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OtherEric

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Everything posted by OtherEric

  1. The GCD credits the cover to Sheldon Mayer, which I can see. Although it looks like they credit all the DC Mutt & Jeff covers to him, which I am far more skeptical of.
  2. Oh, and I agree with @grendelbo mostly, 6.0 as is but a C&P would help.
  3. The Shadow book was copyright 1931, since that was the copyright on the original story. It was actually published later, ISFDB says 1933.
  4. It sounds like you do, but since I promised an image when I got home, here's a digest by a paperback anyway:
  5. That’s why I love this forum. Most of us never make it past the Frazetta art to go “there’s a synopsis?”
  6. Digest generally refers to trim size in this context. So the Dell 10c books are a rare example of saddle stitched paperbacks rather than digests. Otherwise, most saddle stitched books are digest size but not all (or even most) digests are saddle stitched. I’ll try to get a picture to compare sizes when I get home if nobody beats me to it.
  7. And if my calculations are correct, no less than 75 of those pages contain posts related to the distribution of US published comics in the UK, at least tangentially.
  8. Funny Stuff #5 is almost entirely by Sheldon Mayer: While I have a few others, most of my DC Funny Animal books have Sheldon Mayer stories... I think his stuff was hilarious. (As if my Avatar wasn't a giveaway on that...)
  9. Several of Cain's books appeared in Avon's Murder Mystery Monthly series, which is something of an overlap between pulp digests and paperbacks. The MMM edition of "Double Indemnity" was the first standalone complete edition of the story, it has previously been reprinted in an omnibus with two other stories by Cain.
  10. No, I won't, because I've never actually heard that. However, your comment caused a file mismatch as I pulled this up as the closest match I could find in my brain:
  11. Skippy, not Snippy. And how the heck do I, a Yank, who has never seen the show, and wasn't even alive when it originally aired, know that off the top of my head?
  12. I hadn't, but it's been a minute since I ran into a listing I wanted to save... For me, it's mostly Peter Wheat related books I can't afford, and they don't turn up very often. My only workaround is to suggest "print screen" to get a screenshot can be your friend. Opening the image in a new tab can help. Yay for higher resolution monitors these days, so you can actually get something semi-useful like that, and my apologies if I'm just telling you tricks you already know.
  13. Today's book. This one is a reprint, but it's the only reprint within the Ace D-series I'm aware of where they changed the cover art. I'm assuming its somehow connected to the fact that this is Ace D-339, and Ace D-340 (Solar Lottery), another reprint, has the other half of the D-103 double the image was taken from. I've got a copy of the D-340 on the way as well, so I'll post that when it shows up. I'm including the original cover of the book and the original use of the cover art for comparison:
  14. I had a friend who had over a century of National Geographics complete, I want to say back to 1909 with no gaps, and quite a few earlier issues. They've become slightly harder to find the past decade or so, I think. From roughly 1950-2000, people believed that any house built in the US would collapse if there weren't a minimum of 10 years of National Geographic back issues in the basement, but they apparently finally figured out how to get around that problem.
  15. Saturday Evening Post with the first publication of Heinlein’s “The Green Hills of Earth”. This one is important at the first time a SF writer from the pulps sold a SF story to the slicks.
  16. My only issue of Collier's. First publication of "There Will Come Soft Rains", my favourite Ray Bradbury story.
  17. Fair enough, although I think Gibson was much better at mixing things up on the Shadow than Dent on Doc Savage or many of the other hero pulp writers
  18. 85 in 12 years is nothing compared to Walter Gibson. 20 Shadow novels a year for a decade
  19. Lovecraft wasn't the ghost writer on that story, only on "Imprisoned with the Pharaohs". But I can't remember who was the ghost on that one off the top of my head.
  20. Creepy #42 thoughts: Cover: Trying to think how to describe my reaction... It looks like it should look better than it actually does? All the elements are there, but they're fighting each other and the net reaction is somewhat muted. Loathsome Lore: A pretty solid piece, with nice art by Kelly. Captain Kidd is a good source for a lore page, the reality and the stories have become so jumbled, even during his lifetime and shortly after, that "lore" is about as good a word for it as you can get. Letters: The letter from Frank Miller (assuming it is THE Frank Miller) is definitely noteworthy. But, having noted it, there's really nothing else to say there. The Quaking Horror: Auraleon is a MAJOR Warren creator, searching his name in the index comes back with over 100 matches... some of which are reprints or comments, but still, a ton of stories by him, and he'll be here all the way to the last issues of Creepy and Vampirella. The story is pretty good, with Fox going all-out Lovecraft and Auraleon providing nicely bizarre imagery to go with it. A Change of Identity: Glut knows he's doing a six-page story and keeps the amount of story well calibrated to the room available, but it does mean it's a rather slight story. Then Cockrum's art is a bit too clean, for lack of a better word, than is really needed... but, well, that's Cockrum's style and always was. All of which makes this story a bit of a reversal of a more common result... I like the story more than I think the actual quality warrants, because I love Cockrum's art so much in general. The Amazing Money-Making Wallet: Joe Staton only does two stories for Warren, but has over 3000 credits at the GCD. I'm not even sure where to begin trying to summarize his career, so let's go with co-creator (with Nick Cuti) of E-Man and co-creator of the Huntress for DC. The story is fairly amusing, although similar to Cockrum I think his work is a bit too clean to fit the story perfectly. Spacial Delivery: An amusing story with Todd providing his unusual but effective artwork. A nice humor-horror balance. A Chronicle: GCD says Jorge B. Galvez is a pseudonym for Jorge Badia Romero, I'm not familiar with their work under either name, but they do a handful of stories for Warren. He illustrates a very odd but extrmely effective little story by Steve Skeates. Escape from Nowhere World: We didn't really need a follow-up to "On the Wings of a Bird", honestly. But they could have done worse than this, with a solid ending and some of the best and most enjoyable art I've seen from Grandenetti yet. Ice Wolf: Gary Kaufman's last story, and probably his best work yet. But I'm not a fan of the cannibalism theme, so while I can recognize the craft here I can't say I like it at all. This was really a pretty good issue; overall, even if I did wind up damning lots of it with faint praise.
  21. What I have is the 2nd print, actually. Would like to get a 1st, I think it looks better.
  22. It's on the "keep an eye out for this" list, to be sure.