Captain America #195 [1976] – 1984

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Cap and the Falcon’s search for the “Big Daddy” Madbomb leads them to captivity in the underground lair of the New Society, where the traitors to the American way experiment in ways to rob people of their free will and make them workers for the rulers. There they meet the extremely creepy Cheer Chadwick, daughter of one of the leaders of the New Society.

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Chadwick pulls rank on the soldiers and leads our heroes on a tour of the place, which culminates in a nightmarish vision out of Orwell (hence the title of the story) of a charismatic computer composite dictator on a screen whipping a crowd into a frenzy against freedom. She then tells Cap and the Falcon that they’ll have to participate in the Kill-Derby, although as a fight against the leader of one of the teams, Tinkerbell, shows, their obsolete notions of “fair play” won’t serve them well in the arena.

Definitely some crazy stuff, with Kirby exploring some of his favourite ideas in different ways while still keeping the action up there.

D. Bruce Berry inks the 17-page story and Frank Giacoia inks the cover.

Published 1976

The Eternals #19 [1978] – The Pyramid

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The final issue of the series begins with Ikaris imprisoned by his cousin Druig, who is determined to find a weapon capable of destroying the Celestials hidden in the Pyramid of the Wind. Ikaris manages to escape after Druig departs, and pursues, while one of the Celestials also makes his way to the Pyramid.

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Ikaris eventually realizes that he won’t be able to capture Druig alive and the weapon is disintegrated, killing Druig and starting a chain reaction that threatens to destroy the Earth. Fortunately, it turns out the Celestials are a lot more powerful than the Eternals had given them credit for, and Ziran of the Fourth Host is able to defuse the out-of-control energies of the weapon.

A somewhat satisfying ending to the series, at least not ending on an unresolved cliffhanger like so many Kirby endings. Obviously there was a lot more he wanted to do with the concepts, but that wasn’t to be, and the story at least hints at some of the themes of ancient secrets and mankind’s final destiny that drive the series.

Mike Royer inks the 17-page story and Frank Giacoia inks the cover.

Published 1978

Where Monsters Dwell #23 [1973]

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A retitled 7-page Kirby/Ayers reprint from STRANGE TALES #92 [1962] leads off this issue, so “The Thing Hunts For Me” becomes “The Monster Hunts For Me”. No doubt because calling a creature “The Thing” in 1973 at Marvel had a different effect than it did a decade earlier. In this short tale a young woman gets a cheap room in New York City, where one of the other tenants is a reclusive old man. He approaches her that night and tells her his story about seeing an alien ship land three years earlier and being pursued by a creature from the ship.

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Only managing to get aways thanks to the creature’s aversion to water. He’s been on the run ever since, and is now dying of a weak heart and wants to tell someone his story. A sudden knock on the door frightens him, giving him a fatal heart attack, never realizing that the girl he trusted was in fact the alien.

This is a pretty good, moody story with a few great bits of art, including the design of the alien, especially on the splash page (although in this case I think it was actually improved in the reprint colouring). On the other hand, there seems to be a bit of a disconnect with the script, as it’s kind of hard to reconcile some of the early narration from the young woman with the surprise revelation.

The cover is also from STRANGE TALES #92, one of a handful of experiments from the era with using panel art on the covers, but not the most effective examples.

Fantastic Four #54 [1966] – Whosoever Finds the Evil Eye

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This issue opens up with one of the great FF scenes, the team unwinding by playing baseball in Wakanda after their recent adventure with the Black Panther and Wyatt Wingfoot. Meanwhile we also catch up with the Inhumans, still trapped behind the barrier created by Maximus, where Black Bolt tries various ways to free them, perhaps at the cost of his own life.

As the FF prepare to depart from Wakanda, Johnny decides to go try to free Crystal and the Inhumans, with Wyatt joining him in a Gyro-Cruiser lent to them by the Panther.

On their way the boys get caught in a sandstorm and find an elaborate underground crypt…

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That’s a great looking sculpture guarding the door. Anyway, inside they find a 700 year old knight from the court of King Richard, Prester John, who relates some of the lands he saw in his wanderings, ending with the city of Avalon, which was destroyed for some unexplained reason, leaving him in the Chair of Survival where Johnny found him, with the Evil Eye device possessing amazing powers. Johnny, always the jerk, decides the Evil Eye is his key to freeing Crystal, so he steals it with no explanation, not realizing it’s still powered and set to explode. Wyatt and Prester John pursue, knocking the device out of the Torch’s hand just before it explodes like an A-Bomb.

It’s a bit of a filler issue (doesn’t look like Prester John even shows up again for another decade), and Johnny’s behaviour is even worse than normal, but otherwise a lot of fun, especially the backgrounds on thinks like Wakanda, Avalon and Prester John’s travels.

Joe Sinnott inks the cover and 20-page story.

Published 1966

–Link– Upcoming Sinnott

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TwoMorrows has an upcoming book that is sure to have a lot of stuff of interest to fans of Kirby’s 1960s work.

JoeSinnott.jpgBrush Strokes With Greatness: The Life & Art of Joe Sinnott
by Tim LASIUTA

Joe Sinnott is a true living legend. During his 56-plus-year career in comic books, he has worked in every genre, and for almost every publisher. As a young artist in the 1940s, he started with Stan Lee at Timely Comics, then branched off to Charlton Comics, Treasure Chest, and Dell as a top penciler. But the creation of the Fantastic Four in 1961 by Stan and Jack Kirby ushered in the Marvel Age of Comics, and Joe began a long and storied association with Marvel as its top inker. His deft touch can be seen on almost every book published by Marvel in the ’60s to the late 1980s, and today, Stan and Joe continue that tradition with the Sunday Spider-Man comic strip. Brush Strokes With Greatness celebrates the storybook career of the versatile artist, as he demonstrates his passion for his craft. In it, Joe shares his experiences working on Marvel’s leading titles, memories of working with Lee and Kirby, and rare and unpublished artwork from his personal files. This book features dozens of colleagues and co-workers paying tribute to Joe and his amazing body of work, plus an extended Art Gallery, and a Checklist of Joe’s career. Don’t miss this once-in-a-lifetime celebration of all things Sinnott, which includes a Foreword by Stan Lee, and an Afterword by Mark Evanier.

Upcoming Kirby – Spider-Man Omnibus

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Obviously more of a Ditko book, but the upcoming AMAZING SPIDER-MAN OMNIBUS VOL 1 has some key covers by Kirby, another few of partial covers and three stories pencilled by Kirby and inked by Ditko (ASM #8 backup, FF ANNUAL #1 backup and STRANGE TALES ANNUAL #2 lead story). It’s also good to see a Spider-Man collection ending at the right place.


AMAZING SPIDER-MAN OMNIBUS VOL. 1 HC
Written by STAN LEE & STEVE DITKO
Penciled by STEVE DITKO with JACK KIRBY
Cover by JACK KIRBY & STEVE DITKO
Variant Painted Cover by ALEX ROSS

In 1962, in the pages of a comic book slated for cancellation, Stan Lee and Steve Ditko gave birth to one of the most-enduring icons in American popular media: the one and only Amazing Spider-Man! Turning the concept of a super hero on its head, they imbued the young, guilt-ridden Peter Parker with the fantastic powers of an arachnid and the fantastic pressures of an everyday teenager. The combination was pure magic.
During the course of 40 issues of web-slinging, wisecracking wonderment Lee and Ditko built the foundation for 45 years of Spidey spectaculars — girl trouble; bill trouble; bully trouble; the Daily Bugle; and a cast friends, family and, of course, super-villains unlike any other!
Completing the entire Stan Lee/Steve Ditko Spider-Man run in one massive volume —including every page, every pinup and every letters column. Not to mention unused covers, critical essays and bonuses galore!
We went back to the Mighty Marvel Archive to restore each and every page in this volume for painstaking accuracy to the originals. There’s no kidding — this collector’s edition is the guaranteed be-all, end-all book for the Spider-Man fan!
Collecting AMAZING FANTASY #15, AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #1-38 and ANNUAL #1-2, STRANGE TALES ANNUAL #2, and FANTASTIC FOUR ANNUAL #1.
1088 PGS. $99.99
ISBN: 0-7851-2402-0

The Demon #13 [1973] – The Night of the Demon

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Kirby concludes his three part story based on Frankenstein in this issue, as Etrigan destroys the lab of Baron von Evilstein, setting his experimental beasts free. Meanwhile, Randu and Harry manage to get the girl Janie, who has a psychic link with Evilstein’s monster, close to where the gentle creature is being tormented by a mob. Unfortunately Evilstein shows up and attacks, and the creature dies saving his only friend.

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Etrigan of course takes the fight to Evilstein, and uses the Philosopher’s Stone against him.

I thought this storyline had a bit more potential than this final chapter realized, but I always do like the classic Kirby mis-understood beast archetype.

Mike Royer inks the cover and 20-page story.

Published 1973

Thor #172 [1970] – The Immortal and the Mind-Slave

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Marvel was in the middle of Marvel’s “single issue stories” experiment, which wasn’t really playing to the strength of the whole Marvel way of doing things. Thor returns as Don Blake to his office, where he’s met by Jim North, Jane Foster’s new boss, who brings news that Jane has been kidnapped by Kronin Krask, who wants North to perform a forbidden operation for him. North has come to see if Don Blake can contact Thor to help.

Meanwhile, Odin takes a look around at where everyone is, using his Enchanti-Scan. The odd mix of mythical and high-tech in Asgard always confuses me…

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It turns out that Krask wants North to perform a mind-transplant, and the body he wants for his mind is Thor, who he knew North would contact. Thor is captured and the mind-exchange is attempted, which leads to a battle of the embodied egos of Thor and Krask, which Thor wins, killing Krask in the process.

Not the greatest story (although with a few ideas that came together a bit better in some Fourth World stories). Bill Everett inks the 20-page story and cover, and that looks really nice.

Published 1970

Kirby in Print page updates

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Just did some much needed updates to the Kirby in Print Guide, always available over there on the sidebar. Among other things I’ve added links to Tales of Wonder for most books, including the MARVEL MASTERWORKS series most at 30% off, with affiliate info that gives part of each purchase to the Kirby Museum.

Marvel Double Feature #4 [1974] – He Who Holds the Cosmic Cube

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A reprint of the cover and Captain America story from TALES OF SUSPENSE #80 [1966] in this issue, as Cap rescues an AIM agent who was blown out of the sky pursuing a traitor who is bringing the powerful Cosmic Cube to the Red Skull. SHIELD is able to help Cap quickly catch up to the AIM traitor, and they both land on the Skull’s island.

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The Skull plays dirty, using the information that he was behind the WWII plan of Zemo that resulted in Bucky’s death, to distract Cap long enough for a sneak attack, giving him a chance to get possession of the Cube.

Great little story, although a bit jumpy in this form with two pages edited out for the sake of stingy 1970s page counts. It’s interesting how some of the descriptions of the power of the Cosmic Cube read like rough versions of the Anti-Life Equation. Don Heck handles the inking on the now 8-page story and cover, and that’s always a pleasing combination (Kirby must have thought so as well, since it wasn’t long after this that he hired Heck to ink the presentation pieces that led to the Fourth World books).

Published 1974