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Posts posted by Surfing Alien
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On 3/7/2018 at 10:31 PM, OtherEric said:
February 1940 sees Heinlein getting his first cover and first serial. "If This Goes On..." is one of the few stories where Heinlein made such extensive revisions that they're obvious even if you're not comparing the stories side by side. I don't know if this original version has ever been reprinted.
Other writers of note in the issue include L. Ron Hubbard, who is not a favorite of mine but does drive up the price of books he has stories in; and Leigh Brackett, who I enjoy immensely but only rarely shows up in Astounding.
Thanks for posting these! Such a great set. Aside from the Heinlein aswesomeness, this cover has everything you need to be "Golden Age" ... giant, amorphous spaceships, tank treads, broken battlements and gas mask wearing Humanoids running across the battlefield...
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Pennies for Gold.... I missed this when it just happened or it'd be mine... Never see this so nice. When the Top of the Hobby is a hunnerd or two....
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6 hours ago, mrwoogieman said:
Does that qualify as a "headlight" cover?
Maybe a "Flashlight" cover?
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I think this is one of the best John Dickson Carr/Carter Dickson covers in Pocket Books.
Pocket got a little more experimental and daring starting in the very late 1940's
This is 1949 by Louis Glanzman, who did some cool comic book work (along with his brother, Sam Glanzman) but this is just a really nice composition and detail execution
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3 hours ago, PopKulture said:
Oooo. An early Popular I've never seen in person. And that looks a little like the Shadow back there!
That "really" looks like The Shadow back there...
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- vaillant, october and Pat Calhoun
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- frozentundraguy and vaillant
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On 1/21/2018 at 7:54 AM, otherworldsj331 said:
Not a Action 1, but in 1969 I asked my dad to buy me a Superman 1 at My Friends Book store on Flatbush Ave in Brooklyn. Paul Levitz later worked there as well as Roger Stern. They were known for their considerable comic inventory probably more then their books. They said they could get a Superman 1 for $100. My dad said no way would he pay $100 for a "used comic". The grade was never even discussed. So instead he got me a Act 37 and Batman 14, for $20 each. Both around vg+/fine.
I recall seeing an Action 1 for sale at the 1971 NYC July 4th convention. I was only 12 at the time, so no way I could afford the $200 ask price. I do not remember the dealer or condition.
Much later, around 1982 I was at a book store on 86th street on Brooklyn NY. The owner was known to deal in comics. Fischler often went there; I did not go there so much. Anyway, I was offered a Act 1 for $1800 at the time. I think it was around fine. I just did not have the money for it.
Wow... My Friends Bookstore... it was an incredible place for kids in Flatbush back then. Always hated that they price marked all the comics they had in the bins in the corner where the CCA stamp was. You could always tell a book that came from there by the magic maker price in the corner. I have a friend who still has his whole childhood collection including hundreds of those books. For years they had a copy of All Star #36 with the Superman Batman cover on top in the glass case up front where they kept the good stuff. I assembled a collection of Spider-Man back to #2 and FF back to #3 from that case. They're long gone but I still remember what they looked like.
The bookstore on 86th Street was a similar type place. I think it was near 20th or 21st Avenue. It was still there into the 90's and they had a significant back stock of the Marvel Key Golden Record Reprints for $15-$25 each depending on how the owner felt that day. They must have been from a warehouse as they had dozens of them. I bought several of each back then, including some NM ones, and used them for trade bait. They also still had random hoards of 60's Marvels - I remember a short box of Marvel Superheroes #12 & Ghost Rider (1967) #1's that I picked some out of. I still have one of the Ghost Rider #1's.
At the Seuling shows in the mid 70's , we considered it a "good show" if you saw Action 1 and/or Detective 27 there, which was quite often. They were in the several hundreds of dollars and up range at the time. One time a guy was showing a dealer a stack of books, each separated by a piece of cardboard. He started flipping the cardboards over one at a time and we were amazed to see 2 copies of Detective 27 in a row. I'd love to know where they are now.
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Comics, Pulps, and Paperbacks: Why such a discrepancy in values?
in Pulp Magazines
Posted
Cool stuff - Man I wish there was a paperback show on the east coast... just to geek out and come home with a bunch of great covers for the cost of one decent comic book...