Thursday, May 12, 2016

Reading Room SPACE ADVENTURES "It's a Small World..."

Behind this kool Jim Aparo cover...
...is an equally-kool Steve Ditko-illustrated tale!
BTW, neither has seen the light of day since their intitial publication in Charlton's Space Adventures V2N8 (1969).
Now that's a weird, out-of-left field, ending in a wild tale probably written by Charlton mainstay Joe Gill.
BONUS: the original art for the cover...
Be here tomorrow for MORE of Gil Kane's Talos of the Wilderness Sea!

Wednesday, May 11, 2016

Reading Room: SPACE CLUSTERS Part 3

Pursuing criminal Ethan Dayak, Lieutenant Kara Basuto of the Terran Interplanetary Corps follows him from star system to star system, always one step behind him.
Due to the huge distances, both of them go into suspended animation during the trips between planetfalls.
But the more time they spend in hibernation, the more their minds and bodies begin to alter...

Tuesday, May 10, 2016

Reading Room WORLD OF FANTASY "Xom! The Menace from Outer Space!"

Behind this kool, never-reprinted Jack Kirby/Christopher Rule cover...
...lurks an equally-cool (but visually-different) never-reprinted tale!
Plotted by Stan Lee, scripted by Larry Lieber, and penciled/inked by Joe Sinnott, this cover-featured tale from Atlas' World of Fantasy #18 (1959) was a combination of the "giant monster with weird name" and Twilight Zone "switch ending" tropes Lee was so fond of.
You'll note the "monster" is rendered pretty much the same on both the cover and insides, while the Earthmen and aliens are vastly-different!
I'm not certain which was done first, but the difference between the Flash Gordon/Buck Rogers renderings by Sinnott and the...well...Kirbyesque versions on the cover are striking!

Monday, May 9, 2016

Reading Room CAPTAIN JOHNER AND THE ALIENS "Matter of Judgement"

With half his crew on an alien ship and half the alien crew on his, Johner heads home to Earth...
Written by Eric Freiwald & Robert Schaefer and illustrated by Russ Manning, this morality tale from Gold Key's Magnus, Robot Fighter #3 (1963) also sets up a potential menace in another group of aliens who are, in fact, hostile!
There's more space opera action to come, next week!