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Monday, 28 June 2021

Modesty Blaise 51-96 (Peter O'Donnell et alii) Strips

 Author: Peter O'Donnell

Illustrators: Jim Holdaway, Enrique Badía Romero, John M. Burns,

 Patrick Wright, Neville Colvin,  Dan Spiegle, Dick Giordano

Current status/schedule : Finished

Launch date 13 May 1963 End date 7 July 2002

Syndicate(s) Hall Syndicate (1966–1967)
Los Angeles Times Syndicate (1976–1980)








THE END
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Thursday, 24 June 2021

Tales from the Great Book (01-04) John Lehti (Complete Series)


 Tales from the Great Book
Eastern Color, 1955 Series
Published in English (United States) United States
Publication Dates:  February 1955 - January 1956
Number of Issues Published:  4 (#1 - #4)
Color: color
Dimensions: standard Golden Age US
Paper Stock: glossy cover; newsprint interior
Binding: saddle-stitched
Publishing Format: was ongoing series
Publication Type: magazine

Author
  John Lehti (signed)  Pencils & Inks


SUMMARY : 

Young Daniel's Faith  / 23 pages
The Saga of Samson  / 9 pages
Joshua Marches On Jericho / 12 pages
King Saul and the Witch of Endor / 11 pages
Elijah the Prophe  / 6 pages
Joash The Boy King  / 11 pages
The Tower of Babel  / 6 pages
The Unselfish Love of Ruth  / 14 pages
The Little Captive Maid  / 6 pages
Young David / 9 pages
Moses and Miriam  / 13 pages

http://www.oldsundaycomics.com/sc1390.htm











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Monday, 21 June 2021

Modesty Blaise 00-50 (Peter O'Donnell et alii) Strips

Author: Peter O'Donnell

Illustrators: Jim Holdaway, Enrique Badía Romero, John M. Burns,

 Patrick Wright, Neville Colvin,  Dan Spiegle, Dick Giordano

Current status/schedule : Finished

Launch date 13 May 1963 End date 7 July 2002

Syndicate(s) Hall Syndicate (1966–1967)
Los Angeles Times Syndicate (1976–1980)

 Modesty Blaise is a British comic strip featuring a fictional character of the same name, created by author Peter O’Donnell and illustrator Jim Holdaway in 1963. The strip follows Modesty Blaise, an exceptional young woman with many talents and a criminal past, and her trusty sidekick Willie Garvin. It was adapted into films in 1966, 1982, and 2003, and from 1965 onwards eleven novels and two short story collections were written.

In 1945, a nameless girl escapes from a displaced person (DP) camp in Kalyros, Greece. She remembers nothing from her short past and wanders through post-World War II Mediterranean, the Middle East, and regions of North Africa, where she learns to survive the hard way. She befriends Lob, another wandering refugee who is a Jewish Hungarian scholar from Budapest. He gives her an education and a first name: Modesty. Sometime later Modesty creates her last name, Blaise, after Merlin’s tutor from the Arthurian legends. When Lob dies is unclear, other than it being prior to her going to Tangier. In ‘The Xanadu Tailisman’ it is mentioned that Modesty has left Lob at a village to recover from a wound; she goes alone to sell a car tyre. In 1953 she takes control of a criminal gang in Tangier from Henri Louche and expands it into an international organization called the Network.modesty02

Having conceived the idea after a chance meeting with a girl during his wartime service in the Middle East, O’Donnell elected to work with Jim Holdaway, with whom he had worked on the strip Romeo Brown, after a trial period of collaboration with Frank Hampson, creator of Dan Dare, left O’Donnell dissatisfied. Modesty Blaise debuted in the London Evening Standard on 13 May 1963. The strip was syndicated among a large number of newspapers ranging from the Johannesburg Star to the Detroit Free Press, the Bombay Samachar, The Telegraph (Calcutta, India), The Star (Malaysia), The West Australian (Perth) and The Evening Citizen (Glasgow, Scotland).

After Jim Holdaway’s death in 1970, the art of the strip was provided by the Spanish artist Enrique Badía Romero. Eight years later, Romero quit to make time for his own comics projects, and after short attempts by John Burns and Patrick Wright, Neville Colvin drew the strip until 1986. Then Romero returned to the job and continued until the end of the strip.

modesty05The strip’s circulation in the United States was erratic, in part because of the occasional nude scenes, which were much less acceptable in the US than elsewhere, resulting in a censored version of the strip being circulated. (Modesty occasionally used a tactic that she called the “Nailer,” in which she would appear topless, distracting the bad guys long enough to give Willie or herself a chance to incapacitate them.) An example of this censorship appears in the introduction to the 2007 Titan Books reprint volume Death Trap, which illustrated two segments of the story arc, “The Junk Men” that were censored by the Detroit Free Press when it published the strip in 1977; in both cases a screen was drawn over scantily-clad images of Willie and Modesty. Reportedly, O’Donnell did not approve of the changes, although they were made by the artist, Romero.

The final Modesty Blaise strip ran in the Evening Standard on 11 April 2001. Some of the newspapers that carried the series, feeling that it had become a tradition for their readers, began running it again from the beginning. O’Donnell, to give Romero some additional work, gave the artist permission to adapt one of his short stories (“The Dark Angels”) as a graphic novel that was published in Scandinavia in 2002, later being reprinted in the US in a special issue of Comics Revue.modesty07

From 1 December 2008, the Evening Standard, which had stopped including comic strips for some time, republished La Machine, using the original artwork. Following a change of ownership of the paper, they did not continue with subsequent stories.

The ordinary strips are consecutive numbered from 1 to 10183. Outside this numbering are the two newspaper stories “In the Beginning” and “The Killing Ground” and the two comic book stories “Modesty Blaise” and “The Dark Angels”.

Outside the ordinary numbering is also an amount of A-strips. An A-strip has the same number as the previous strip but followed by an A. They were used on days when not all the newspapers running Modesty Blaise were published. An A-strip is not vital for the continuity of the story and is often just supplementing the previous strip.
The first A-strip was 194A and was published during Christmas 1963 in Scottish newspapers.

Since December 1974 The Evening Standard has not been published on Saturdays. So, since then, and the story “Cry Wolf”, a sixth of the strips have been A-strips and have not had their premiere in The Evening Standard.

https://newspapercomicstripsblog.wordpress.com/2016/03/05/modesty-blaise/











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Thursday, 17 June 2021

Journey into Terror - Compilation 25 - 30 [Final Issues)

  

 Here 5  issues of  of  Journey into Terror

All pages are taken from various comic scans all thanks 

to the original scanners.

Contents stories taken from:

Chambers of Chills

Fear 

Strange Tales

Tale of  Suspense

Tales to Astonish

Out of the Night

Where Monsters Dwell  

Where Creatures Roam 

Where Monsters Prowl 

Compiled and edited by HuckyC.






THE END

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Monday, 14 June 2021

Four Color Dell 1942 -1962 [#1251-#1275]

 

 Four Color

Dell, 1942 Series
Published in English (United States) United States

Publication Dates:
    1942 - April-June 1962 
Number of Issues Published:
    1331 (#1 - Little Joe - #1354 - Calvin and the Colonel) 
Color:  Color 
Dimensions:
    Standard Golden Age U.S.; Standard Silver Age U.S. 
Paper Stock:    Glossy Cover; Newsprint Interior 
Binding:    Saddle-stitched 
Publishing Format:   Was Ongoing Series 
Publication Type:   magazine 
Pages  68     Indicia frequency  ?

More information HERE


Notes : 

- One of the earlier issues of Four Color (#9 from October 1942), featuring Walt Disney's Donald Duck in Donald Duck Finds Pirate Gold. Note Four Color title below the price.

- Series II. Early issues have "Four Color Comic" on the cover. Last with this notation is #101. The following issues were apparently never published: 1217, 1228, 1277, 1292, 1314-1327, 1329 (believed to have instead been published as Gyro Gearloose (1962 series) #01329-207), 1331, 1334, 1338-1340, 1342-1347, 1351-1353. There are ad and non-ad versions for many issues from #693 to the end.


Four Color  Dell   [#1251-#1275] 1962

TITLES:

Four color 1251    Everthing's Ducky
Four color 1252   Andy Griffith
Four color 1253   Space Men 
Four color 1254   Diver Dan
Four color 1255   Aladdin
Four color 1256   Kona
Four color 1257   Car 54 Where Are You
Four color 1258   The Frogmen
Four color 1259   El Cid
Four color 1260   Walt Disney's The Horsemasters
Four color 1261   Rawhide
Four color 1262   The Rebel
Four color 1263   77 Sunset Stip
Four color 1264   Pixie And Dixie
Four color 1265   The Real McCoys
Four color 1266   Spike and Tyke
Four color 1267   Gyro Gearloose
Four color 1268   Oswald the Rabbit
Four color 1269   Rawhide
Four color 1270   Bullwinkle and Rocky 
Four color 1271   Vogi Bear Birthday Party
Four color 1272   Frosty the Snowman
Four color 1273   Hans Brinker
Four color 1274   Santa Claus Funnies
Four color 1275   Rocky and His Friends















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