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American Update: Batmania: DC Debuts: 1st Silver Age Riddler in Batman #171

Posted on 13th March 2021 by 30CC13th March 2021

*DC: The Riddler made just two appearances in Detective Comics in 1948, before returning to plague the Dynamic Duo in the Silver Age in Batman #171 in 1965 and staying pretty much a constant thorn in Batman’s side ever since. Interest has now built to a frenzy since the announcement of the Riddler’s appearance in the upcoming Batman movie, so what better time to invest in this lovely copy of his Silver Age debut? A pence stamped copy, with vivid rich cover colour, and a superb Carmine Infantino cover illustration. Tight and flat with excellent staples and off white pages. Some edge wear at spine and minor corner blunting, but nothing too bad. There is a tiny non-colour breaking crease across the diagonal right cover bottom edge (the size of the black band across the cover bottom), but overall a superior copy. Personally, I don’t think Batman’s classic foes have ever looked better than on covers from this classic period. 
PICTURED: BATMAN #171 VG/FN p £400

Posted in What's New

American Update: Iron Man & Sub-Mariner #1: Historic One-Shot From 1968

Posted on 13th March 2021 by 30CC13th March 2021

*Marvel: ‘A Special Once-In-A-Lifetime Issue’, the cover of this one-shot boasted, and its unique position is simply a result of a scheduling tangle which arose when Marvel was finally allowed by its distributors to increase its range of titles. The Hulk took over the numbering of Tales to Astonish and Captain America the numbering of Tales of Suspense, but that left ‘orphaned’ chapters of the Iron Man and Sub-Mariner serials languishing, so they were used in this oddball one-off so that both Iron Man and the Sub-Mariner could start off their #1 issues with clear storylines. Nevertheless is has found ‘fame’ in recent years as a Marvel #1! Joyfully, both strips were pencilled by the superb Gene Colan. This new addition is an above average cents copy, clean & bright, sound firmly-attached staples, good cover colour and minimal edge & corner wear, apart from some creasing across a small bottom right corner of the cover. One of the easiest Silver Age Marvel titles to complete – buy one and you’ve got the set!
PICTURED: IRON MAN & SUB-MARINER #1 VG/FN £110

Posted in What's New

American Update: Spider-Mania: Classic Mysterio Two-Parter in Amazing #66 & #67

Posted on 13th March 2021 by 30CC15th March 2021

*Marvel: Jazzy Johnny Romita really excelled himself with the covers of Amazing Spider-Man #66 & #67, two of my favourites of his tenure on the wall-crawler. Appropriately enough for a special effects artist and illusionist, Mysterio is one of the most visually striking of Spidey’s Rogues’ Gallery, and these great-looking issues are not comics you want in low grade! #66 is FN- pence stamped, some edge wear and corner blunting, but excellent tight staples, a clean cover image with vibrant colour and white to off-white pages. #67 is VF, cents, great clean vibrant colour cover, white to off-white pages and tight staples; a beauty with only minimal wear. 
PICTURED: AMAZING SPIDER-MAN
#66 FN- p £70 SOLD
#67 VF £75 SOLD

Posted in What's New

American Update: Mighty Marvel Firsts: Angry Bird! Savage She-Hulk #1 from 1980 – First ‘Shulkie’

Posted on 13th March 2021 by 30CC15th March 2021

*Marvel: Let’s be honest, on the face of it, the She-Hulk sounded like a really lame idea when we first heard of her — what was to follow? Hulk-Hound, the Hulkmobile, Planet Hulk? But intermittently chartreuse lawyer Jen Walters has gone on to become one of the most enduring and endearing characters in the Marvel Universe, with creators such as John Byrne and Dan Slott providing charm, wit and (mostly) intelligent humour in her own series and during tenures with the Avengers and the Fantastic Four. There wasn’t too much trace of that in Jen’s first series, the Savage She-Hulk, when it saw the light of day back in 1980 and she was as angry as her cousin (though didn’t burst out of quite as much of her clothing, thanks to the exigencies of the Comics Code Authority) but Savage She-Hulk #1 – by the legendary creators Stan Lee and John Buscema – is where Jen’s illustrious career got its start. Non-distributed in the UK, so there are no pence copies. This is a lovely high grade copy, tight and flat with excellent staples, white to off-white pages, square corners and virtually no wear.
PICTURED: SHE-HULK #1 VF+ £120 SOLD

Posted in What's New

American Update: WandaVision: 1982 Vision & Scarlet Witch Mini

Posted on 13th March 2021 by 30CC15th March 2021

*Marvel: The Disney+ WandaVision TV show, with its affectionate pastiches of classic TV sitcoms underlain by a growing sense of unease and dread, has captured the imagination of viewers worldwide, and demand for the early appearances of the couple has never been higher! Allow us to jump on the bandwagon with a series of updates devoted to TV’s hit couple. The 1982 Vision and Scarlet Witch four issue miniseries was the first headline title for either character, telling a charming tale of a mystic mutant and a sentient synthezoid in love, adapting to suburban life in Leonia, New Jersey. Of course, when you’re Avengers, domestic challenges tend toward the dramatic, and along the way the couple face demonically animated trick-or-treaters, the attack of Vizh’s ‘brother’ the Grim Reaper, revelations about Wanda’s parentage, and a visit from Magneto, all admirably presented by writer Bill Mantlo and artist Rick Leonardi. All 4 issues now available in one complete VF+ set. More WandaVision soon.
PICTURED: VISION AND SCARLET WITCH 1982 #1 VF+; COMPLETE SET 1-4 VF+ £50 SOLD
 

Posted in What's New

British Update: Free Gift Farrago: Victor 1973 x 3

Posted on 13th March 2021 by 30CC15th March 2021

*Boys’ Adventure & War Comics: Sometimes it seems like Victor was the home of football-themed Free Gifts, as we have three more for your consideration this week, from consecutive issues in 1973. #625 has ‘Stars On Stick-Pix’ sticky badges to ‘peel off and apply to your anorak, jacket or cap’; #626 has ‘The Football Special’, a ‘smashing’ booklet and ‘a big collection of full colour pictures of famous footballers to stick in it’; #627 has ‘another 29 full colour pictures of famous footballers to stick in your Victor Football Special’. These are our last Victor Free Gift issues for the time being.
PICTURED: VICTOR ALL SOLD
#625 VG WITH FREE GIFT VF £30
#626 FN WITH FREE GIFT VF £30
#627 FN WITH FREE GIFT VF £30

Posted in What's New

British Update: War Picture Library between #200-300

Posted on 13th March 2021 by 30CC13th March 2021

*Boys’ Adventure & War Picture Libraries:  A couple of dozen of one of Fleetway’s Big Three War-themed Picture Libraries added this week, War Picture Library between #200-300, all in cheap and cheerful grades (if such a title can ever appropriately be termed ‘cheerful’!).

Posted in What's New

British Update: What’s Old: Long Hot Summer: Rare Bunty Summer (Very) Specials – From the Very First 1963-1975

Posted on 13th March 2021 by 30CC15th March 2021

*Girls’ Comics: What’s Old is our feature where we highlight stuff from our catalogue that you may have missed. The definitive British Girls’ comic, Bunty was not the first such, but it was the most enduring, lasting for 2249 weekly issues from 1958 to 2001. It is remembered fondly by generations of followers of the Four Marys, Lorna Drake, Moira Kent, and our eponymous tomboy heroine. Bunty was the first of the D.C. Thomson girls’ titles to get her own oversized Summer Special, and the first of these, released in 1963, is believed to be one of the rarest, if not the rarest, Summer Special.

We have acquired several Bunty Summer Specials, in an extraordinary state of preservation, given their vintage and the fact that these large-format magazines were often creased, folded or damaged either on display or in the possession of eager young readers.

We begin with 1963, the first Bunty Summer Special released; then we progress to 1965, 1968, 1970, 1971, 1972 (the original, not the smaller facsimile souvenir released in 2009) and 1973. From 1974 to 1979, there were no ‘solo’ Bunty Specials released; instead, our heroine teamed up with stablemate Judy for the Bunty/Judy Summer Special, featuring popular series from both weeklies, and our final entry in this listing is the 1975 Bunty/Judy edition. 

All of these remarkably preserved items have tight staples with no rust or discolouration; clean, bright, vibrant colours with minimal fading or occasional slight dustshadows at edges; sharp corners, glossy interior pages with absolutely no stains, scribbles or other markings. The provenance of this selection is from a newsagent’s former stock, archived for decades, and we suspect that not only were they never sold, they were never even opened prior to our assessment of them. We confidently predict that these are the nicest examples you’ll find – and in several cases, the only ones you’ll find!

PICTURED: BUNTY SUMMER SPECIAL:
TOP ROW
1963 FN+ £400
1965 FN+ £175
1968 FN+ £100 SOLD
BOTTOM ROW
1970 VF £100 SOLD
1971 FN+ £60
1972 VF £85
1973 FN £50
BUNTY & JUDY 1975 VF £85

 
Posted in What's New

British Update: A Royalty Of Princesses: Princess Picture Library

Posted on 13th March 2021 by 30CC13th March 2021

*Girls’ Picture Libraries: Launched in 1961 and lasting until 1966’s #120, Princess Picture Library started out by alternating between two fixed ‘players’ – Sue Day of the ‘Happy Days’, and Sally Doyle, one of those ballerinas who was always performing her pirouettes in unlikely locales – jungle, castle, Tesco’s, you name it. In later issues, however, the scope broadened to encompass other features, such as the Freedom Fighters for France (it’s a wonder the German Army got anything done in World War II, with all these plucky schoolgirls hurtling at them) and well-meaning plus-size duffer Bessie Bunter – sorry, Tilly Tuffin. Our potpourri of Princesses is delicately refreshed this week with dozens of issues, many previously unrepresented in our inventory, running between #31 and the final issue #120. It’s a shame that the last 30 issues or so featured covers with a reduced colour palette, as in the example shown here; despite that, they look like even more fun!
PICTURED: PRINCESS PICTURE LIBRARY #97 FN £9

Posted in What's New

Books Update: Lin Carter Of World’s End

Posted on 13th March 2021 by 30CC13th March 2021

*Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror: Lin Carter was a busy man. As well as science fiction, fantasy and horror novels and short stories, he was also a noted critic, anthologist and editor. His passion was fantasy, and he is possibly best remembered today as the editor of the Pan Ballantine Adult Fantasy series in the 1970s. There is no doubting his predilection for sword and sorcery of the Robert E Howard type, and this is very evident in the World’s End series, where in the far future all the Earth’s land masses have joined together into a super-continent called Gondwane. Carter uses this as a setting for familiar sword and sorcery archetypes. Three of the six novels in this sequence are included in this update: #2 The Enchantress Of World’s End, #3 The Immortal Of World’s End, #4 The Barbarian Of World’s End. All are 1st US paperback printings; Enchantress is a decent VG, the others are reading copies, a bit battered.
PICTURED: THE ENCHANTRESS OF WORLD’S END by LIN CARTER VG 1st US PB £4

Posted in What's New

American Update: DC Debuts: 1st Elongated Man in Flash #112

Posted on 6th March 2021 by 30CC9th March 2021

*DC: An uncommon treat joins us this week in the shape of Flash #112. We don’t see early issues of the Flash too often, and this one is particularly prized for the debut of Ralph Dibny, the Elongated Man. The Ductile Detective went on to become a close ally of the Flash, and lots more adventures in the DCU, alongside his wife Sue (who didn’t debut until Flash #119). Their loving relationship was a cornerstone of the Elongated Man’s adventures (but don’t get us started on what happened to them in the 21st century!). Artistically, Ralph was never better portrayed than here by Carmine Infantino, who also drew most of his solo strips in the back of Detective Comics. As if that wasn’t enough, Flash #112 also has a very early Kid Flash back-up. This is a decent cents copy, marred by a dust shadow along the top half of the spine and (narrowly) the top left cover edge; there is also a 3 cm upper spine split with a tiny chip out and evidence on the inside cover of an historic moisture stain at the top of the spine; a small blob of something shows relatively imperceptibly at the Flash’s hip. Nevertheless, nice bright colours, no creases, only minor edge wear, tight staples and good off-white pages.  
PICTURED: FLASH #112 GD/VG £130 SOLD

Posted in What's New

American Update: What’s Old: Fantastic Four #25 & #26: The Hulk Vs The Thing

Posted on 6th March 2021 by 30CC6th March 2021

*Marvel: What’s Old is our feature where we highlight stuff from our catalogue that you may have missed. A personal favourite from the distant childhoods of the 30th Century team, these classic issues pit the Green Goliath against Marvel’s First Family in a long-promised but oft-deferred fight to the finish. When three of the Four rapidly succumb to the Hulk’s irresistible force, it falls to the Thing, outclassed despite his own formidable strength, to hold the line in an epic, desperate struggle to protect the city. And when the combined powers of the FF fail, who better to step up to help out than the Hulk’s former teammates, the ever-Assembling Avengers? Powerful and gripping, this remains, decades later, one of the best-remembered battles of the early Marvel Age! FF #25 is a solid VG pence printed copy with moderate spine and edge wear and corner blunting, but nice unmarred cover image with deep purple background, tight, firmly attached staples and creamy-white pages. FF #26 has a few creases, but also an unmarred cover image, spine wear and corner blunting; very slight looseness of the staples at cover, and a slight dinginess at cover edges on the white background; decent pages, also pence printed.
PICTURED: FANTASTIC FOUR
#25 VG p £135
#26 GD/VG p £70

Posted in What's New

American Update: Spider-Mania/Mighty Marvel Firsts: Amazing #298/299: 1st Eddie Brock, 1st Venom Cameo

Posted on 6th March 2021 by 30CC9th March 2021

*Marvel: Amazing Spider-Man issues #298 and #299 are significant for a variety of reasons. New artist Todd McFarlane debuted and fast became a fan favourite, whilst #298 saw the debut of Eddie Brock (later to become Venom) and #299 featured the last page cameo debut of Venom himself. Our latest copies are both the sort of nice grades you’d hope for on things of this tender vintage; both are bright and tight with vivid colour; #298 has slightly more reading stress marks at the spine than #299, but very minor in both cases.
PICTURED: AMAZING SPIDER-MAN BOTH SOLD
#298 VF £60
#299 VF+ £70

Posted in What's New

American Update: Mighty Marvel Firsts – Journey Into Mystery #114, Debut of the Absorbing Man

Posted on 6th March 2021 by 30CC9th March 2021

*Marvel: One of Marvel’s long-running and more beloved villains, Crusher Creel, the Absorbing Man, premiered in this issue, with his ability to absorb and replicate the properties of any person, object or substance causing quite a headache for our favourite Thunder God! Despite his surly mien, many folks feel that Crusher Creel is, to quote the Shangri-Las, ‘Good-bad, but not evil‘, and he has quite the fan-base, especially in latter decades since he married Titania. This first appearance of an enduring villain is a classy Fine, pence stamp in upper corner, minimal edge wear, unfaded red background, tight staples.
PICTURED: JOURNEY INTO MYSTERY #114 FN p £115 SOLD

Posted in What's New

American Update: Pre-Code Horror Fest: Atlas Suspense #3 (1st Horror issue) & #11

Posted on 6th March 2021 by 30CC6th March 2021

*Horror 1940-1959: The Atlas series Suspense (which started in 1949) began as a crime comic based on ‘gripping CBS Radio – Television series’, but after two photo-covers with #1 & #2, it changed tack to full blown pre-code horror with #3 and lasted 29 issues. This week we have the first horror issue #3, plus #11, both full of the distinctive and superior horror tales for which this publisher was famed. #3 is a bright copy with only minimal edge wear, a couple of creases to the back cover only, a slight spine roll and a rusty lower staple with minimal migration; pages are off-white and the staples are tight with centrefold firmly attached. #11 only ever had one central staple, but it is tight and firm, off white pages, minor edge and spine wear and an upper spine split of under 2 cm. 
PICTURED: SUSPENSE
#3 VG+ £130
#11 GD/VG £75

Posted in What's New

British Update: Retro Futures: More Science-Fiction Albums from the 1950s and 60s

Posted on 6th March 2021 by 30CC9th March 2021

*Annuals: Another selection of these wonderful science fiction compendiums. If you’re like me, you just love these imagined futures from the 50s and 60s, when spaceships had rivets, saucers were flying, women were princesses and aliens were green. Four great examples in this update. The All Worlds Album (softcover), has a mixture of sci-fi, western, adventure, funnies and features, the star attraction being Swift Morgan and the Feathered Serpent by Dennis McLoughlin. The Other Worlds Album (softcover) has a mixture of science fiction, horror, mystery and adventure and features a lot of Ditko stories, as well as other US and UK strips. Under a Ditko cover, Mysteries of the Unexplored (softcover) is all sc-ifi and all British strips, with work by Norman Light and Ron Turner on Captain Future, the Buccaneers of Space etc. Finally, Outer Space (softcover) is more of the same with the same creators and characters.
PICTURED: ALL SOLD
ALL WORLDS ALBUM GD £12.50
OTHER WORLDS ALBUM VG £20
MYSTERIES OF THE UNEXPLORED FN £25
OUTER SPACE FN £25

Posted in What's New

British Update: Quirky Corner: Buster Comics 1947: Super-Rare One-Off with Electro Girl and Phantom Maid

Posted on 6th March 2021 by 30CC9th March 2021

*Boys’ Adventure & War Comics: We mosey on down to Quirky Corner this week for a super-rare oddity. Buster Comics (a one-shot as far as we know) from 1947 was published by the small Scottish publisher Cartoon Art Productions (there is no connection to the more famous Buster comic that started in the 1960s). We can find no recorded sales of this, nor virtually any information about it on the net. What we do know is that it is written and drawn by Dennis M Reader, a famous British creator of the 1940s and 50s. It stars the super-heroines Electro Girl (revived by 2000 AD in its Zenith phase and used by Alan Moore in the League Of Extraordinary Gentlemen) and Phantom Maid (this appears to be her first appearance from the context of the story, although an internet source states this was in Super Duper #5 from the same publisher, a more famous and longer-lived title). There is also western adventure with Dusty Trale, a western text story with Dakota Dan and one page funny Daffy Notion; Reader sure packed a lot into 16 pages. Published in black and white and red and blue (with shading), Reader’s creations were inspired by his love of American comics, as evidenced by the settings of all the stories, particularly Electro Girl in Hollywood. Here we’re showing front cover, back cover (with the Electro Girl story which continues inside) and an interior page of the Phantom Maid story. The condition is okay, centrefold loose of its single staple, the odd edge tear, but unmarked and all perfectly legible. We expect this to be snapped up very quickly — you’ll look a long time before you find another!
PICTURED: BUSTER COMICS 1947 GD/VG £100 SOLD

Posted in What's New

British Update: Your Wish Is Our Commando: More Early Issues From The Stapled Collection

Posted on 6th March 2021 by 30CC22nd March 2021

*Boys’ Adventure & War Picture Libraries: Following on from previous releases of earlier numbers, we now have issues #8, #9, #13, #15 & #16 of Commando War Stories In Pictures from the same source. A previous owner at some point decided to place two to four reinforcing staples through the spine, quite skilfully so as to not hamper the opening of the item nor hide any of the content; there is minimal bleed from these staples and the page quality is really rather nice. As we move up the numbers, the overall condition quality improves, so in most cases, the grade is assigned through wear rather than specific defects.
PICTURED: COMMANDO
#8 FA/GD £35 Once this had a heavily taped spine, but now tape removed with some marks left
#9 GD+ £70
#13 VG- £55 SOLD
#15 VG- £55 SOLD
#16 VG £60 SOLD

 

Posted in What's New

British Update: School Friend Picture Library #7 & #8

Posted on 6th March 2021 by 30CC6th March 2021

*Girls’ Picture Libraries: Just a pair of items in this popular category this week, two consecutive issues of the less common and relatively short-lived School Friend Picture Library from Fleetway 1962. Nice copies of issues #7 & #8.
PICTURED: SCHOOL FRIEND PICTURE LIBRARY
#7 VG/FN £12.50
#8 VG/FN £12.50

Posted in What's New

Books Update: Five by Philip K Dick

Posted on 6th March 2021 by 30CC6th March 2021

*Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror: Philip K Dick is one of our best-selling authors. I guess his themes of religion, drugs, counter culture and destructive relationships appeal. So we’re pleased to present five of his works this week in paperback. A Maze Of Death is a surrealistic murder mystery on a mysterious alien world; the classic Martian Time-Slip is about the material and mental struggle for survival in the Martian colony; Radio Free Albemuth (his last posthumous novel) touches on paranoia, political repression, the decay of American society and the plastic nature of reality (I guess you could call these his themes too); The Divine Invasion has at its centre the Second Coming; and The Golden Man is a collection of 15 short stories. Full details of all in our catalogue.  
PICTURED:
A MAZE OF DEATH VF £15 2nd UK PB
MARTIAN TIME-SLIP VG/FN £10 1st UK PB

Posted in What's New

American Update: The Return of Slab Happy: World’s Best Comics #1 1941

Posted on 27th February 2021 by 30CC27th February 2021

*DC: Our Slab Happy feature, showcasing third party graded and slabbed comics, is back with a bang this week, with something rather special. World’s Best Comics #1, Spring 1941 (retitled World’s Finest Comics from #2 onwards) is the first of the long-running series starring DC’s biggest stars, Superman and Batman with Robin. Other strips in this giant 96 page issue include Crimson Avenger, Johnny Thunder, The King, Young Dr. Davis, Zatara, Lando, Man of Magic and Red, White & Blue. Writers include Siegel, Fox & Finger, artists Fleisel, Lampert, Gustavson, Purcell & Kane, with a classic cover from Fred Ray. This is CGC blue label (unrestored) graded as 0.5 (incomplete). From the CGC label: Page 1 & 48 missing, affects story; cover detached; white pages. Since this is slabbed, probably never to be read, the missing pages aren’t really a problem (although they keep it affordable in relative terms); the front and (illustrated) back covers are totally intact and look great. One of the most iconic and historically important comics we’ve ever had through our hands, now 80 years old. 
PICTURED: WORLD’S BEST COMICS #1 CGC 0.5 INCOMPLETE £880

Posted in What's New

American Update: Batmania: Joker Cover and Story in Detective #341

Posted on 27th February 2021 by 30CC28th February 2021

*DC: Joker appearances are always highly prized and collected, and here in Detective #341, we have a rare depiction of him by Carmine Infantino, who captures his wildness in a way perhaps few former artists had done in ‘The Joker’s Comedy Capers’. There’s also a lovely Elongated Man back-up, also by Infantino. A lovely superior-graded copy, pence stamped, great cover colour and gloss, white to off-white pages, tight and firmly-attached staples. Edge and handling wear are minor; there are a couple of small stamped numbers above the logo, which do not detract from the cover image.
PICTURED: DETECTIVE COMICS #341 FN/VF p £55 SOLD

Posted in What's New

American Update: Spider-Mania/Mighty Marvel Firsts: Debut and origin of Morbius in Amazing #101-102

Posted on 27th February 2021 by 30CC28th February 2021

*Marvel: By his 101st issue, Spider-Man had become temporarily encumbered with six arms, leaving him a true eight-limbed arachnoid hero; but more importantly, he met a foe who was destined to become one of the Marvel Universe’s prime anti-heroes. Following the 1971 relaxation of the Comics Code Authority (which had hitherto banned mention of vampires and werewolves in the wake of the 1950s horror comics scare), the floodgates were opened for all manner of supernatural beings; one of the first was Michael Morbius, tragic scientist who, while not a traditional vampire, gained many vampiric attributes after an experiment gone awry. Among said attributes: enhanced strength, speed, senses… and an uncontrollable craving for human blood. A big hit with the Spider-Man audience, Morbius the Living Vampire first appeared in Amazing Spider-Man #101 and #102 revealed his tragic origin; he then made a rapid reappearance in Marvel Team-Up #3, graduating to his own series in Fear thereafter. There have been several Morbius series in the intervening decades, and the upcoming Morbius flick is leading to a heightened demand for his premier appearances. Our latest copy of #101 is very decent, pence printed, with a great unmarred cover image, good colour and gloss, tight and firmly-attached staples and nice page quality. There is minor wear/blunting at corners and spine and the odd unobtrusive handling mark; very small crease across the tiniest bit of the bottom right corner. #102 is a squarebound extra-length giant, also featuring the Lizard, pence printed, with great cover colour and gloss, minor corner blunting, totally intact spine and good tight staples; some puckering at the bottom spine, probably from the glue used on squarebounds and a tiny scuff on the back cover; a very nice copy.
PICTURED: AMAZING SPIDER-MAN
#101 FN- p £290
#102 FN+ p £70 SOLD

Posted in What's New

American Update: Mighty Marvel Firsts: X-Men #129 – The Double Debut of Kitty Pryde and Emma Frost

Posted on 27th February 2021 by 30CC28th February 2021

*Marvel: X-Men issue #129 introduced not one, but two, characters who were to become major players in the lives of the X-Men. Kitty Pryde, the young immaterial ingenue, made her debut as a pupil at Xavier’s school, and went on to become a central part of the series, eventually becoming the leader of the team, while Emma Frost, White Queen of the Hellfire Club, dedicated her telepathic prowess to the X-Men’s destruction – though that dedication hasn’t prevented her from occasionally joining the group herself, and seducing Cyclops whenever Jean Grey happens to be dead for a while! Our latest #129 is a fabulous cents copy, looks as good as new; extremely minor stress marks to the bottom of the spine (I’m being really picky here) and a small faint crease at the top left back cover are the only signs this has ever been handled and read.
PICTURED: X-MEN #129 VF+ £120 SOLD

Posted in What's New

American Update: The Big Panty Monsters are back in Strange Tales Annual #1, the First Marvel Annual

Posted on 27th February 2021 by 30CC28th February 2021

*Marvel: In 1962, Marvel published their first annual, Strange Tales Annual #1, an all reprint affair featuring a plethora of those monster and science-fiction stories from the earliest days of Marvel, not all from Strange Tales (a previous owner, as well as writing his name at the top of the splash page, has helpfully annotated the bottom of the splash of each story with the issue it originally appeared in, although we haven’t verified this). By now familiar names such as Grottu, Shagg and Diablo rub shoulders with more conventional sci-fi, all as depicted by Kirby, Ditko and others. A great package, and one we don’t see too often. This copy, sadly, has seen better days; the spine is taped (clear magic tape) and there is tape and tape residue on the cover near the spine as well; many cover creases and a small hole in the back cover, but complete and nice to have in your collection nevertheless. 
PICTURED: STRANGE TALES ANNUAL #1 FA £33 SOLD

Posted in What's New

American Update: Mighty Marvel Firsts: Earliest Appearances of Cable

Posted on 27th February 2021 by 30CC3rd March 2021

*Marvel: Issues #86-88 of New Mutants featured the earliest appearances of Cable, a man from an apocalyptic near-future, son of Scott Summers by a cloned replica of Jean Grey, who came back in time to prevent his own future from coming to pass. Or something like that. His powers include metal bits, a strappy costume, really big guns, and glaring a lot. With a shiny eye, for no very good reason. Anyway, he took over the stewardship of the New Mutants from Magneto, and eventually honed the survivors into X-Force, a dubious achievement for which no-one should thank him. He’s since bobbed back between ‘now’ and the future, interfering with his own and the world’s time stream, and accosting various mutant children to become the Hope of the World. Kind of a perma-grumpy Mary Poppins, he’s a super-powered nanny with metal limbs. Confusing back history and ambiguous abilities or not, his co-starring role in the record-breaking second Deadpool film has caused interest in the character’s early appearances to peak. #86 is a cameo appearance, #87 his first full appearance and #88 his second. All nice copies as you might expect of this vintage, the #87 has minor stress marks at the spine and a little handling wear at the right edge. See our catalogue for full details.
PICTURED: NEW MUTANTS #87 VF- £70 SOLD

Posted in What's New

American Update: Marvel ‘I’ List: Inhumans, Iron Man

Posted on 27th February 2021 by 30CC27th February 2021

*Marvel: We’ve reached the letter ‘I’ in our alphabetical jaunt through the Marvel Universe, which as far as this update is concerned is represented by Inhumans (from #1) and Iron Man (later issues between #161 & #222). Full details of course in our catalogue.

Posted in What's New

American Update: What’s Old: Pre-Code Horror Fest: Eerie #3, #4 & #6

Posted on 27th February 2021 by 30CC28th February 2021

*Horror 1940-1959: What’s Old is our feature where we highlight stuff from our catalogue that you may have missed. This week, one of the most famous horror titles of the 1950s. Confident of the success of their horror showcase, Avon Publishing followed up their 1951 debut issue with an ongoing series. Always a quality title, showcasing the work of Wally Wood & Joe Kubert, among many others, with evocative preludes in moody black and white on the inner front covers. Issue #3 is structurally sound but with mild ‘rippling’ and very faint cover image erosion from historical moisture exposure. Issue #4 has a chip missing at top of spine and a few chips out upper edge. Issue #6 #6 has quite a worn spine, but okay in other respects. Despite these flaws, the striking quality of the work remains undiminished.
PICTURED: EERIE
#3 FA/GD £150
#4 FA/GD £120 SOLD

#6 GD/VG £200

 

Posted in What's New

American Update: Whoever Knows Fear Burns At The Touch Of The Man-Thing

Posted on 27th February 2021 by 30CC27th February 2021

*Horror/Mystery 1960-1980s: Marvel’s entry into the muck monster stakes comprehensively updated this week, with almost every issue of Man-Thing (1st series) now available in a choice of grades and prices, including Giant-Size Man-Thing. (One of our most esteemed customers once remarked that Giant-Size Man-Thing was his favourite comics’ title; think about it.)

Posted in What's New

British Update: Miller Horror: Mystic, Spellbound, Voodoo & Zombie inc #1 issues

Posted on 27th February 2021 by 30CC28th February 2021

*Vintage UK/Australian Reprints of US Material: In the years before Alan Class got going, Len Miller was the big name in ‘faux’ American comics in the UK, reprinting much material that would otherwise not have seen the light of day on our shores. Prominent among his offerings were four horror titles, reprinting Atlas and early Marvel horror/mystery tales: Mystic, Spellbound, Voodoo & Zombie, all keenly collected these days. We have two #1 issues in this update: Spellbound & Voodoo, plus a smattering of Mystic (#30), Voodoo (#3) and Zombie (#2) all in decent shape.
PICTURED:
SPELLBOUND #1 VG/FN £80 SOLD
VOODOO #1 VG+ £40

Posted in What's New

British Update: A Boys’ Picture Library Miscellany: Pocket Detective, Suspense, Thriller

Posted on 27th February 2021 by 30CC28th February 2021

*Boys’ Adventure & War Picture Libraries: A bit of a round-up this week as we feature Pocket Detective Library, a couple of Suspense Holiday Specials from 1977 and 1979 and a few Thriller Picture Libraries between #87 and #143.
PICTURED:
SUSPENSE PICTURE LIBRARY HOLIDAY SPECIAL 1977 FN £9 SOLD
THRILLER COMICS LIBRARY #105 VG £12

Posted in What's New

British Update: Countdown #1 VF

Posted on 27th February 2021 by 30CC28th February 2021

*TV & Film Related Comics: When the first series of TV Century 21 faltered, competitors Polystyle were quick to generate a successor in ‘Countdown’, featuring many of the most popular Gerry Anderson TV shows in comic strip form. Fireball XL5, Captain Scarlet, Thunderbirds, Stingray all graced its pages, plus a brand-new sci-fi strip ‘Countdown’, illustrated rather spiffily by John M. Burns, and the star power of a Doctor Who comic series imported from TV Comic! This classy, slick package is fondly remembered and avidly collected today. Our latest copy of Countdown #1 is an exceptional VF, a high grade for a British comic only possible because of the superior paper quality, tight staples, flat white pages, vibrant colour, sharp corners; minor stress marks at the spine. Please note this copy does not come with Free Gift.
PICTURED: COUNTDOWN #1 VF £70 SOLD

Posted in What's New

British Update: Free Gift Farrago: Princess Tina 1968

Posted on 27th February 2021 by 30CC28th February 2021

*Girls’ Comics: We’ve had one of these before (quite recently, in fact), but despite that I must stress the rarity of these Free Gift issues. So it’s Princess Tina 2/3/68 complete with ‘This Lovely Necklace’ (real plastic pearls). The comic is VG, as is the gift; the necklace is still sealed in its original plastic bag, but has sustained damage at some point in its history, so that the string of the pearls is broken at one point. The price reflects that.
PICTURED: PRINCESS TINA 2/3/68 VG WITH FREE GIFT VG £30 SOLD

 

Posted in What's New

British Update: More True Life Library

Posted on 27th February 2021 by 30CC28th February 2021

*Girls’ Picture Libraries: Aimed at the adult female reader (or older adolescent), these often beautifully drawn romance comics from Amalgamated Press (later Fleetway) dealt with slightly more mature themes such as infidelity, divorce, or marital discord — though always discreetly alluded to, and with the inevitable happy ending! We have nearly 50 new issues this week, from #151 up to #199, almost complete. While these are overall in a remarkable state of preservation for their age, with mostly glossy covers and bright interior pages; staple rust has unfortunately affected most of them to some degree, and we have adjusted the grades accordingly. In general, they’re averaging VG, with several FN and a few dropping to GD, though it must be observed that, staple rust aside, most of them would achieve a full grade higher.
PICTURED: TRUE LIFE LIBRARY #167 VG £7 SOLD

Posted in What's New

Books Update: Two wonderful hardcovers with Reginald Heade dust jackets

Posted on 27th February 2021 by 30CC28th February 2021

*Crime, Spies & Sleaze: I’ve banged on here before about the quality of work by Reginald Heade, dubbed ‘England’s Greatest Artist’ for his book covers in the 1940s and 1950s, so of course we’re pleased to have two new examples fresh into stock this week, and great examples at that. The first is Harbour Lights by Anne Duffield, a first hardcover edition from 1953 and a fine specimen of Heade’s romance cover work. (Yes, we know romance isn’t exactly crime, spies or sleaze, but whilst we don’t plan on having a romance category, we’re not letting that stop us stocking anything by Heade!). A VG/FN book in a GD/VG dust jacket, with minor creasing at the bottom spine and a slight loss at the top spine and back cover, but the art is totally undamaged. The second selection is more appropriate for this category, and a classic thriller to boot – part of Sax Rohmer’s Fu Manchu sequence, one of the great villains of English literature. This is Daughter Of Fu Manchu, a second UK HC VG/FN from 1955 in a GD/VG dust jacket, sporting a stunning Heade interpretation of the title character. The dust jacket has a small loss to the top of the spine and a couple of tears on the rear, but the front cover image is totally unspoilt. Two very disparate looks at the art of Reginald Heade, both from the same publisher, Cassell.
PICTURED:
HARBOUR LIGHTS by Anne Duffield VG/FN in GD/VG DJ 1953 £15
DAUGHTER OF FU MANCHU by Sax Rohmer VG/FN in GD/VG DJ 1955 £40 SOLD

Posted in What's New

American Update: Batmania/DC Debuts: Batman #313 & #323, 1st & 2nd Tim Fox, Future State Batman

Posted on 20th February 2021 by 30CC20th February 2021

*DC: It’s a funny old game, this hobby. You can have a perfectly good issue of Batman, featuring a tussle with one of his major foes (Two-Face) which has been around for 40 years and only accumulated a modest value, then suddenly, overnight, DC announce that a hitherto minor character incidentally introduced in that very issue is to become the new Batman in their current Future State storyline, and the collectors and speculators go wild. So, we offer a chance to get a decent copy of the first appearance of Tim Fox (#313) in lovely condition, with just a tiny amount of edge wear, plus his second appearance (#323 FN/VF p £28), minor creasing to back cover and minor handling wear, at the current market values. Are they good investments? Well, the last copy we had of #313, just three weeks ago, sold instantly…
PICTURED: BATMAN #313 VF £150

Posted in What's New

American Update: If you go down to the swamp today… Alan Moore’s Swamp Thing

Posted on 20th February 2021 by 30CC20th February 2021

*DC: A chunky update to one of comics’ greatest sequences: Alan Moore’s classic run on Swamp Thing, with nearly 20 high grade issues fresh into stock between #20 and #41 plus Annual #2, including #20 (1st Moore Script) and #21 (his defining new origin for the character). When Moore took over Swampy with issue #20 of his second series, he was just another muck monster (albeit one with great pedigree), but Moore transformed the series into one of dark, gothic ecological thriller, penetrating to the heart of the darker side of the USA as perhaps only an Englishman could. Myriad denizens of DC’s supernatural universe guest. If you’ve never read Alan Moore’s Swamp Thing, you’re in for a treat!
PICTURED: SWAMP THING (SAGA OF) #21 NM- £50

Posted in What's New

American Update: DC Limited Collectors’ Edition Tabloids

Posted on 20th February 2021 by 30CC22nd February 2021

*DC: The tabloid-sized DC Limited Collectors’ Editions from the 1970s are all uncommon in the UK, but we’re lucky enough to have a find of several new in, including many duplicates in a choice of grades. See our catalogue for full details — a selection of our stock is shown here:
PICTURED: LIMITED COLLECTORS’ EDITION
C21 VG+ £15 SHAZAM SOLD OTHER COPIES AVAILABLE
C37 VF+ £50 BATMAN ALL-VILLAIN SPECIAL SOLD
C38 VF £25 SUPERMAN SOLD OTHER COPIES AVAILABLE
C39 VF/NM £40 SECRET ORIGINS OF SUPER-VILLAINS SOLD
C47 VF £20 SUPERMAN SALUTES THE BICENTENNIAL SOLD OTHER COPIES AVAILABLE

     

Posted in What's New

American Update: Batmania Extra! Batman Adventures, the Famous First Series

Posted on 20th February 2021 by 30CC20th February 2021

*DC: From 1992, the first (and by far the best) series based on the Batman TV Animated series. Delightfully adapting the TV cartoon style, the series matched the intelligence, humour and charm of the TV show, especially when rendered by the superb pencils of the late and much missed Mike Parobeck, who really found his calling with this style. Of course, it was the series that give birth to Harley Quinn, and although her issues are not included in this update, we do have most of the 36 issue series new in, including #3 & #16 with covers and stories featuring the Joker.  
PICTURED: BATMAN ADVENTURES
#3 VF+ £20
#16 VF/NM £20

Posted in What's New

American Update: Spider-Mania: Amazing #252 – New Black Costume (later Venom)

Posted on 20th February 2021 by 30CC9th March 2021

*Marvel: Amazing Spider-Man #252, like many Secret Wars ‘epilogue’ issues, featured a major ‘twist’ only explained retroactively. In Spidey’s case, it was a dramatic black & white costume which would eventually be revealed as an alien symbiote, which in turn would evolve into Venom, who eclipsed most longer-established villains to become Spidey’s crucial nemesis for the modern era. Although the first appearance of the symbiote in internal continuity was Secret Wars #8, its joint debut in real time was this very issue. This is a lovely high grade issue, tight, flat and glossy with good staples and nice pages; only minor edge handling wear and tiny stress marks at spine (non-colour breaking) stop us awarding an even higher grade.
PICTURED: AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #252 VF+ £100 SOLD

Posted in What's New

American Update: Sky-Rider of the Spaceways: Silver Surfer 1st series

Posted on 20th February 2021 by 30CC22nd February 2021

*Marvel: It makes a lot of our customers happy when we get in issues of the 1st Silver Surfer series from 1968, such is the popularity of the surfing dude. This week, most of the run newly available, including giant issues #2, #5-7, then complete regular-sized issues from #8-18, the end of the run. Mostly on the lower graded side, and thus very affordable copies. Superb artistry from John Bucema, with Jack Kirby on the final issue, and guest stars galore.
PICTURED: SILVER SURFER #2 VG- £40 SOLD

Posted in What's New

American Update: Fantastic Four Annual #5 – A Jam-Packed Spectacular

Posted on 20th February 2021 by 30CC22nd February 2021

*Marvel: Stan and Jack pulled out all the stops when it came to the fifth annual for the Fantastic Four. Not only the debut of a new villain – the Psycho-Man – and his flunkies Live Wire, Ivan & Shellshock, not only guest shots by the Black Panther AND the Inhumans, not only a back-up story with the Silver Surfer’s encounter with Quasimodo, not only a Stan & Jack vignette about them creating the FF, not only a pin-up gallery of the FF’s friends and foes, but also a special announcement about a happy event for Sue and Reed, which would culminate in the advent of Franklin Richards in Annual #6 a year later. Quite a package. This is a lovely cents copy, with great squarebound spine, excellent cover colour and gloss, nice tight staples and decent pages; no specific defects.
PICTURED: FANTASTIC FOUR ANNUAL #5 VF £90 SOLD

Posted in What's New

American Update: Mighty Marvel Firsts: Debut of Red Sonja in Conan #23

Posted on 20th February 2021 by 30CC20th February 2021

*Marvel: Roy Thomas and Barry Smith’s comic book recreation of Robert E. Howard’s Conan the Barbarian was a breakout hit for Marvel in the early 1970s, but yet another fantasy comics star made her debut in Conan #23 (Feb 1973), when Conan encountered Red Sonja, a female brigand and adventurer who was every bit his equal – even though Marvel missed a step by not cover-featuring her! Sonja rapidly caught the public’s imagination and spun off into her own series (regrettably with a skimpier and more impractical outfit than her earlier look), and more than forty years later – being a licensed character not linked to a specific publisher – continues her comic-book career to this very day. An average graded copy here, pence printed, nice and glossy with good staples, slightly tanned pages, some spine wear, a dink to the bottom spine and a small crease across the bottom right corner.
PICTURED: CONAN #23 VG+ p £37

Posted in What's New

American Update: Spider-Mania Extra: Amazing #365 with Hologram cover

Posted on 20th February 2021 by 30CC20th February 2021

*Marvel: One of a series of Hologram Specials released to celebrate Spidey’s 30th Anniversary, the super-sized Amazing Spider-Man #365 bears a hologram re-creating the cover to Amazing Fantasy #15. Chock full of special features, this is a copy in great shape. 
PICTURED: AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #365 NM £30 

Posted in What's New

American Update: Six Of The Best: Marvel Bronze & Beyond #1 issues

Posted on 20th February 2021 by 30CC22nd February 2021

*Marvel: Another of those updates you love featuring six #1 issues from Marvel’s Bronze Age and beyond. This time we have Doc Savage, Inhumans, Marvel Premiere (a nice copy let down by a taped tear on the back cover), New Warriors, Nova & Skull the Slayer. Fill yer boots!
PICTURED:
DOC SAVAGE #1 FN £17.50 SOLD
INHUMANS #1 VF £40 SOLD
MARVEL PREMIERE #1 VG+ £55 SOLD
NEW WARRIORS #1 FN/VF £15
NOVA #1 VG+ p £35 SOLD
SKULL THE SLAYER #1 VF+ £17.50 SOLD

 

Posted in What's New

American Update: A Superior Pre-Code Horror Fest: Journey Into Fear

Posted on 20th February 2021 by 30CC22nd February 2021

*Horror 1940-1959: Superior was a Canadian publisher active from 1945-1956 who mostly reprinted American comics from the same time period. They also published a number of original series that were distributed in the United States. Among these were three horror titles famous for their hallucinogenic covers and accomplished Fiction House style interior art. When you see a lot of these together, they have an almost hypnotic and uncomfortable effect. This week we feature Journey Into Fear #7-9; the defects on #7 are noted; #8-9 are mid-grade without specific defects other than general wear.
PICTURED: JOURNEY INTO FEAR
#7 FA £50 Cover almost detached and separated, barely hanging on SOLD
#8 GD/VG £145 SOLD
#9 VG £195 SOLD

Posted in What's New

American Update: 1970s Marvel Horror

Posted on 20th February 2021 by 30CC20th February 2021

*Horror/Mystery 1960-1980s: A top up for the following titles from the House of Ideas: Chamber of Chills, Chamber of Darkness (from #1, inc. #7 1st Wrightson work at Marvel), Creatures On The Loose (with Man-Wolf), Dead Of Night (#11, 1st Scarecrow), Fear, Adventure Into (with Man-Thing inc. #17, 1st Wundarr & Morbius) & Frankenstein Monster. See our catalogue for details. 

Posted in What's New

British Update: Alan Class Astounding inc. early & Marvelous issues

Posted on 20th February 2021 by 30CC20th February 2021

*Alan Class Reprints: A chunky update to our regular stocks of Astounding between #3 and #153, mostly pre-decimal issues, including a Human Torch reprint in #3 & #59 (the same one), and the Torch and Dr Strange in #6. See our catalogue for full details. 
PICTURED: ASTOUNDING
#3 VG £35
#6 FN £35

Posted in What's New

British Update: Near Complete run of Starlord

Posted on 20th February 2021 by 30CC20th February 2021

*Boys’ Adventure & War Comics: From 1978, the sci-fi weekly Starlord, a quality item which featured a number of innovative strips – Strontium Dog, Ro-Busters, Planet of the Damned, Timequake and more – and with more colour pages and slicker paper, it seemed to be attempting to upgrade the 2000 AD model. Sadly, mass audiences didn’t care whether there were higher production standards or not, and after only 22 issues, Starlord was absorbed into 2000 AD, with Strontium Dog and Ro-Busters being the long-term survivors. A near complete run fresh in, 20 of the 22 issues including the first three and the final, nice copies which would grade higher except for a vertical ‘soft roll’ at centre which gives them a slight wavy effect. 
PICTURED: STARLORD #1 VG £12

Posted in What's New

British Update: Your Wish Is Our Commando: The Stapled Collection #3-6

Posted on 20th February 2021 by 30CC20th February 2021

*Boys’ Adventure & War Picture Libraries: Following on from #1 a couple of weeks ago (now sold), we’re now releasing issues #3-6 of Commando War Stories In Pictures from the same source. A previous owner at some point decided to place two to four reinforcing staples through the spine, quite skilfully so as to not hamper the opening of the item nor hide any of the content; there is minimal bleed from these staples and the page quality is really rather nice. Nevertheless these are low grade copies anyway with defects as noted. #3 (£25) is coverless but otherwise complete; it’s unusual for us to list a coverless item, but when it’s of this rarity, we figure someone will want it to fill a gap.
PICTURED: COMMANDO
#4 FA+ £65 Back cover detached; thumbnail size chip out right edge front cover centre.
#5 GD- £90 Long cover tear (7 cm); corner off back cover
#6 GD- £50 Back cover stain (5 x 5 cm)

Posted in What's New

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