Collecting early Action Comics featuring Superman covers can be tough collectors who are mere mortals, but issue #19 can be a place to start.
Mark Seifert Archives
Rangers Comics evolved considerably after its launch, and came to include features like Werewolf Hunter, Glory Forbes, Firehair and more.
The early Golden Age era of Fox Feature Syndicate includes a large number of surprisingly rare comic books.
Victor Fox was not one to shy away from copying his competitors and Big 3 #1 is another clear-cut case of Fox mimicking a DC Comics release.
The only complete set of 41 Spider-Man comic books belonging to the legendary Steve Ditko is up for auction right now at PBA Galleries.
Blue Beetle faces a personification of Death rising up from the underworld in this strange story in Mystery Men Comics #30.
Mystery Men Comics #3 is best known for its Lou Fine cover, but what does it have to do with William Peter Blatty of The Exorcist fame?
Released during a pivotal period in Golden Age comic book history, Wonder Comics #2 has a historically fascinating backstory.
Dick Briefer's Rex Dexter of Mars may draw inspiration from a pair of All-American Comics sagas, which he takes in weird directions.
An obscure Fox Feature Syndicate character who got his own title and fan club, U.S. Jones debuted in Wonderworld Comics #28.
Blue Ribbon Comics is the debut comic book title from MLJ Magazines, and Rang-A-Tang the Wonder Dog was its first star.
The November 18, 1915 issue of Scientific American and its cover feature about an elusive French invisible plane.
The now-legendary material from X-Men #94-96 was published for the Spanish market in 1978 by Ediciones Vértice with a different cover.
International editions of key comic books like Brazil's O Homem-Aranha have been gaining popularity among collectors in recent times.
The debut of Doom Patrol in My Greatest Adventure #80 in 1963 is an underappreciated moment in DC Comics history.
Captain Aero Comics featured an eclectic mix of characters including Miss Victory, Flagman, Alias X, and a magician named Solar.
Inventor Moses S. Cole's "novel form of aerial vessel" made the cover of Scientific American in the Jan 1, 1887, issue.
Silver Streak Comics got a very brief reboot in the post-WWII era with stories that included giving Silver Streak a falcon sidekick named Zoom
One of the most popular Silver Age Marvel keys of the past decade, Tales of Suspense #39 featuring Iron Man has some fascinating inspirations.
Family Story Paper #688 includes a blurb that indicates that the Trade Waiting concept was already a thing in 1886.
Gus Ricca's incredible cover of Dynamic Comics #11 for publisher Harry A. Chesler has an equally fascinating story behind it.
Sid Check and Frank Frazetta's cover for Beware #10 might be one of the most obscure comic book covers Frazetta ever had a hand in.
L.B. Cole's memorable cover for Jay Disbroy's interior story in Ghostly Weird Stories #122 is a wild example of Cole science fiction.
D.S. Publishing's Exposed True Crime Cases got off to a cold-blooded start in the first two issues of the Pre-Code era series.
Beware Terror Tales #4 has a cover by Spectre co-creator Bernard Baily that practically begs you to read the story behind it.
As his Senate testimony shows, Dark Mysteries' William K. Friedman knew what buttons to push when it came to comic book horror.
The cover of 1952's Startling Terror Tales #11 is a prime example of L.B. Cole's cover art philosophy on his Star Publications titles.
Legendary painter Norman Saunders is remembered for his pulp covers, but his Worlds of Fear #10 work is one of his best-known comic covers.
Startling Terror Tales #13 features a boldly lurid cover by L.B. Cole for Jay Disbrow's interior story "Love from a Gorgon".
J.F. Bardsley's fictional story "At Sea With an Infernal Machine" in Saturday Evening Post Volume 61 #23 of 1881 was based on pivotal history