I turned twelve years old around this time, and while I don't especially remember anything about that event, there were two other things that happened in that same week that I'll never forget. I first saw an advertisement for the live action LEGENDS OF THE SUPERHEROES specials in one of my family's regular newspapers--we got … Continue reading BHOC: LEGENDS OF THE SUPERHEROES AND CAPTAIN AMERICA
Comics in the Wild 20
You should know the drill by now. This is an assortment of old photographs that I've gathered together in my travels depicting either the comic book readers of yesteryear devouring their four-color treasures or else newsstands and outlets where vintage comic books were being stocked and sold. So it's a look back into the past … Continue reading Comics in the Wild 20
The Last Hawkman Story
Well, not quite. For the members of the Justice Society of America, most of them made their final appearance of the Golden Age of Comics in the last JSA adventure, published in ALL-STAR COMICS #57 in December of 1950. But before that, many of the heroes' home anthology series came to an end, and with … Continue reading The Last Hawkman Story
BHOC: UNCANNY X-MEN #120
It's pretty plain to see in retrospect that UNCANNY X-MEN was the best ongoing comic book series being produced during this time. It was in the middle of a run that's become legendary over time, the collaboration between Chris Claremont and John Byrne (with editor Roger Stern an important third leg of that triumvirate, and … Continue reading BHOC: UNCANNY X-MEN #120
The 1974/1975 Topps Marvel Super Heroes Stickers
If you were a kid growing up in the 1970s, then these Topps stickers are going to be familiar to you. These things were everywhere--stuck up in all manner of places by industrious kids who bought them either because they had a love for the Marvel Super Heroes of that period, or just because they … Continue reading The 1974/1975 Topps Marvel Super Heroes Stickers
BHOC: MARVEL TALES #102
This issue of MARVEL TALES reprinted the story where the series concluded its transition from the Silver Age into the Bronze Age. The book had been there for several months already at this point, with writer Gerry Conway taking over for Stan Lee. But this was the first issue in forever not illustrated by John … Continue reading BHOC: MARVEL TALES #102
Comics in the Wild 19
Boy, I really do love coming across old photographs showing either people of times gone by reading and enjoying vintage comic books, or else comic books on sale back in the day. I always grab scans of these pictures whenever I come across them, and I've serialized a bunch of them here. But I have … Continue reading Comics in the Wild 19
5BC: Five Middling Marvel/DC Crossover Books
With a big Omnibus collecting all of them coming out any time, my mind has been drawn to the assorted authorized crossovers undertaken by rival companies Marvel and DC over the years. Some of those stories were triumphs, sagas that compared and contrasted the characters involved skillfully, and which were just crackerjack entertaining in their … Continue reading 5BC: Five Middling Marvel/DC Crossover Books
BHOC: INVADERS #39
It was almost the end of the road for INVADERS, though I didn't know that at the time. But looking back, it seems almost inevitable. The artwork had been progressively getting less and less polished, and editor and series creator Roy Thomas had been letting other people write his baby. I can't imagine that the … Continue reading BHOC: INVADERS #39
The Seldom-Seen Jerry Siegel & Russell Keaton SUPERMAN samples
The legend surrounding the origins of Superman has been codified into a sort of simplistic myth-version over the years, the story of two young friends who had a world-beater of an idea, pursued it over the course of half a decade, facing rejection and ridicule along the way, only for it to turn out to … Continue reading The Seldom-Seen Jerry Siegel & Russell Keaton SUPERMAN samples










