Because I just don't get tired of them, here's another assortment of Marvel stories printed in countries around the globe and localized in terms of language and content. Let's start with another Golden Age issue of Guri from Brazil. As was the style at the time, both Captain America and Bucky seem to have forgotten … Continue reading Great Covers: Marvel Around The World 7
Forgotten Masterpiece: THE SPIRIT #30, Part Three
This is the third and final part of our look at the "Spirit Jam" story published by Kitchen Sink Press in THE SPIRIT Magazine #30 and overseen by publisher Denis Kitchen and associate editor Cat Yronwode. This was the first new full-length Spirit story produced since the reprint editions of the 1960s, and the first … Continue reading Forgotten Masterpiece: THE SPIRIT #30, Part Three
Blah Blah Blog – Comics I Don’t Apologize For, Part 4
A post from my ancient Marvel blog, part of a sequence running down individual issues that certain fans didn't like but which I thought were just fine. Comics I Don't Apologize For pt 4 April 28, 2007 | 1:00 AM | By Tom_Brevoort | In General Day four of our journey through unloved and unappreciated … Continue reading Blah Blah Blog – Comics I Don’t Apologize For, Part 4
BHOC: MARVEL TWO-IN-ONE #41
As usual, I bought the new issue of MARVEL TWO-IN-ONE when it showed up at my 7-11's spinner rack. In this case, I did so despite having little interest in Brother Voodoo--the Marvel mystical and monster/horror characters really didn't interest me, and I somehow lumped Brother Voodoo into that grouping, for as little as I … Continue reading BHOC: MARVEL TWO-IN-ONE #41
The Sales Figures of DC’s Irwin Donenfeld
Irwin Donenfeld was the publisher and editorial director of DC Comics (then known as National Comics and National Periodical Publications) for most of the 1950s and 1960s. Irwin was the son of the firm's founder and majority owner Harry Donenfeld, and he was groomed from a young age to play a role in the family … Continue reading The Sales Figures of DC’s Irwin Donenfeld
Brand Echh: Mighty Comics #40
By 1966, the super Hero fad of the 1960s was in full swing, propelled to the forefront of popular culture by the debut of the BATMAN television show, which became a short-lived national obsession. BATMAN's mix of straightforward heroics with broad self-deprecating humor made it the poster child for middle America in terms of defining … Continue reading Brand Echh: Mighty Comics #40
Blah Blah Blog – Comic Tutorial, Part 4
A post from my Marvel blog of the past, part of a sequence going over how a comic book is put together. Comic Tutorial pt. 4 April 28, 2007 | 1:00 AM | By Tom_Brevoort | In General Finishing up on our quick walk-through of how a comic book sequence is put together, using DR … Continue reading Blah Blah Blog – Comic Tutorial, Part 4
BHOC: MARVEL TREASURY EDITION #17
Picked this book up on one of my regular weekly Thursday comic book runs to my local 7-11. It was racked over in he magazine section rather than on the spinner rack due to its huge size. And I quite liked the cover image on it--so much so that I copied it, and did a … Continue reading BHOC: MARVEL TREASURY EDITION #17
Great Covers: Marvel Around The World 6
As before, this is another collection of the covers to localized Marvel reprints from across the globe. This particular batch of covers I have less information about individually, so in may cases, I'm simply going to let the artwork do the talking. They're all pretty interesting to see at any rate. This German edition of … Continue reading Great Covers: Marvel Around The World 6
A Sad Life That Was Dedicated Entirely To Comics
I first read this Pete Hamill column when it was first published in the New York Daily News on June 5, 1978. In those days, I read and collected any mainstream articles about comic books that I came across, keeping them all in a three-ring binder, scrapbook-style. This piece in particular always stuck with me … Continue reading A Sad Life That Was Dedicated Entirely To Comics










