G.A.tor Posted April 29, 2017 Author Share Posted April 29, 2017 13 minutes ago, Cpt Kirk said: I know you said no words, but these demand explanation: 1. Batman 15 -- War cover with Batman and Robin manning a machine gun; awesome story where Catwoman falls in love with Bruce Wayne and Bruce spanks Robin (you owe it to yourself to check out this story, which can be seen in the Batman Archives books); also has another great story where Batman and Robin get to see an alternate future where the Nazis and Japanese win WWII and Batman/Robin get gunned down by the Nazis. 2. Batman 47 -- How could you not keep the first detailed origin story where Batman finds his parents killers?; plus another great Catwoman story called "Fashions in Crime" 3. Superman 20 -- war cover; the first Superman story contains a funny cameo appearance with Bruce Wayne and Grayson, which could be the first story where the three of them actually appeared together in a story; a letter column that talks about the employees of DC who went to serve in WWII; a great war story featuring Hitler 4. Superman 53 -- First detailed origin story showing the death of Superman's parents; great ads giving you the sense of the times; a story featuring "Superhombre" 5. Detective 155 -- Mile High copy with very sharp black cover (one of my favorite covers) with a great Vickie Vale story to boot; plus stories with Roy Raymond and Pow Wow-Smith, Indian Lawman Words and stories are great! just no "lists " without pics! yours is A+ in my mind! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
buttock Posted April 29, 2017 Share Posted April 29, 2017 I thought about this for too long and came up with this list. What I found is that there are "big" cool books that have high dollar value and "little" cool books that have low dollar value, but equally high "want" value. In that scenario, the low dollar stuff tends to win out because it's very unlikely that anyone would be willing to make a cash offer strong enough for me to part with the book. I need to come up with some fancy term for the "dollar-to-coolness ratio". Battle Front 23 -- River City copy. Great example of the era. I struggle with a number of killer Atlas war books, almost all with Heath covers. I settled on this one over a few others (e.g. War 11, 23, Battle Front 15, Men's Advs 20, etc.) due to the fact that I've seen or know of a few really nice copies of the others and I've never seen one to compare with this particular book. None of mine are going anywhere, but if you were ripping them out of my hands I might hold this one the hardest. Bill Battle 3 -- the epitome of anti-communist absurdity. Lurked for this copy for years going back to when Mick showed me a copy back in '96 (oh, my arthritis!) Journey into Unknown Worlds 49 -- Heath, Robots, and alien invasion... what's not to love? United States Marines 8 -- about my favorite 50s Korean war cover. So nonchalantly gruesome. Green Lama 2 -- Certainly one of Raboy's best, if not the best. Incomparable Church copy. gino2paulus2 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
CrocHntr Posted April 29, 2017 Share Posted April 29, 2017 1 hour ago, buttock said: I thought about this for too long and came up with this list. What I found is that there are "big" cool books that have high dollar value and "little" cool books that have low dollar value, but equally high "want" value. In that scenario, the low dollar stuff tends to win out because it's very unlikely that anyone would be willing to make a cash offer strong enough for me to part with the book. I need to come up with some fancy term for the "dollar-to-coolness ratio". Battle Front 23 -- River City copy. Great example of the era. I struggle with a number of killer Atlas war books, almost all with Heath covers. I settled on this one over a few others (e.g. War 11, 23, Battle Front 15, Men's Advs 20, etc.) due to the fact that I've seen or know of a few really nice copies of the others and I've never seen one to compare with this particular book. None of mine are going anywhere, but if you were ripping them out of my hands I might hold this one the hardest. Bill Battle 3 -- the epitome of anti-communist absurdity. Lurked for this copy for years going back to when Mick showed me a copy back in '96 (oh, my arthritis!) Journey into Unknown Worlds 49 -- Heath, Robots, and alien invasion... what's not to love? United States Marines 8 -- about my favorite 50s Korean war cover. So nonchalantly gruesome. Green Lama 2 -- Certainly one of Raboy's best, if not the best. Incomparable Church copy. I like your logic, and your selection of books is top notch. Never seen the Bill Battle, and I don't recall the US Marines cover (though I want it now!). And there's just something uber cool about the Green Lama and the march to war. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Robot Man Posted April 29, 2017 Share Posted April 29, 2017 1 hour ago, buttock said: I thought about this for too long and came up with this list. What I found is that there are "big" cool books that have high dollar value and "little" cool books that have low dollar value, but equally high "want" value. In that scenario, the low dollar stuff tends to win out because it's very unlikely that anyone would be willing to make a cash offer strong enough for me to part with the book. I need to come up with some fancy term for the "dollar-to-coolness ratio". Battle Front 23 -- River City copy. Great example of the era. I struggle with a number of killer Atlas war books, almost all with Heath covers. I settled on this one over a few others (e.g. War 11, 23, Battle Front 15, Men's Advs 20, etc.) due to the fact that I've seen or know of a few really nice copies of the others and I've never seen one to compare with this particular book. None of mine are going anywhere, but if you were ripping them out of my hands I might hold this one the hardest. Bill Battle 3 -- the epitome of anti-communist absurdity. Lurked for this copy for years going back to when Mick showed me a copy back in '96 (oh, my arthritis!) Journey into Unknown Worlds 49 -- Heath, Robots, and alien invasion... what's not to love? United States Marines 8 -- about my favorite 50s Korean war cover. So nonchalantly gruesome. Green Lama 2 -- Certainly one of Raboy's best, if not the best. Incomparable Church copy. Very nice group! War comics like crime comics just don't get the love these days. As a kid pre-Marvel, I mostly bought SA DC war. The men in tights stories just didn't compare to Gunner and Sarge and Sgt Rock. That Bill Battle is off the hook. The Green Lama is a master piece. But being a Robot Man, that Unknown Worlds cover is a special favorite. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sqeggs Posted April 29, 2017 Share Posted April 29, 2017 4 hours ago, Cpt Kirk said: I know you said no words, but these demand explanation: 1. Batman 15 -- War cover with Batman and Robin manning a machine gun; awesome story where Catwoman falls in love with Bruce Wayne and Bruce spanks Robin (you owe it to yourself to check out this story, which can be seen in the Batman Archives books); also has another great story where Batman and Robin get to see an alternate future where the Nazis and Japanese win WWII and Batman/Robin get gunned down by the Nazis. 2. Batman 47 -- How could you not keep the first detailed origin story where Batman finds his parents killers?; plus another great Catwoman story called "Fashions in Crime" 3. Superman 20 -- war cover; the first Superman story contains a funny cameo appearance with Bruce Wayne and Grayson, which could be the first story where the three of them actually appeared together in a story after All Star Comics 7 from Oct-Nov 1941; also includes a letter column that talks about the employees of DC who went to serve in WWII; a great war story featuring Hitler 4. Superman 53 -- First detailed origin story showing the death of Superman's parents; great ads giving you the sense of the times; a story featuring "Superhombre" 5. Detective 155 -- Mile High copy with very sharp black cover (one of my favorite covers) with a great Vickie Vale story to boot; plus stories with Roy Raymond and Pow Wow-Smith, Indian Lawman Great group. Maybe the most impressive thing about that pic is that you broke out a Mile High copy to read it. That, my friends, is a true fan! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sqeggs Posted April 29, 2017 Share Posted April 29, 2017 1 hour ago, buttock said: I thought about this for too long and came up with this list. What I found is that there are "big" cool books that have high dollar value and "little" cool books that have low dollar value, but equally high "want" value. In that scenario, the low dollar stuff tends to win out because it's very unlikely that anyone would be willing to make a cash offer strong enough for me to part with the book. I need to come up with some fancy term for the "dollar-to-coolness ratio". Battle Front 23 -- River City copy. Great example of the era. I struggle with a number of killer Atlas war books, almost all with Heath covers. I settled on this one over a few others (e.g. War 11, 23, Battle Front 15, Men's Advs 20, etc.) due to the fact that I've seen or know of a few really nice copies of the others and I've never seen one to compare with this particular book. None of mine are going anywhere, but if you were ripping them out of my hands I might hold this one the hardest. Bill Battle 3 -- the epitome of anti-communist absurdity. Lurked for this copy for years going back to when Mick showed me a copy back in '96 (oh, my arthritis!) Journey into Unknown Worlds 49 -- Heath, Robots, and alien invasion... what's not to love? United States Marines 8 -- about my favorite 50s Korean war cover. So nonchalantly gruesome. Green Lama 2 -- Certainly one of Raboy's best, if not the best. Incomparable Church copy. At first glance, I thought the guy in the Bill Battle was Elvis. And that Green Lama is to die for. Raboy doesn't get the love of some of the other GA greats (which is fine with me until I track down some more of his books), but he was consistently inventive. For instance, Schomburg's WW II covers, while fun, repeat the same themes many times. Raboy always seemed to be striving for something new. Didn't always work, but he didn't seem to want to settle for mailing it in. Probably a key reason why he often missed his deadlines. FoggyNelson 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
telerites Posted April 29, 2017 Share Posted April 29, 2017 5 minutes ago, Sqeggs said: Raboy doesn't get the love of some of the other GA greats Raboy along with Lou Fine were the two artists that inspired me to collect GA books after I discovered Alan Light's reprints of Captain Marvel, Jr. and The Black Condor/The Ray, respectively. Still marvel at both. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Cpt Kirk Posted April 29, 2017 Share Posted April 29, 2017 28 minutes ago, Sqeggs said: Great group. Maybe the most impressive thing about that pic is that you broke out a Mile High copy to read it. That, my friends, is a true fan! Thanks dude.... I broke out that Mile High to smell it and touch it. I never plan to sell it, so why not break it out and enjoy the darn thing. Zolnerowich 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
adamstrange Posted April 29, 2017 Share Posted April 29, 2017 8 minutes ago, Cpt Kirk said: Thanks dude.... I broke out that Mile High to smell it and touch it. I never plan to sell it, so why not break it out and enjoy the darn thing. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ltpink2002 Posted April 29, 2017 Share Posted April 29, 2017 I'm still waiting for Sqegg's list Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
circumstances Posted April 29, 2017 Share Posted April 29, 2017 i love that black detective comics church copy! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
buttock Posted April 29, 2017 Share Posted April 29, 2017 1 hour ago, Robot Man said: Very nice group! War comics like crime comics just don't get the love these days. As a kid pre-Marvel, I mostly bought SA DC war. The men in tights stories just didn't compare to Gunner and Sarge and Sgt Rock. That Bill Battle is off the hook. The Green Lama is a master piece. But being a Robot Man, that Unknown Worlds cover is a special favorite. Robot covers Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
buttock Posted April 29, 2017 Share Posted April 29, 2017 And thanks for the kind words, all. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
comicjack Posted April 29, 2017 Share Posted April 29, 2017 3 hours ago, buttock said: I thought about this for too long and came up with this list. What I found is that there are "big" cool books that have high dollar value and "little" cool books that have low dollar value, but equally high "want" value. In that scenario, the low dollar stuff tends to win out because it's very unlikely that anyone would be willing to make a cash offer strong enough for me to part with the book. I need to come up with some fancy term for the "dollar-to-coolness ratio". Battle Front 23 -- River City copy. Great example of the era. I struggle with a number of killer Atlas war books, almost all with Heath covers. I settled on this one over a few others (e.g. War 11, 23, Battle Front 15, Men's Advs 20, etc.) due to the fact that I've seen or know of a few really nice copies of the others and I've never seen one to compare with this particular book. None of mine are going anywhere, but if you were ripping them out of my hands I might hold this one the hardest. Bill Battle 3 -- the epitome of anti-communist absurdity. Lurked for this copy for years going back to when Mick showed me a copy back in '96 (oh, my arthritis!) Journey into Unknown Worlds 49 -- Heath, Robots, and alien invasion... what's not to love? United States Marines 8 -- about my favorite 50s Korean war cover. So nonchalantly gruesome. Green Lama 2 -- Certainly one of Raboy's best, if not the best. Incomparable Church copy. War comics are a great choice don't get the love and who cares ! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
HRCostigan Posted April 29, 2017 Share Posted April 29, 2017 I've been accused of having too narrow of a focus. Not true -- I own two titles. sagii, porcupine48 and gino2paulus2 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
comicjack Posted April 29, 2017 Share Posted April 29, 2017 I think as board members we have quite a few copies of WW7 don't we Two titles are better than one so i think your doing just { Fine } Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gino2paulus2 Posted April 29, 2017 Share Posted April 29, 2017 2 hours ago, HRCostigan said: I've been accused of having too narrow of a focus. Not true -- I own two titles. ?x5 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RareHighGrade Posted April 29, 2017 Share Posted April 29, 2017 (edited) 1 hour ago, gino2paulus2 said: 4 hours ago, HRCostigan said: I've been accused of having too narrow of a focus. Not true -- I own two titles. ?x5 +1. Love the early Fox books. Edited April 29, 2017 by RareHighGrade Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
batman_fan Posted April 29, 2017 Share Posted April 29, 2017 4 hours ago, HRCostigan said: I've been accused of having too narrow of a focus. Not true -- I own two titles. I love your selection Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Robot Man Posted April 29, 2017 Share Posted April 29, 2017 6 hours ago, Cpt Kirk said: Thanks dude.... I broke out that Mile High to smell it and touch it. I never plan to sell it, so why not break it out and enjoy the darn thing. How was it? Nothing like that Mile High smell, wet inks and just the feel of them. I've got a bunch of raws but could never bring myself to slab 'em... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...