Category Archives: New Kirby

New Kirby – Essential Thor v2

by

At long last the second volume of ESSENTIAL THOR has been released, a big chunk of some of Kirby at one of his creative peaks for a very affordable price. Lots of fun.

Also of note on that topic, there’s a new printing of the first volume of ESSENTIAL FANTASTIC FOUR (with a Kirby cover taken from FF #3 this time), which I noticed adds several of the bonus pages from the first Annual that were missing in earlier printings, and possibly other pin-ups from the early issues not in previous printings.

New Kirby – Marvel Milestones with Hercules

by

The second in the new series of Marvel Milestone one-shots has been released, MARVEL MILESTONES: VENOM & HERCULES. The Hercules half of the book is the first Thor/Hercules story from JOURNEY INTO MYSTERY ANNUAL #1 (1965), along with the cover and map of Asgard from that issue. The cover was really badly reprinted, but the story looked okay. The other half of the book is an out of context chapter from a 1980s mini-series and various 1980s Spider-Man covers.

New Kirby – Marvel Milestones: Iron Man

by

Haven’t seen it yet, but a comment below mentions that the first of the new series of MARVEL MILESTONES one-shots just came out, this one reprinting the first Ant-Man story (pre-Ant-Man actually) from TALES TO ASTONISH #27 and the origin of Cap by S&K from CAPTAIN AMERICA #1, as well as the non-Kirby first Iron Man.

Note I’ve added a permanent page over on the sidebar to document new Kirby publications in one bookmarkable place in addition to these posts. Feel free to add a note in the comments there if you see anything I’ve missed.

New Kirby – Marvel Weddings

by

Just a quick note that MARVEL WEDDINGS came out recently. It has a reprint of FF Annual with the wedding of Reed and Sue. It’s not really a very sharp reprint (and bad print quality with Colletta inks is just a double killer) unfortunately, and most people would probably prefer to get the story in the recent MARVEL VISIONARIES STAN LEE or one of the other reprints (none of which are any better, but have better other material).

Also, more when I confirm, but I’ve heard that the recently announced MAXIMUM FANTASTIC FOUR has been pushed back to the fall.

New Kirby – Black Panther & Marvel Visionaries – Stan Lee

by

Two Marvel releases featuring Kirby art now published

BLACK PANTHER BY JACK KIRBY v1 collects the first 7 issues of the 1970s series, with some nice stuff in the back like the unused cover and character design from the 1960s and some unused pencil pages.

MARVEL VISIONARIES – STAN LEE features a few stories drawn by Kirby, most notably the never before reprinted final Kirby issue of THOR.

New Kirby – Jack Kirby Collector #41 – quick notes

by

Some initial reactions to the latest issue of TJKC, which turns the spotlight on the 1975-1978 era at Marvel.


Front cover is a Black Panther piece, newly inked by Dick Giordano. Backcover is Devil Dinosaur as inked by Mark Schultz. Both are briefly interviewed inside (both the artists, not both characters…), and the full page original pencils of each piece are also shown. Both were fairly faithfully inked, but I kind of wonder how it would have looked if the colouring was done straight over the pencils.

The frontispiece is the unused splash page to the story that was published as FF #108, which I guess is newly discovered since they did the big reconstruction back in TJKC #9. Kind of amazing what seems to turn up all these years later, and I can’t help but wonder if any of the other missing bits of that issue have turned up.

A promo article for the new edition of KIRBY UNLEASHED follows, with some background on how the new edition came together. Still need to pick up my copy of that.

Mark Evanier’s regular article follows. Always interesting, in paticular this time talking about how Kirby worked in the “Marvel Method” in the 1960s. Some nice art, including the original art for the FANTASY MASTERPIECES cover that Kirby inked (although, as noted, miscredited to Frank Giacoia here. Another odd caption error a few pages earlier where they call the cover to JUNGLE ACTION #18 unused, which makes me wonder if they had an unused version and slipped in the wrong one, or just got it wrong).

Next article is about the upcoming GALACTIC BOUNTY HUNTERS, using some Kirby presentation and concept art. I’ll take a look at the book when it comes out, but frankly I’ve got at best mixed feelings about this.

Some fascinating bits found on original art of the 1970s. The final issue of MACHINE MAN had the title changed, with the paste-up covering the original name and Kirby’s introductory caption. And for some reason, on the brilliant double page splash of DEVIL DINOSAUR #4 Kirby wrote the script on a separate sheet. I wish they’d printed that double-page splash bigger, though.

Next article deals with some contracts between Kirby and Marvel, which isn’t that interesting to me. Also some anecdotes about the horrible treatment of original art in the 1970s Marvel warehouse.

Can’t say I agree with the next article, which argues Kirby should have put in more Marvel Universe ties in this 1970s work. While I can understand the desire for that on a fannish level, and even agree that it might have boosted sales on the books, I have two main objections. One, that Kirby clearly didn’t want to do it, for good reasons, and forcing that is never a good idea. Second, that would have only invited even greater editorial interference given Marvel at the time. I can only imagine that the books would have been full of “corrected” faces and dialogue. That said, I do like the FF vs. Eternals sketch, and the look at the pencils to the altered Eternals vs. Robot Hulk cover.

The first Gallery section features pencils for a dozen covers that Kirby did for other editors during that era. I always find those fascinating, especially given the minor changes made on many of them before printing, mostly on some faces and costume details. Even though he was working from layouts by others on these they look nice. I especially like the cover they, for whatever reason, got him to do for the “Krang” reprint. Giant monster, fleeing crowd, you can go home again.

Never really understood the “Kirby as a Genre” feature. I always think that every image in TJKC should be by Jack Kirby unless there’s a good reason, and this doesn’t qualify. And I’m kind of bummed they printed in the centerfold, which I think should be used for a large repro of a two-page spread or an extra large single page at close to illustrated size.

Next article looks at those awful 1966 Marvel “cartoons” which swiped panels from the comics. Some interesting stuff, but no actual Kirby art or involvement.

Next gallery looks at some of the villains from the Kirby written and drawn books of the era, with pencils from some covers and interior pages and short articles. Some interesting stuff, and nice to see Ten-For covered, but come on, no Arnim Zola? And nothing from DEVIL DINOSAUR?

2004 Kirby tribute panel follows, with Evanier, Royer, Steve Rude, Dave Gibbons, Walt Simonson and Paul Ryan. Some interesting anecdotes about Kirby and about discovering his work in different eras. Most interesting art included is from the cover to CAPTAIN AMERICA #101, where it was found that under the sanitized Red Skull face was a real Red Skull face by Kirby/Shores, many times better than the published version. Also, I know I had that objecting to non-Kirby in TJKC rule above, but Steve Rude drawing Modok and Joe Sinnott drawing some scene of Doom taking over Galactus’ powers. Cool.

Next up is a real curiousity. TJKC always gets highest points from me when it includes unpublished Kirby story pages. Well, here they have three pages that appear to be pencils from an unused Hulk story from 1962, found in Larry Lieber’s closet. Best guess seems to be that they’re from an abandoned story direction in HULK #3 (or possibly HULK #6). Wherever they’re from, it seems clear that there were probably more, since it opens on “page 11” with the Hulk in a hospital, which no published pages logically lead up to. Pretty funny sequence, with I guess, Rick Jones getting hustled on the basketball court by toughs disguised as teen-agers, and using his mental link with the Hulk (which he only had in #3 and #4, hence the speculation it was meant for #3) to take care of them. That’s playing fair, Rick, calling in the Hulk to take care of a basketball hustling ring. I don’t know what Cap saw in that boy. Anyway, the very one-sided ensuing battle includes the Hulk slam-dunking a guy, which is neat.

Rather maddeningly, the article isn’t clear on if what was found was actual original art or photostats (kind of hope they’re stats, since they seem to have been ripped in half at some point). Hopefully in the near future someone will be able to interview Lieber about what he remembers about these, and maybe show them to his big brother to see if they jog any memories.

Two more pieces of pencil art, more Eternals vs Robot Hulk action and a quiet page from the Surfer graphic novel.

Great issue. Next one up promises Dingbats, Soul Love and a Murphy Anderson inked (and not just the heads) Jimmy Olsen cover.

New Kirby – Smithsonian Book…

by

Just confirming the recent release of the previously mentioned anthology, THE NEW SMITHSONIAN BOOK OF COMIC BOOK STORIES: FROM CRUMB TO CLOWES (ISBN 1588341836). As promised, it has a reprint of “The Hate-Monger” from FF #21, in black and white. Looks very sharp, though I again question the choice given the less than stellar story and one of the lesser Kirby inkers

Amazon and presumably other online sellers have a pretty decent discount on it right now, and it should be showing up in most library systems.

New Kirby – Unleashed, Collector, Hulk

by

More when I actually get copies, but just a quick note that within the last few weeks the following Kirby items were released:

KIRBY UNLEASHED, a new edition of the early 1970s volume that had a biography of Kirby (updated for this release), along with various rare artwork, and the plates from the GODS portfolio and other extras.

THE JACK KIRBY COLLECTOR #41, focussing on the 1970s Marvel period, and you know what that means: Devil Dinosaur!

MARVEL MASTERWORKS: THE HULK v2 (which oddly I can’t seem to find on any of the major on-line bookseller sites). Collecting Hulk stories from TALES TO ASTONISH #59 – #79, so a lot of Kirby covers (17 of the 21 assuming they include non-Hulk covers which they usually do), plus three stories he did the pencils for, nine others he did layouts, with Esposito/Kane/Powell/Everett/Romita finishing. Plus work by Steve Ditko and Dick Ayers.

Later, 2004 in review for the Kirby fan. At least 12 major releases. Feel free to post your favourites.

New Kirby – Essential Iron Man #2 etc

by

This is one of those trivial entries in a Kirby bibliography, but I’m not going to win that award for “Most Monomaniacal Comics Weblog” with half-measures now, am I? Anyway, the just released ESSENTIAL IRON MAN #2 has about a half-dozen Kirby covers from the last bit of IM’s run in TALES OF SUSPENSE. Doubly trivial because all of those covers were reprinted in the same format in ESSENTIAL CAPTAIN AMERICA #1 a few years back.

Less trivial, there should be a new JACK KIRBY COLLECTOR in the next few weeks, and hopefully the updated KIRBY UNLEASHED portfolio will be out soon.

And request for information, anyone know what Kirby work is in the recent ART OF MARVEL v2 hardcover? Is it strictly previously published and/or fairly common stuff, or did they sneak in something unpublished and/or rare?

New Kirby – Marvel Masterworks Avengers v4

by

Okay, this will be one of the most obscure new Kirby reprint mentions you’ll ever see. There’s a new Marvel Masterworks out, the fourth Avengers volume. The Kirby content of it is the cover of AVENGERS #33, where Kirby drew the background characters only, and the cover of AVENGERS #35, where the Captain America figure is lifted from a TALES OF SUSPENSE story.

Also, just for completeness, the recent AVENGERS #503 apparently reprints three pages from AVENGERS #16, as well as a few Kirby panels in some collage pages of Avengers history. No comment on the rest of the book, except to say there are far better ways to get those Kirby pages.