Tales to Astonish #93 is a classic hero vs hero battle with a twist. It started when Hulk wanted Silver Surfer to take him to another planet
Mark Seifert Archives
Who is the strongest hero in the Marvel Universe? It's a question that fans have debated for decades, and it often centers Hulk vs Thor.
The inspirations behind the origin of Sabrina the Teenage Witch is one of my very favorite moments in all of comic book history.
Harvey Dent had been absent from comics for 16 years when Batman #234 hit the newstands, becoming a memorable part of a legendary run.
Cover-dated May 1964 and hitting the newsstands in May, Avengers #5 represents a young Marvel Universe beginning to hit its stride.
Fantastic Four #48, has been an important Marvel comic book key for decades, and for good reason. It's a cornerstone of Marvel cosmic stories
It's difficult to remember this now, but the Avengers have not always been household names among Marvel Comics properties.
The Black Knight has a long and interesting history in Marvel comic books, and Dane Whitman got his start in Avengers #47 in 1967.
The infamous Guy Gardner first appeared in 1968 in Green Lantern #59 in 1968, but few high grade copies have hit the market in recent times.
The Promise Collection is a group of high grade comics from 1939-1952, and mid-1948 has one of the most infamous covers in comics history.
One of the stories in Strange Tales Annual #1 from Marvel in 1962 has a wonderfully obscure connection to the Eternals.
King Features' 1966 debut of its Flash Gordon series was the fan-favorite comic book of that year due to spectacular Al Williamson artwork.
The Promise Collection is a group of high grade comics from 1939-1952, and early 1948 was about the crime explosion, and a Futurama mystery.
Farrell Publication's Voodoo Annual #1 is a comic book that Pre-Code Horror collectors rarely want to part with, and it's easy to see why.
The Pre-Code Horror series Mysteries from Candian company Superior Publications is even more rare than most PCH -- and that's saying something.
Bill Everett's Zombie first appeared in the obscure Pre-Code Horror comic book Menace #5 in 1953, and got his own series 20 years later.
Marvel's original Werewolf by Night story appeared in Marvel Tales #116, cover-dated July 1953 in a Pre-Code Horror classic.
Haunted Thrills 13 features a classic PCH skull cover, & a great interior story that backs it up, plus work by Human Torch creator Carl Burgos
An overlooked area of vintage comic book collecting, the Pre-Code Horror field is undiscovered country from a historically fascinating moment.
In the new Morbius trailer, we see his transformation into a living vampire and a run-down of his various powers... plus more.
Fiction House's Rangers Comics was a well-crafted war story comic book series with some spectacular covers.
Early Wow Comics from Fawcett Publications featured a caped crusader in Gotham City, and a power-ring wielding boy of the atom.
Victor Fox's Mystery Men Comics has an underrated place in the pantheon of historically important Golden Age comic book series.
A Vampires vs Zombies saga that resonates now as much as ever, Max Brooks' Extinction Agenda is a conflict at the crossroads of horror.
An underappreciated series with unrestrained covers and interiors to match, Chesler's Punch Comics is worth your attention.
The centuries-spanning tales of Garth and Princess Malu were inspired by a British comic strip and Conan the Barbarian.
The Promise Collection is a group of high grade comics from 1939-1952, and late 1947 was about true crime, true love, and synthetic gems.
A decade before the Phantom Zone, these criminals from Krypton were punished in a way that would have consequences for Superman and Earth
The Aquaman story in More Fun Comics #76 was inspired by real-world events from the early moments of WW2.
In 1968, Stan Lee called the moment that Incredible Hulk #102 was part of "The beginning of the second Golden Age of Marvel".