Lost Crossovers: FLASH COMICS #77

While Golden Age publishers in general were relatively averse to having the stars of their assorted strips meet and team up on any sort of regular basis, the folks at DC/National Comics were a little bit more open to the idea of an occasional appearance or reference. Especially when it came to the features and … Continue reading Lost Crossovers: FLASH COMICS #77

Crisis II – The Villain Crossover

We've been looking at some of the ideas that surfaced for what to do as a follow-up to DC's ultra successful 50th Anniversary Crossover limited series CRISIS ON INFINITE EARTHS, which were being discussed and debated well before CRISIS had itself run its course. In the end, a number of different ideas were explored and … Continue reading Crisis II – The Villain Crossover

BHOC: MARVEL TWO-IN-ONE #46

There was very little that could happen in a comic book at this point in 1978 that was more exciting to me than the prospect of a Thing vs Hulk fight. There had been a number of them previously over the years, but I hadn't yet read any of those earlier stories, though I was … Continue reading BHOC: MARVEL TWO-IN-ONE #46

WC: SUPERMAN’S PAL JIMMY OLSEN #77

SUPERMAN'S PAL JIMMY OLSEN is a resolutely strange series, albeit one that was incredibly successful for two decades thanks to the lasting appeal of Superman and the performance of actor Jack Larson as the cub reporter on the syndicated ADVENTURES OF SUPERMAN television program. Every young reader of the period knew exactly who Jimmy Olsen … Continue reading WC: SUPERMAN’S PAL JIMMY OLSEN #77

CHANGES, April 15, 1970: Stan Lee Interview

All throughout the 1960s and 1970s, Marvel Comics and Stan Lee in particular had made a deliberate effort to grow a college-age audience for his comic book output. In this effort, he was largely successful, and by the 1970s Marvel was recognized among the counter-culture as possessing at least a little bit of hipness. Not … Continue reading CHANGES, April 15, 1970: Stan Lee Interview

BHOC: MARVEL SUPER-HEROES #77

Another week brought more new comic books, including this issue of MARVEL SUPER-HEROES starring the Hulk. Or, as he was billed on the recurring cover blurbs during this period, "Marvel's TV Sensation!" I'd imagine that there were a lot of young readers who picked up their first issue of a Hulk comic book as a … Continue reading BHOC: MARVEL SUPER-HEROES #77

Lost Crossovers: UNCLE SAM QUARTERLY #2

Quality Comics was one of the best and most consistent publishers of comics books during the years of the Golden Age. The firm is largely forgotten now, but in its heyday, it featured a whole line of memorable characters such as Plastic Man, Blackhawk, The Ray, Doll Man, Phantom Lady, the Human Bomb, Quicksilver, the … Continue reading Lost Crossovers: UNCLE SAM QUARTERLY #2

The Selling of Superman: Correspondence between Jack Liebowitz and Jerry Siegel

I've been doing a deep dive of late into the early days of Superman, researching everything that is known or can be established about the development, purchase and evolution of the Man of Steel across his first decade, when he became virtually immediately a Pop Culture Phenomenon that conquered all forms of mass media simultaneously. … Continue reading The Selling of Superman: Correspondence between Jack Liebowitz and Jerry Siegel

BHOC: GREEN LANTERN #110

I believe that I picked up this issue of GREEN LANTERN while on a shopping trip one Satuday. That's a pretty good, eye-catching and dramatic cover by artist Mike Grell. Grell had been a semio-regular fixture on GREEN LANTERN ever since the title came back from limbo in 1976, and his Neal Adams-influenced artwork was … Continue reading BHOC: GREEN LANTERN #110

WC: DETECTIVE COMICS #349

This was the latest issue of DETECTIVE COMICS that I wound up with in my 1988 Windfall Comics purchase, where I bought a box of close to 150 Silver Age comic books for $50.00. And it represents a bit of a quantum leap forward from the earliest one that was in that purchase, the strongest … Continue reading WC: DETECTIVE COMICS #349