*DC: 7 issues of DC’s Magnificent 7: the Blackhawks, the adventurous aviators who, having fought in WW2 and the Cold War, found themselves in the 60s up against aliens, monsters and weird super-villains. Such is the fare on offer in this update in an evocative melange of action and adventure.
IN THIS UPDATE: BLACKHAWK ALL SOLD
#144 (PICTURED) VG p £11.75
#147 VG- p £10.25 Off top staple; Lady Blackhawk story
#157 VG p £11.75
#159 VG p £11.75
#164 GD/VG p £10
#167 VG p £9
#176 VG p £9
American Update: The Good Doctor Collection: Mighty Marvel Firsts: Debut of the Falcon in Captain America #117
*Marvel: This week’s first visit to the Good Doctor Collection commences the Captain America issues and features the first appearance of the Falcon, co-star of the recent TV series. Three years after the debut of the Black Panther, 1969’s Captain America #117 saw the debut of Marvel’s second African-American super-hero. Having switched bodies involuntarily with the Red Skull, Cap ends up on Exile Island, being hunted by the Skull’s henchmen. Rescued by a young man named Sam Wilson and his pet hawk, Redwing, Cap persuades Sam of the importance of a costumed identity as a symbol, and Sam adopts the guise of the Falcon, first to inspire revolution in the native population of Exile Island, and later as an aspirational figure in Sam’s Harlem home. The Falcon and his avian sidekick Redwing would become a mainstay of Cap’s series, and of course figure largely in the current Marvel Cinematic Universe. This is a reasonably attractive cents copy, with good colour and some gloss, nice pages and good staples (except that the centrefold is off bottom staple). Some edge and corner wear and markings and (mainly) non-colour breaking creases, but a strong central image.
PICTURED: CAPTAIN AMERICA #117 VG £265 SOLD
American Update: The Good Doctor Collection: Six Of The Best: Avengers #49-53 & #56
*Marvel: Also from the Good Doctor Collection this week, a nice selection of Avengers, from when the title was at its absolute best by my reckoning. Magneto, Hercules, the Collector, the Black Panther, the Grim Reaper, the X-Men, Bucky and more! With a lot of the art by John Buscema at the height of his powers.
IN THIS UPDATE: AVENGERS
#49 VG p £25 Book shop stamp. SOLD
#50 App FN p £11.50 Colour touches SOLD
#51 FN- p £25 SOLD
#52 (PICTURED) FN- p £65 1st Grim Reaper; Black Panther joins. Nice copy, great colour gloss and staples and pages. Some minor shallow creasing, breaking colour for only about 1-2 cms.
#53 (PICTURED) VG £40 Vs X-Men. Bright and attractive copy with minor wear and creasing. SOLD
#56 (PICTURED) VF p £50 Excellent copy with just minor reading wear at spine.
American Update: The Totally Amazing Spider-Man Collection: Spider-Mania: Amazing #57-60
*Marvel: More from our comprehensive, high grade Spider-Man Collection this week as we feature four consecutive classic issues by Lee & Romita, featuring Ka-Zar, the Spider Slayer, the Kingpin, Gwen and Mary Jane and the gang etc.
PICTURED: AMAZING SPIDER-MAN
#57 FN/VF £65 A bright, shiny copy with some colour-breaking creases at lower spine and minor edge and corner wear, but white pages and tight staples.
#58 VF £70 Tight, flat and glossy with just minor corner blunting. SOLD
#59 VF- £130 1st Mary Jane cover. Excellent copy with great colour, gloss, nice pages, tight staples, just a few small, non-colour breaking creases at spine.
#60 FN/VF £130 Classic Kingpin cover. Unblemished black background. Shiny and vibrant, with minor corner blunting and a couple of small creases which do not break colour. SOLD
American Update: Mighty Marvel Firsts: Debut of Red Sonja in Conan #23 & #24
*Marvel: Forget the Frank Thorne drawn daft ha’p’orth in the chainmail bikini – the proper Red Sonja, who, you know, wore clothes and had a brain, made her first appearance in issue #23 of Conan’s title (Marvel rather dropping the ball by not having her on the cover, but we promise you, she’s in there) and co-starring in #24’s epic ‘The Song of Red Sonja!’ – though our heroine does a great deal more than just sing, proving herself Conan’s equal, if not superior. Sadly, the popularity of Sonja’s appearances in these two issues led Marvel to produce a more sexualised and less competent version of the character for her solo series – but these two issues, by Roy Thomas and superbly drawn by Barry Smith, remain as good as ever!
PICTURED: CONAN
#23 FN/VF p £140 Pence printed, shiny and glossy, tight, firm staples and off-white pages. Short vertical crease below logo (left) just breaks colour for about 1-2 cm; slight corner blunting.
#24 FN- p £55 Pence printed, glossy with great colour, tight, firm staples and off-white pages. A touch of white spine (see scan). 1-2 cm spine split upper plus minor upper corner creasing.
American Update: Steranko A Go-Go: Nick Fury, Agent of SHIELD in Strange Tales
*Marvel: Our Steranko A Go-Go feature showcases the Silver Age Marvel super-hero work of Jim Steranko, one of our favourite artists and one of the most innovative. His storytelling, both words and pictures, sums up the spirit of the late 1960s, and his all too brief body of work has always left his fans clamouring for more. Nick Fury Agent of SHIELD constitutes his main body of work, and we have every Steranko issue of Strange Tales fresh in this week, from #151 to #168. For the budget conscious, many of these are low grade and thus at bargain prices. Included are the first two Living Tribunal appearances (in Dr Strange) in #157 & #158, 1st Val in #159 plus the classic Steranko cover shown here.
PICTURED: STRANGE TALES #167 VG+ £32 SOLD
American Update: The Bute Collection: Pre-Code Horror Fest: EC’s Crime SuspenStories, including infamous ‘bullet in the head’ cover
*EC: We return to the Bute Collection for four examples of EC’s Crime Suspenstories. While technically, generally not strictly horror comics, EC’s Crime SuspenStories was certainly horrific, featuring as it often did gruesome deaths of betrayed spouses or untrustworthy friends, and this selection definitely belongs in the ‘horror zone’, including #17, the infamous ‘bullet in the head cover’. Containing tightly-plotted twist-ending shockers illustrated by Frazetta, Williamson, Craig, Kamen, Wood, Ingels, Crandall and others, these are outstanding examples of their genre. Somehow, without the supernatural elements of EC’s more famous horror titles, these seem all the more scary!
PICTURED: CRIME SUSPENSTORIES ALL SOLD
#16 GD/VG £245 Pre-code. Nice unmarked cover with strong colour. Small upper spine split (about 3.5 cm), small chip out base of spine, tight, firm staples, nice creamy pages. Only minor edge irregularities.
#17 GD £275 Pre-code. Infamous ‘bullet in the head’ cover. Nice unmarked cover with strong colour. Small upper spine split (about 4 cm), lower spine split of about 2 cm. Front cover off bottom staple (staples otherwise tight and firm). Small chips out top and bottom right corners and bottom edge. Presents well.
#24 GD £90 Pre-code. Spine neatly taped with magic tape. Otherwise a perfectly decent copy without other significant defects.
#26 VG+ £175 Pre-code. Solid mid-grade copy with strong, unmarked cover image, tight, firm staples and nice white to off-white pages. Only minor edge and corner wear and very soft creasing to the spine from the back with no colour breaks.
American Update: The Bute Collection: A Timely Intervention: Sub-Mariner #6 1942
*Miscellaneous 1940-1959: A true Golden Age gem from the Bute Collection. Sub-Mariner #6 (Summer 1942 edition) features two long Sub-Mariner stories drawn by Carl Pfeufer and a 20 page Angel story. With a classic cover by Alex Schomburg, who drew many of the Timely super-hero covers. Cover colour is good if a little dingy. There is a long upper spine split of about 10cm (cover off top staple), and a lower spine split of about 8 cm. Tiny chip out of top centre cover and a couple of insect marks causing two small holes though the comic near the spine but below the bottom margin. Small letter in pen or pencil on ‘R’ of logo, tiny scuff mark on Namor’s leg and a couple of soft, short, non-colour breaking creases bottom left of cover. But overall presents very well. We see precious few Golden Age Timelys and the last time we had one demand was phenomenal. High resolution images are available on request, but there is a good chance someone will order this before we can get those to you.
PICTURED: SUB-MARINER #6 (1942) FA/GD £1,075 SOLD
British Update: This Week’s #1: Space Adventures from Australia
*Vintage UK/Australian Reprints of US Material: Not so much a British update this time, but an Australian one. Published by Larry Cleland PTY Ltd, Space Adventures #1 reprints in black and white stories from the original American Charlton title of the same name, including one by Steve Ditko. This comic dates from the 1950s, we believe, and must have been printed soon after the originals. The cover is an Australian original, as far as we know. A bit dingy and dirty, with some staining to cover and foxing to interior pages, and a small tear at centre spine throughout, this retro sci-fi example is nevertheless a fascinating curiosity in our #1 slot this week.
PICTURED: SPACE ADVENTURES #1 GD £20 SOLD
British Update: A Baker’s Dozen of Alan Class inc. Marvelous issues
*Alan Class Reprints: Not Plate Sets this week, but 13 Alan Class issues, all pre-decimal and in nice condition, with over half of them reprinting classic Marvel stories. The Avengers, Spider-Man, Daredevil and the Torch/Thing all await within these pages. All those featuring Marvel covers are depicted here. Please refer to the regular catalogue listing for full details of all issues. Most issues have a discreet and unobtrusive previous owner’s label over the ‘Approved Comic’ symbol.
PICTURED: ALL SOLD
LEFT: ASTOUNDING #76 FN £22
RIGHT: SECRETS OF THE UNKNOWN #115 VG/FN £21
BELOW LEFT TO RIGHT:
SECRETS OF THE UNKNOWN #116 FN £22
SINISTER TALES #99 FN/VF £30
SINISTER TALES #101 FN £29
SUSPENSE #101 VG/FN £21
UNCANNY #76 VG+ £19
British Update: Cowboy Picture Library
*Boys’ Adventure & War Picture Libraries: 10 issues of Cowboy Picture Library added this week, later issues when Cowboy Comics had changed its name. Starring Buck Jones, Kit Carson, Kansas Kid & Davy Crockett, these range from #254 to #378. Full details as always in our catalogue.
PICTURED: COWBOY PICTURE LIBRARY #378 VG £4.50
British Update: Love Story Library: 25 issues from #521-550 – a Swingin’ Sixties Selection
*Girls’ Picture Libraries: A run of Love Story Library this week from #521 to #550 from the mid-sixties, featuring nearly every issue in that sequence. These are a delight, with lots of Carnaby Street influenced covers and outlandish storylines including perky young witches, creepy Christmasses, go-go girls and other groovy chicks. Bright, upbeat and hugely enjoyable, with colourful eye-catching covers and often striking interior art. These new additions average VG to VF, some only flawed by a degree of staple rust, but many rust-free. Full details as always in our catalogue.
PICTURED: LOVE STORY LIBRARY #528 VG/FN £4.50
American Update: Sensation Comics #78 (1948)
*DC: Just like Superman & Batman, Wonder Woman didn’t start out in her own title. Her first appearance came in All-Star Comics #8, with her story continuing into the anthology series Sensation Comics from #1-106. Sightings of Sensation Comics in the UK are not common, so we’re very pleased to be able to present issue #78 (June 1948) this update, with a Wonder Woman cover and lead, backed up by Wildcat, Little Boy Blue and the Blue Boys and other features. Wonder Woman comes up against Furiosa, the ‘Mistress of Masquerade’. This is a reasonable copy, with a strong, unmarked cover image, virtually no creasing, minor edge wear (notably a tiny corner off top right cover above the DC logo) and nice, supple creamy pages. 52 pages inc covers. The staples are firm at centrefold and appear to be well attached at cover spine, but nevertheless the lower staple has been protected by a small piece of magic tape. Other small unobtrusive pieces have been used to protect the spine at centre and bottom. A robust enough copy of a true vintage item.
PICTURED: SENSATION COMICS #78 GD/VG £100 SOLD
American Update: The Good Doctor Collection: Steranko A Go-Go: X-Men #49-51 inc Mighty Marvel Firsts: Lorna Dane
*Marvel: Our Good Doctor update this week continues our new Steranko A Go-Go feature showcasing the Silver Age Marvel super-hero work of Jim Steranko, one of our favourite artists and one of the most innovative. His storytelling, both words and pictures, sums up the spirit of the late 1960s, and his all too brief body of work has always left his fans clamouring for more. Although Nick Fury Agent of SHIELD constituted his main body of work, he did dip a toe into the water of other titles, including three issues of Marvel’s Merry Mutants, the X-Men (covers on all, interior art on #50 & #51).
PICTURED: X-MEN ALL SOLD
#49 FN/VF £350 1st Lorna Dane (later Polaris). Steranko cover. A lovely copy with a totally unmarked cover image and a brilliant, pure white background. Great cover colour and gloss, very little corner blunting, off-white to white supple pages and tight, firmly attached staples. Only minor handling and edge wear.
#50 FN- £250 1st Lorna Dane in costume. Steranko cover and interior art. Dynamic green-tinted cover, one of the great iconic masterpieces of the later Marvel Silver Age. Unmarked cover image with great colour. Off-white to white supple pages and tight, firmly attached staples. A couple of small creases at spine do not break colour; small bit of handling wear near right edge. Very minor edge and corner wear.
#51 VG/FN £50 Steranko cover and interior art. Great cover colour and off-white to white supple pages and tight, firmly attached staples. Minor handling wear faintly shows across cover; spine wear with tiny colour-breaking creases; some corner blunting.
American Update: Spider-Mania/Mighty Marvel Firsts: Scorpion Tales
*Marvel: The first two appearances of the Scorpion this week in Amazing Spider-Man #20 and #29, two issues which seem to turn up a bit less often than those around them for some reason. They feature the debut and second appearance of the Scorpion, one of Spidey’s most enduring foes. And both drawn by Sturdy Steve Ditko, of course.
PICTURED: AMAZING SPIDER-MAN
#20 GD/VG p £400 1st Scorpion. Pence stamped, solid and firm, with nice colour cover and gloss, tight and firmly attached staples. Pages are supple, creamy to slightly tan. Faint central vertical crease on lower half of cover, which only slightly breaks colour on bottom couple of cms. Relatively minor wear at spine just breaks colour with an insignificant short reading crease. The right edge of the cover has a dust shadow (see scan). Interior covers are moderately tanned at edges, but there is no suggestion of brittleness. The grade has been assigned to recognise these defects.
#29 VG p £140 ‘Marvel Pop Art Productions’. Pence printed, more than reasonable copy, with good cover colour and gloss, firm and tight staples, and creamy supple to slightly tan pages. A little corner blunting, but very little edge wear except for a very narrow chip out top right cover. There are a couple of diagonal creases across the centre of the cover which do not show strongly, and only very slightly break colour for a small part of their extent. The right edge of the cover has a dust shadow (see scan). Interior covers are tanned at edges, but there is no suggestion of brittleness. The grade has been assigned to recognise these defects.
American Update: Doctor Strange 2nd Series 1974
*Marvel: Doctor Strange has always been blessed with a good selection of artists working on him, nowhere more so than in this update of issues #2-12 of his second series (starting in 1974), with early issues by Frank Brunner, followed by Gene Colan. As a bonus, we also have the rather beautiful Annual #1 from 1976, with stunning art by P Craig Russell. All very nice copies; see our catalogue for full details.
PICTURED: DR STRANGE ANNUAL #1 FN+ £40 SOLD
American Update: Pre-Code Horror Fest: Ghost Rider #10 (1952) with Frankenstein
*Western: It’s not often you’ll find an entry for our Pre-Code Horror Fest in this category, but here’s a great exception. In issue #10 of the Magazine Enterprises series of Ghost Rider from 1952 (yes, he wasn’t originally a Marvel character, folks!), our titular character (already something of a horror character in his own right) encountered Frankenstein’s monster (unquestionably in the horror genre!). Other stores entitled ‘The Devil and Jed Gunner’, ‘The Spirit Spurs’, ‘My Friend, the Hangman’, and ‘The Devil Tiger’ firmly place this issue in the horror as well as the western genre. Art by later Marvel stalwart Dick Ayers. A stunning cover with rich, deep purple background. Great cover colour overall and a lot of gloss. Just tiny creases at the spine which do not break colour, slightly blunt corners and a faint crease across the top right corner above the logo. There is a small felt tip pen line over the ME logo and a faint 50 Ore price stamped on the moon (a Scandanavian currency — what stories this issue could have to tell!). Firmly attached staples and supple off-white to white pages. A vibrant, stunning example from the Golden Age.
PICTURED: GHOST RIDER #10 FN+ £330
British Update: This week’s #1: Top Spot – Unusual series from 1958
*Boys’ Adventure & War Comics: Top Spot was an unusual and not altogether successful attempt to link something like a traditional boys’ comic (albeit with more adult storylines) with the world of glamour, sport and showbiz (a la Tit-Bits or Reveille). Thus, as in issue #1, photos and articles on glamour stars such as Diana Dors and Sabrina would sit alongside quality picture strip stories of crime, sport, western and action. The prize in the competition in #1 (a Vespa scooter) showed that Top Spot’s target audience was young men rather than boys, as did the Free Gift with #1 (sadly missing here) of a glow-spot tie clip. Despite being a publication of some quality, the experiment failed and the comic was merged with Film Fun after a year and a bit. Our copy of #1 is VG, with rusty staples (minimal migration), off bottom staple and minor foxing and corner curling, but in pretty good shape.
PICTURED: TOP SPOT #1 VG £25 SOLD
British Update: Eyrie Tales: Selections from Eagle Volume 5 (1954)
*Boys’ Adventure & War Comics: One of the icons of British comics’ history, Eagle started up in 1950; every issue of its twenty year run starred Dan Dare, its most famous son. We’re always selling lots of Eagles, and we’re delighted to have added a substantial number of issues from Volume 5, mostly in FN or VF grade, and filling a few gaps. Consult our catalogue for more information.
British Update: Your wish is our Commando: Five early issues
*Boys’ Adventure & War Picture Libraries: Early issues of Commando remain both tough to get and in high demand, so we’re glad to have five early (ish) examples fresh into stock this week as follows:
IN THIS UPDATE: COMMANDO
ALL SOLD
#59 (PICTURED) FN £25
#60 (PICTURED) VG/FN £22.50
#93 VG (PICTURED) VG £20
#105 VG £15
#115 VG/FN £17.50
British Update: Free Gift Farrago: Bunty 1970/71
*Girls’ Comics: Two vintage issues of the longest-running Girls’ comic this week, both complete with their original Free Gifts still in sealed envelopes. Bunty #662 (1970) has the Tip-Top Knots hair-ties; comic is VG/FN, Free Gift VF. Bunty #717 (1971) has the Daisy-Chain Bracelet; comic is VG (just a little crumpled by the bulky gift), Free Gift VF.
PICTURED: BUNTY
#662 VG/FN WITH FREE GIFT VF £40
#717 VG WITH FREE GIFT VF £35
Coming Attractions: The Bute Collection
Over the years, we have been privileged to handle and market many prestige collections of note, such as the Alan Class Private Collection, the Whitko Collection, the Square Mile Collection and, still ongoing, the Good Doctor Collection and the Totally Amazing Spider-Man Collection.
We are now delighted to announce the impending Bute Collection.
Named after a favourite place of the owner (Bute is an island in the Firth of Clyde in Scotland), this is the personal reference collection of a working comics artist and author who wishes to remain anonymous. Derived from a multiplicity of sources over decades, but characterised by an astonishing depth, breadth and diversity of American and British items from the 1930s onwards, including many seldom seen on these shores, in a variety of grades.
The overall collection comprises literally tens of thousands of comics, and our job is to sort through them and extract the vintage gems. They are not recorded or ordered, so the journey for us will be just as exciting as it is for you as we’re able to reveal these treasures. We’ve already seen enough to know it will be quite an experience! Special thanks to Will Morgan here for services above and beyond.
Due to the particular circumstances surrounding the owner of this collection, we can only carry out the sorting on an infrequent and incremental basis, and we expect the whole job to last several years. We will be branding comics from the Bute Collection with special labels and a logo on our What’s New page. And we’ll be starting next week with the first releases. If you’re a lover of vintage comics, you’ll enjoy the ride, and you’re certain to find many comics you’d love to add to your collection.
American Update: Batmania: 4 x 10 cent Detective Comics
*DC: From the early years of UK distribution, we present four 10 cent copies of Detective Comics, each with a lead Batman & Robin story, Roy Raymond, TV Detective (exquisitely drawn by Reuben Moreira) and early tales of J’Onn J’Onzz, Manhunter from Mars. These were the days of aliens, monsters and strange transformations in the Batman stories.
INCLUDED IN THIS UPDATE: DETECTIVE COMICS
#274 FA/GD p £18.75 Cover detached. The Hermit Of Mystery Island
#275 GD/VG p £37 The Zebra Batman
#284 VG- p £35 The Negative Batman SOLD
#290 (PICTURED) VG p £40 Robin’s Robot
American Update: Early Silver Age Superboy #72-97
*DC: A couple of dozen Silver Age Superboy added to our catalogue this week in the above number range, spanning the 10 cent to 12 cent price change. Includes many issues previously missing from our listings. The Smallville adventures of Superman as a boy are both charming and wacky, featuring his family, friends and foes and, particularly, Krypto the Super-Dog, of course. Full details as always in our catalogue.
American Update: The Totally Amazing Spider-Man Collection: Spider-Mania/Mighty Marvel Firsts: Debut of Madame Web in Amazing #210
*Marvel: Debuting in Amazing Spider-Man #210, Madame Web was a new type of foe for our hero. An elderly, blind and paralysed woman who happened to be a telepath, both clever and sadistic. Currently in production, a Madame Web movie will eventually be unleashed upon us, although whether or not it’s this version of the web mistress remains to be seen. From the high grade Totally Amazing Spider-Man Collection comes this lovely copy of #210, great colour and gloss, sharp corners, flat and tight, white to off-white pages — everything you would want. One or two tiny stress marks along the spine preclude an even higher grade.
PICTURED: AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #210 VF+ £200
American Update: Captain America Joins Iron Man in Tales Of Suspense #58 & #59
*Marvel: In Tales Of Suspense #58, Iron Man and Captain America were ‘in mortal combat’ (as a result of the machinations of Kraven the Hunter and the Chameleon, who had hopped over from Amazing Spider-Man). And in #59, Cap joined the title with the beginning of his own series, and an encounter with a gang of mobsters in a story which also featured the introduction of Jarvis, the Avengers butler. Iron Man meanwhile comes up against the Black Knight. With artwork by Don Heck and Jack Kirby, and guest shots from their fellow Assemblers, these are almost like reading early issues of the Avengers.
PICTURED: TALES OF SUSPENSE
#58 VG- p £135 Pence printed, structurally sound but for a little fragility at front top edge with tiny chip out (similar at back but unaligned). Good spine, tight staples, small signs of wear at edges. Unspoilt cover image. Inner covers are moderately tanned, turning to heavy at edges, but not brittle. Pages are a decent off-white. Faint hint of a subscription crease down top half of front cover barely shows and only breaks colour for a couple of cms into logo.
#59 GD/VG p £115 Pence stamped and structurally sound with good solid spine, tight staples and only minor edge wear. Cover has good colour and some gloss. Nice off-white to cream pages. The comic is marred by a long dust shadow down the right hand edge (see scan). Inner covers are heavily tanned at edges, but not brittle.
American Update: The Good Doctor Collection: Fantastic Four #112 – Hulk Vs. Thing – The Sequel
*Marvel: Our first visit to the Good Doctor Collection this week features a tough one to get in any sort of reasonable condition. Evoking the classic two-parter of issues #25 and #26, Fantastic Four #112 pits the FF’s Ben Grimm against Bruce Banner, the Incredible Hulk, for a no-holds-barred battle by Stan Lee and John Buscema. Highly sought-after these days, primarily for the dynamic Buscema cover, this copy of Fantastic Four is a FN+ cents copy with minor edge wear and some corner blunting, but a deep, rich black background with vibrant colour figures of the protagonists. Staples are tight and firm and the comic lies flat. Pages are white, with just a hint of off-white. The only significant defect is purple ballast ink, primarily on the back cover lower spine and margin centrefold, as well as some lower page edges, but this does not impinge on the reading experience.
PICTURED: FANTASTIC FOUR #112 FN+ £170
American Update: The Good Doctor Collection: Avengers Assemble: 1st Line-Up Change in #16
*Marvel:
These days, when the roster of the Avengers seems to change every other week, it’s refreshing to remember the first big membership shake-up, in the 16th issue of the Avengers. Yes, the team had gained and lost members before – the Hulk leaving and Captain America joining – but this was a radical event as the remaining four founding Avengers stepped down to leave the team in the hands of Cap – only recently returned from frozen limbo – and three former super-villains, Quicksilver, Hawkeye and the Scarlet Witch! The gamble played off, and the ‘Cap’s Kookie Quartet’ years are fondly remembered by most veteran readers. You can read more about this period in Will’s lockdown article here. This Good Doctor copy is mid-grade, pence stamped, with a few minor colour breaking creases on the cover, mostly above the logo, but strong cover colour and gloss, staples tight at spine and centrefold and supple white to off-white pages. Minor edge wear and corner blunting. The deep purple cover background is really vibrant.
PICTURED: AVENGERS #16 VG/FN p £150 SOLD
American Update: The Good Doctor Collection: Spider-Mania: The Todd McFarlane Years
*Marvel: Finally from the Good Doctor Collection this week, we concentrate on the years when the title was revitalised by fan favourite artist Todd McFarlane. Although not to everyone’s taste, there’s no doubt that McFarlane injected a dynamism into the Amazing Spider-Man series as it approached and passed its 300th issue. His run was festooned with guest stars and favourite Spidey villains, including the launch of Venom. This update features almost every issue from #302 to #329 (except #316), nearly all of which were drawn by McFarlane. A couple of examples of his cover layout style are shown here. Most of the Good Doctor copies are in very nice high grade. See our catalogue for full details. More from the Good Doctor next week!
PICTURED: AMAZING SPIDER-MAN BOTH SOLD
#306 NM- £55 Classic Action Comics #1 Homage cover
#324 VF/NM £40 Classic Sabretooth cover
American Update: Steranko A Go-Go: Captain America
*Marvel: Continuing our new Steranko A Go-Go feature showcasing the Silver Age Marvel super-hero work of Jim Steranko, one of our favourite artists and one of the most innovative. His storytelling, both words and pictures, sums up the spirit of the late 1960s, and his all too brief body of work has always left his fans clamouring for more. Although Nick Fury Agent of SHIELD constituted his main body of work, he did dip a toe into the water of other titles, including three issues of Captain America: #110, #111 and #113. We have the first two of these in this update. #110 is a landmark issue; Rick Jones takes on the Bucky identity and teams up with Cap against the Hulk. Marvel’s movie star villainess Madame Hydra makes her debut. And I don’t think I’ve ever since the fury of the Hulk so vividly depicted. The story continues in #111.
PICTURED: CAPTAIN AMERICA BOTH SOLD
#110 VG+ p £110 Pence stamped; great cover gloss and colour. White to off-white pages, good staples. Some edge wear and corner blunting, but superb cover image.
#111 GD/VG p £25 Pence stamped, a bit tired and dingy. Staples and pages are okay, minor creasing and corner blunting.
American Update: 3 x EC’s Weird Science
*EC: We’re always delighted to add the outstanding quality of the EC line to our catalogue, and judging from the way they get snapped up, we imagine you’re equally pleased to see them. On a personal note, I’m always even more impressed by the EC science fiction titles than I am by their horror or crime, but it’s a high benchmark all round. This week, three terrific issues of Weird Science from 1951/52, all sporting classic covers by EC master Wally Wood. Interior art by Wood, Kamen, Orlando, Williamson and more. #10 contains the classic ‘Transformation Complete’ sex change story and #20 the remarkable ’50 Girls 50′ drawn by Al Williamson with inks by Frazetta and Krenkel. Comics rarely get much better than these.
PICTURED: WEIRD SCIENCE ALL SOLD
#9 VG+ £230 1st Wally Wood EC cover. Good cover colour, little wear. Very slight spine roll. Bottom staple just attached. Tiny chip out right edge cover. Nice pages; presents well.
#10 VG/FN £150 Excellent cover colour, tight and flat with nice pages. A couple of minor cover creases, the only colour-breaking crease is at the right edge. Small crayon letter in ‘W’ of logo.
#20 GD/VG £85 Great cover. Edge wear with bottom staple coming loose at front cover. Corner blunting with small tears at bottom corners.
British Update: Alan Class Plate Sets Final Phase: Creepy Worlds #37, reprints Fantastic Four #6
*Alan Class Reprints: For many years now, we’ve been scouring the personal archives of legendary publisher Alan Class (who is still very much with us) and with his full co-operation, releasing for sale sets of the original printing plates that were used to print the covers of his comics from 1959-1989. We have now reached the final phase of these plate set releases, which will last us throughout 2022. These sets are time-consuming to prepare, so our release schedule will be staggered. But the good news is that all the sets we have left are among the best, either featuring a classic Marvel comic reprint, or else a very early fantasy/mystery issue. So, this final phase represents your last opportunity to add one or more of these unique pieces to your collection. Each set comprises the lead printing plates used in the original comic’s colour printing, a copy of the comic printed with these plates and a signed certificate of authenticity signed by Alan Class himself. These are packaged in a special protective presentation case. Several sets (as noted) have additional historical artefacts such as colour proofs, interior page plates, printers’ photostats etc. (Please be aware that these weigh a lot and postage will be expensive. Also note that due to the onerous paperwork required for customs declarations following Brexit, we can no longer post these Plate Sets outside the UK.) Just one set this week, but it’s a rather special one. The run of Creepy Worlds reprinting early Fantastic Four issues are particularly prized.
CREEPY WORLDS #37 £225 Comic FA; cover (fairly cleanly) detached; much wear and tear and creasing; dog-eared. Reprints Fantastic Four #6 inc cover, Charlton, Atlas (1 Ditko, 1 Wood). Extra: Colour cover proof (torn and stained). SOLD
British Update: Lion – King of Picture Story Papers 1954
*Boys’ Adventure & War Comics: I’ll let you into a little secret. Before I discovered American comics in the early 1960s, I was an avid young reader of British comics, specifically Lion for thrills and adventure and Dandy for laughs. I used to look forward every week to the latest issue of each thumping on to the mat inside our door. This batch of Lions fresh in this week though are a little before even my time. We have almost every issue from April 1954 from to the end of the year. From an original owner collection, these are lovely copies in a well-preserved state, all VG or VG/FN; staple rust, the curse of this title, is at a minimum with virtually no migration. Captain Condor, Sandy Dean, Stowaway on the Sea-Hawk, Fighters of the Desert Patrol and many more adventurous types await you within. Full details as always in our catalogue.
British Update: Air Ace & Battle Picture Libraries
*Boys’ Adventure & War Picture Libraries: Small updates to early-ish issues of two of Fleetway’s big three this week, with four issues of Air Ace (#15, #29, #57 & #108) and seven of Battle (#22, #45, #61, #102, #164, #165 & #168). Full details as always in our catalogue.
British Update: This Week’s #1: Giggle – short-run humour weekly from 1967
*Humour Comics: 1967’s Giggle was an odd launch for Fleetway, primarily translated European reprints with only a smattering of new material, the slightly-taller size was an odd format, and the whole exercise seemed to be a test run – possibly a cost-cutting measure – to see if Euro-reprints (which Fleetway had been partially using for many years) could sustain their own weekly. If so, then the answer was ‘no’ – or possibly ‘Non’ as after a couple of months it settled down to the more conventional size, and after 38 issues was absorbed into Buster, leaving Giggle as an odd cul-de-sac in the promenade of British comics history. Nevertheless, a genuine rarity, and this copy of the premier issue is in nice tight shape.
PICTURED: GIGGLE #1 FN £40 SOLD
American Update: Justice League of America #4 – Green Arrow Joins
*DC: In his issues of Justice League of America, author Gardner Fox often used a science fiction or fantasy setting, influenced no doubt by his novels in those genres. This gave many of the issues a unique flavour beyond that of standard super-heroics. #4 (1961) is no exception, with adventure on alien worlds where Green Arrow becomes the first hero to join the team since its inception. Beneath a classic cover from Murphy Anderson (his run of covers on this title is a joy to behold), Mike Sekowsky shows his versatility, handling the wide cast of characters with flair and distinction. This is a very nice pence stamped copy, with a small arrival date in pen at the top of the cover diamond, but no other marks and strong, vivid colour. Moderate spine and edge wear, with tiny bits of colour break only. Excellent off-white pages. Printed without a lower staple; upper is tight and firmly attached.
PICTURED: JUSTICE LEAGUE OF AMERICA #4 VG+ p £125 SOLD
American Update: Superman’s Girl Friend: Half a Box of Lois Lane
*DC: A huge update of dozens of issues of Lois Lane this week, from #30 all the way up to the final issue #137 plus Annual #2, including many issues previously missing from our listing. Witness all Lois’ schemes to marry Superman and her other wacky adventures from Silver Age through to Bronze. Full details in our catalogue, which now boasts our best selection of Lois Lane ever.
American Update: The Totally Amazing Spider-Man Collection: Mighty Marvel Firsts/Spider-Mania/Slab Happy: Amazing #25
*Marvel: This week’s first visit to Spider-Mania ticks all the boxes. Amazing Spider-Man #25, from the high grade Totally Amazing Spider-Man collection, is a CGC 8.0 (VF) cents copy, unrestored blue label, perfect case, off-white to white pages. It features the first of several cameo appearances of Mary Jane (her face was not shown until #42), as well as the debuts of Professor Smythe and his Spider Slayer, the first incarnation of which was a marvellously fluid Ditko invention. Virtually every issue of Amazing from these early years was a landmark!
PICTURED: AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #25 CGC 8.0 VF £650
American Update: The Good Doctor Collection: X-Men Vs the Avengers in X-Men #9
*Marvel: From the Good Doctor Collection this week: It had already been a busy time for Marvel’s newest team, the merry mutant X-Men, when, in issue #9 of their own series, they faced up against the might of the Avengers, although, truth be told, it was more of a skirmish here than a battle royale, as the real threat in this issue was the mysterious Lucifer. Still, there’s nothing quite like Lee & Kirby pitting two teams of their creations against each other! This is a decent pence stamped copy with a good cover (a few short soft creases which do not break colour) and fairly minor edge and spine wear and corner blunting. Staples tight at spine and centrefold and excellent off-white pages.
PICTURED: X-MEN #9 VG+ p £310 SOLD
American Update: The Good Doctor Collection: Steranko A Go-Go: Nick Fury, Agent Of SHIELD
*Marvel: We kick off a new feature this week showcasing the Silver Age Marvel super-hero work of Jim Steranko, one of our favourite artists and one of the most innovative. His storytelling, both words and pictures, sums up the spirit of the late 1960s, and his all too brief body of work has always left his fans clamouring for more. We turn first of all to the Good Doctor Collection for the first seven issues of Nick Fury, Agent of SHIELD, which Steranko very much made his own when taking it over a couple of years earlier in Strange Tales, before the series acquired its own title in 1968. In my opinion, these seven covers (and the interior art he did for #1-3 & #5) constitute his finest work. All the Good Doctor copies are superior grades and have strong visual appeal without significant defects. More Steranko coming soon!
PICTURED: NICK FURY, AGENT OF SHIELD
#1 VF- p £125 SOLD
#2 VF p £55
#3 FN- p £25 SOLD
#4 FN+ p £90 SOLD
#5 VF £65 SOLD
#6 FN p £35 SOLD
#7 FN p £30 SOLD
American Update: Captain America #109 — Cap’s Origin
*Marvel: Soon after the inception of Cap’s debut Silver Age series (#100), Stan and Jack chose to retell his origin in #109. With its distinctive cover of Cap bursting through a newspaper front page dated 1941, this issue has steadily risen in collectability. Our latest copy is pence stamped, in nice structural shape, with a strong colour image on the dynamic cover, flat with no creases, tight, firmly attached staples and good, off-white to cream pages. There is a tiny chip out at bottom right cover corner and the interior covers are moderately tanned.
PICTURED: CAPTAIN AMERICA #109 FN- p £100 SOLD
American Update: The Force Is With Us: Mighty Marvel Firsts: Star Wars #1
*Marvel: Well, here it is, the very first Star Wars comic from 1977. The 1970s Marvel Comics series of Star Wars isn’t commonplace in the UK, many of the issues having been completely non-distributed in Britain, and the rest having only low circulation here in the Old Country. Adapting the beginning of famous first movie courtesy of Roy Thomas and Howard Chaykin, the continuing popularity of the franchise has seen the prices soar on this issue in recent years. This flat, glossy copy of #1 presents well, with firm tight staples, sharp corners and excellent off-white pages. Wear is restricted to a few very short, minor stress marks at the spine, which do not break the black colour background. A lovely 30 cent copy of the first printing.
PICTURED: STAR WARS #1 VF+ £235 SOLD
American Update: Spider-Mania: Amazing Issues between #164 & #175
*Marvel: Nine issues of Amazing Spider-Man fresh in this week in the above number range, featuring the Kingpin, the War of the Reptile Men with Stegron and the Lizard, the villainy of Dr Faustus, a guest appearance by Nova, the debut of the Rocket Racer, the Molten Man, the Punisher and the Hitman. All in very affordable grades — see our catalogue for details.
American Update: Master & Wings: Two Early Anthologies
*Miscellaneous 1940-1959: Two anthology titles this week. First up, from Fawcettt, Master Comics #128 (1952), featuring Captain Marvel Jr, Nyoka the Jungle Girl, Western hero Tom Mix and others. Secondly, from Fiction House, Wings #107 (1949), one of the later issues with a plucky aviatrix cover, featuring Captain Wings, Suicide Smith, the Ghost Squadron and others.
PICTURED:
MASTER COMICS #128 FN- £49 Nice solid copy with Danish price stamped on cover.
WINGS COMICS #107 FA £10 Okay copy except for insect damage throughout bottom margin and on back cover.
American Update: Pre-Code Horror Fest: L B Cole Miasma: Blue Bolt Weird Tales #114 with Classic Zombie Cover
*Horror 1940-1959: L B Cole was one of the most famous of Golden/Atomic Age cover artists. He drew in a variety of genres, and was artistic director at Star, illustrating 95% of the company’s covers; his lurid, feverish style, almost hallucinogenic, graced horror, science-fiction, jungle and romance alike. Star took over the venerable title Blue Bolt in 1949 (previously it had been a classic anthology title starring the titular character, with much work by Simon & Kirby, Everett etc, lasting throughout the war years and beyond). By the time we got to the #114, Blue Bolt himself was long gone and the emphasis of the series had changed to horror, according to the zeitgeist of the time. Indeed, the title was rebranded as Ghostly Weird Stories from #120 onwards. Contents include three stylish horror shorts by Jay Disbrow plus three reprints of Fox horror tales including ‘The Mummy’. But it’s the wonderful L B Cole cover for which this issue is prized, showing a zombie-like denizen underwater in the swamp. A reasonable copy with a little spine white, front cover off top staple with the upper spine partially split for top 5 cm. Gruesome cover scene unimpaired (small arrival date stamped on ‘R’ in logo), with just tiny creasing to bottom right cover corner. Edge wear is minimal and page quality a decent off-white to cream. High resolution images are available on request.
PICTURED: BLUE BOLT WEIRD TALES #114 GD/VG £650 SOLD
British Update: Mighty Marvel Firsts: Captain Britain #8 – First Betsy Braddock (later the X-Men’s Psylocke)
*Marvel UK: In 1976, Marvel UK’s first attempt to generate a British-based super-hero was placed into the hands of Chris Claremont and Herb Trimpe, whose comic-opera interpretation of the UK has become a source of hilarity for generations. But after a shaky start, CB became inextricably linked with the mainstream Marvel Universe, not least because of his psychic sister, Betsy, who – years later and after many, many changes – turned Japanese and became the X-Men’s scantily-clad ninja mind-warrior Psylocke. As you do. This is Betsy’s first appearance in Captain Britain Weekly #8, a copy in VG/FN condition, rather decent considering the flimsy stock of the Marvel UK weeklies, with no creases or marks, tight with excellent, firmly attached staples and flat with just a suggestion of a slight curl at the spine. The puzzle pages have been completed, but in faint pencil only. Nice white to off-white pages and sharp corners.
PICTURED: CAPTAIN BRITAIN #8 VG/FN £175 SOLD
British Update: Eyrie Tales: Selections from Eagle Volumes 11 and 12 (1960 and 1961)
*Boys’ Adventure & War Comics: One of the icons of British comics’ history, Eagle started up in 1950; every issue of its twenty year run starred Dan Dare, its most famous son. We’re always selling lots of Eagles, and we’re delighted to have added a smattering of issues from Volumes 11 and 12 this week, all in VG or FN grade. Consult our catalogue to fill your gaps!
British Update: Six Of The Best: Super-Detective Library featuring Lesley Shane and others
*Boy’s Adventure & War Picture Libraries: Six more classics from the famous Super-Detective Picture Library series this week, many starring female detective Lesley Shane, but also with a tale by Edgar Wallace and more. From an original owner collection, the condition on these is very consistent.
PICTURED: SUPER-DETECTIVE LIBRARY
#24 VG £15 Lesley Shane: The Phantom Of Dracos Island
#25 VG/FN £17.50 Diamonds To Burn
#26 VG/FN £17.50 Lesley Shane: The Phantom Of The Flying Fort
#27 VG/FN £17.50 Lesley Shane: Jungle Manhunt
#30 VG/FN £17.50 The Fatal Feather with Edgar Wallace’s Three Just Men
#32 VG/FN £17.50 Lesley Shane: The Case Of The Secret Archer
British Update: This Week’s #1: Solo: Short-lived TV anthology from 1967
*TV & Film Related Comics: Released in 1967, Solo, the companion paper to TV Tornado, featured a line-up of film and TV tie ins with guaranteed star power -‘Sgt Bilko’, ‘Mary Poppins’, and the hugely popular ‘Man From UNCLE’. Oddly, the powers-that-be decided to go with Disney’s ‘Scarecrow of Romney Marsh’ as the lead cover feature. Nevertheless, these leads plus lesser lights – ‘Seaspray’? ‘Run, Buddy, Run’? – provided ample entertainment, though it could be argued that the multitude of Disney cartoon strips brought the reading age down a bit. Despite its quality, Solo never achieved very wide circulation, and copies are seldom seen. Our latest copy of Solo #1 is in lovely shape, with white pages, firm staples and little to no wear. Sadly without the Free Gift, but still the nicest copy we’ve seen.
PICTURED: SOLO #1 FN £95 SOLD
British Update: A Small Miscellany of Girls’ Picture Libraries
*Girls’ Picture Libraries: Just a handful of new items in this category this week, the star of which is Schoolgirls’ Picture Library #6. The remainder all have felt tip pen prices in circles on the covers: the lesser seen Dream (#20), Picture Romances (#566 & #567) & Star Love Stories (#341).
PICTURED: SCHOOLGIRLS’ PICTURE LIBRARY #6 FA/GD £17.50