Within the last few years, TwoMorrows has issued a series of books by Pierre Comtois reviewing the creative rise & fall of Marvel Comics, with each book in the series covering a different decade in the company’s first thirty years of existence. Continue reading Blind Byrne Worship
Category Archives: 1970s
The Vision
Alright, so I finally gave up—I could not find that article I was looking for. Continue reading The Vision
Herb Trimpe 1939-2015
On Monday we lost one of the big ones—particularly for those of us who came of age in the 70s and early 80s. Continue reading Herb Trimpe 1939-2015
May the Glut Be with You
Last month Newsarama published an article on the “Top Selling Comic Book Titles of the 21st Century…So Far”—an article that, perhaps shockingly, had the just-released new Star Wars comic from Marvel occupying the top spot. Continue reading May the Glut Be with You
Celebrating Black History Month!
Looks like I’ll get this “Black History Month” post in just under the wire! Continue reading Celebrating Black History Month!
Man-Thing Addendum
As fate would have it, mere weeks after finishing up my multi-part Man-Thing opus, TwoMorrows finally… finally put out the “Swamp Men” book they’d been promising for the last DOZEN years. Continue reading Man-Thing Addendum
“Pop Goes the Cosmos!”
NOTE: This is the eighth and final installment of a multi-part series of posts examining Steve Gerber’s final arc on the 1970s Man-Thing series. Continue reading “Pop Goes the Cosmos!”
“A Lunatic on Every Corner!”
NOTE: This is the seventh part of an eight-part series of posts examining Steve Gerber’s final arc on the 1970s Man-Thing series. Continue reading “A Lunatic on Every Corner!”
“The Nightmare Box!”
NOTE: This is the sixth part of a multi-part series of posts examining Steve Gerber’s final arc on the 1970s Man-Thing series. Continue reading “The Nightmare Box!”
“The Scavenger of Atlanta”
NOTE: This is the fifth part of a multi-part series of posts examining Steve Gerber’s final arc on the 1970s Man-Thing series. Continue reading “The Scavenger of Atlanta”