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OtherEric

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Everything posted by OtherEric

  1. I don't think any of the LTMM books are genuinely rare; but if you're looking for the early issues in grade watch out. 4, 14, 18, and 21 all have minor variants. Possibly others as well, but if so I haven't seen them. 9 is an odd one, with the painted cover- and the only cover without Bugs anywhere on it. 22 is close but has a Bugs cameo on the side. If you're looking for spin-off books, that FC 402 I posted is insanely hard to track down in any grade.
  2. In today, using the photo from the listing as my scanner finally died and I still haven't replaced it. Not a great copy, either; but a slight step up from my Sniffles-chewed copy that I've shown many times before.
  3. DC comic with a Frazetta story to DC comic with a Frazetta story
  4. Nope, near Seattle. The store has awesome dollar boxes on occasion, though... I guess they figure if they're selling a comic for 3 Million, their standards for what isn't worth bothering with are different than normal stores.
  5. I wonder if I got your copy; I got a SA X-Men 24 from that store a few months ago as well. Two books doesn't prove anything, but it's at least a slightly odd 1-2 combo...
  6. Trying to select the best of my pick-ups for the year. As is the case the last few years, I've been leaning into the Pulps quite a bit. They're just so much more affordable than comics right now it's hard to resist, although it seems like more and more people are figuring out what a deal they are and the competition is picking up for them. Mystery in Space #1 is a book I was crazy happy to get. The Frazetta story is amazing, and like all the DC Frazetta stories, they've never looked better than their original printings. (As far as I know, that's in part because almost all the reprintings had to go back to the printed books to source the material.) The Mad #24 is the first Magazine issue; an extremely historically important and very, very funny book. I actually got Mad 24-31 this year; which gives me all the Kurtzman edited material (including some inventory stories) in the Magazine format. Classic stuff that hasn't had multiple comprehensive reprintings like the comic book issues (although large chunks have been reprinted.) September 1927 Amazing Stories, with first publication of Lovecraft's The Colour Out of Space. A classic story, and it's almost a half decade older than my next oldest Lovecraft pulp. Not a grail like the 1st Buck Rogers I got last year, but still one of the three bedsheet Amazings I really wanted and I'm delighted to have all three now. (3rd was the other Buck Rogers issue.) Add in a Tales of Suspense #52 for the silver age side, and illustrations by Adam Hughes, Todd Nauck, and Ty Templeton for my Legion sketchbook, and this has been a great year for my collecting interests. No absolute grail pickups, but an unusually high number of high profile items that fall just short of grail level.
  7. Look at some of the books here: https://digitalcomicmuseum.com/ It's only Public Domain material, so no DC, Marvel, or EC books. But it will let you get a good look at a LOT of material before you dive in deeper.
  8. Marvel Science Stories to Marvel Stories. (Same series, just renamed)
  9. The "Doc Savage Science Detective" covers near the end of the run are all pretty oddball.
  10. Here’s an oddity I’ve had for a long time, never sure what to do with it. Only a double cover, but the outside is newsstand and the inside is direct:
  11. I have no idea. While I suspect I own several more, the only Mark Jeweler issue I know I have for sure is Logan's Run #6, and I only know that because I ran across the issue in storage a few weeks ago. BUT, if somebody had the 75c version, it would give us some info, one way or another. I'm also curious if the 75c MJ version exists at all; I'm not clear on how completely documented every possible issue having the variant is.
  12. Two books in this week. I already have the Nov-Dec 47 issue, but the price was too good to miss. I know someone who will appreciate it as a Christmas gift.
  13. A quick oddball question: Does anybody have this issue with a 75c price and the insert? That would seem to be the obvious question to ask at this point.
  14. Do you know what books there are that don't actually have the logo, but would be AA books from the era? Obviously the Big All-American Comic Book, but I wonder if any of the Picture Stories from the Bible collections actually came out in the relative time frame, as well. Mind you, I fully respect using the lack of the actual logo to not include the Big AA book as part of the run; it's not what I would call an easy book to get. (I've actually got 3 tearsheets from the book so I've got the Scribbly story; otherwise the reprint will have to do for me for that one.)
  15. I need to track down this one for myself. All Sheldon Mayer issue. More generally, what an awesome idea for a collection!
  16. Now I'm tempted to dig out my Animal Comics #22 and re-read it myself.
  17. I enjoy a lot of them, but I read them at an age when I wasn't necessarily great at figuring out how good the actually were. I can say that what I enjoyed most as a kid was what I later figured out was the run mostly written by Archie Goodwin, roughly 11-50; or drawn by Walter Simonson, roughly 49-66. (There were a fair number of fill-ins.) But as much as nostalgia make me love the series I have to admit it was hit and miss at best, without a terribly huge hit rate. I have to believe there were at least a few gems in there, however.
  18. A great book; but Gil Kane and Archie Goodwin almost always are.