Ok, how about this for an idea. We take it in turns to post a favourite (British spelling) comic cover every day. This went really well on the comic fan website that I used to frequent. What we tried to do was find a theme or subject and follow that, until we all got bored with that theme. I'd like to propose a theme of letters of the alphabet. So, for the remainder of October (only 5 days) and all of November, we post comic cover pictures associated with the letter "A". Then in December, we post covers pertaining to the letter "B". The association to the letter can be as tenuous as you want it to be. For example I could post a cover from "Adventure Comics" or "Amazing Spider Man". However Spider Man covers can also be posted when we're on the letter "S". Adventure Comic covers could also be posted when we're on the letter "L" if they depict the Legion of Super Heroes. So, no real hard, fast rules - in fact the cleverer the interpretation of the letter, the better, as far as I'm concerned.
And it's not written in stone that we have to post a cover every day. There may be some days when no cover gets posted. There's nothing wrong with this, it just demonstrates that we all have lives to lead.
If everyone's in agreement I'd like to kick this off with one of my favourite Action Comic covers, from January 1967. Curt Swan really excelled himself here.
Date | Page/Reply | Theme (and clickable link) | Pages | Replies |
Oct 2016 | 1/1 | Letter A | 19 | 228 |
Dec 2016 | 20/1 | Letter B | 17 | 207 |
Jan 2017 | 37/4 | Letter C | 18 | 214 |
Feb 2017 | 55/2 | Letter D | 17 | 208 |
Mar 2017 | 72/6 | Letter E | 15 | 178 |
Apr 2017 | 87/4 | Letter F | 15 | 184 |
May 2017 | 102/8 | Letter G | 13 | 157 |
Jun 2017 | 115/9 | Letter H | 16 | 195 |
Jul 2017 | 131/12 | Letter I | 12 | 133 |
Aug 2017 | 143/1 | Letter J | 16 | 194 |
Sep 2017 | 159/3 | Letter K | 19 | 237 |
Oct 2017 | 178/12 | Letter L | 24 | 285 |
Nov 2017 | 202/9 | Letter M | 24 | 280 |
Dec 2017 | 226/1 | Letter N | 19 | 236 |
Jan 2018 | 245/9 | Letter O | 21 | 245 |
Feb 2018 | 266/7 | Letter P | 25 | 295 |
Mar 2018 | 291/2 | Letters Q & R | 20 | 243 |
Apr 2018 | 311/5 | Letter S | 22 | 270 |
May 2018 | 333/11 | Superman’s 80th anniversary | 21 | 250 |
Jun 2018 | 354/9 | Letter T | 21 | 250 |
Jul 2018 | 375/7 | Letter U | 17 | 207 |
Aug 2018 | 392/10 | Letter V | 19 | 228 |
Sep 2018 | 411/10 | Letter W | 20 | 233 |
Oct 2018 | 431/3 | Letter X | 15 | 180 |
Nov 2018 | 446/3 | Letter Y | 13 | 156 |
Dec 2018 | 459/3 | Letter Z | 13 | 156 |
Jan 2019 | 472/3 | Person being carried | 16 | 190 |
Feb 2019 | 488/1 | Real people | 17 | 214 |
Mar 2019 | 505/11 | Homages/parodies | 19 | 224 |
Apr 2019 | 524/7 | Green-skinned people | 17 | 207 |
May 2019 | 541/10 | Wanted posters | 17 | 201 |
Jun 2019 | 558/7 | Boxing rings | 15 | 180 |
Jul 2019 | 573/7 | Empty uniforms | 15 | 177 |
Aug 2019 | 588/4 | Beaches | 25 | 297 |
Sep 2019 | 613/1 | Apes | 28 | 340 |
Oct 2019 | 641/5 | Haunted houses/graves | 21 | 250 |
Nov 2019 | 662/3 | Motor bikes | 21 | 254 |
Dec 2019 | 683/5 | Foreign language covers | 17 | 209 |
Jan 2020 | 700/10 | Playing cards/tabletop games | 23 | 275 |
Feb 2020 | 723/9 | Valentines and Cupids | 22 | 259 |
Mar 2020 | 745/4 | Statues | 21 | 256 |
Apr 2020 | 766/8 | Elephants | 22 | 263 |
May 2020 | 788/7 | Heroes & villains cooperating | 17 | 198 |
Jun 2020 | 805/1 | The Moon | 26 | 322 |
Jul 2020 | 831/11 | Flags & patriotic symbols | 18 | 215 |
Aug 2020 | 849/10 | Foreign locations (non-US) | 20 | 233 |
Sep 2020 | 869/3 | MST3K (with commentary) | 24 | 292 |
Oct 2020 | 893/7 | Vampires and Werewolves | 20 | 245 |
Nov 2020 | 913/12 | Giants | 24 | 286 |
Dec 2020 | 937/10 | Snow & winter scenes | 24 | 289 |
Jan 2021 | 961/11 | Doppelgängers | 32 | 377 |
Feb 2021 | 993/4 | Movies | 23 | 275 |
Mar 2021 | 1016/3 | Cats/cat-themed adventurers | 22 | 263 |
Apr 2021 | 1038/2 | Dogs/dog-themed adventurers | 25 | 305 |
May 2021 | 1063/7 | Big guns/Heavy weaponry | 25 | 302 |
Jun 2021 | 1088/9 | Dinosaurs/Time Travel | 28 | 338 |
Jul 2021 | 1116/11 | Big Questions/Question Marks | 28 | 330 |
Aug 2021 | 1144/5 | Highways, Travel etc | 19 | 232 |
Sep 2021 | 1163/9 | Favourite Covers/Comics | 28 | 330 |
Oct 2021 | 1191/3 | Lineups | 21 | 260 |
Nov 2021 | 1212/11 | JSA 80th Anniversary | 23 | 269 |
Dec 2021 | 1235/4 | Logos in the action | 26 | 317 |
Jan 2022 | 1261/9 | Dynamic Duos | 29 | 348 |
Feb 2022 | 1290/9 | Romantic Scenes | 26 | 313 |
Mar 2022 | 1316/10 | Bridges | 29 | 339 |
Apr 2022 | 1345/1 | Unexpected Green | 23 | 286 |
May 2022 | 1368/11 | Neal Adams | 26 | 310 |
Jun 2022 | 1394/9 | George Perez | 19 | 227 |
Jul 2022 | 1413/8 | Parents | 30 | 356 |
Aug 2022 | 1443/4 | Fairgrounds and Carnivals | 24 | 285 |
Sep 2022 | 1467/1 | Joe Kubert | 19 | 238 |
Oct 2022 | 1486/11 | First and last issues | 27 | 324 |
Nov 2022 | 1513/11 | Classrooms and Education | 22 | 264 |
Dec 2022 | 1535/11 | Robots and Cyborgs | 33 | 392 |
Jan 2023 | 1568/7 | Trials and Courtrooms | 28 | 330 |
Feb 2023 | 1596/1 | Doctors, Nurses and Hospitals | 24 | 292 |
Mar 2023 | 1620/5 | Detectives & Murder Mysteries | 34 | 411 |
Apr 2023 | 1654/8 | Birds and Winged Creatures | 35 | 419 |
May 2023 | 1689/7 | Strength in Numbers | ||
Jun 2023 | Horses, Centaurs & Equines | |||
Jul 2023 | Railways |
Tags:
There were the I.W. reprints of Plastic Man from1963-1964 that were illegal!
Next up, for me, Plastic Man. He first appeared in Police Comics #1 (publisher Quality) cover dated August 1941, although he didn't manage a cover appearance until Police Comics #5.
Interesting name, Plastic Man. Plastic doesn't necessarily conjure up images of stretchable limbs, unlike say, Rubberman or Elongated Man. Plastic is generally a fixed shape which doesn't alter unless you apply heat to it.
However, in 1941, plastic was a relatively new product, and people were amazed by the way it could be molded into all kinds of different shapes. I guess Jack Cole wanted to have his new character associated with something new and exciting.
The final appearance of Plastic Man, under the Quality imprint was Police Comics #102 (October 1950). He wouldn't appear again until 1965, this time under the DC umbrella.
Whoops. I took the opportunity to post them back-to-back (as I did with "Marvel Legacy" yesterday) but, as it turns out, Steve W sneaked in ahead of me anyway. If you've got a good one, best not to hold back as competition is going to be lively this month. Incidentally, that 1974 series is Kazar's second, following Astonishing Tales [which ran for 20 issues (Kazar's feature)] and third if you count the earlier reprint series.
In the 50s, DC debuted several series in either The Brave and the Bold or Showcase. to see if they sold, with either one, two three or even six issues. Contrary to this, in the late 60s they debuted several series in a single issue of Showcase often followed the next month with issue #1 of its own title without any sales figures. The first appearance and the first issue are in conflict for this month's theme. I've been going with title instead of appearance.
This is news to me. I didn't realize there were comics with the Dell masthead after Gold Key started.
Dave Palmer said:
I've read that old magazines and newspapers are sold using the cover date instead of the issue number. This is also my experience when visiting antique stores and shows. Comics have been, I think, unique in using the issue number as the reference. This has become a problem since issue numbers are now commonly being reused.
ClarkKent_DC said:
Is the issue number important for any kinds of publications that aren't comics? Other than being a way to distinguish one issue from another?
I mean, I never knew or cared what the issue number is for Time or Sports Illustrated or People, or for mags with short stories like Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine or Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine, or, really, anything but comics.
Richard Willis said:
The first appearance and the first issue are in conflict for this month's theme. I've been going with title instead of appearance.
FWIW, that was my intention when I proposed this theme (although I would say "series" rather than "title"; think "series of sequential numbers" regardless of title change). Any Showcase appearances (for example) would be considered another series. For example, Green Lantern would be...
FIRST:
LAST:
Even though the title changed from Green Lantern to The Green Lantern Corps with issue #201, it's still the same series, but Showcase #22 is not part of that series. (Showcase #1 & 104 would qualify, however.)
The word plastic has been in English since the 1600s at least, with the same meaning as its sources, Latin plasticus and Greek plastikos, something you can mould or shape, like clay. Cole may have been using the word in that sense, though he lived at a time when plastic products were proliferating, so.....
Steve W said:
Next up, for me, Plastic Man. He first appeared in Police Comics #1 (publisher Quality) cover dated August 1941, although he didn't manage a cover appearance until Police Comics #5.
Interesting name, Plastic Man. Plastic doesn't necessarily conjure up images of stretchable limbs, unlike say, Rubberman or Elongated Man. Plastic is generally a fixed shape which doesn't alter unless you apply heat to it.
However, in 1941, plastic was a relatively new product, and people were amazed by the way it could be molded into all kinds of different shapes. I guess Jack Cole wanted to have his new character associated with something new and exciting.
.
After Dell and Western split, Dell quickly rebuilt a line of comics. Arguably it was a viable publisher well into the 1960s. Some of its tiles included, Kona, Thirteen, Beverly Hillbillies, Ghost Stories, Combat, Alvin, Bewitched, Ben Casey, Dr. Kildare, and the superhero versions of Frankenstein, Dracula, and Wolfman (retitled Werewolf).
The chart is from Mike's Amazing World.
Richard Willis said:
This is news to me. I didn't realize there were comics with the Dell masthead after Gold Key started.
Dave Palmer said: