Category Archives: Genre

What If #11 [1978]

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One of the sillier concepts of all time, this features Kirby and others from Marvel in the 1960s transformed into the Fantastic Four, with the on-the-nose title of “What If… The Fantastic Four Were the Original Marvel Bullpen?”. Kirby is cast as The Thing, of course.

What If #11 [1978]

It’s all delightfully goofy, with a few gentle shots taken at the man playing Mr. Fantastic. And it was good to see Kirby getting one last pseudo-shot at writing and drawing a Fantastic Four story.

Joe Sinnott inked the cover, while Mike Royer and Bill Wray inked the 34 interior pages.

Journey Into Mystery #59 [1960] – I Unleashed Shagg Upon the World

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Steve Ditko inked the cover over Jack Kirby for this issue, while Dick Ayers handled the inks for the lead story, “I Unleashed Shagg upon the World”. This is really one of the weaker Atlas monster stories, with a man finding a hidden lever next to the Sphinx, bringing it to life as the alien conqueror Shagg.

Journey Into Mystery #59 [1960]

Shagg proceeds to rampage across Europe then onto America, before realizing that his fellow alien conquers aren’t around, and he was re-animated early. So he, um, just reverses everything with his cosmo-gamma electro-magnetic waves, which also makes everyone forget him, and returns to his Sphinx position.

As I said, weak story, but the art is nice, especially the Kirby/Ditko cover. And the rest of the book has some nice Ditko and Heck art.

Published 1960

Chamber Of Darkness #7 [1970] – I Found the Abominable Snowman

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This 1970 comic reprints a Kirby/Ditko story from TALES TO ASTONISH #13 from 1960.

Chamber Of Darkness #7 [1970]

Very nicely paced story about a man who comes across a photo of the Abominable Snowman, and starts on an obsessive search through the Himalayas for the mythic beast. The exotic locales come through nicely, and the story builds cleverly to the inevitable conclusion. Definitely one of the better overall Atlas stories, and the Ditko inks over Kirby are always a treat.

Published 1970

The Adventures Of The Fly #1 [2004]

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The recently released collection of the first four issues of ADVENTURES OF THE FLY from 1959/1960. The first issue is all Simon&Kirby, as is half of #2.

Mostly very good reproduction on the Kirby stories, except for one story which is clearly taken from a printed copy and is a bit wanting. The covers (only the first by Kirby) are also taken from printed copies, but look pretty good since obviously they were on better paper.

“The Hide-Out”
A quick two-page feature from THE DOUBLE LIFE OF PRIVATE STRONG #1, introducing the character. Nice preview (the first of two, the second by Joe Simon is also in here), where Kirby gets to draw his trademark thugs getting punched by a briefly seen Fly.

“The Strange New World Of The Fly”
The origin of the Fly, which is about as silly as you’d expect, with orphan Tommy Troy getting sent to live with an old couple, finding a ring which summons Turan, emissary of the Fly People, and transforms him to a super-hero. Fun stuff.

“The Fly Strikes”
The conclusion of the origin, with the Fly rounding up the bad guys who were shaking down the orphanage.

“The Fly Discovers His Buzz Gun”
Hard to believe it took him this long to discover it, it’s right there strapped to his leg. Also introduces Tommy’s neighbour, Dolly Lake.

“Come Into My Parlor”
Great opening, which would have been a centerfold page in the original, but is printed on a single page sideways here. Not sure about that display choice, but it still looks nice. This is the best story in here overall, with great art and the introduction of Spider Spry, a great looking deformed Kirby villain.

“Magic Eye”
Very silly and quick story about a fight with a robot, and I’m still not sure what the title means, but this has some great fighting

“Marco’s Eyes”
The only weak reproduction of a Kirby story in this collection. Still not too bad, just a bit splotchy with the linework and lettering after the double page spread (again printed sideways on one page) that opens the story is great, and it does appear to be from the original art, fortunately. Anyway, it’s a nice story about a hypnotist turned evil, very much with the feel of old Fawcett Captain Marvel stories, I thought.

“The Master Of Junk-Ri-La”
This time the Fly takes on Hans Yunkman, a junkman inventor who makes a safe robbing plane out of junk. Yeah, it looks that silly, too.

fly
Non-Kirby work includes Joe Simon (including a new introduction), Dick Ayers, Al Williamson and others, a cover by Joe Staton and Bob Smith.

Published 2004

Black Panther #10 [1978] – This World Shall Die

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Some people seem to have a problem with the fact that, on launching the new BLACK PANTHER series in 1977, Kirby mostly went in a completely different direction from what was done with the character in the previous years. I never quite got that, but then I haven’t read much of that non-Kirby stuff.

What Kirby did was a fast-paced action-adventure book, a bit silly at times, but enjoyable.

Black Panther #10 [1978]

I like the middle panel on this page, it has a very nice Kirby dynamic and sense of playfulness. Plus those other members of the Wakanda royal family can be pretty funny.

Joe Sinnott inked the cover while Mike Royer inked the story.

Published 1978

Monsters On The Prowl #15 [1972] – The Thing Called… It!

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This is a reprint of the Kirby/Ayers contribution to STRANGE TALES #82. I guess whoever it was who named the monsters was tired that week, so this one just got named “It”. I’m sure he’s mocked at the Atlas Monster reunions by Zzutak, Orrgo and Fin Fang Foom.

Monsters On The Prowl #15 [1972]

The story features another one of those castle owning mad scientists in an unspecified European country, driven mad with jealousy for the recognition given to a rival trying to create some artificial life. I love the bit where It starts to stand but falls. Looks like a monster who had too much to drink, especially given the odd fact that he’s wearing a suit. Anyway, he eventually comes to life thanks to the magical properties of quicksand, but turns out to be useless to a revenge seeking scientist thanks to a pesky respect for life that he got with his sentience. This eventually ends happily thanks to, apparently, the timely intervention of God.

As silly as they are, I love the Atlas monster stories, which always look cool if nothing else.

The New Gods #7 [1972]

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Note, this is the 100th Kirby book featured on this weblog. Of course, a disproportionate number of them (67) have been books where Kirby just did the covers, because they’re easier (I’ve got scans of about 300 other such books ready to go). I figured for #100 it should be one of the best.

The New Gods #7 [1972]

NEW GODS #7 featured “The Pact”, a powerhouse 24 page story which fills in the mythology of the Fourth World. I can only imagine how much more powerful it was to people who read it not knowing the secrets it reveals. This is full of amazing scenes that flesh out what was in the first few issues and raising more questions and possibilities. The best of these scenes is the one that the page above is in the middle of, where Izaya rejects the ways of Darkseid to find his destiny as Highfather. It’s a thing of beauty. Thank god Mike Royer was the inker at this point, so the scene has its full weight.

Interesting side note, there was an unused unfinished splash page, apparently meant for this issue, published in JACK KIRBY QUARTERLY #11, which featured an intriguing scene of pre-transformation Izaya confronting Darkseid. No dialogue on the page, unfortunately, so no clue as to exactly what this scene would have entailed.

Also in this issue, a two-page Young Gods story featuring Vykin of the Forever People, quickly looking at some of the remnants of the “Great Clash” on New Genesis, inked by Vince Colletta, a reprint of the Manhunter story “The Legend of the Silent Bear” from ADVENTURE #76 from 1942, which has some interesting moments (such as the hero being led through a forest by a boy scout), although Manhunter is definitely the most minor of the S&K DC features (they only did seven short stories). Also a two page S&K reprint from REAL FACT #2, “A World of Thinking Machines”, projecting such things as robot secretaries, robot athletes and multi-armed robots for housework. Okay, not the best predictions ever…

Published March 1972

The Eternals #1 [1976]

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Kirby’s first new series on his return to Marvel, a few months after he re-took the reins of CAPTAIN AMERICA, was THE ETERNALS. It also had the most complex set-up, with two hidden races emerging, the god-like Eternals and the monstrous Deviants.

The Eternals #1 [1976]

The first issue eases into the concepts, with just one of the Eternals, Ikaris, leading a father and daughter archaeologist team to a chamber of alien beings in South America, explaining the basis of the Eternals/Deviant setup, and then being attacked by a group of Deviants led by Kro.

Kirby really goes all out in the art for this. He opens big, with two full page splashes and a double page splash making up the first four pages, with detailed images of the huge constructs in the chamber. He continues with such nice images as the underwater Deviant city, the mountain home of the Eternals and more, all well inked by John Verpoorten (with a cover inked by Frank Giacoia). All in all it’s a good set up to what would be an entertaining and fairly long-lived series (19 issues and a double sized annual).

Published 1976.

First Romance Magazine #42 [1956] – Cover

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FIRST ROMANCE MAGAZINE #42, 1956. One of the Harvey romance covers Kirby did in that era. An average Kirby cover, but I’m assuming the art doesn’t refer to story in the caption. Check out this juxtaposition:

FirstRomanceMagazine42_93.jpg

If you can’t read it, it says

Should I Keep My Love a Secret? Or Compete With… “My Sister, My Rival”

Now, if that referred to this cover, by romance comic standards, it would be the bus driver in the background who’s speaking, meaning that’s his sister in the foreground, and she’s his rival for the affections of the coffee-counter guy. Now, I’ve got no problem with that, but I don’t think it would have gotten that code seal in the corner in 1956 with that plot.

The Superman Gallery #1 [1993]

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Since I had it out to compare the pencils with the just released Milgrom inked version (and Milgrom did a great job with it), here’s the unused cover to JIMMY OLSEN #133, as published in THE SUPERMAN GALLERY #1 in 1993.

A fairly minor entry in the Kirby bibliography, even moreso now that the inked version has been published and so many pages of Kirby pencils have been published in fanzines in the past decade, but there’s some other good stuff in here, including images by Joe Shuster, Curt Swan, Wayne Boring, some decent modern images (some not quite so much, depending on your tastes).