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Post by Prince Hal on Dec 8, 2022 16:20:08 GMT -5
50 Years Ago (Dec 1972)Batman 100-Page Spectacular 4 Best bargain in comics! Adventure 426 Vigilante? I'm interested in anything new. Batman 427 Habit buy, but a nicely designed cover. Demon 6 Loved that Kirby goodness! Detective 432 Habit buy. Justice League 104 Habit buy. A crash from the sugar-high of the last three issues. Kamandi 3 Good, though not great Kirby. Still better than most of the other DC mainstream titles, though. Shazam 1 Curiosity... and for the first time, bought two copies of a comic. Swamp Thing 3 This was obviously going to be a great run. DC reprints of old favorites: bought 'em all to do my part in supporting the return of old favorites Challengers of the Unknown 78Doom Patrol 122 Four-Star Battle Stars 1 Johnny Thunder 1 Jeez, was Toth good, or what? Legion 1Metal Men 42Secret Origins 1Wanted 6 The new and different titles, part of a new wave of young writers and artists.Sword of Sorcery 1 Great fun. And one of the best covers of the month. Weird Worlds 6 I was all in on all these new to me ERB characters. Captain Marvel 25 Co-o-osmic, man! Other Marvels Conan 24 The peak of the Conan series was the Tarim saga, AFAIAC. Monster of Frankenstein 2 Liked that Ploog artwork; so different from Marvel's house style. Total: $4.60
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Post by Roquefort Raider on Dec 22, 2022 11:10:36 GMT -5
I didn't have access to the originals, but we had translated versions of some of those comics at the local news outlet. Conan #24 is the best issue of the entire series, and I agree with you, Prince Hal... the Tarim war is the crowning achievement of any Conan series. Frankenstein #2 was also pretty neat. Ploog was a fantastic artist; t's unfortunate that he never seemed to stay very long on any given title. They were all stellar.
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Post by MDG on Dec 22, 2022 12:26:38 GMT -5
50 Years Ago (Dec 1972)Total: $4.60 Wow, when you make a list like that and show that total, it really puts things in perspective--like my friends thinking I was nuts for spending $12 on a single EC around the same time.
But it's also why I can't bring myself to spend big bucks (read: double digits) to buy those same books today.
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Post by codystarbuck on Jan 1, 2023 17:17:53 GMT -5
Not quite there yet, but we are getting closer to when I start seeing comics beyond Super Goof, Uncle Scrooge and the Beagle Boys, thanks to a neighbor.
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Post by Hoosier X on Jan 1, 2023 17:35:14 GMT -5
Not quite there yet, but we are getting closer to when I start seeing comics beyond Super Goof, Uncle Scrooge and the Beagle Boys, thanks to a neighbor. Super Goof was awesome.
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Post by MWGallaher on Jan 1, 2023 19:56:13 GMT -5
Here’s what I bought off the stands in January, 1973, as I was approaching my 13th birthday:
100-Page Super Spectacular DC-15 (DC) DC’s Super-Specs, at least the superhero ones, were irresistible to me. I’d moved past Superboy, but the opportunity to sample so many of DC’s youthful heroes over the decades had me eagerly giving up 2 quarters. Surprisingly, the Boy Commandos had proven to be favorites, even though they weren’t superheroes. Astonishing Tales #17 (Marvel): For some strange reason, I had become a Ka-Zar fan, and I was also fascinated by Gemini, in his Golden Age Daredevil-esque costume. I would later find out that he had debuted as a solo feature in an earlier issue, under the name “the Brothers Link”, kind of a precursor to Kirby’s Kobra series. Brave & the Bold #106 (DC): Haney and Aparo never let me down in this era of B&B, and Two-Face, who cropped up here, would become my favorite Batman villain. That was unusual for B&B, featuring established villains from older comics. Challengers of the Unknown #79 (DC): I was excited by DC’s reprint series, so I bought this even though I didn’t especially like the Challs…
Doom Patrol #123 (DC) …but boy, did I love the DP! This was absolutely as good as anything on the stands…except maybe B&B!
Defenders #5 (Marvel): This was my first favorite Marvel series. I had just jumped on the bandwagon along with Valkyrie in the previous issue, and I was in it for the long haul. Crazy #2 (Marvel): I had seen some old issues of Not Brand Ecch at a friend’s house, and I was desperate to read them, so I loved getting the chance via this reprint series. Legion of Super-Heroes #2 (DC): Another DC reprint, featuring one of my new favorite features. The huge roster of the Legion was a big plus to me. Marvel Team-Up #8 (Marvel): I kept hoping for MTU to be competitive with B&B, but it just never was. I hadn’t ready any issues of The Cat, so this was my intro to her. Mister Miracle #13 (DC): I was finally buying this every time I saw it, but it was kind of a disappointing final era going on here.
Phantom Stranger #24 (DC): The Stranger, Cassandra, and glorious Aparo art! One of the many things I loved about this Dark Circle arc was the globe-trotting, providing Aparo with the chance to draw interesting locales, this time Rio de Janeiro. Wanted, the World's Most Dangerous Villains #7 (DC): This would have been the first Hourman solo story I would ever read. As of this year, I’ve read and reviewed them all, but I can’t remember what I thought of this encounter with Dr. Glisten when I was 12 years old. I’d have known it wasn’t up to modern standards, but I think I enjoyed it anyway, maybe because I liked the crude but fascinating art of Bernard Baily. Little did I know I would soon be seeing new Baily art in one of my two favorite comics series. The Johnny Quick story didn’t impress me; I’ve never warmed to Mort Meskin’s art, to be honest. I wasn’t a fan of Hawkman at this time, so I doubt the Golden Age version sat any better with me. Wonder Woman #205 (DC): Why did I continue to buy this when it was obvious that the version that had drawn me in, the Diana Prince version, was gone forever, replaced by this juvenile tripe? Cover of the Month: Browsing them all, Aparo’s Phantom Stranger #24 still stands out as the most appealing to me. Comic I’d Most Like to Have but Don’t: There were a lot of genres I ignored in 1973, and I think I’d pick from one of them instead of adding another superhero book to my collection. I think I’d take Li’l Kids #11, featuring Calvin, one of Marvel’s most obscure characters. Comics I Remember Browsing on the Racks: I remember being tempted by Supernatural Thrillers with that terrific logo for REH’s The Valley of the Worm and the nice Gil Kane art. I read some of it in the drug store at Memphis’s Crosstown Theater, after my best friend and I had gone to see some kid’s movie. Superman’s Pal Jimmy Olsen #157 got a gander, because I’ve always been a sucker for blank-faced characters like the guy on the cover. I’m pretty sure I scoped out Detective Comics #433; I remember wondering why the editor thought a lame character (literally, but that’s not how I meant it) like Jason Bard was worth wasting pages on. And I remember seeing Trigger Twins #1, but my interest in DC’s new reprint line didn’t extend to Westerns. Total Cost: $3.00
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Post by codystarbuck on Jan 2, 2023 4:07:24 GMT -5
Here’s what I bought off the stands in January, 1973, as I was approaching my 13th birthday: ............................................. Wonder Woman #205 (DC): Why did I continue to buy this when it was obvious that the version that had drawn me in, the Diana Prince version, was gone forever, replaced by this juvenile tripe? ................................................... Bondage cover?
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Post by chaykinstevens on Jan 2, 2023 13:14:50 GMT -5
Amazing Spider-Man #119 Captain America #160 Daredevil #98 Defenders #5 Incredible Hulk #162 Iron Man #57 Marvel Spotlight #9 Pink Panther #11 Sub-Mariner #60 Supernatual Thrillers #3
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Post by Prince Hal on Jan 2, 2023 13:47:12 GMT -5
January, 1973... Always Bought 'Em List 100-Page Super Spectacular Nothing better than these square-bound treasure troves. Brave and the Bold Though as much as I loved Green Arrow, I was tired of seeing him here. Give the guy his own book already! Phantom Stranger It really didn't get much better than this book for a while, in large part thanks to the Aparo covers and art. Conan the Barbarian Still fresh and fun. Demon Loved this. Kirby always seemed to be having fun here. Moody, atmospheric and more over the top than Kamandi. It was as if 50s Kirby had been let loose once again. Mister Miracle Another fun book. Supernatural Thrillers Loved these adaptations, and this was probably the best of the run. Kane was en fuego. And even I have to give it to Ernie Chan here. It was kick-ass Howard. Can't think of a better comic that came out that month. Wanted DC kept sneaking this through and I kept buying it. Way to go, E. Nelson Bridwell, inventor of fanboy service. Tarzan But starting to develop a sense of sameness. Korak I think I was liking this more than the Tarzan book. Maybe because they were going for a more barbarian vibe and had a bit more freedom? Habit Buys List (Didn't want them to be canceled):Detective Comics Meh. You're killin' me, Batman. Kamandi A little early in a run to become a habit buy, but I wanted to support Jack.
Reppin' da Reprints List: (Old heroes, old titles, diverse genres, and I wanted all of them back, and at 20 cents a pop, I owed it to my old favorites.) Challengers of the Unknown
Doom Patrol
G.I. War
Strange Adventures
Trigger Twins
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shaxper
CCF Site Custodian
Posts: 22,866
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Post by shaxper on Jan 3, 2023 1:41:59 GMT -5
January 1973 (I wasn't alive yet, but I've acquired all of these after the fact)
Avengers #110: When I first returned to comic collecting as an adult, my first deep dives into the back issue bins were an effort to assemble every X-Men story ever printed from their first appearance up through around 1994, and I clearly remember this being one of my first acquisitions.
Defenders #5: I assembled a run up to #60 about a decade ago and still haven't read it yet! Maybe this year.
Demon #7: Klarion the frickin' Witch Boy! DC has seldom correctly tapped the sheer awesomeness of this character.
Fear #13: There are few comics I adore more than Gerber's Man-Thing.
Kamandi #4: Well...Jack Kirby on Kamandi. Maybe I love that just as much; at least the first twenty or so issues.
Legion of Super-Heroes #2: I bought this out of a dollar bin in an early effort to try out The Legion, long before I knew about the good runs and the less good runs.
Warlock #5: I loved the start of the Counter-Earth saga, but after a ton of writer changes, the whole thing had gone off the rails a bit by this point. I like it anyway.
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Post by Hoosier X on Jan 16, 2023 15:10:58 GMT -5
Oh man. Defenders #1 to #60 and you haven’t read them!?
Don’t worry about reviewing them! Just read them! It’s a totally different comic every 15 or 20 issues!
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Post by codystarbuck on Apr 1, 2023 19:41:01 GMT -5
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Post by MWGallaher on Apr 2, 2023 6:38:22 GMT -5
Here's what I bought in the month after I turned 13:
100-Page Super Spectacular DC-18: I was tiring a little of Superman, but I didn’t miss any superhero Super-Specs if I could help it. The backups would have included my second solo Hourman reprint, my introduction to TNT and Dan the Dyna-Mite and Captain Triumph, and The Atom, an established favorite of mine. The Superman stories included important classics “Superboy’s Last Day in Smallville” and “Superman-Red and Superman-Blue”, key components of Superman lore. Adventure Comics #428: I wasn’t going to pass up the debut of a new hero, with a bold logo: Black Orchid restoring Adventure back to its proper superheroic roots. The Dr. Thirteen backup was a nice bonus for this young Phantom Stranger fan.
Flash #222: I liked the Flash but wasn’t buying it regularly. Green Lantern made this a team-up title for one issue here, so that was the biggest draw. Jungle Action #5: Black Panther’s first solo series got my attention, but I recall being disappointed to find this was really an Avengers reprint, and that the series would really start next issue. Justice League of America #106: I may have been one of the few readers for whom spotlighting Red Tornado on the cover was a huge draw. JLA was usually an easy ‘yes’ for me anyway, though. Kamandi, the Last Boy on Earth #7: My second Kamandi, and the King Kong riff may have been part of the draw.
Legion of Super-Heroes #4: I was loving this reprint series! Of all DC’s new batch of reprint titles, this is one I wished they’d have continued, but this was instead the final month of that experiment.
Marvel Team-Up #11: I liked the Inhumans, and I remember digging the Inhumans logo whipped up for their co-starring role this issue, but I’ve got no memory of this Conway/Mooney effort.
Metal Men #44: Another in that last gasp of DC’s attempt to counter Marvel’s reprint flooding tactic with one of their own. I was fond of the team, and enjoyed them well enough. Secret Origins #3: Arguably a part of DC’s reprint initiative that did linger, but I never counted Secret Origins, or its counterpart, Wanted, along with the likes of LOSH, Metal Men, Doom Patrol, COTU, Johnny Thunder, Inferior Five, Trigger Twins, and Four Star Battle Tales. I wasn't so interested in Wonder Woman's origin, but Wildcat fascinated me, thanks to his B&B appearances. Shazam #4: I was determined to like this, but the juvenile quality was disappointing me. Special Marvel Edition #11: My first “war comic”, but I only bought this Sgt. Fury reprint for the guest-starring Captain America and Bucky. And I was disappointed. Swamp Thing #5: The monster of the month is a witch; not the most exciting for me, but I loved every issue of Wein/Wrightson, and I got a big kick out of Swampy regrowing a severed arm!
Sword of Sorcery #3: This series still reigns as my all-time favorite S&S title. World's Finest Comics #218: I didn’t usually like WF, I’m pretty sure I bought this for the Metamorpho back-up by Haney and Calnan.
Worlds Unknown #2: A fine pair of SF tales with twist endings I can still remember. Total Cost: $3.50
Cover of the Month: No real stunners for me this month, but I do really love the spotlight on Red Tornado on Cardy’s JLA cover. Comic I Don’t Have But Would Most Like To Have: Given my pick, and with no consideration of resale value, I wouldn’t mind having a copy of Charlton’s Haunted Love #2, thank you very much.
Comic I Wanted Real Bad But Only Obtained Years Later: Tales of the Zombie #1. Man, Marvel’s house ads really had me hyped for this one, but I could never spot a copy on the racks!
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Post by berkley on Apr 2, 2023 17:17:00 GMT -5
January 1973:
Fear #13 - my comics reading was tapering off and there would be a couple years during which I read almost nothing, but these Gerber comics stuck in my head and this was one of the first series I looked out for when I got back into comics
February 1973:
Dracula Lives #1 - I was kind of obsessed with Dracula as a kid, after reading a slightly abridged edition of Stoker's novel a couple years earlier, and this mag was like a dream come true for me at the time. I had been intrigued by the early issues of Tomb of Dracula but it was this black and white mag that really blew my mind.
Spoof #5 - I think I enjoyed the one or two issues of this short-lived humour series at least as much as I did MAD at the time
Swamp Thing #4 - my first issue of this classic series; the Wrightson art and the atmosphere were incredible; I remember being very impressed by Wrightson's visualisation of a werewolf, like nithing I had ever seen or imagined before.
I don't see anything for March and April that I bought at the time but I know there were a few things that came later so I don't think my comics reading had yet dwindled completely to zero.
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shaxper
CCF Site Custodian
Posts: 22,866
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Post by shaxper on Apr 3, 2023 22:12:32 GMT -5
Thanks for resurrecting this one! I believe we should be up to April 1973, so here goes:
Amazing Adventures #19: I respect so much of what Killraven tried to do, but I find the run tedious all the same.
Amazing Spider-Man #122: Sold this just this year for an ungodly amount of cash. Just as happy with the Marvel Tales reprint.
Batman #250: I've yet to read this one, and yet it's been in my collection for decades. So much Batman, so little time.
Demon #10: There is very little 1970s Kirby that I don't love.
Jungle Action #5: Sold this one recently for insane cash as well.
Kamandi, the Last Boy on Earth #7: One of the few issues from this run that I don't absolutely adore. The King Kong homage felt a little too campy/out of place in the run for me.
Marvel Premiere #9: I know I have it, but I don't recall the storyline at all. I much prefer the Ditko era.
Swamp Thing #5: I need to revisit this run. I enjoyed it well enough when I read it decades back, but I suspect I'd have a lot more appreciation for it now.
Tales of the Zombie #1: Gerber's work on Simon Garth is one of my absolute favorite runs in all of comicdom.
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