• When you click on links to various merchants on this site and make a purchase, this can result in this site earning a commission. Affiliate programs and affiliations include, but are not limited to, the eBay Partner Network.

OtherEric

Member
  • Posts

    8,647
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by OtherEric

  1. And, for variety, a couple SF books with Cordwainer Smith stories- including his first one: And, slightly later date than I would normally post here, but it's an amazing cover even by Finlay standards:
  2. My first- and probably close to last- western pulps. Grabbed these because they each have a story by John D. MacDonald, 2 of the only 3 westerns he did: I find the 15c price on Dime Western hilarious. That's the problem when you outlast your projected end date, I guess. (See also: 2000 AD)
  3. I don't know if I've ever posted in here before, I don't have many Fox books. But I just got one today, so might as well share it: Not a Fox book, you say? But it is, as the first page shows: The interesting thing is what the interior ISN'T... which is Dorothy Lamour 2 or 3, or even Jungle Lil 1. It's clearly an issue of the Fox series, but it wasn't actually ever published by Fox. Nobody's quite sure if all copies were remaindered without being released, or if whoever had the Red Circle covers got plates to an issue somehow.
  4. Very, very happy to finally get this one. This is one of the issues with a Scribbly story by Mayer; and unlike the 32, 33, and 39, this one just never seems to show up. I suspect the only reason I actually won this one is the seller listed it as brittle pages- looking at the photos, I was pretty sure they didn't know what they were talking about and I was right. They're slightly tanned but extremely supple. Now I just need 3 actual issues of Scribbly for the whole late 40's-early 50's run; this was the last of the 5 books with backup stories I needed.
  5. Sadly, I've only got one Baker Romance book. On the plus side, it's all Baker:
  6. I miss O'Leary's horribly, one of the two best comic shops I've ever been to. Got my first true GA book there (Fawcett's Funny Animals #10), one of the only issues of All-Star I've ever had (All-Star #20, sadly sold on now), my first precode Super-Hero books (a handful of beat up Marvel Family books), my first issue of Scribbly (#9, $9); the first Platinum age book I've ever had (The Funnies #13). And that's just the Precode stuff that comes quickly to mind... First pre-Adv 300 Legion appearance I ever got (Action #287). First Steranko art I ever saw (X-Men #50). First Neal Adams art I ever saw (GL/ GA #87). Got my GL/ GA #76 there, as well. I want to say I paid $14 for it at the time, the most expensive book I had ever bought up until then. One year for my birthday, my parents got me the GL/GA #85 they had in the case up front; signed by Neal Adams and Gil Kane both. (I got Denny O'Neil to add his signature to it a couple years ago, finally.) Pogo Books. Sugar & Spike. Bantam Doc Savages. Dell Looney Tunes. An issue of Goofy Comics with Frazetta text illos. For Legion fans, That Damned Tabloid. Half a dozen Harlan Ellison 1st editions as a lot for 75c each, as I recall. Always something good there, even when my budget was next to nil. It was only a couple miles from my high school, so sometimes I went without lunch and went there instead. I miss O'Leary's horribly. And I'm far, far from the only person in the area who does.
  7. And, just some low grade copies, but always nice to have. Up to 20 Planet Stories now... I think I've passed the point of no return on the title. Should be some interesting reading in that one. B. Curtis is Maggie Thompson's mother; and it also has an early Philip. K. Name-I-can't-use-here story. Brackett is always good, as well. And wrap it up with an issue with Bradbury, Brackett, and PKD. All good stuff, even if the Bradbury story is actually a reprint.
  8. Would love to put together that run, or at least the revival half of it. Great set, Hap!
  9. Clearly, just a reader copy. But for $20, I couldn't resist it at my LCS today.
  10. Those are some beauties, Hap! The late pulp-format issues of both Doc and the Shadow seem to be, if not scarce, at least high demand, the Docs in particular.
  11. Been too quiet in here for a while... So here's a late Doc Savage I just got. It's the last digest issue, with the last 3 issues of the series returning to the pulp format. It's also got John D. MacDonald's last work in the title, with a story that's actually longer than the lead Doc 'novel'. They were also clearly squeezed for space getting ready for the format change- there's only 1 1/2 ad pages in whole issue, and the Doc story doesn't even get an illustration.
  12. For no clear reason that Science Fiction Plus brought to mind another book with a somewhat odd appearance by a creator not often seen in the pulps. This issue features the only story one writer ever did for the pulps. But us comic fans know him better as an artist... I know, given the nature of the pulps, that it wasn't unusual for an artist not to illustrate a story they wrote- Hanes Bok comes to mind as somebody who both wrote and drew, but not necessarily the same story. But wouldn't it have been amazing to see C. C. Beck draw for the pulps?
  13. I've heard it failed pretty badly, despite a few good authors in the mix. The most interesting in that issue is the winner of that month's Short-Short+ story contest. It's Anne McCaffrey's first published story, and one of only two she had published in the 50's.
  14. Gerber has this as a 7, I think it might actually qualify but if it does it's a lot closer to 50 than 20. Still not an easy book to locate:
  15. I can respect that position. Like I said, I don't have any Zorro appearances. I do have an appearance of one of McCulley's other continuing characters... That one showed up in here: Not a very impressive copy, but it was the first hero pulp (and one of the first 3 or so pulps as opposed to digests) I ever got so I'm fond of it anyway.
  16. Like Tarzan or Conan, Zorro didn't have his own series as such; just various appearances. Mind you, I would love to get at least one Tarzan and Conan and Zorro story into my collection. But that's a separate goal from one issue of each of the long-running hero pulp series, as I defined it up there. (Trying not to get too crazy on projects.) What issue was that Zorro page you just posted from?
  17. Oh, I did mention a couple pick-ups, right? Missing the back cover, sadly. But the last issue I needed from the later part of the run, starting from the first Purple Invasion issue. So issues 26-48 complete, and 35 of 48 overall. In addition to one of each major hero title, I want all of one title and Op #5 is the one I'm going for. Still a ways to go, but at least I'm at the point where I know I'll pull it off eventually.
  18. A couple pick-ups today: Been wanting an issue of Phantom Detective for a while, trying to get one example of each of the longer-running hero titles. By longer running, I mean at least 10-15 issues, the ambiguity there being because Green Lama was 14 issues, I believe, and seems to be a pain to find. So if I get one, I'll go with the lower number but until then I'll stick with the higher. I think the titles that count are these: Shadow (325 issues) Doc Savage (181 issues) Phantom Detective (170 issues) The Spider (118 issues, I still need an issue) G-8 and his Battle Aces (110 issues, I still need an issue) The Black Bat (62 issues of Black Book Detective) Operator #5 (48 issues) Secret Agent X (41 issues, I still need an issue) The Whisperer (26 issues, I think. Not positive on the length of the 2nd run) The Avenger (24 issues) Captain Future (20 issues including 3 novel-length stories in Startling) Green Lama (14 issues of Double Detective, I still need an issue) Am I missing any other hero pulps of significant length? I'm not counting Nick Carter as a hero pulp as such, and I'm not talking about characters who had extensive but sporadic pulp appearances like Tarzan and Conan. And I'm not counting appearances in short stories in the pulps after their title died, like the Avenger or Whisperer or the Captain Future shorts as opposed to the novel-length stories.
  19. Wow! Serious gratz on that one, it seems to be the hardest of the four Lovecraft Astoundings to locate. (Goodness knows I've never seen an even remotely affordable copy.)
  20. Apparently the book was based on an earlier series of stories done for the pulps under a pseudonym, but completely redone. I've only got the one:
  21. Might as well throw this one up here for fun: Unlike most BLB's I've seen, this one is also all comics, no text pages.
  22. Looks like it's #27. It does not seem to be a particularly valuable issue, to put it mildly. Certainly I couldn't resist snagging a copy when I saw the cost.
  23. It's great your kid will be growing up with Bugs. He is a great philosopher and role model for young people. Here are a couple early appearances: Bugs Bunny All Pictures Comics - A Tall Comic Book. All B+W comics. Supposedly reprints Bugs first appearance from LT 1. Easy to find cheap, for now! Famous Gang Book of Comics - Not first appearances but pretty tough to find early giveaway with an all star cover Some of those pages are definitely from Looney Tunes #5 and #6: I've scanned as much as I feel like tonight, can pull a comparison page from the #6 tomorrow if anybody wants it.
  24. You've got one too? Well, I've got two, too! So here's my 2nd copy for giggles: And a few more wartime covers for fun: