Today is the 91st anniversary of the birth of Jack Kirby.
Here’s a photo set of 91 Jack Kirby covers from throughout the years.
(Go over here if the embed thing doesn’t work)
And visit the Museum home page for more Kirby birthday links.
Today is the 91st anniversary of the birth of Jack Kirby.
Here’s a photo set of 91 Jack Kirby covers from throughout the years.
(Go over here if the embed thing doesn’t work)
And visit the Museum home page for more Kirby birthday links.
A trio of Kirby/Ayers 7-pagers reprinted in this issue, giving a nice sample of the range of monsters that rampaged through the pre-hero Marvel line.
Opening up is “I Created Sporr, The Thing That Could Not Die” from TALES OF SUSPENSE #11 [1960], which also provides the Kirby/Ayers cover for this issue. A scientist buys the castle supposedly owned by Doctor Frankenstein in Transylvania (I think someone was mixing their movie monsters there), planning some experiments on growth rays to cure world hunger. Unfortunately, just as he tries his first experiment on an amoeba, the superstitious villagers burst in and take him away, leading the amoeba to grow uncontrollably. Oddly, this was foretold in a local legend about Sporr. Our hero manages to break out of prison, rescue a young boy on crutches and then use his scientific know-how to lure Sporr into some quicksand. Everybody learns their lesson.
These 7-pagers are sometimes a bit unsatisfying in story terms, too quick to really get more than a sketch of events. Still gorgeous, though, and the cover and title page of this story are particular favourites among the Kirby/Ayers stuff, and Sporr’s a great little creature causing havoc on the eastern European landscape.
Next up is “I Am Dragoom! The Flaming Invader” from STRANGE TALES #76 [1960], and from an organic monster we now move to flames. Despite the title, this story is told by sci-fi/horror movie maker Victor Cartwright, who gets no respect, but a great deal of money, for his craft. That all changes when Dragoom, a flaming invader escaped from prison on the planet Vulcan comes to Earth to conquer. Mankind quickly falls to the threat of a ring of flames around the planet, until suddenly Dragoom gets word of some of his fellow creatures, police from Vulcan, arriving on Earth, and flees in fear. All special effects wizardry from Victor, of course.
This one works pretty well. Dragoom’s not that noteworthy, although the panel of him using a city block as a throne is really cool.
And finally, from STRANGE TALES #75 [1960] comes “Taboo! The Thing From the Murky Swamp”. An adventure writer heads down to the Amazon for some new ideas, and ignores local legends about a monster in a forbidden swamp. Never a good idea:
I love that last panel. Silent panels like that aren’t too common in these monster stories, making them all the more striking when they are used.
The creature reveals that it crashed in the swamp while journeying from a distant galaxy, and needed access to all human scientific knowledge to build a new spaceship. The United Nations agrees to this, foolishly as it turns out, since this was all a ruse by Taboo to gather intelligence for an invasion. Joke’s on him, as they planted an H-bomb on the device with the information. Just in case.
I do like that ending. Taboo’s okay, but the real highlight here is the amazon scenery.
Quite a bit in the future, but keep an eye out for more info on the 2010 release THE ART OF THE SIMON & KIRBY STUDIO from Abrams, reprinting some as yet unspecified work from the original artwork. Should be a great companion to the books Simon is releasing through Titan next year.
Apparently there’s something by Simon&Kirby in the new MAMMOTH BOOK OF BEST CRIME COMICS, edited by Paul Gravett. Anyone got a copy to elaborate?
Thanks to Tim in the comments. It’s a 14-page story from JUSTICE TRAPS THE GUILTY #6 [1948], “The Money-Making Machine Swindlers”. Never before reprinted, as far as I know.
The 22-page story “The Eye of the Falcon”, previously twice scheduled for other books that didn’t come out, finally saw print in a recently published anthology, FRONT LINES.
This story is the third published “extrapolation” from Kirby’s unfinished novel THE HORDE! that Janet Berliner has written and had published (the previous two were “Shadow Of The Falcon” and “The Conversion Of Tegujai Batir“). You can read more about THE HORDE in this article from TJKC #32.
In honour of the JACK KIRBY CHECKLIST GOLD EDITION, a history of Kirby checklists.
I’m sure people were building lists and trying to keep track of everything Kirby did going back to the 1940s (for all I know the 1930s, depending on how dedicated his mom was), and as fanzines and APAs grew around comics there were more doubt more and more attempts to nail down every detail of his long and varied career, as well as more general publications and price guides documenting that information (since hey, if you want to up the price of something, no better way than to point out Jack Kirby drew it).
As far as I know the first widely available attempt at a comprehensive checklist was Greg Theakston’s attempt in his two volumes of THE JACK KIRBY TREASURY (v1, 1982, Pure Imagination and v2, 1991, Eclipse), which in addition to presenting an extensive biography of Kirby up to 1961 and the dawn of the “Marvel Age” also provided the first two parts of a massive illustrated checklist, A-J and L-S in the two volumes. The third book never did come out, though not for a lack of Theakston publishing books about Kirby. That checklist focused on original material, with issues, dates, story titles and page counts.
Theakston’s list is among the primary sources for the checklist in the back of the 1992 book from Blue Rose Press, ART OF JACK KIRBY. The 24-page checklist compiled by Ray Wyman, Catherine Hohlfield and Robert Crane, also adds in inker credits and reprints, cross-referenced with the original printings, and sets the form used by the checklist to this day.
Not really fitting in this history, but I got AoJK a few years after it came out, and discovered all sorts of Kirby stuff from that checklist, and around 1996 put together a bunch of notes made from that, Theakston’s list, my own collection and various other sources and put together what I confidently called “The Incomplete and Error-Filled Kirby Checklist”, a barebones checklist (book and issue number only) for online distribution in various venues. Around 2500 entries when I started, the spreadsheet I built it on is still the basis of the one I use for the regular posts on this weblog. When I do regular posts on this weblog. I’ll get back to that someday, I promise…
Anyway, that brings us to 1997, when the folks at TwoMorrows decided that their by-then well-established and rapidly expanding magazine THE JACK KIRBY COLLECTOR wasn’t enough decided to update the Kirby Checklist. Richard Kolkman answered the call, tweaking the format of the previous list and and in short order we got first THE JACK KIRBY CHECKLIST BETA VERSION (Nov. 1997) and then THE JACK KIRBY CHECKLIST 1998 UPDATED EDITION, the first a magazine sized 48-page updating of the checklist, adding many entries and sections on Kirby’s comic strip work, magazines and books with Kirby content, animation work, unpublished work and more, and the second a 108-page digest sized version incorporating additions and corrections made since the first. I vaguely recall at some point there was an electronic version of the checklist that made the rounds to gather corrections and additions, but if there was I no longer have a copy. Anyway, these two also feature an unnamed robot in a pencil drawing by Kirby, who I guess is the Rigellian Recorder tasked with recording Kirby’s output. Ah, the one sent with Thor to explore Ego the Living Planet didn’t know how easy he had it.
That brings us to THE JACK KIRBY 1998 FINAL EDITION, a 100-page comic-book sized version of the index, now closer to complete than ever, especially with the expansion of the extra sections on Kirby in books, magazines, unpublished work and more. And also a list of the story codes used for Kirby’s 1970s work at DC, which provide some interesting information on the order things were done, and some possibly still missing work. Photo cover of Kirby this time around, although our busy Recorder friend (who I just realized could be called Kolk-Man) is on the inside back cover.
But of course, more info pops up, and new books come out, so 2001 saw the now-tabloid sized THE JACK KIRBY COLLECTOR #31 include an 18-page update to the checklist, including a few minor deletions and a lot of additions.
And now comes THE JACK KIRBY CHECKLIST GOLD EDITION, a 132-page book available in print and PDF format, detailing more Kirby than ever before. Same photo cover as the 1998 edition, and our robot pal is safely inside, and this time there’s also a list of what’s in the archives of Kirby’s pencil art copies that has provided such a wealth information on his work process and debate about the quality of various inkers (and scans of many of the pages are available at the Kirby Museum). This should provide all sorts of aid in tracking down Kirby comics and understanding the depth of his career. Of course, there’s no doubt more to be found, and publishers aren’t going to quit printing Kirby any time soon, so updates will be available at the Kirby Museum.
And in the future, well, an update for Kirby’s 100th in 2017 makes sense. Of course, by then kids will probably get all their information in easy to swallow pill form, so the checklist will be a delicious pill imprinted with Kirby-tech. Delivered to you on your home on Mars. By a giant Kirby-designed robot.
But for now, hats off to everyone who contributed to this massive tribute to all facets of Kirby’s career, especially our robot friend Richard Kolkman, and I’m glad to have been a small part of it.
Lots of big Kirby books this year shouldn’t overshadow what would be the Kirby publishing event of the year most years, the newly updated JACK KIRBY CHECKLIST GOLD EDITION, shipping in mere weeks from TwoMorrows (early August, after they get back from San Diego), and if you order direct from them including download of a searchable PDF file version of the book (PDF also available separately). And if you’re at the San Diego Con next week drop by the TwoMorrows booth and see what they have going on, check here for their panels and books that debut at the show.
Coming out of the UK later this summer is JACK KIRBY QUARTERLY #15 (for those confused by the numbering, I don’t think #13 and #14 were ever widely distributed outside the UK. See comments for clarification on numbering). Copies can be pre-ordered now via ebay, and it will reportedly be available through comic shops via the usual distribution channels, but not for several months after it’s available for mail order.
Details below, many scans of interior pages at the links.
GET IT FIRST!
Early orders are now being taken for this landmark title, available late August
From the originating publishers of Warrior, Comics International, Halls of Horror, Comix: The Underground Revolution, Miracleman, V for Vendetta and lots of other fine stuff, comes the 15th anniversary special of the world’s first-ever magazine devoted to the work of the King of Comics: Jack Kirby.
Chrissie Harper’s Jack Kirby Quarterly #15 is a special 68-page full-sized magazine, overviewing the entire 60+ year career of the master of US comicbooks, with contributions and insight from top comics creators and specialist journalists including Kevin Eastman, Mark Evanier, Paul Gambaccini, Paul Gravett, Nigel Kitching, Peter Laird, Bob McLeod, John Morrow, Dez Skinn, William Stout, Greg Theakston and Marv Wolfman.
** Cover art by Jack Kirby and Bob McLeod
** Turtle Power! Kevin Eastman’s memories of Jack, plus Kirby’s version of TMNT
** Big Jack’s Pack: William Stout recalls one of Jack’s lesser-known art jobs
** The King of Comics and the King of Horror: Would ya believe: Kirby’s version of Dr. Phibes?!
** Opening Shots: A brief 1993 Kirby interview on Topps Comics and beyond
** Tune In, Man! Kris Brownlow looks at Kirby, drugs and hippie culture
** Kirby’s Mob: Nick Caputo dissects the crime classic In the Days of the Mob
** “I Always Tried To Do My Best”: The ULTIMATE Kirby interview, 12 fact-packed pages!
** A Final Chat: One of Kirby’s last ever interviews, January 20th 1994
** Life After Jack: Jack’s widow, Roz, speaks after Kirby’s passing in April 1994
** San Diego 1995: Convention memories with Roz, August 1995, plus a superb photo gallery
** Battle for a 3-D World: 1982 stunner by Kirby and Mike Royer (glasses not needed!)
** Twice-Told Tale: Paul Gravett investigates Lee & Kirby’s Western, Rawhide Kid
** Drag Your Battered Bones: Mike Hill’s subjective, in-depth analysis of New Gods #8
** Heroic Grandeur: Fabio P. Barbieri assesses Kirby’s place in 20th Century art
** Undiscovered Particles: James Romberger plunges into Kirby’s psychedelic interzone
** Not Quite Definitive: Karen Hellman finds DC’s Fourth World Omnibus series flawed
** He Still Rules: Marv Wolfman talks about Jack and their almost-collaboration
** Fantastic Four #1 Inker: Not-So-New News! The George Klein theory’s an old one, as Mike Lake explains
** Life and Truth: Tim Bateman reviews the philosophy of Mister Miracle #9
** London Tales: The April 2008 “Live From Kirby Plaza” event at the Institute of Contemporary Arts
** Cult Horror: Chrissie Harper examines the depths of 1983’s Silver Star #2
** Sez Dez – A Legend Hits Lucca: The return of comicdom’s best-loved column!
** Finishing School: Illustrated essay with Nigel Kitching on inking our back cover
… and even more. Hour upon hour of fascinating reading, with lots of rarely seen Kirby artwork.
Halfway through, 2008 is shaping up to be a pretty stunningly prolific year for Kirby publications, with 29 already out (a few of them fairly trivial, like some cover reprints in AVENGERS CLASSIC, but that balances with some major releases like KING OF COMICS, KIRBY FIVE-OH, COMPLETE KIRBY v5 and FOURTH WORLD OMNIBUS v4), and 10 more already solicited for release by year’s end (and more to come), a few of them major all-Kirby books, including several interesting things from TwoMorrows, Greg Theakston’s bio of Kirby and many all-Kirby hardcovers covering several eras (1940s Captain America, 1960s Thor, 1970s Demon).
Highlight of the year so far, KING OF COMICS (though I’m still waiting for a copy of COMPLETE v5). Highlight of the upcoming stuff, well, I always like a good checklist, so there’s that, plus the Demon book should be good.
And then 2009 has the potential to be even bigger.
Let me know what you think about what came out, what you’re looking forward to and what books you think should come out (I’m hoping DC finally gets to the 1940 S&K material soon, maybe working with Simon to match the format to his upcoming S&K books from Titan). And remember, part of purchases from Amazon and Tales of Wonder from the links on the New Kirby page or the due-for-an-update Kirby In Print page go to the Museum.
This is early and of course publishing plans change, especially dates, but take a look at these books that popped up on Amazon:
Joe Simon: The Man Behind the Comics: The Illustrated Autobiography of Joe Simon (Hardcover)
The Best of the Simon and Kirby Studio (Hardcover)
Nice fat books (listed at 256 and 288 pages, respectively), safe to say these should be the Kirby publishing events of 2009.