-Link- Kirby in British art magazine

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Posted in Links.

Nick comments on the previous post:

While browsing the magazine rack today, out of the corner of my eye I noticed a Kirby/Shores Cap figure surrounded by images by George Grosz and Dieter Roth. I picked up the magazine entitled Tate Etc. with the sub heading “The Art Magazine that RESPECTS your intelligence!” (couldn’t pass up a joke!). It’s a British publication and Inside there is an article by John Carlin entitled “The Real Comic Book Heroes”. I have not read it yet but it is accompanied by a nice full page of the Original Art that appears on the over (cover to Captain America # 108). It’s always nice to see Kirby represented in fine art magazines, not the first time I’ve seen him there and I’m sure it won’t be the last. Of course, we all know Kirby is Art with a capital A. I’m glad the rest of the world is discovering this as well.

You can see the cover and article here. The Kirby mention in the article is fairly brief, but interesting. In part it reads:

Echoes of [William Blake’s] flattened muscular style reverberate throughout the comic’s heroic phase, particularly by artists such as Jack Kirby (1917–1994), creator of Captain America, The Hulk, X-Men and the overall look of Marvel Comics. One of Kirby’s characters, The Thing (one of the Fantastic Four) on the title page of This Man, This Monster, resembles Blake figures such as Lucifer from his illustrations for Dante’s Divine Comedy.

Additional Kirby artwork included is the great double page splash from DEVIL DINOSAUR #4.

http://www.tate.org.uk/tateetc/issue9/realcomicbookheroes.htm

-Link- Evanier updates Kirby projects

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Posted in Links.

Mark Evanier has an update on some recent stuff he wrote on the topic of Jack Kirby coming out in the next few months, including a link to the publisher’s site for KIRBY – KING OF COMICS, which has these details:

224 pages, 9″x12 1/4″
Hardcover
ISBN: 0-8109-9447-X
EAN: 9780810994478
US $40.00

Fantastic Four – Atlantis Rising Collectors’ Preview #1 [1995]

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I guess since the Inhumans backups originally appeared in the unusual place of the back pages of THOR #146 – #152, it makes sense that reprints of them have also popped up in unusual places, like behind Spider-Man reprints in MARVEL TALES, or three of them in this special designed to promote a now long-forgotten crossover. The first two and the final episode of the 5-page Kirby/Sinnott back-ups are included in this issue.

“The Origin of the Incomparable Inhumans” is the first, starting with a splash page of the current royal family before going back to a pre-historic time to show us a far more advanced civilization that existed alongside savage early humans, and had to flee to the island refuge of Attilan.

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There they discovered the Terrogen Mists, and their monarch Randac decided that the logical thing to do would be to expose himself to them first, becoming the first Inhuman.

“The Reason Why” explains a bit more as a Kree Sentry arrives in Attilan and reveals that their advanced evolution was the result of Kree experiments, and meets Randac as he emerges from the Terrigan Mists (they apparently changed the spelling while he was in there) with his new powers. Of course, as shown when the margin notes for the story were printed in THE JACK KIRBY COLLECTOR #21, this is quite a different story from what Kirby actually wrote.

They skip to the end for the final 5-page Inhumans story, “While the City Shrieks”. After causing some mischief at sea, reported in the papers a “sea monster”, Triton arrives in New York, where humanity responds with fear and violence. To be fair, they have a point regarding some of his behaviour. He returns home and convinces Black Bolt that they’ll have to move from their island home or risk eventual discovery, hence the mountain location of the “Great Refuge” in then-modern stories.

All these stories look gorgeous, of course, with the Kirby/Sinnott combo at its prime with their slick high-energy style. The stories don’t work quite as well, whether because of those changes from the original notes or just the nature of filling in background instead of going forward, but they do have their moments. Unfortunately, it looks like that run of backups has been an orphan in Marvel’s current reprints, unless I missed them somewhere, as they didn’t show up when those issues were reprinted in ESSENTIAL THOR (despite the table of contents listing Sinnott as inker on those issues), so presumably won’t when the MASTERWORKS volumes of Thor get that far.

Most of the rest of the contents of this issue are related to then-current goings on in the FF related books, but there is a 4-page article on “Marvel’s Top 10 Monsters” with some nice images and story recaps of some old favourites like Monstrollo, Pildorr and Googam (son of Goom).

Published 1995

The Mighty Marvel Western #25 [1973]

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This issue has a reprint of the 7-page Kirby/Ayers story “Trapped by the Bounty Hunter”. RAWHIDE KID #26 [1962]. The Kid is nervous around town, knowing a bounty hunter is after him but not knowing who it is. Leaving town, he falls for the oldest trick in the book, an hombre pretendin’ to be thirsty for some water.

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While taking him in, the bounty hunter gets ambushed by some outlaws. The Kid of course won’t let them kill the hunter in cold blood, and saves his captor, earning his freedom and a promise that the bounty hunter will quit his job.

The Kid sure did end up making a lot of friends in his time on the run. You’d figure a couple of them might have been able to help him clear his name or something. Anyway, nice little story with some good western gunplay.

The Kirby/Ayers cover to this issue is also from RAWHIDE KID #26.

Published 1973

Surfer book confirmation

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Thanks to Glen for answering the previous post about reprint editions of the 1978 SILVER SURFER book, and sending this scan of the cover of a 1997 paperback reprint (ISBN #0-7851-0652-9) that he has. I was into Kirby and going to comic shops on a pretty regular basis back then and I don’t think I saw a copy of it. And searching that ISBN on the usual places online shows either no record of the book, or a Masterworks edition of the early Buscema issues or this book, just as the ISBN for the hardcover is as likely to come up with some other book entirely. I suspect that Marvel might have mistakenly slapped duplicate ISBNs on some books.

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For the record, Galactus face from page 43, Galactus hands from page 29, Earth from page 18, Surfer from page 30 and some of that Kirby crackle and the tech around the edge from some other source. You know, Kirby did a perfectly fine cover for this book (see TJKC #9 backcover). And bad enough that this was hard to find when it was re-released in 1997, why is there no edition in-print now that the Surfer is going to be in, y’know, a movie?

Surfer book query

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I’ve been trying to definitively establish some sort of reprinting history for Kirby’s 1978 SILVER SURFER book published by Fireside. I know there was a hardcover edition dated March 1995, officially titled MARVEL LIMITED: SILVER SURFER, with an ISBN of 0785101179 and with a print run of 742 copies according to the enclosed note. What I’d like to know is, was there ever a mass-market reprint (hardcover or softcover) from Marvel at that time or since? The internets are proving no help as that ISBN also seems to refer to some 2001 book by Paul Jenkins, and I’m never sure if any other listing I see is for the original 1978 hardcover or softcover, the “Marvel Limited” book or some other printing that I don’t know of or some other book entirely. So if you have any printing of the book other than the original Fireside hardcover or softcover or the Marvel Limited hardcover, or know for sure that they don’t exist, let me know. If there is any other edition, a scan of the cover would be useful so I know what to look for.

Fantastic Four #236 [1981]

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FF #236 was the the 20th anniversary of the book (it was bi-monthly for the first few issues). To have some Kirby in the issue they took some storyboards he did for the FF cartoon series a few years earlier (though apparently not with Kirby’s “consent and cooperation” as they claim) and adapted it to a 14-page comic book story. For the inks they rounded up most of the available inkers who had worked with Kirby on the 1960s series (Joe Sinnott, Chic Stone, Dick Ayers, George Roussos, Sol Brodsky, Frank Giacoia, Vince Colletta) plus a few later artists (Al Milgrom, Pablo Marcos and John Byrne) and split the pages among them. This page was one of Chic Stone’s.

FantasticFour2361981.jpg

As you can see, the story was “The Challenge of Dr. Doom”, adapted from FF #5, most notably changed to substitute the Human Torch with the robotic Herbie. Other than that it pretty much follows the original, with Doom attacking the Baxter Building, sending the boys back to get “Blackbeard’s treasure chest” and getting tricked by his exact wording, as well as a rescue effort from Sue. Still a lot of goofy fun even in this form.

Despite various misgivings on the genesis and quality of this story, it was an interesting glimpse into what Kirby was up after his comic book years, and it was nice to see some of the classic inker combinations one more time. Of course, these days we’ve had a much better chance to see Kirby’s storyboard work in its pure form, including his notes (the recent KIRBY COLLECTOR #47 printed the boards for a full episode).

Published 1981

The Avengers #350 [1992]

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Fifteen years ago AVENGERS made it to #350. These days there isn’t even a single AVENGERS book within reach of #100. Funny how that works.

For this particular milestone they celebrated with some reprints in this flipbook with gatefold covers on both sides. Of note for this weblog are the cover galleries that adorned the covers. A full page was given to the Kirby/Ayers cover of AVENGERS #1, a great start to the series and probably one of the five or six most swiped/homaged Kirby images.

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Two more Kirby covers get quarter page reprints. AVENGERS #11, the Kirby/Stone cover featuring Spider-Man, and #25, the Kirby/Ayers cover with Doctor Doom. Good choices, but kind of odd not to include #4 and #16 in a roundup of milestone issues of the series.

Published 1992

Fantastic Four #224 [1980]

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Presumably because Marvel had just recovered from their nadir of 17-page comics a few months before, this issue of FF had a 17-page lead story and room for a few more pages. They responded to that with some interesting Kirby content, including the first ever printing of the originally planned cover to FF #3, which is a pretty cool little piece of history. A nice little action shot from the interior story and a demonstration of the powers of the members of the team in the little inset vignettes, while the actual published cover shows off the new costumes better. It was probably a good switch to make, especially at this early issues, setting the book apart from the monster comics which Marvel was publishing.

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But they had more pages to fill than that, so we also get the “Feature Page” on Mister Fantastic and what his powers are capable of from FF #16, a pin-up of the Invisible Girl in her section of the Fantasi-Car from FF #10 and two feature pages explaining the Torch’s powers from FF #8 and #9 (including his study of weather patterns to avoid rain). But oddly none of the available pin-up pages of the Thing were used. Poor Benjy…

The pin-up/feature pages are inked by Dick Ayers. The unused cover is also credited to Ayers here, but to Sol Brodsky in the Kirby Checklist. I think Brodsky seems more likely, though the printing here makes it hard to say with any confidence.

Published 1980

-Link- Marder’s “Think Kirby”

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If you’ll forgive the self-link to another web project I’m working on, Gunk’l’dunk is a fan site for Larry Marder and his TALES OF THE BEANWORLD series, one of my favourite modern age comic (and a very Kirby-inspired one on a more fundamental level than most), and among the posts on the odd little bits of Marder’s published material I’m doing is this one, one of my favourites, a tribute to Jack Kirby that appeared in AMAZING HEROES #100.