Category Archives: New Kirby

New Kirby – Kamandi Archives

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The first volume of KAMANDI ARCHIVES, reprinting the first 10 issues of the series, is now out.

KAMANDI ARCHIVES VOL. 1 HC
Written by Jack Kirby
Art by Kirby & Mike Royer
Cover by Kirby
The first archive in a series collecting the adventures of Kamandi, the last boy on Earth, by Jack Kirby! In these tales from KAMANDI #1-10 (1972-1973), Kamandi — one of the few survivors of the Great Disaster — must make his way in a world populated by bizarre mutated animals and other strange wonders!
244 pg, FC, $49.99 US

New Kirby – Marvel Masterworks Doctor Strange

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Boy, been a while since the last New Kirby announcement. Trivial one this time. Marvel just released MARVEL MASTERWORKS – DOCTOR STRANGE v2, collecting the last few Ditko stories and the rest of the STRANGE TALES run. This wouldn’t be relevent to this weblog except that v1 contained no covers, so this one includes all the covers featuring Doctor Strange that should have been in v1, several by Kirby. Exactly how many depends on how loosely they interpret “Doctor Strange’s cover appearances”.

New Kirby – Jack Kirby Collector #43 – quick notes

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Initial reactions to the latest issue, available now in finer comic shops and from TwoMorrows.

The cover is a 1980s Silver Surfer piece, newly inked by Joe Sinnott. The original was kind of loose, so Sinnott does quite a bit of fleshing out of the details, especially on the background, which he’s certainly qualified to do (yes, I have a double standard when it comes to requiring faithful inking of Kirby). The original appears inside. The backcover is an early version of Silver Star from the mid-1970s, drawn and coloured by Kirby (and as we find out inside partially digitally restored for this printing) and a few other colour images related to interior articles.

The announcement of the Kirby Museum is up first, including a great photo of Kirby with his parents at age 3, some of the tentative plans for the project and a hint of a SILVER STAR GRAPHITE EDITION to go with the existing CAPTAIN VICTORY edition sometime next year. I’m always forgetful on Silver Star history so I don’t know exactly what would be in this.

Mark Evanier’s article this time around is on inkers, specifically Colletta. I think he mostly makes good points, although I think in balance he’s a bit too generous to Colletta, but then I’m kind of sick of the whole Colletta argument (other than taking a cheap shot on the weblog every few months).

The full story reprint this issue is the 8-page “His Best Friend’s Sweetheart” from YOUNG ROMANCE #3, a good early example of the S&K work in the genre, about a girl who waits for her man during the war, and copes with the unwanted attentions of the friend he asked to look out for her both before and after his return. Great stuff, nice look at post-war life in America, plus a nice unpublished TRUE DIVORCE page from the 1970s included for a look at Kirby’s last try at the genre.

First Gallery section is devoted to the Captain America story in TALES TO ASTONISH #93, with four full finished pages inked by Sinnott printed full-page next to their uninked counter-parts. Great looking pages, and interesting to see exactly what Sinnott added to the process.

Second Gallery is devoted to 1980s work, with pages from various projects printed with pencils beside the inked versions (plus an unused pencil-only Bruce Lee / Phantom Force page). A good look at the techniques, I was especially interested in seeing the DESTROYER DUCK page, where Alcala used Kirby’s main linework but did a lot of his own shading. Also a very nice is the SATAN’S SIX page.

There’s a good speech and Q&A session from a 1966 convention in here. Kirby’s in fine form, very funny (KIRBY: Roy has asked me to announce that there’ll be a refreshment period. ROY: No, a question period. KIRBY: Well, if there’s a refreshment period, it’s on me). He also mentions the “extras” in his crowd scenes being people from his life, like his brother-in-law or old landlord, which came up here a few weeks ago.

The Kirby Obscura article looks at some more nice 1950s stuff, including one I’m now in love with based on the splash page. “Lone Shark”, the story of a mutant killer shark, narrated by the shark. I hope they reprint that. The splash from the DC published “The Two-Dimensional Man” is also great.

A big part of this issue is a series of articles/interviews with people who Lisa Kirby presented with a “Jack Kirby Award” last year, various friends and associates, including a long interview with Steve Sherman and his brother Gary. I haven’t read all of those yet, just quickly scanned them and looked at the art included, but there are some interesting anecdotes about the Kirby family life in California. Lots of interesting photos and artwork, including a very different early Devil Dinosaur proposal (originally a modern day “hidden land” type story, including remnants of Atlantis and an old Nazi sub crew) and an unused Captain Victory page and a very odd photo-comic proposal STARBABY (printed in colour on the backcover). Looking forward to reading through this section.

New Kirby – Marvel Digests

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Marvel will be releasing its set of “Dollar Digests” this week, 64-page black and white, possibly edited reprints of various early material for $1. See here for details. Not sure if I’ll see them, so feel free to comment if you do.

FANTASTIC FOUR: FIRST FAMILY DOLLAR DIGEST
AVENGERS: ASSEMBLE DOLLAR DIGEST
HULK: HULK SMASH DOLLAR DIGEST
X-MEN: CHILDREN OF THE ATOM DOLLAR DIGEST
SPIDER-MAN: AMAZING FANTASY DOLLAR DIGEST (maybe)

New Kirby – Cap Masterworks v2 and Milestones

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At least two Marvel books with Kirby reprints in the past week, a Masterworks hardcover with with MODOK. I mention that just because I seem to get at least one hit every week from people searching for MODOK. And another in their Milestones line of cheaper reprints has two samples of Kirby featuring the origins of two of his most memorable villains.

Did anyone see a copy of the tradepaperback with the FF movie (featuring characters co-created by Jack Kirby) adaptation and various reprints? I could use some confirmation on which, if any, Kirby stories they picked for it. I assume the origin or something with Doom?

update: I’m told it has FF #5, the first Doom story


MARVEL MASTERWORKS: CAPTAIN AMERICA VOL. 2
Written by STAN LEE & ROY THOMAS
Penciled by JACK KIRBY, GIL KANE & JACK SPARLING
Cover by JACK KIRBY
Who loves seconds? We love seconds—a second sensational serving of the Sentinel of Liberty! Yes, that’s right, the Mighty Minions of Marvel are chipping the next Cap Masterworks free from its icy fifteen-year slumber and you’re invited to the homecoming party. So strap on your shield and prepare for a barrage of Stan and Jack’s best as Cap (with a little help from his friends, the Avengers) battles a bevy of baddies like the strange Super-Adaptoid—the super-powered robot with the combined powers of the Avengers. And if an android passing himself off as Cap was as odious as you thought, the Red Skull tries to convince the people of America that Cap’s turned traitor. Yikes! Don’t crawl into your fallout shelter in shame, though. Our boy will bounce back to take on a hearty helping of that horrendous head, M.O.D.O.K.., in his first-ever appearance, before taking it home in a scintillating struggle against Baron Zemo, guest-starring Nick Fury, the Black Panther and Cap’s super-spy gal, Sharon Carter! Reserve your star-spangled copy today! Collecting TALES OF SUSPENSE #82-99 and CAPTAIN AMERICA (VOL. 1) #100
240 PGS. / $49.99
ISBN: 0-7851-1785-7

MARVEL MILESTONES: DR. DOOM, SUB-MARINER & RED SKULL
Written by BILL EVERETT, STAN LEE & ED HERRON
Penciled by BILL EVERETT, JACK KIRBY & JOE SIMON
Cover by ALEX SCHOMBURG
It’s SUPER-VILLAIN TEAM-UP revisited as MARVEL MILESTONES brings on the bad guys! In a special preview of this month’s MARVEL MASTERWORKS: GOLDEN AGE SUB-MARINER VOL. 1, Prince Namor fights single-handed the world’s first deep-sea blitzkrieg, from SUB-MARINER COMICS #1! Plus: the fantastic origin of Dr. Doom from FANTASTIC FOUR ANNUAL #2, and the first appearance of the Red Skull from CAPTAIN AMERICA COMICS #1!
48 PGS. / $3.99

New Kirby – FF Omnibus

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Apparently the FANTASTIC FOUR OMNIBUS volume, the $100 oversized 848 page collection of FF #1 – #30 and Annual #1 with a new restoration of #1 better than the one they’ve been using (presumably even reprinting the real cover), original letter pages and various other special features is out this week. Haven’t decided if I’m getting it yet, and might not even see a copy, so I’ll be curious to hear from people who get it how it looks and what the extra features are.

New Kirby – Essential FF, 70s Cap, X-Men

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Triple shot of new Kirby from Marvel this week. The long awaited ESSENTIAL FF v4 is a big chunk of quality stuff. CAPTAIN AMERICA BY JACK KIRBY: BICENTENNIAL BATTLES TPB includes the relatively hard-to-find original tabloid adventure plus five regular issues of Cap. GIANT-SIZE X-MEN #3 includes two Kirby reprints (X-MEN #9 / FF #28) among the mix of new and reprint contents.

New Kirby – Modern Arf

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Editor Craig Yoe reports that his MODERN ARF, previously talked about here, with a 1950s Kirby short story from Harvey reprinted from the original art, is now out. You can read more about the book at arflovers.com and you order it from Amazon.com.

New Kirby – Jack Kirby Collector #42 – quick notes

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Image Hosted by ImageShack.usA few quick comments on TJKC #42, the most recent issue. First thing, a note in here mentions that BACK ISSUE #10 has an article on Kirby’s b&w magazines for DC, published and unpublished. Anyone seen that and can give a rundown on what’s included (especially if there’s any unpublished art that hasn’t been seen in TJKC yet).

The main focus this time is on the early part of Kirby’s 1970s stint at DC, especially on JIMMY OLSEN. The front cover is inked by Kevin Nowlan, with the Guardian and the Newsboy Legion based on two sketches Kirby included with his bound copies of his STAR-SPANGLED COMICS issues. It’s okay, I guess, but pretty liberally interpreting of Kirby’s linework. The backcover is Murphy Anderson providing an inked version of an unused JIMMY #147 cover (and with Mike Royer providing the lettering). Also maybe a bit too free with the linework, but he did only have a bad photocopy to work with, and maintained most of Kirby’s power at least. Fortunately the source material and related stuff is shown inside (I like Nowlan’s first try at inking better than the final version).

The Opening Shot looks at how Kirby’s work on JIMMY OLSEN was reflected in other Superman books, in particular LOIS LANE, which is kind of interesting, but more interesting is the closeup of one panel from JIMMY with the Plastino paste-up Superman head removed. DC really does seem to have been conflicted about wanting Kirby’s influence on Superman, but without that, y’know, Kirby influence.

Mark Evanier has his usual column, this time with some interesting notes on Kirby’s cover designs, eating preferences and politics. Some nice art and photos, including a crazily complex robot design that Kirby gave to Don Heck in 1966.

Shel Dorf provides a nice transcript from a taped interview Kirby did with several fans in 1969, where he discusses, among other things, the upcoming first San Diego Con where he would be a mainstay for several decades. This was shortly before he signed with DC, so his answer to whether he’d be at Marvel for a long while is interesting. Nice artwork for this section, too, including the obligatory San Diego Five-String Mob artwork and a recently inked unused FF cover by Joe Sinnott, as seen on Tom Kraft’s site.

Odd unused JIMMY page from #144, inexpertly inked unfortunately, with a discussion about how the Guardian’s story just seemed to be suddenly dropped a few issues before the end. Following that is a more in-depth look at Kirby’s first issue of JIMMY from the perspective of a fan buying it off the racks.

An interview with the creators of the recent RADIOACTIVE MAN with the Kirby pastiche, an issue I enjoyed, but it’s not Kirby so maybe takes a bit too much space, especially with four pages of “Kirby as a Genre” in the same issue and the visit to the FF set, which I’m sure is of interest to some. Good to see another example of Kirby’s FF cartoon storyboards.

Another interesting article about JIMMY, this one with some insights on his working relationship with E. Nelson Bridwell over in New York on the book, plus a short interview with Neal Adams.

One of the highlights of the issues is the long article about the original Newsboy Legion stories, with lots of cover and splash page reprints and comments about the stories that weren’t reprinted in the 1970s. Man, I hope we see a decent collection of those someday, as the early ones when Kirby was still heavily involved seem great.

Kirby Obscura looks at some nice work drawn in the 1950s for Harvey and DC, including old favourite BLAST-OFF #1.

First Gallery section is devoted to pencils from JIMMY OLSEN, all published pages but when it comes to JIMMY that still means a lot of the faces are unpublished. I especially liked the inclusion of the page from the “Arin” story in #146, one of my favourite Kirby shorts.

The absolute highlight of the issue is the complete reprint of the 10-page S&K story “This Way to the Gallows, If You Please” from JUSTICE TRAPS THE GUILTY #9 (1949). Great restoration of the linework and an amazing story, a nice witty crime classic. That section also includes one of the unpublished IN THE DAYS OF THE MOB pages and some nice photos of Kirby drawing at a convention. They’re planning on including more public domain stories, to which I can only say bring it on. Might be nice to see them printed full page instead of some of the non-Kirby content in the issue.

Second Gallery has more good stuff, including several pages from the unpublished b&w romance mags of the 1970s and, drumroll, two unpublished Dingbats of Danger Street pages. Man, that unpublished 1970s stuff needs to be printed in one place once and for all, instead of spread out page by page across dozens of fanzines.

The letter column has some interesting speculation on the unused 1960s Hulk pages printed in #41, with various theories on where exactly they fit in.

The issue closed with Mike Royer’s new inks for the unused JIMMY OLSEN #133 cover which has probably now seen more play than the replacement DC insisted on.

Very good issue, despite some superfluous stuff, thanks to the fact that the highlights were very special indeed.