Tuesday, April 12, 2016

Reading Room AMAZING ADULT FANTASY "Why Won't They Believe Me?"

Stan (the Man) Lee felt a good story...
...such as this one from Atlas' Amazing Adult Fantasy #7 (1961), was worth repeating...
Scripted by Lee and illustrated by his Spider-Man and Dr Strange co-creator Steve Ditko, the tale was typical of the "gotcha" snap-ending stories made popular in mass culture by Rod Serling on The Twilight Zone, but done, in comics, a decade earlier in the EC Comics horror and sci-fi/fantasy books (though usually with more gore).
Lee re-used (and expanded) the plot almost a decade later when he re-did it with another Silver Age legend, as you'll see tomorrow...

Monday, April 11, 2016

JACKIE ROBINSON Classic Comic Book Covers

Fawcett Comics produced six issues of a comic about Jackie Robinson between 1949-1952.
Digitally-restored and remastered from the actual original covers!
Collect all six for a kool wall display!
Trivia note: While there were many comics dedicated to specific baseball players and teams, only Babe Ruth Sports Comics had more issues than Jackie Robinson's book, and it ran stories about other sports like football and basketball!
And watch
by Ken Burns
on your local PBS station!

Sunday, April 10, 2016

Reading Room REAL FACT COMICS "Rookie of the Year" & PICTURE NEWS "California Flash"

...today, it's the "real deal"!
The story from DC's Real Fact Comics #14 (1948) presents the story in a straightforward, if slightly patronizing, manner.
The following tale from Parents Magazine's Picture News #4 (1946) by writer/artist Charles Wessel, predates his being called up to the majors.
Note it does contain a couple of racial stereotypes common to the era, and may be NSFW.
There was also an official Jackie Robinson comic book from major publisher Fawcett that lasted six issues (longer than most other comics based on real-life baseball players) from 1949-52.
We'll show you their covers tomorrow...

Saturday, April 9, 2016

Reading Room BASEBALL COMICS "Rube Rooky Climbs Up from the Pit"

The saga of how a baseball superstar is created continues...
...as Rube leaves his family and girlfriend to pursue his dream...
Wow!
Big-screen TV in 1949?
Who knew?
That aside, anybody here see a parallel between Rube and a real-life ballplayer who faced similiar problems being accepted by his teammates because he was "different" just a year before writer/penciler Will Eisner and inker Tex Blaisdell created this tale?
Be here tomorrow and Monday to see whom I'm talking about...

Friday, April 8, 2016

Reading Room JOURNEY INTO MYSTERY "Orogo!! The Nightmare from Outer Space!!"

Behind this Jack Kirby-penciled/Don Heck-inked splash...
...lurks a mystery. which we'll delve into after you read the story!
When this Stan Lee-scripted, Don Heck-illustrated (except for the splash) tale was reprinted in Marvel's Fantasy Masterpieces #2 (1967), the cover played-up Heck's Cyclopean robot (and Dashin' Don himself)...
...but when it was first published in Atlas' Journey into Mystery #57 (1960)...
...and reprinted a second time in Marvel's Where Monsters Dwell #12 (1971)...
...it used the original Kirby cover that seems to be a reverse-angle of the splash page above and shows a radically-different Orogo with two eyes!
Did editor/art director Stan the Man have The King do the cover and splash and then pass the rest of the story to Heck to finish,...but, for whatever reason, didn't give Dashing Don the cover as reference for Orogo, so Heck came up with his own version of the robot?
There are several Atlas-era monster stories where Kirby would do splashes, then another artist would complete the tale.
We'll be taking a look at them over the next few months.
Bookmark us and keep an eye out as we attempt to solve the half century-old mystery....