Category Archives: New Kirby

New Kirby – Marvel Romance TPB

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Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.usThe MARVEL ROMANCE collection is out now. As mentioned before, featuring these Kirby stories:

“The Summer Must End!”
From Teen-Age Romance #84 (November 1961)

“By Love Betrayed!”
“Give Back My Heart!”
From Love Romances #102 (November 1962)

“The Dream World of Doris Wilson!”
“If Your Heart I Break—”
From Love Romances #103 (January 1963)

And other promising non-Kirby stuff.

New Kirby – Marvel Monsterworks

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Out this week, Marvel Masterworks: Tales to Astonish Vol. 1, a reprint of the first 10 issues of the series from 1959/1960. Eight stories, nine covers by Kirby, plus lots of other interesting stuff.

Go here for more on the book, including previews of many pages.

New Kirby – Green Arrow and Hulk

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Two new Kirby reprints out this week.

SHOWCASE PRESENTS – GREEN ARROW VOL. 1 has all of Kirby’s 1950s GA stories, in black and white, plus another decade of GA stories after that.

MARVEL MASTERWORKS – THE INCREDIBLE HULK VOL. 3 has the last few stories that Kirby did layouts for the Hulk in TALES TO ASTONISH, plus a few covers beyond that.

New Kirby – MACHINE MAN #1 reprint

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Just released, to tie in with the membership of some new Marvel team book, MARVEL MILESTONES SPECIAL: BLOODSTONE, X-51 & CAPTAIN MARVEL II, with a reprint of the first issue of MACHINE MAN from 1978 among other things. Not his first appearance, of course, but that’ll require re-acquiring some rights.

New Kirby – All-Winners Masterworks

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Oops, looks like I jumped the gun on closing the book on Kirby in 2005 a few posts back. Apparently the MARVEL MASTERWORKS – ALL-WINNERS v1 came out this week, with two S&K Captain America reprints. Not really recommended just for the Kirby, the first is just average and second is kind of weak, and are available in other cheaper places. Some of the other contents might be worth having, though.

New Kirby – WHAT IF tpb and CD

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The second volume of WHAT IF CLASSIC, including Kirby’s cover to #9 as the front cover, and featuring Kirby’s full issue from #11 (most recently also reprinted in VISIONARIES v1).

Apparently the Pure Imagination CD-Rom of the first two volumes of THE COMPLETE JACK KIRBY also came out. Anyone pick it up, feel free to comment.

New Kirby – Giant-Size Invaders #2

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Apparently out now, GIANT-SIZE INVADERS #2 is a $5 special with a short new story and several reprints, including the first ever reprint of the S&K Captain America story from ALL-WINNERS COMICS #2 (1941) (the second ever reprint, along with the S&K story from #1 will be in a few months in a Masterworks hardcover).

New Kirby – Jack Kirby Collector #44

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Now in stores, JACK KIRBY COLLECTOR #44, with the Demon on the cover, two full-story reprints from BLACK MAGIC, lots of other stuff. Quick notes on the issue.

Highlight, as always for the past few issues, is the section of full story reprints, this time two stories from BLACK MAGIC #4 (“Voodoo on Tenth Avenue”) and #31 (“Slaughter-House”). Both great stories on their own merits, and with the added benefit of interesting connections to other future Kirby work. “Slaughter-House” is about the aftermath of an alien invasion, and how the “bugs” round up humans. Chilling stuff, and parts of it, especially the last caption (a warning to “those who expect a visitation from space to bring us dreams fulfilled by the hands of an alien culture”), bring to mind his thoughts on the creation of CAPTAIN VICTORY and other works. “Voodoo” is also good stuff, and of course the ending famously is very similar to the Puppet Master story in FF #8 a decade later. Anyway, both good stuff, and very well reconstructed from printed copies (as is a “Tales of Asgard” splash elsewhere in the issue). I hope they do a separate book of these when they have enough pages.

Lots of artwork of note in this issue, especially from the 1970s.

The title page is a Roman gladiator image that saw print in an inked form in a 1980s issue of BURIED TREASURE.

Several pages for the unrealized THUNDERFOOT book, which looks like it would have been a funny book in the DEVIL DINOSAUR vein.

Partial pencils for this image, which reveals it was apparently meant to be part of a Captain Victory story. Interestingly, the pencils of the last page of the last issue of THE DEMON suggest if there had been a #17 it would have featured a vampire story. Kirby seemed to like vampires…

Lots of pencils from other issues of THE DEMON, which more and more I’m thinking was among Kirby’s best work of the 1970s, taken as a whole.

An unused page from the “Atlas” story in FIRST ISSUE SPECIAL adds a lot to the characters.

Lots of Thor art as well, which is always good to see, including a look at where exactly the Origin of Galactus that was squeezed into the book might have come from (some interesting speculation that the Galactus Trilogy might have had his origin, with the pages being pulled and then used in THOR years later.

There’s a BLACK PANTHER cover (with Abner Little) where it’s also interesting to note that at least as far as when Kirby did #6 the plan was still to continue JUNGLE ACTION rather than launch the Panther’s own book.

An interesting interview with Kirby from The Journal of Popular Culture. It’s one of those odd interviews where the interviewer is obviously much more familiar with Kirby’s work than Kirby is, and discussing the details of his themes and writing influences rather than the usual focus of Kirby interviews. So you get weird long questions (sample part of a question “…an impersonal technological deity with the Orwellian name of Brother Eye. This machine was designed by Myron Forest, deceased, whose name sounds like ‘My run Forest,’ which suggests ‘My run in the Forest,’ which in turn suggests…”), but Kirby’s reactions to some of them do reveal some interesting things you don’t get in the usual interviews.

Mark Evanier’s column this time concentrates on Syd Shores and why his inking looked the way it did, using his history with Marvel to tell a lot of Marvel history, including their attempts to expand in the late 1960s and some of the resulting artistic shifts.

In the editorial, it’s mentioned that the FF DVD will include a one hour documentary about Kirby, including interviews with his kids and various notables from the comic industry. So that’ll probably be worth renting or borrowing. Still no money or proper credit, but it’s something.

UPDATE: It was later announced that the documentary was pulled from the first release of the DVD, might be on a future “special edition”. So not worth renting or borrowing.

Lots of other articles that I’ll be reading later. One has an interesting find on a possible source for the design of Etrigan, a 1922 movie HAXAN, which was re-released in 1968. Although as I recall either Evanier or Sherman telling the story, Kirby did go back and actually look at the Foster original from Prince Valiant before drawing the character, not draw it from memory, which should be mentioned in the article if that’s the case.

Front cover is inked by Matt Wagner, based on an image from HEROES AND VILLAINS. He has two other tries at the image inside. I kind of prefer the first one, dismissed for being “too Royer”, but the one they used has an interesting ink-wash effect. The backcover is a painting by Georgio Comolo, based on a Galactus splash page from THOR #160, which doesn’t quite work for me. I kind of like the same artist’s version of the double page spread from THE DEMON #7 shown inside.

New Kirby updated

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Just updated the Kirby release list over on the sidebar. The four “Marvel Monsters” one-shots with Kirby reprint backups came out, as did the FF wedding special, a couple of AC books, an ESSENTIAL TWO-IN-ONE with some Kirby covers and the coffeetable book MAXIMUM FANTASTIC FOUR (see this thread on the Masterworks message board for some scans and comments on it).

New Kirby – MARVEL MONSTERS: DEVIL DINOSAUR #1

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Just released, the first of the four one-shots feauring new stories of old Marvel monsters, backed up by Kirby reprints.

MARVEL MONSTERS: DEVIL DINOSAUR #1
reprints “I Was a Slave of the Living Hulk!” from Journey Into Mystery #62, November 1960 by Kirby/Ayers (13 pages), plus the Kirby/Ditko cover to JIM #62.