BHOCOS: SUPERSNIPE COMICS v2 #5

SUPERSNIPE COMICS  Vol. 2 #5 October, 1944 Billed as “The Boy With The Most Comic Books in America”, Supersnipe was actually young Walter Mitty-ish Koppy McFad. Not content merely to follow his favorite comics–a tag line tells us Koppy “reads ‘em, eats 'em and sleeps 'em”–Koppy indulges in an ongoing fantasy life in which he’s … Continue reading BHOCOS: SUPERSNIPE COMICS v2 #5

BHOCOS: CRIME DETECTIVE COMICS #6

CRIME DETECTIVE COMICS #6 January-February, 1947 Not to tread on Scott Shaw’s territory, but this issue of CRIME DETECTIVE COMICS features one of the most oddball covers in the history of crime comics–the sole reason I picked it up. Sadly, it’s also an entirely misleading cover, as none of the stories contained herein features a … Continue reading BHOCOS: CRIME DETECTIVE COMICS #6

BHOCOS: ALL-FLASH QUARTERLY #1

ALL- FLASH COMICS #1 Summer, 1941 This is, I believe, the oldest comic book I own–I have a few pulp magazines and such that are older, but no comics. And I paid a grand total of $3.00 for it, which, even in the dilapidated state it’s in, was quite a bargain. ALL-FLASH COMICS–so named because … Continue reading BHOCOS: ALL-FLASH QUARTERLY #1

BHOCOS: FANTASTIC FOUR #1

FANTASTIC FOUR #1 November, 1961 I saw this book at a New York show in the early months of 1991. I’d already spent all of the cash I’d put aside for the weekend when I spied it on a dealer’s wall across the way. It had a post-it on it identifying it as a “beaten, … Continue reading BHOCOS: FANTASTIC FOUR #1

BHOCOS: DOONESBURY

DOONESBURY I read the entire run of DOONESBURY to date over the course of one week in the early 1990s, after coming across this second oversized collection in my local used bookstore. I’d been too young to really start following the strip when it first debuted, and had never before been able to get into … Continue reading BHOCOS: DOONESBURY

BHOCOS: COUNT DUCKULA #14

COUNT DUCKULA #14 November, 1990 COUNT DUCKULA #14 was the first professional comic book I ever wrote (or co-wrote, as was most often the case, with Mike Kanterovich.) It also represented my first regular Marvel assignment–one that only lasted until #15, when the book, based on the British animated series then running on Nickelodeon, was … Continue reading BHOCOS: COUNT DUCKULA #14

BHOCOS: ALL-FLASH COMICS #8

ALL- FLASH #8 January-February, 1943 ALL-FLASH #8 was the first Golden Age comic I ever purchased. I picked it up in 1990, on my first trip to the San Diego Comic Convention. Ever since reading the Jay Garrick story reprinted in FLASH #DC-22, I’d been a big fan of the work Gardner Fox and E.E. … Continue reading BHOCOS: ALL-FLASH COMICS #8

BHOCOS: HEPCATS #2

HEPCATS #2 1989 Martin Wagner’s HEPCATS was a full-length comic book version of a daily strip he’d done for his college newspaper. Obviously influenced by CEREBUS (much as the daily strip, which Wagner eventually collected into a trade paperback, was strongly DOONESBURY-flavored), Wagner was clearly interested in following in Dave Sim’s footsteps by producing an … Continue reading BHOCOS: HEPCATS #2

BHOCOS: WOLVERINE SAGA #4

Wolverine Saga #4 - Mid December, 1989 WOLVERINE SAGA #4 contains my first published credit, although it doesn’t really say in what capacity I was being credited. WOLVERINE SAGA was an overpriced, bookshelf-format life’s story of Wolverine, published at a time when pretty much everything starring the X-Men sold tremendously well. It was well researched … Continue reading BHOCOS: WOLVERINE SAGA #4

BHOCOS: KEIF LLAMA, XENOTECH #4

KEIF LLAMA, XENO-TECH #4 December, 1988 My favorite of all of Matt Howarth’s offbeat comics, KEIF LLAMA followed the adventures of a young Xeno-Tech– someone who’d been trained to understand alien thought processes and to effectively communicate around the incompatible differences between alien species. It was an intelligent science fiction series with something of the … Continue reading BHOCOS: KEIF LLAMA, XENOTECH #4