History of Comics
History of Comics
History of Comics
HISTORY OF
COMIC BOOKS
A BRIEF HISTORY OF COMIC BOOKS
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(Please note: In this article, all dates given for various Ages are approximate. With the
exception of the beginning of the Golden Age and the beginning of the Silver Age, little
consensus exists on starting/ending dates. In fact, if you really want to start an argument
between comic book geeks, just ask any two of them when the Silver Age ends and the
Bronze Age begins. Just make sure that youre standing well back and wearing protective
clothing when you do, though)
But for all intents and purposes, the comic book industry
really started with the publication of ACTION COMICS #1
in June 1938. This landmark issue, the first comic to pres-
ent all-new material, saw the first appearance of The Man of
Steel, Superman. The product of two teenage boys from Cleveland, Ohio, Jerry Siegel
and Joe Shuster, Superman was an overnight sensation and forever transformed the
fledgling comic book industry. It is the publication of ACTION #1 that marks the
beginning of the Golden Age of comics.
And then the war ended, and the heroes who had kept the world safe for democracy
found themselves without worthy enemies to fight. Truly, after triumphing over
Hitler and his Axis hordes, using those same superpowers to catch bank robbers was
sort of like using a tank to swat a fly. The heroes limped on, doing the best they could,
until about 1949, but their days were clearly numbered.
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Another trend in popular culture in the late 40s and early 50s was the horror
film, which, in turn, gave birth to the science fiction movie. Horror films had lain
dormant since the start of World War II. Who cares about vampires and werewolves
when theres a real monster to fight in Germany? Avon Publications tried to enter
the horror comics niche in 1946, but EERIE, their sole oering, lasted only one
issue. But by 1949, the war was over, and monsters were making a comeback in both
films and comics. 1951 gave us The Thing. It Came From Outer Space, War
Of The Worlds, Robot Monster and Invaders From Mars terrified us in 1953,
Godzilla first stomped Tokyo in 1954, and Cold War paranoia reached its height in
1956 with Invasion Of The Body Snatchers.
And science-fiction wasnt neglected, either. There were books like WEIRD
SCIENCE, WEIRD FANTASY, and INCREDIBLE SCIENCE FICTION.
Rockets, spacemen, and a plethora of weird aliens populated these magazines, with
all the promise of the newly-born Atomic Age.
Today, a crackpot like Wertham would be laughed out of the media, but, much
like the infamous Tail Gunner Joe McCarthy and his Red Scare, people heard
Werthams message and took it to heart. The Supreme Court actually held hearings
on comic books, and, as the publisher of the most flagrantly horrific comics, William
Gaines took the stand. It was not a pretty sight.
In response to this incredible threat, and to avoid any kind of government interfer-
ence, comics publishers banded together and created their own Comics Code, which
specifically banned, for example, the words Horror and Terror from the title
of a comic book. It also banned vampires, werewolves, ghouls, zombies, and other
supernatural creatures from the pages of comics literature.
This seemed to satisfy Wertham and his allies. There are those
who say, however conspiratorially, that the Code was designed
to put EC, the most successful publisher of the day, out of
business. It all but succeeded.
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Hot on the heels of the revitalized Flash came other heroes of the Golden Age,
reinterpreted for a savvier audience. Hawkman, Green Lantern, the Atom all were
reborn. And then, inevitably, subscribing to the theory that if one is good, more
is better, they all met in the pages of THE JUSTICE LEAGUE OF AMERICA,
the greatest gathering of heroes the world had ever known.
Across town, Martin Goodman, publisher of the struggling Atlas/Marvel line of
comics, wasnt slow to pick up on this new trend. Atlas had been plugging along since
the establishment of the Comics Code, turning out lightweight monster yarns about
such Code-approved creatures as Tim-Boo-Bah, Fin Fang Foom, Grootah, Googam,
and Metallo. Tight scripts by Stan Lee, and imaginative artwork by Jack Kirby, Steve
Ditko, Larry Lieber, and others, made these books fun and exciting to read, but they
certainly werent setting the world on fire.
And then Martin Goodman made a momentous decision: since National had a
successful superhero team book, Marvel needed one also. Stan Lee was tasked with
creating it.
But this wasnt just any super-group. The FF was a family. They fought amongst each
other, they had no secret identities, they had money and dating problems, and, for
the first couple of issues, they had no colorful costumes. Clearly, these were not your
fathers superheroes.
The Fantastic Four were a smash, and it didnt take Stan and crew long to capitalize
on their success. Before long, Marvel introduced such icons as Spider-Man, Thor, the
Hulk, Iron Man, and the X-Men. Comics became hip with the college crowd, and,
by about 1964, comic collecting became an increasingly organized hobby.
The Silver Age was in full swing. Fueled in part by the bur-
geoning Pop Art movement championed by such influential
artists as Andy Warhol and Roy Lichtenstein, both of which
drew inspiration from the four-color page, and stoked by the
growing number of fans on college campuses and in the adult
world, comics were cool. Batmania, a brief but intense
national obsession ignited in 1966 with the premiere of the
Batman TV show starring Adam West and Burt Ward, helped
to kick the Silver Age into high gear, as even the days most
popular and powerful entertainment stars vied for a chance
to cross paths as colorful villains with the Gotham Guardian and his youthful ward.
POW!, ZAP!, and WHAM! were the watchwords of the day, given life in glar-
ing, day-glo colors. Superman starred in his own Broadway musical, and superhero
cartoons rocked the airwaves on Saturday mornings. It was a good time to be a comic
character, as publishers, licensors and merchandisers were finding out.
Its not as easy to precisely define the end of the Silver Age as it is to place the end of
other ages. Dierent people have dierent ideas about when this halcyon time came
to an end. Some say it happened as early as 1970 when Jack Kirby left Marvel to go to
DC and the first OVERSTREET COMIC BOOK PRICE GUIDE was published.
Some say the release of CONAN #1 (October, 1970), and the birth of the sword-
and-sorcery genre in early 1971 is as good an ending date as any other. For many,
however, the Silver Age ended in 1973, when Gwen Stacy, Spider-Mans girlfriend
and long-time love interest, was killed. Really killed. Not a hoax, not a dream, not an
imaginary story. For the first time, death was real in comics. For the first time, no one
was safe. Happily ever after was no longer a guarantee.
It was the end of innocence. It was the end of the Silver Age.
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But just because the Silver Age ended didnt mean that comics
came to a crashing halt. Far from it. The form was alive and
well, and entering a new age with new artists and new ideas.
Relevant comics were big in the Bronze Age, with characters
like Green Lantern and Green Arrow (in stories masterfully
told by Denny ONeill and Neal Adams) confronting such
topical issues as drug abuse, pollution, racism, and poverty.
Stan Lee actually challenged the Comics Code when he wrote
a story spanning AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #96-98 (1971)
that dealt with drug abuse. The Code refused to approve the
book, so Lee ran those three issues without the Code Seal. It had taken 15 years, but
the Comics Code armor was beginning to crack.
Many people see the end of the Bronze Age as some unde-
fined time in the late 1970s. Certainly, the DC Implosion of
1978, when DC Comics ceased publication of roughly a third of their titles, is a plau-
sible end. Also, it would not be remiss to note that 1980, with the election of Ronald
Reagan to the White House, saw a societal shift that was definitely felt in the comics
world. However you look at it, by 1980 the Bronze Age was well and truly over.
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Perhaps one of the most significant events in graphic novel history was the publi-
cation of Art Spiegelmans MAUS: A SURVIVORS TALE in the pages of RAW
MAGAZINE in 1977. Collected into graphic novel form and issued as a trade paper-
back in two parts in 1991, Spiegelman deftly tells the story of his fathers experiences
as a Jew in Poland during the Holocaust. In order to tell the tale eectively, and to
allow himself some distance from the oftimes painful retelling, Spiegelman cast the
Jews as mice and the Nazis as cats.
Spiegelmans treatment was so eective that MAUS won a Pulitzer Prize Special
Award for Letters in 1992, and has been in print in one form or another ever since. It
is a groundbreaking work, and one that should be read by anyone who has even the
slightest interest in events in Europe during the Nazi regime.
It wasnt all that long ago that any adult seen reading a comic book in public
was looked on as stupid and slow. Public ridicule was the price one often paid for
indulging in these four-color fantasies. Now, with film, TV, and the popular media
making comics hip, its cool to be a geek. Comics have finally come into their own,
and those of us that have been around for the ride since we were kids couldnt be
happier.
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Absolutely not.
Although theres no doubt that superheroic fare has driven the industry since 1938,
there have always been other genres that have proved popular at one time or another.
Some, such as Crime, Science-Fiction, and Horror comics, have been mentioned in
other parts of this essay. It should be noted, however, that Romance comics, West-
erns (fueled by the popularity of Cowboy shows on TV, such as The Lone Ranger,
Paladin, Gunsmoke, and all of their Wild West brethren), and Humor comics all
have had their time in the sun. Even great Western literature was given its due in the
pages of the long-running CLASSICS ILLUSTRATED.
Although some critics would claim that all comics are, at best, intended for children,
there are and always have been publishers that focused solely on comics for younger
readers. Several of them have very interesting stories.
Harvey published standard superhero books during the 1940s, including the GREEN
HORNET, which was a success as his first licensing venture. By late in the decade,
however, as noted above, superheroes were on the way out, and Harvey was left look-
ing for the next big thing.
In Harveys case, that next big thing came about as a result of another licensing
venture. In 1945, Paramount/Famous Studios released a short cartoon about a
friendly ghost named Casper. Sensing greater potential in the character than the
silver screen could give him, Paramount licensed the character to St. John Publishing
in 1949. St. John released five issues of Caspers book between 1949 and 1951, then
the rights were given to Harvey in 1952.
Such was the case with MLJ Magazines, a comic publisher known for such titles as
PEP COMICS, which featured The Shield (the first patriotic hero, who predated
Captain America by more than a year), the Comet (who has the dubious distinc-
tion of being the first comic superhero killed in the line of duty), and the Hangman
(the Comets brother). Other titles included TOP-NOTCH COMICS, ZIP COM-
ICS, and BLUE-RIBBON COMICS. It was all pretty standard stu, and MLJ
would have gone quietly into that good night were it not for a small strip that ran in
the pages of PEP COMICS #22, cover dated December 1941. PEP covers typically
featured the Shield doing something heroic: from destroying a tank to ripping guns
o the decks of battleships to hurling villains around like ragdolls, the Shield asked
for no quarter and certainly gave none. He faced the best and the mightiest that the
Enemies of America could throw at him, and he triumphed, issue after issue.
These two brief examples are by no means the only successful kids titles, but they are
the most familiar. Certainly, they prove the dictum that comics truly oer something
for everyone.
WHOS WHO IN COMICS
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Clarence Charles Beck transformed every boys fantasy into four-color reality: he
gave us a magic word that could transform young Billy Batson into the red-and-gold-
clad Captain Marvel. That word? SHAZAM! Beck was born on June 8, 1910, and
joined Fawcett Publications in 1933 as a sta artist. Becks whimsical, cartoony style
was a perfect fit for the new medium of comic books, and in the first issue (which
sports a #2 on the cover due to a pre-publication name-change) of WHIZ COMICS,
Captain Marvel was born. Gifted with the Wisdom of Solomon, the Strength of
Hercules, the Courage of Achilles, the Power of Zeus, the Stamina of Atlas, and
the Speed of Mercury, Captain Marvel was the Worlds Mightiest Mortal. Mighty,
indeed, as its reported that The Big Red Cheese (as the Captain was aectionately
called) sold over 1,000,000 issues per month.
After Fawcett folded its comics line in the early 1950s (due to losing a copyright
infringement suit brought by DC Comics, who claimed Captain Marvel was an imi-
tation of Superman), Beck dabbled periodically in comics, which he saw as having
grown far too realistic and downbeat. He died on November 22, 1989.
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Creator and illustrator of one of the strangest superheroes ever to grace the four-color
page, Plastic Man. Jack Cole was born on December 14, 1918, and got his start in
comics in 1937, working for Harry A Chesler. He went to work for Lev Gleason
in 1939, where he created Daredevil (no relation to the Marvel character of the same
name), and assisted Will Eisner on The Spirit. In 1941, Cole created Plastic Man,
a former crook who gained the ability to stretch his body into any shape imagin-
able. Surreal and bizarre, Coles Plastic Man stories remain a high water mark of the
Golden Age, and his work is increasingly studied by those interested in graphic story-
telling. Beginning in 1954, Cole became the premiere artist for Playboy, and his gag
cartoons graced that magazine for several years until his death by suicide on August
15, 1958. The reasons for his suicide have never been made public.
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Born on December 2, 1924, one of the finest caricature artists of this or any age, Jack
Davis began his career working for Bill Gaines EC Comics titles. Particularly adept
at the goriest and creepiest stories Gaines could produce, Davis also had a comic flair
that was well-displayed in his work for MAD. Currently, Daviss work can be seen in
everything from movie posters to product ads to magazine covers.
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An intensely private man, Steve Ditko rarely gives interviews, and has mostly left his
comics work behind him. An unfortunate state of aairs for the co-creator of one of
the most popular comics characters of the last half of the 20th Century: The Amazing
Spider-Man.
Born on November 2, 1927, Ditko began his comics career in the 1950s, first at
Charlton, then at Atlas/Marvel, where he produced mystery, sci-fi, and horror tales.
In 1962, he and writer Stan Lee created Spider-Man for the final issue of AMAZ-
ING FANTASY (#15), and a legend was born. Spider-Man received his own title
shortly thereafter, and Ditko stayed with the book until issue #38, when he left due
to creative dierences with Lee. During this time, he also co-created Dr. Strange, and
worked on the Hulk, Iron Man, and other Marvel characters.
After leaving Marvel, Ditko returned to Charlton, where he created Captain Atom
and revamped the Blue Beetle, then went to DC to bring to life such obeat heroes
as The Hawk and The Dove and the Creeper. In later years, Ditko would briefly
return to Marvel before abandoning company-owned comics all together in favor of
his own creations.
Steve Ditko is, reportedly, a staunch adherent to Ayn Rands philosophy of Objectiv-
ism, which states, in Rands own words, My philosophy, in essence, is the concept
of man as a heroic being, with his own happiness as the moral purpose of his life,
with productive achievement as his noblest activity, and reason as his only absolute.
(excerpt from Atlas Shrugged, 1957)
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One of the most innovative and influential creators the medium has ever known,
Eisners career spanned the history of comics. Born on March 6, 1917 in Brooklyn,
NY, Eisner sold his first cartoons at the age of 19 to WOW!, WHAT A MAGAZINE,
published by Jerry Iger. The magazine lasted only a short time, but it led to a fortu-
itous collaboration between Eisner and Iger, who formed their own comics company.
In 1939, Eisner dissolved his partnership with Iger and created his most famous and
lasting character, The Spirit, who appeared in newspapers nationwide until 1952
(during Eisners stint in the service during World War II, The Spirit was ghosted by
Eisners assistants on the strip, including Jules Feier, Lou Fine, and Jack Cole).
Throughout the 1960s, Eisner turned his talents to advertising and marketing, but
in 1970, he returned to comics, creating what would come to be called the graphic
novel. A CONTRACT WITH GOD, AND OTHER TENEMENT STORIES
told tales based on Eisners childhood in Brooklyn, and revolutionized the industry.
This pioneering publication would set the stage for a graphic revolution, the eects of
which are still being felt today. A true giant in a field full of giants, Eisner continued
writing and drawing almost until the day he died, on January 3, 2005.
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Bill Everetts fame rests squarely on the shoulders of one character: Prince Namor,
the Sub-Mariner. Originally created for a comic book called MOTION PICTURE
FUNNIES WEEKLY in the late 1930s (the intent was to hand the book out to kids
for free at movie theaters to kids as a promotional item), it was never distributed, and
the Sub-Mariner story was repackaged for the first issue of Martin Goodmans flag-
ship comics title, MARVEL COMICS. Perfectly paired with Carl Burgoss Human
Torch, who premiered in the same issue, Namor became one of the leading characters
of the Golden Age. After a brief revival in the 1950s, the Sub-Mariner entered the Sil-
ver Age in the pages of FANTASTIC FOUR #4, to become a key component of the
Marvel Age of Comics. In fact, in 1972, with the fiftieth issue of SUB-MARINER,
Everett would return to draw the adventures of the character he created more than
three decades earlier. After suering a series of heart attacks, Everett passed away on
February 27, 1973.
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A master draughtsman and illustrator, Fine, born in 1914, is known for his fine
line technique of illustration, particularly noticeable on his classic covers for Fox
and Quality comics. His best-known work is found on The Flame, published in
WONDERWORLD COMICS and The Black Condor, who appeared in CRACK
COMICS. Fine passed away on July 24, 1971.
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Son of M.C. Gaines (credited as the father of the modern comic book), Bill, born
on March 1, 1922, was the driving force and head writer behind the infamous EC
Comics of the 1950s. After the Senate Hearings on Comic Books and Juvenile
Delinquency and the institution of the Comics Code Authority all but shut ECs
doors, Bill focused on his comic magazine, MAD, which became one of the most
popular comics ever published. He passed away on June 3, 1992, but MAD,
fortunately, lives on.
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Ghastly Graham Ingels, born on June 7, 1915, certainly put the grue in
gruesome. With an artistic style that made his panels almost look as if they were cut
from blocks of wood, Ingels is rightly hailed as one of the kings of the horror comics
genre. His work for EC Comics stands as some of the best put out by that legendary
publisher. After EC folded their comics line, Ingels left the field to become part of
the faculty at the Famous Artists correspondence school. He refused to acknowledge
his prior career until shortly before his death on April 4, 1991.
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Bob Kane will always be remembered as the main creator of The Batman in 1939
(writer Bill Finger is now credited as co-creator), inspired, at least in part, by his love
for the Douglas Fairbanks film The Mark of Zorro, and Mary Roberts Rineharts
The Bat. Born on October 24, 1915, Kane learned quickly from the mistakes Siegel
and Shuster had made in selling Superman outright to National, and signed a lucra-
tive contract in which, in exchange for outright ownership, Kane was guaranteed
credit on each strip, whether or not he was actually involved, and a handsome salary,
in addition to other benefits. Kanes actual day-to-day involvement with Batman
pretty much ended in the 1940s, as he handed over more and more responsibility to
ghosts within his studio, while he more and more enjoyed the life of a minor celeb-
rity, especially during the Batmania days of the mid-1960s and the popular revival
that accompanied the Tim Burton-helmed film, Batman, which starred Michael
Keaton. He died on November 3, 1998.
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Born Jacob Kurtzberg on August 28, 1918, Jack Kirby was the undisputed King
of comics. An innovative and influential artist beginning in the Golden Age, Kirby
worked for virtually every publishing house in town, from Timely to DC to Har-
vey, before forming his own studio in the late 1940s with frequent collaborator Joe
Simon. During this time, the pair invented and inaugurated the genre of romance
comics, beginning with YOUNG ROMANCE COMICS #1 in 1947. Co-Creator of
Captain America, the Fantastic Four, the Hulk, Iron Man, Thor, Mister Miracle, and
more long-lasting characters than you can shake a stick at, his career can hardly be
encapsulated in such a small space. He brought an operatic, nearly Wagnerian sense
of drama to his comics, with bigger-than-life characters that practically leapt o the
page in all their cosmic glory. No doubt, Star Wars owes more than a small debt
of gratitude to the work of The King. Just remember: when you think of comics,
youre probably thinking of Jack Kirby, who passed away on February 6, 1994.
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Born Stanley Martin Lieber on December 28, 1922, he began his career at Timely in
the early 1940s (his earliest published credit is on a text piece in CAPTAIN AMER-
ICA COMICS #3 [1941]) as an assistant to Joe Simon and Jack Kirby. He later
became the editor and head writer of Marvel Comics, where he co-created Spider-
Man, the Fantastic Four, the Hulk, Iron Man, the X-Men, Daredevil, and countless
other characters. In the 1970s, Stan moved to California to head Marvels burgeoning
media eorts. He is currently the head of POW! Entertainment, and is still creating
characters and content for a variety of media. He has had cameo roles in such films
as The X-Men, The Fantastic Four, and Spider-Man.
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Born on May 9, 1893, psychologist and feminist William Moulton Marston was a
man ahead of his time. He is credited as one of the early inventors of the lie detec-
tor (specifically, he is credited as the creator of a device to measure changes in systolic
blood pressure to detect deception. This device became one of the components of the
modern polygraph machine), he was a noted psychologist whose book, The Emo-
tions of Normal People, became an instant classic in the field of passive/aggressive
emotional studies upon its publication in 1928. He also believed very strongly in the
great educational potential of comic books.
His stand on comics came to the attention of Max Gaines, who hired Marston as
an educational consultant for his line of comic books, Detective Comics. Marston
quickly noted the fact that all of the current heroes were male, and decided to create
a super-female character, based on his wife, Elizabeth, and his former student, Olive
Byrne (with whom he and Elizabeth then lived in a polyamorous relationship, and
upon whose appearance Moultons new character would be based). Using the pen
name Charles Moulton, and assisted by illustrator H.G. Peters, Marston soon gave
birth to Suprema.
Marston passed away from cancer on May 2, 1947, but Elizabeth and Olive continued
to live together until Olives death in the late 1980s. Elizabeth died at age 100 in
1993.
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The creators of Superman, arguably the single most influential comics character ever
set on paper, Siegel was born on October 17, 1914 and Shuster on July 10, 1914.
They sold all the rights to their super-character in 1938 to National for the sum of
$120, and were thereafter paid only page rates for their work on Superman. Their
battle for recognition and compensation during the 1970s stands as a landmark in
the field of creators rights. Joe Shuster died on July 30, 1992; Jerry Siegel passed away
on January 28, 1996.
THE 10 MOST VALUABLE GOLDEN AGE COMICS*
All original newsstand prices: 10
Action #1 (1938)
The origin and first appearance of Superman. 2006 NM- price: $550,000
Detective #27 (1939)
The first appearance of The Batman. 2006 NM- price: $450,000
Marvel Comics #1 (1939)
The origins and first appearances of The Human Torch and
Prince Namor, the Sub-Mariner. 2006 NM- price: $400,000
Superman #1 (1939)
First Superman in his own comic. 2006 NM- price: $335,000
All-America #16 (1940)
Origin and first appearance of The Green Lantern. 2006 NM- price: $200,000
Batman #1 (1940)
First Batman in his own comic. First appearances of The Joker and Cat-Woman.
2006 NM- price: $150,000
Captain America Comics #1 (1941)
Origin and first appearance of Captain America and Bucky.
2006 NM- price: $150,000
Flash Comics #1 (1940)
Origin and first appearances of the Golden Age Flash (Jay Garrick),
Golden Age Hawkman (Carter Hall), and Johnny Thunder.
2006 NM- price: $120,000
More Fun Comics #52 (1940)
Origin (Part One) and first appearance of The Spectre. 2006 NM- price: $97,000
Whiz Comics #2 (#1) (1940)
Origin and first appearance of Captain Marvel. 2006 NM- price: $90,000
THE 10 MOST VALUABLE SILVER AGE COMICS*
Original Newstand Prices: 10 - 12
*All values based on The Ocial Overstreet Comic Book Price Guide, 36th Edition
RESOURCE LIST
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