In the Bronze Age, Marvel adapted every barbarian/sword and sorcery character they could get...
...often giving the original prose writers (if they were alive) the chance to script the series themselves!
Author John Jakes commented...
I long ago admitted in print that I created Brak because there were simply no more Conan stories from Robert E. Howard, whose work I admired.
In my adolescent years I
wrote – on notebook paper – further adventures of Batman and Superman
because I enjoyed them but there weren’t enough of them in comic books
to satisfy me.
Somehow the other sword and sorcery strong men – Lin Carter’s,
Michael Moorcock’s et al. – while deserving of praise in their own
right, didn’t do it for me. I needed more Howard.
I invented Brak.
There were only three Brak comic tales, this one plotted
and laid out by Dan Adkins and scripted by Jakes himself along with
penciling by Val Mayerik and inking by Joe Sinnott.
(It seems to be an original tale, not an adaptation.)
Then a two-part adaptation of the (chronologically) first Brak tale, "The Unspeakable Shrine" by Jakes, Doug Moench, and Steve Gan.
Then...nothing!
No more new comics tales!
No reprints!
Next week, we're presenting an illustrated text feature from Savage Tales featuring background info about the character and author, John Jakes!
After that, the complete, unseen for decades two-part comic story!
Don't miss them!
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(includes a never-before-published conclusion to the series!)