Thanks to Charlie Horse 47 and Killdumpster for their sponsorship of this post, via the magic of Patreon.
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Can our collective sanity survive whatever it is Marvel's finest can throw at us, this month?
There's only one way to find out.
Only for it to turn out to be the property of AIM who promptly use it to start blasting places to oblivion, using its great big death-ray.
The cover tale's a strange one from Charles Vess. One that's so strange I can't remember much of what it's about but I do believe the wall-crawler must rescue a child from criminals, on a snowy day, while there's some sort of stuff going on with an imaginary Wendigo.
Or maybe it's not imaginary.
Or maybe it is.
However, that's the second of this issue's adventures. I suspect the first one sees Spidey decide to threaten the Kingpin over his destructive interference in the life of Matt Murdock.
And Conan beats him up, like he beats everybody up.
Elsewhere, the star of the comic must tackle one of the Kingpin's goons who's taken to committing crimes while dressed as the man without fear.
However, Bruce and Betty leave for their honeymoon, with Bruce being misled into thinking everything's all quiet on the Hulk front.
Instead, he drops in on Dr Strange who tells him he's suffering from repeated contact with the Black Cat's jinx powers.
So, Strange removes the jinx from Spider-Man - but that eliminates the Black Cat's powers just when she needs them most.
Fortunately, the police come to their rescue and send the bad guys packing.
But are we going to stay there?
After all, the FF and Nick Fury find themselves repeatedly oscillating between the 1930s and the present.
And Fury takes the opportunity to fly to Germany, in a bid to kill Hitler!
Well, that's a swizz. Last month, Balder was killed by Kurse.
And, this month, it turns out the victim wasn't Balder at all.
It was Malekith!
Disguised as him!
So, Thor sets off to find the real Balder. A quest that leads him to a floating castle and a trio of damsels in distress.
But are those damsels as innocent as they seem?
And just what have they done with Balder?


13 comments:
Just the DD, I think!
I won’t go on about it, but it’s a masterpiece and the moment Melvin says ‘good to hear your voice’ is lovely - Matt has friends in places he didn’t know, and he finds out just when he needs to.
I really don’t remember that Thor cover so I have a strong suspicion I had bailed on the book by this point.
I remember once looking up when Simonson’s run finished, because I hadn’t been around for it, and being surprised it was as late as 1987.
1987 was a completely different epoch to 1983, for me - 16 years old vs 12 years old.
But still reading comics!
All of these comics say "MARVEL 25TH ANNIVERSARY" in the corner-box, being 25 years since Fantastic Four #1 in 1961, but in 2018 Marvel celebrated their 80th anniversary having decided the company actually began in 1938!
Matthew, I stopped reading comics when I was 17 (in 1983) and didn't buy another comic until I was 41 (in 2007).
The brilliant DD 231 is the only one of these that I bought this week 40 years ago.
CTB 183 gets my vote for most stylish cover here. The color scheme especially is very effective.
“Clanking clod” — Steve, you are such a tease :D
b.t.
Colin, not only that. They celebrated their 50th anniversary just five years after celebrating their 25th.
Just DD #231 for me too this month.
I'd been off and on with Simonson's Thor since the later part of the Surtur storyline, and Sal Buscema becoming the regular artist with #368 was never going to win me over as a regular buyer again.
Perhaps it's not surprising readers weren't paying much attention to Marvel at this point. Check out what DC had on offer this month:
The Shadow #2 by the mighty Howard Victor Chaykin, Swamp Thing #49 - in which Alan Moore set things up for the double size conclusion of American Gothic - and the first issue of a new revisionist Batman mini-series, called The Dark Knight Returns. Written and drawn by Frank Miller iirc...
-sean
A quick peek at Mike’s reminds me that I also bought the first issue of DAKOTA NORTH (for the Tony Salmons art) — the rest of my purchases that month were DC’s (THE SHADOW, BLUE BEETLE, DKR, DEADMAN, SWAMP THING) and Independents (DEATH RATTLE, MR. MONSTER, LLOYD LLEWLLYN, LOVE AND ROCKETS, THE SPIRIT, WORLD OF WOOD).
b.t.
Today (June 11th) is the 90th anniversary of Robert E Howard's suicide.
Sean - i might say it was experienced or mature readers drawn in by Dark Knight and such. Was there anyone here who was 10 years old 40 years ago? Might be interesting to hear their thoughts.
I don't know about 10, but I think Matthew is a little younger than most regular commenters here?
Speaking for myself, I would say I lost a lot of interest in regular Marvel and DC super-hero comics in the late 70s. The ones I read in the 80s... well, with Marvel you're pretty much talking about Miller's Daredevil, Byrne's FF, and Simonson's Thor. If hadn't been for those three, I would have read hardly any.
I think it's fair to say those creators had their eye primarily on older readers too..?
-sean
Colin, today is also the anniversary of the execution of alleged Trotskyist Soviet officers in 1937 that kicked off Stalin's purge of the Red Army.
-sean
40 years ago Matthew was around 15 not 10.
Indeed. Born in 1971. I got into American comics in 1983 through Miller and reprints in Marvel UK. So I’d already bought Ronin and was fully primed for TDKR.
Being 15 and having all the people I’d been following for 3-4 years reach maturity was pretty much perfect timing.
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