• 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.

Readcomix

Member
  • Posts

    23,362
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by Readcomix

  1. That's a monkey. I haven't read this issue yet (been crazy busy) but I have felt for a long time it's a greatly underrated cover among WWII covers.
  2. Joe is one of the nicest human beings ever, period. I haven't seen him in a while, which is my fault for being a busy sandwich generation person, but I give him a quick call now and again. I interviewed him a couple times more years ago than I care to remember (as a newspaper reporter -- my first career, and for CBM) and he has treated me as a friend ever since. He was really appreciative of the career retrospective (thanks Pat Calhoun!) One place you can usually catch Joe is the Albany, NY Comic Con. He lives barely an hour south of Albany, so it's his home team show. A couple fun facts: he illustrated Dell's Life of the Beatles one-shot, and it is the work he is most proud of. (If any of you Overstreet advisers can get that in there, it's his fond wish). He is a huge Bing Crosby fan and hosted for years a weekly Bing show on local radio. For all his exceptional teamwork with Jack Kirby, they only met in person three times! Joe told me the only thing he ever fixed in Kirby's work was ears. He said ears were the one thing Kirby could not draw. When we did the CBM retrospective, in the late 90's, Stan Lee was in California, beginning Marvel's first movie negotiation efforts. (Remember when Marvel movies were rumors of possibility for the longest time?) Given Lee's focus on the project, I recall everyone doubting that I would ever get him on the phone, including his receptionist in California when she answered the phone. I asked her nicely to let him know that it would be for a career retrospective on Joe Sinnott, and she came back on sounding shocked that he agreed. I thanked Stan profusely when we got on the phone, and he cheerily said that when he heard it was for Joe, there was no way he would be kept from making time for it. Joe was just too important to him and to Marvel.
  3. Early 50's DC...all Alex Toth...mostly Dell published her, but DC had her for a while.
  4. Freebie added! What better freebie for a mostly Barry Windsor-Smith lot than a Freebooters freebie? Freebooters/Young Gods/Paradoxman preview pictured below is now added as a freebie when you buy this lot. PM's encouraged
  5. Freebie added! Buy this thread and receive Superman Speeding Bullets graphic novel pictured, not the most common one out there. PM's encouraged!
  6. Holy ! Rodents are consistent! I've got a Wonder Woman 5 chewed the same way, albeit with a bit more of the spine margin eaten. Never thought I'd see it twice. Your book looks awesome; GLWTS!
  7. Jack the giant killer to David the Goliath killer
  8. Rules - First ; no listy types, returns ok if notified in 3 days, back in same condition on your dime unless I missed something; lot is offered U.S. Only price Was $125 shipped via USPS Priority. -- NOW $75 Payment is money order or check. One lot only, 18 issues of Conan the Barbarian, featuring a good chunk of the Barry Windsor-Smith run: #'s 4,5,6,7,8,9,10,13,14,15,16,17,20,21,23,24,37,100. Most everything in this lot ranges from 4.0-5.0 with the following exceptions: 7 is coverless; 8 has a detached cover, 23 has small piece missing from the lower right front cover (see pics), 37 is a 6.0 (would call it 7.5 if not for the nick above the lower staple; see pic) and 100 is NM. Pics are representative but just ask for specific pics if you want. That's 15 BWS issues including the first Red Sonja and first full Red Sonja appearances, first Elric, the Neal Adams issue (37), the death of Belit (100); 18 total books. The lot is $125 NOW $75 shipped, U.S., only, in a USPS Priority medium flat rate box.
  9. Buy this thread! Take everything left (U.S. Only) for $125 shipped, in a USPS Priority medium flat rate box. See pix throughout, second post for recap (7 bagged Superman 75, out of print Avengers/JLA tpb, various #1's, some Akira, some What If? Etc) If it's not sold, it goes in the box to you!
  10. You may wanna check out the "I wanna get married" thread....its Tinder for comic book parts guys.
  11. Not in the best shape, but I picked it up recently.
  12. Rescuing a sidekick from the Nazis in issue 7 to rescuing a sidekick from the Japanese in Issue 7
  13. Maybe PM Zzutak; he does. He helped me out with the pin-up centerfold from Capt Marvel 13, so often missing.
  14. See below, looks like you two could help each other out re: Batman 3. Also, I have a good Chunk of Superman 14 interior if that would help you out. Posted April 8 · Report post · Anyone have a centerfold to a batman 3 or a incomplete copy that has the centerfold. Plmk i have tons of parts or cash. Thanks James G .
  15. I will never forget the impact his work had on me as a child. Much as I loved horror films, his was the first that truly scared me. I read about it in glorious B&W in Famous Monsters long before I ever saw it, and those photos haunted me. Then, one Friday night, (I think I was maybe 11, tops) it was on at 11:30 and I snuck it quietly on the tv in my room. At that level, it was a frightening horror film for me. Years later, it delivered me the same societal message that's at the core of Walking Dead, a couple decades earlier, I guess. Kirkland has fleshed out the theme, but Romero nailed the heart of it off the bat. Thank you, and RIP.