There
is no longer a void for this blog to fill. Talking about binding,
paper, and restoration is now the norm, not the exception. My work is
done in that regard. There are endless YouTube reviews, message
boards, etc. I will pop in with pellet reviews. Consider this the
“how I spent my summer vacation” book report.
ANT-MAN/
GIANT-MAN EPIC COLLECTION VOL. 1: THE MAN IN THE ANT HILL (Marvel,
First Printing, 2015;
Softcover)
Collects
the Ant-Man/Giant-Man stories from Tales
To Astonish
#27, 35-59 (cover dates January, 1962- September, 1964)
While
this is one of the “lesser” titles of the Silver Age, it was
still a lot of fun to read. Readers with modern sensibilities will
dislike the “you're just a girl, Wasp” vibe to some of the
earlier stories, but this was a pre-women's lib era. I have a soft
spot for Egghead and The Human Top. Seeing Ant-Man transition into
Giant-Man was pretty cool.
WOLVERINE:
OLD MAN LOGAN VOL. 10: END OF THE WORLD (Marvel,
First Printing, 2018; Softcover)
Note:
Book actually released in 2019.
Collects
Old
Man Logan
#46-50 and Old
Man Logan Annual
#1 (cover dates October-December, 2018)
Good
stuff, although it was pointless to end the series here. Rebooted
numberings lose readers in the long run.
CRIME
PATROL
ANNUAL VOL. 2 (Gemstone,
2000;
Softcover)
Collects
Crime
Patrol
#12-16 (cover
dates June-July, 1949- February-March, 1950)
EC
remains the gold standard for comic books, even here in the
“Pre-Trend” era collected here. The first steps toward EC
becoming a Horror comic company happened here, with the introduction
of The Crypt Keeper in a handful of stories until the final issue,
which was basically the first issue of The Crypt Of Terror.
Within a few issues that title would change into the more familiar
Tales From The Crypt.
Gemstone
used some pretty kick ass glue. This book is almost 20 years old and
doesn't even creak when you open it.
FANTASTIC
FOUR BY JOHN BYRNE OMNIBUS VOL. 2
(Marvel,
First Printing, 2013; Hardcover)
Collects
Fantastic
Four
#261-295, Fantastic
Four Annual
#18, 19, Alpha
Flight #4,
Avengers
Annual
#14, Thing
#10,
19, and material from Epic
Illustrated
#26-34, Thing
#7, What
If?
#36, and What
The--?! #2,
10 (cover dates November, 1983- January, 1991)
1984
and 1985 were the zenith of western civilization. The spinner racks
at 7-11 were filled with gold month in and month out. I thought that
it would last forever, as children tend to do. Little did 10-11-12
year old me know that this was the second golden age of Marvel, and
arguably the last time that every single title was hitting high marks
at the same time. John Byrne remains a favorite of mine, and this
stuff still holds up decades later. Hard to pinpoint a favorite
issue, but #276 was one I read several times on the Christmas break
from school in 1984.
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