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Post by brutalis on May 2, 2019 7:53:22 GMT -5
May 1979. Junior Year in High School. Full blown comic book junkie. Even have friends joining me every day in the library to read my newest purchases.
Amazing Spider-Man 195 Avengers 186 Batman 314 Battlestar Galactica 6 Captain America 236 Defenders74 FF 209 Hulk 238 Ironman 125 John Carter 26 Machine Man 10 MTU 84 MTIO 54 MOKF 79 Micronauts 8 PM/IF 58 Shogun Warriors 7 Spectacular Spider-Man 33 Spiderwoman 17 Star Wars 26 Superboy and LOSH 254 Thor 286 Warlord 24 X-Men 124 What If 16
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Post by Roquefort Raider on May 2, 2019 8:38:07 GMT -5
Bought in May 1979 : Amazing Spider-Man #195, which I believe is the last issue I read as a regular Spidey reader (later issues I bought extremely irregularly). Archie #282, because it was there on the newsstand, one of the few American comics that made its way to my hometown. Conan the barbarian #101, which surprised me by not being a recap of the first 100 issues. A major chapter had been concluded in the previous issue with the death of Bêlit, and traditionally when comic-book heroes went through such a big change they spent one issue moping about the past. Props to Roy Thomas for throwing Conan back into the thick of things so quickly! DC Special series #17 (featuring Swamp Thing reprints), an issue that first showed me just how good this Bernie Wrightson fellow could be!!! John Carter, Warlord of Mars #26, one of the last chapters in the (over)long "Master assassin of Mars" storyline. I remember being quite relieved to see that Ernie Colon was not coming back to the book (he had been replaced by Mike Vosburg). I grew to really love Ernie's art in later years, but at the time I thought he was an ill fit for the book (mostly on account of someone else's inking, in all honesty... the one issue Ernie inked himself was fine). Marvel Premiere #49, featuring the Falcon... but to me, it was mostly featuring SAL BUSCEMA! Sal had been *the* Captain America artist for me (young age imprinting and all that), and seeing him handle Sam's adventures was just great. I recall buying that issue while on a trip to my grandmother's; she lived in a big city, close to Montreal, and the local newsstand had tons of American comics. I could spend something like FIVE DOLLARS on comics in one visit! (Those were the days, weren't they?) Marvel Treasury Edition #22, featuring Spider-Man... Team-ups, team-ups, team-ups! With Gil Kane drawing the Savage Land! Master of Kung Fu #79. I kept reading Shang-Chi out of loyalty whenever I could, but Mike Zeck wasn't doing it for me... and the stories seemed to be retreads of the Gulacy years. It's as if Doug Moench had spent a few years not knowing exactly where to take his hero next. Micronauts #8, of which I bought two copies!!! I wanted to clip and send a coupon from the issue, and didn't want to be left with a damaged issue only! The art by Michael Golden was magnificent, and the story about extra-terrestrial beings in battle armor was awesome! I loved the first twelve issues of that series. Savage sword of Conan #42, which had lots of non-comics code approved nudity! Luckily for this Conan fan, SSoC, because it was a magazine and not a regular comic, made its way to our local newsstand every month. Tomb of Dracula #70 : What? Dracula is dead??? They can do that in comics??? Yes, I did believe that Drac was dead for good, and since I missed the Dracula magazine that took over from the comic, I never realized that it did not feature only tales from earlier periods in the character's life (or un-life, as it were). The Warlord #24, bought along with Marvel Premiere. I was quite impressed by Mike Grell's art, even if the story was a quick read (17 pages with double page spreads don't last that long). What if..? #16, featuring Shang-Chi : a great example of how the What if..? premise should be used. As you'll recall, these were not just imaginary stories where anything went; they were supposed to be firmly anchored in actual Marvel continuity, showing what would happen if just one event had happened differently. Really nice story, and I really liked the Hoberg art. Not Gulacy, but hey... even back in 1979, "things were better before"!
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Post by MWGallaher on May 2, 2019 9:07:50 GMT -5
This might have been my smallest monthly purchase since I started collecting. I was away from home at college, with very limited income and meager access to comics. There was one convenience store that carried some, but I had learned of a comic book store in the city, and I decided I would visit it. DC Comics Presents #12, Superman and Mr. Miracle. Scott Free was one of my favorites, so I bought this after taking a bus off-campus to the Knoxville comics shop. I remember I was reading it and got engrossed at the bus stop to head back to my apartment. The bus stopped, waited, and left without me noticing until it was too late, and I had to walk back 5 miles or so. Defenders #74. Never missed an issue. Shogun Warriors #7. For some reason, I was fascinated enough by this to find and buy every issue, even during the year away at Knoxville. Tomb of Dracula #70. No, it can't be over!!!! *sniff* What If? #16. Even though I wasn't a big MOKF fan, I really loved the surprises in every issue of this, so I got 'em all X-Men #124. I was still on the bandwagon for this book. It was fresh and different and engaging.
$2.40, before tax.
I skipped Brave & Bold #153, with a fill-in instead of the usual Aparo art (other than the cover), even though I liked co-star Red Tornado. Beyond that, nothing else this month really interested me.
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Post by MWGallaher on Jun 4, 2019 9:52:58 GMT -5
June 1979:Off the racks, I bought: Adventure Comics #465 ($1.00) : The main draw for me was the JSA and Deadman. I was disappointed to lose Jim Aparo's art on Deadman, but that character was as close to bulletproof as any character in comics, for me. Always worth reading. The JSA had a strong hold on me, but I never warmed to Joe Staton's cartoony interpretation. Brave and Bold #154 ($0.40), Batman & Metamorpho: At least I still had Jim Aparo here, and co-starring one of my first favorite B&B co-stars, the Element Man himself! Defenders #75 ($0.40): I stayed faithful to my beloved Defenders, even though I wasn't especially enjoying it. Marvel Super Special #11 ($1.50), Warriors of the Shadow World: Weirdworld had caught my eye the first time around, and though I hadn't quite internalized it, Doug Moench had established himself as one of my favorite writers. As a Tolkien fan, I was a sucker for the cover blurb's pitch: "In the Fantastic Tradition of Tolkien!" Well, not exactly, but it scratched the itch. Shogun Warriors #8 ($0.40): I really can't understand why I was so devoted to this trivial book, maybe it was the draw of Doug Moench, and the affection I had for Herb Trimpe's artwork, but more likely, I saw this as the heir to the much-missed Godzilla. X-Men #125 ($0.40): Claremont & Byrne were in top form as they brought back Phoenix. This series rewarded my dedication with engaging, well drawn stories. Wow, it looks like I was this close to breaking the comics habit! This month's purchases come to a paltry $3.70. I'd be back to more investment by the time fall came around. Miller's Daredevil was still a ways off for me, and Marvel would start earning more of my dollars than usual. But for the summer of '79, I was more about playing music with my band and getting ready for my sophomore year in a different college, leaving my best friend behind at the old university, and trying to finish off my teenage years. Best cover of the month: Looking them over, the one that most appeals to me is Baron Weirwulf's Haunted Library #44, a nice job by Tom Sutton, who I didn't appreciate at the time. Comic I'd most like to own today but don't: I picked up the Jonah Hex digest a few years ago, so if I had to pick another, I think I'd ask for Best of DC Digest#1. Can't go wrong with vintage Superman reprints!
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Post by brutalis on Jun 4, 2019 10:22:02 GMT -5
June 1979: a great summer for being a kid! Just ending junior year of high school. Plenty of saved lunch money to hold me in comics as summer begins and mowing neighbors yards, helping at my friend's dad's junkyard and bicycling all over south Phoenix searching out good reads. And there is LOTS of classic fun in the summer of 79 to be had. Change in the pockets, comics to read all afternoon (once chores and jobs are done when it is too hot outside) and Popsicle's galore along with the smell of fresh cut grass. Oh the memories Amazing Spider-Man 196 Avengers 187 Batman 315 Battlestar Galactica 7 Brave and Bold 154 Captain America 237 Cerebus 10 Daredevil 160 DC Presents 13 Defenders 75 FF 210 Hulk 239 John Carter 27 JLA 170 Marvel spotlight 2 MTU 85 MTIO 55 MOKF 80 Micronauts 9 Shogun Warriors 8 Spectacular Spider-Man 34 Spider-Woman 18 Star Wars 27 Thor 287 Warlord 25 X-Men 125
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Post by codystarbuck on Jun 4, 2019 11:40:19 GMT -5
Hell of a month! The Justin hammer saga continues, in Iron Man and nears the climax; John Byrne doing Avengers (Wundagore), Micronauts is building to its first year climax, X-Men are about to introduce Proteus, in one of the scarier storylines of its era. Marvel Spotlight is finishing that last storyline left over from Captain Marvel (Moench & Broderick), Invaders puts out a final issue blowout with the entire Nazi Justice League vs the Invaders. Frank Miller has Daredevil battling Bullseye, MTU ends the Black Widow/Viper & Silver Samurai story, with a captured Hellicarrier on a kamikaze run into the Capitol Building! This was 20+ years before 9/11. MTIO has more Project Pegasus and Black Goliath gets a new name. Adventure Comics goes Dollar Comic, the Best of DC Digest series begins, the second Archie Super Hero Digest comes out (with an unpublished Neal Adams Black Hood story), Buck Rogers is opening in theaters and Gold Key/Whitman is doing the adaptation in 2 parts (without much photo reference, I might add). My family would take a vacation to Florida in either July or August and I would buy a s@#$load of comics, at a Stuckeys, on the trip. Oh, yeah, and some space movie sequel was in theaters. Whoops, that was next summer. ps Captain America tells the tale of liberating the fictional Diebenwald Concentration Camp, thereby saving his new landlady! I'm not sure; but, i think this was the first time that captain America directly addressed the Holocaust.
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Post by beccabear67 on Jun 4, 2019 12:57:35 GMT -5
By the September cover dates I was into buying multiple titles though mostly testing and trying Marvel titles to see how they compared to Star Wars and Galactica. I bought one Fun & Games and one Buck Rogers in this timeframe somewhere, and more than one Crazy. It was all through corner shop spinner rack type places still. I tried Batman and The Flash early on from around this time too, and maybe Green Lantern; there was a regular book shop getting rid of it's direct edition comics half-priced and they dated from late '79 to early '80 dates. I grabbed a few Iron Man as well having bought #130 elsewhere, and Defenders #75 as the best of what was left. At 20cents each I broke the piggy bank and had almost never gotten so many comics all at once, but I think I had as I found nine Star Wars reprints/directs (#7-15) in those 'threefor' plastic bags.
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Post by Slam_Bradley on Jun 4, 2019 13:03:53 GMT -5
I haven't done this in a while. Because I get busy. And reasons...darnit! But what the hey.
Bought at...or nearly at the time.
Adventure #465 - JSA and Deadman.
Avengers #187. I dunno...cuz.
Captain America #237. I actually feel like I got this one in a three-pack. But maybe not.
Marvel Tales #107. Always liked Hammerhead.
Warlord #25. The only book at the time I would make sure to find.
Have since bought or read a passel of them.
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Post by EdoBosnar on Jun 4, 2019 16:27:22 GMT -5
Which can be said for pretty much every month in 1979. I'm telling you, it's just one of the best damn years in (superhero especially) comics ever.
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Post by Roquefort Raider on Jun 5, 2019 12:37:01 GMT -5
Purchased in June 1979... Adventure comics #465. Dollar comics looked like a great deal, even if I was not much of a DC fan. I remember that the Deadman story (drawn by Garcia-Lopez, if memory serves) looked really, really good! I distinctly remember when I purchased that comic: my family was on vacation in Ontario, and as we stopped by my grandma's place (she lived near Montreal, with newsstands crumbling under the weight of English-language comics, or so it seemed to me) I spent almost my entire personal budget right then and there. (Granted, my newspaper run back then did not provide me with important pecuniary resources, but still... I just binged). Battlestar Galactica #7. I was a big Galactica fan. That comic was not as good an adaptation as Star Wars, but it was a decent read. John Carter, Warlord of Mars #27. Could I get enough John Carter? After discovering the first five paperbacks on the shelves of the school's library, I would dream of Barsoom. Marvel Spotlight #2, starring Captain Marvel. I arrived in media res, but this read like a sort of continuation of the Drax/Titan/Warlock Starlin mythology and I was a sold audience. I really, really enjoyed Pat Broderick's art in this book, too! Marvel Super Special #11, featuring Weirdworld under the title Warriors of the Shadow Realm. Boy, had I been afraid to miss that one, after it had been lauded on the Marvel Bullpen Bulletins page! Luckily, Marvel Magazine made their way to our town far more frequently than regular comics. I must admit the book looked good; in hindsight I suppose John Buscema's pencils and Rudy Nebres' inks are up to their usual standards, no more, but Peter Ledger's colours really shone. The editorial pages were also very interesting, discussing classic fantasy strips like Little Nemo and Dreams of the Rarebit Fiend. Some people called this book "overproduced", but I think it was actually quite a successful experiment, artistically speaking. I certainly didn't begrudge it its higher price tag. Marvel-Two-in-One #55, introducing the new identity of Black Goliath: Giant-Man. I was an intermittent reader of the Pegasus Project arc, but liked what I read. Byrne's art was certainly nothing to sneeze at, even if Joe Sinnott's inks tended to overpower Byrne's quirks. Master of Kung-Fu #80, with Shang-Chi in the middle of another long Fu Manchu story arc. The book was on its way to find its new center, after years of meandering (I think losing Paul Gulacy was a terrible blow to the mag). Here it was returning to its Sax Rohmer roots, in part, and Shang-Chi himself was experiencing problems with the rise and growth of his spirit. It was interesting (while also uncomfortable) to see him struggling with this reality: you can't stay at the very top of your game if you don't train all the time with single-mindedness, and his new lifestyle where training was interrupted by eating pizza with his girlfriend had taken its toll. Micronauts #9, with gorgeous art by Michael Golden inked by Al Milgrom. I know many preferred Rubinstein over Golden's pencils, but I think Milgrom's more basic brush strokes fit Golden's bold lines to a T. This issue introduces Acroyear's people (also named Acroyears, which is the name of the toy, althiugh in story we are told that the prince bears the name of his people). Part Vulcan, part Samurai, they were a great concept... and Bill Mantlo's epic continues with a beautiful space battle. Savage Sword of Conan #43, the conclusion of the adaptation of Conan the buccaneer. More on that issue here! (But has it really been 40 years? Ye gods!!!) Shogun Warriors #8, a fluke purchase. I liked giant robot stories well enough, but Shogun Warriors didn't have the same impact on me as Goldorak (that's Grandizer to those who weren't restricted to the French-dubbed version!) Star Wars #27, with the return of Valance the hunter!!! As fate would have it, among the few early Star Wars comics I could buy when they came out were the two first appearances of Valance. I loved that character. Tarzan #28, in which the Lord of the Jungle plays the role of King Kong (sorta). While Sal Buscema's art could in no way compete with that of Russ Manning (or Gil Kane, who I think drew the Tarzan Sunday page in those days), he did a very honest job on this series... and the script, set in the '30s, was much more exotic than the "modern" setting Tarzan had in the newspaper. The whole "Tarzan in New York" arc was all kinds of fun. The Warlord #25. Short on story, but weren't those double page splashes of Mike Grell's beautiful to look at? I also greatly enjoyed his dialogues and the soap operatic nature of his relationship with Tara. X-Men #125: O.K., that's a bit of a cheat because I didn't buy it in June 1979... a friend gave it to me for my next birthday. I was absolutely engrossed in the mystery of the Phoenix, and found that Claremont really wrote his female characters in a new and uncommon way -at least as comic-book characters usually went. Jean Grey, Lorna Dane, Colleen Wing and Moira McTaggert weren't damsels in distress, but they weren't written as boys either... they managed to convey a sense of femininity and strength at the same time, while characters like, say, Red Sonja could have been substituted for male characters with nobody noticing. As for Byrne's art, it wasn't yet my cup of tea... but I would soon become a big fan. Forty years... I really can't believe it.
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Post by berkley on Jun 6, 2019 4:11:50 GMT -5
My memories of June 1979's comics, jogged by Mike's Newsstand for that month and year: Conan the Barbarian #102 - don't recall much about this specific issue, but in a general way the series was losing steam for me around this time, both the writing and the artwork, though neither was ever less than competent - especially in comparison with what I've heard about what came after. Daredevil #160 - with (or is it 'in'?) hindsight I suppose this looks a bit like a precursor to the famous Bullseye-kills-Electra issue that came a couple years later, but this was very much in the spirit of the earlier part of Miller's DD run, which I actually prefer, as it combined Miller's excellent artwork with something of the old DD persona - and I actually prefer Miller's art from this period, before it became more sketchy and almost diagrammatic, as if he was saying, "Look, my layouts are so great, I don't need to finish a drawing!". Minority opinion, I know. Eerie #103 - I was never a regular Eerie or Creepy reader, always trying to play the game of picking those specific issues with creators I liked, but I had to get this for the Don McGregor + Paul Gulacy story, and it didn't disappoint. Haven't read it for years, but in my memory it ranks pretty high in each of their respective bodies of work, as did another story they did together around the same time in Creepy. Fantastic Four #210 - I was reading the FF around this time and I'm pretty sure I had this issue, as I see from the cover gallery that it was part of the Sphinx storyline, which was pretty good, apart from a rather lame ending. Wolfman's FF was OK, I thought - at least it didn't do anything really awful. But the artwork was kind of bleah - Sinnot's inks always seemed to drain the life out of very artist other than Kirby, to my eyes. Hulk #16 - I was a regular reader of the Hulk mag, which is a bit of a surprise to me now as I look back. Don't recall this issue's story, but I remember the cover, vaguely. Marvel Spotlight #2 (Captain Marvel) - what can I tell ya, I always liked Marvel's Captain Marvel, no offence intended to anyone who finds this idea offensive. I think this carried on from the recently cancelled CM series and with the same creative team of Moench and Broderick. Or did they no start till the Spotlight run? I forget. Anyway, I liked the character and Moench almost always delivered something enjoyable, though I wouldn't rate this with his best work. I liked Broderick's style too. Marvel Super Special #11 - Moench doing a Lord of the Rings inspired fantasy comic? I'm in! Or so I thought, until I read the actual comic. I never took to Weirdworld, though I read it in almost all its earliest appearances. It didn't help that I never did get along with inker Rudy Nebres's style, which totally overwhelmed Buscem's pencils. Master of Kung Fu #80 - at a time when most of my favourite Marvel series were either being cancelled (e.g. ToD) or were starting to feel tired (e.g. Conan), or had suffered a catastrophic change in creative team (e.g. Dr. Strange, HtD, really, much if not almost everything Gerber and Englehart wrote) ... MoKF bucked the trend in that it was just early into what I think ended up another highlight run, with Gene Day becoming the regular inker for Mike Zeck. I think Moench's writing had always been there, but he needed a sympathetic artist to raise his work to its highest level, and Gene Day, even as an inker, was someone he felt a rapport with. Thor #287 - another trend-bucker, a Marvel series that was getting better rather than deteriorating or just out and out imploding. Much as I deplore the (IMO) fated to fail effort to incorporate the Eternals into the MU, this was a huge Thor epic with a feeling of cosmic significance that subsequent corporate-driven "events" could only dream of, no matter how much they tried to up the stakes. X-Men #125 - was the Claremont/Cockrum and then Claremont/Byrne X-Men the last really great, innocently enjoyable run of traditional Silver/Bronze-Age superhero comics? Perhaps only in my own personal experience. Anyway, this issue came just about smack in the middle of it.
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Post by MWGallaher on Jul 2, 2019 11:03:04 GMT -5
In July 1979, my comics purchases were inching back up. I bought: Action Comics #500 ($1.00): How could I pass up a historic milestone like this? Brave & the Bold #155 ($0.40): Green Lantern was never a favorite of the B&B co-stars, but I never passed on a Haney/Aparo issue of this one. Defenders #76 ($0.40): Still a sentimental favorite, nothing was going to stop me from picking up The Defenders. I was eager to read the conclusion of Omega the Unknown, not realizing how contrary this was to the creators' original intentions. Marvel Premiere #50 ($0.40): Not a particular fan of Alice Cooper, but this was just too odd a deviation from the norm to pass up. Tom Sutton was the perfect choice of artist for this! Shogun Warriors #9 ($0.40): Still serving to fill the Godzilla void. I don't know why I was so attached to this obviously juvenile comic, but it must have largely been due to Doug Moench, one of my favorite writers, although I didn't realize it then. Time Warp #1 ($1.00): Science fiction and Jim Aparo! One of my favorite logos! I was excited to see this on the stands. What If #17 ($0.60): Starting to get a bit stale, but still a big kick to see these alternative takes on Marvel history. This time, Ghost Rider, Spider Woman, and Captain Marvel as villains. I don't remember any of the stories, but I probably got a kick out of seeing Mar-Vell in the green and white, always a favorite look. X-Men #126 ($0.40): Still one of the best books on the market at the time. I don't remember ever being disappointed with a Claremont/Byrne issue.
Cover of the Month: I'm fondest of Sgt. Fury #154, a new Herb Trimpe cover for a reprint of a Captain Savage issue.
Comic I Don't Have But Would Most Like To Have: Not much here appeals to me, but I'd take that World's Finest #259, just to have the unusual Green Arrow/Hawkman team-up story!
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Post by brutalis on Jul 2, 2019 13:29:30 GMT -5
July 1979 and summer between Junior and Senior high school. 15 year old me has plenty of summer jobs around the neighborhood providing the jingle in the pockets for delivering my Marvel fixation! Truly great classic summer reading material to be found here. Can almost smell the cut lawns being watered even as I type this up...
Amazing Spider-Man 197 Avengers 188 Avengers Annual 9 Batman 316 Battlestar Galactica 8 Defenders 76 FF 211 Iron Man 127 John Carter Warlord of Mars 28 John Carter Annual 3 Machine Man 11 Marvel Premiere 50 Alice Cooper! MTU 86 MTIO 56 MOKF 81 Micronauts 10 Powerman and Iron Fist 59 Shogun Warriors 9 Spectacular Spider-Man 35 Spider-Woman 19 Star Wars 28 Thor 288 Time Warp 1 Warlord 26 What IF 17 X-Men 126
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Post by codystarbuck on Jul 2, 2019 14:37:38 GMT -5
July 1979. In theaters, we have The Villain, Amityville Horror, and Disney's Unidentified Flying Oddball (which was one of several nails in the coffin for Disney live action, for several years) Moonraker and the Muppet Movie are still doing big box office, after opening in June. Tv is in reruns; but, some of the shows of the season that just ended: battlestar Galactica, WKRP in Cincinnati, MASH, the Norman Lear shows, the Gary Marshall shows, Real People, Salvage 1, Super Train (Love Boat, on a train), The Incredible Hulk, New Adv od Wonder Woman, Quincy, What's happening?, Fantasy Island, Delta House (spun off from Animal House) and Operation Petticoat (from that movie, with Jamie Lee Curtis as one of the nurses). In comics, these were my selections that month: Action Comics reached #500. That was a big deal. 500 issues of the book that launched Superman. Inside, we got Superman taking visitors through the newly opened Superman Museum, while he related stories of his past (without telling people the names of the Kents). Luthor has a plot at hand, as well. Batman faces Crazy Quilt, not one of his more spectacular villains. Buck Rogers continues adapting the movie, which was the tv pilot, released in theaters, before tv broadcast. DCCP #14 has Superman facing a time displaced and brainwashed Superboy, as part of a plot by the evil....Pete Ross?!? Mr Terrific is murdered in JLA 171 and everyone is a suspect. Well, not Superman; no one could buy that. Micronauts is about to reach the conclusion of the debut saga, which was pretty much the only saga Mantlo had in him, as he would repeat it, at least twice. Superboy & the Legion face the problem of Brainiac 5's insanity, after he suffers a mental breakdown. The X-Men face Mutant X, the villain released by Magneto, way back in X-Men #104. he would take on the name Proteus and come probably the closest of anyone to killing Wolverine. Meanwhile, Jean Grey is having weird slips into the 18th/19th Century, where she hunts with Jason Wyngarde. Also out, but I did not buy then: America at War, the book collection of some of DC's war comics, edited by one Michael Uslan, who had something to do with some Tim burton film. Don Newton draws a rare Marvel job, on Avengers Annual #8. byrne is drawing the regular series. Defenders is starting the conclusion to Gerber's Omega the Unknown, without Gerber. Byrne also draws the FF against Terrax. Iron Man fights Justin Hammers army, as he brings an end to Hammer's meddling with his armor. I had previous issues; but, missed this one. Alice Cooper starred in Marvel Premiere, Thundra kicked Ben grimm's but as the Graplers invade Project Pegasus, in MTIO. Thor fights the Forgotten One, as that comic tries to bring an ending to the Eternals (by mostly dumping them, after a few issues and having Thor and other gods face the Celestials). Finally, Dc tries a sci-fi anthology, with Timewarp, a Dollar Comic, with an awesome Mike Kaluta cover (he did all of the covers). The book lasted 5 issues.
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Post by Deleted on Jul 2, 2019 23:13:16 GMT -5
Off the racks this month, I only had a handful of books...
Amazing Spider-Man #197 Avengers 188 Avengers Annual 9
-M
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