rare first printing of an early Avengers novel from 1965 featuring Steed & Mrs Peel. Deadline is written by Patrick Macnee himself (with help from Peter Leslie). Ruthless criminals, Fleet Street and a disused airfield in the Midlands. Comes with a card from an Avengers set featuring Mrs Peel as the Hellfire Club’s Queen of Sin from the famous episode A Touch Of Brimstone – makes a handy bookmark. In lovely condition.
PICTURED: THE AVENGERS: DEADLINE by PATRICK MACNEE Hodder & Stoughton 1965 1st UK PB FN £35 SOLD