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yrag9591

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Posts posted by yrag9591

  1. On 5/16/2024 at 1:31 PM, Get Marwood & I said:

    Just saw this on eBike - quite unusual to see UK stamped Romance from this period, let alone double stamped <3

    Capture.PNG.0581bda1f81121a43e33888bdb3925f3.PNG

    I like that title by the way. "It's over"

    "All over!"

    Dramatic.

    I have complete runs of all the 1960s and 1970s DC romance comics. Quite a lot of them have UK stamps, surprisingly. But I still consider them to be ND, and the ones with stamps to be ‘random’. I began collecting them in the UK, only finding an occasional issue, but later I bought many more at US conventions and from US dealers.

  2. On 9/26/2023 at 6:24 PM, OtherEric said:

    The Hot Wheels series is just crazy hard to find and, from what little I've seen, has jaw-droppingly good Toth art.  But I've only got one issue, and it's the one Toth didn't work on.

    In the UK, issues 2 and 4 were very difficult to find. I think they are listed as ND in Alan Austin’s price guide, which was my note. The other issues weren’t so scarce. Issue 1 was the commonest by far.

  3. All-Star Squadron 15 is meant to have a 16-page Masters of the Universe insert. But my copy doesn’t have the insert. I bought my copy of All-Star Squadron 15 new, when it was published. I know for certain that I would not have removed the insert. Also, the staples look tight to me. Can anyone think of any explanation? My other issues of that period (such as DC Comics Presents 26) all have their inserts.

  4. On 7/15/2023 at 7:06 PM, themagicrobot said:

    If you want the satisfaction of owning every single comic produced by a Publisher it helps to choose one that didn't issue all that many books. Hampshire Distributors Ltd only managed two so I am the proud (?) owner of the full run. Kirby put a lot of work into these but we must assume sales were poor. The second issue of Days of the Mob was never issued (or completely drawn) but did appear in book form along with the first issue 10 years ago.

    In the States In the Days of the Mob was released a month before Spirit World. Perhaps Thorpe and Porter belatedly received theirs the other way round as Days of the Mob is stamped at a higher price than Spirit World displays. That magazine cheerfully warned us that the world would end in 1983.

    Inthedaysofthemob.thumb.jpg.9f1bd6db80ead5a4962351f75099f1e9.jpg

     

    spiritworld.thumb.jpg.cfb3644c29439f84614f4510360ca631.jpg  

     

     

    I have always thought of those two as DC publications. Mike’s Amazing Comics thinks so too. 

  5. On 3/29/2023 at 7:09 PM, baggsey said:

    That's an interesting thought, @LowGradeBronze .   Back in 1972, while on holiday in Ventnor, Isle of Wight, I picked up a 1966 Detective comic in crisp, immaculate condition from the spinner rack. It could very well be that the seaside retailers had an alternative source for their summer stock ; I always assumed it was in the back room, wheeled back at the end of the season.

    That didn’t just happen by the seaside though. For example, I found a new-looking copy of Detective 341 in Walthamstow in about 1972/3.