STINGRAY copyright relevant owner |
A cascading cornucopia of cool comics, crazy cartoons, & classic collectables - plus other completely captivating & occasionally controversial contents. With nostalgic notions, sentimental sighings, wistful wonderings, remorseful ruminations, melancholy musings, rueful reflections, poignant ponderings, & yearnings for yesteryear. (And a few profound perplexities, puzzling paradoxes, & a bevy of big, beautiful, bedazzling, buxom Babes to round it all off.)
Sunday, 30 June 2024
STINGRAY - IN THAT SINK-ING FEELING...
Thursday, 27 June 2024
TOYBOX TREASURES Of The PAST - PRESENTING THE PLASTON STINGRAY - AND IT'S MINE, ALL MINE... (Updated)
STINGRAY copyright relevant owner |
Tuesday, 25 June 2024
SPECIAL MARVEL EDITION - Featuring The MIGHTY THOR...
Special Marvel Edition was a comic which lasted for 16 issues from 1971 to 1974. The first four issues featured The Mighty Thor, the next ten starred Sgt. Fury, and the final two introduced The Hands Of Shang-Chi, Master Of Kung Fu. I bought #2 as a back issue at the start of the '80s, #1 circa the mid-'80s (I think), and #s 3 & 4 only recently. I've also got #15, purchased around 15 years or more ago (from the late Pete Root when he rented space in other premises in Buchanan Street in Glasgow), so that's only five issues in all. (Update: Now six, as I acquired #16 since first publishing this post.)
However, it's the Thor issues I'm mainly interested in today, as it's good to finally have all four 53 years after they first appeared, and around 43/44 years after I first acquired #2. Incidentally, neither 1 or 2 are replacements, both of them are the original issues from when I first bought them - as are 3 & 4, though I've only had them for a few days. I've shown the first two on the blog before, but thought it would be a good idea to feature all four together so that you Crivs can view them as the 'family' unit they are. (I've also now added them to some previous Thor cover posts so you'll see them there as well.)
Thought, theories, observations, and speculations about the comics welcome, as are imaginative, creative, inventive, and fanciful comments and insults about my good self. Get cracking.
Monday, 24 June 2024
COMING SOON - MY VERY OWN PLASTON STINGRAY FROM 1964... (Updated)
Something for you to look forward to, Crivs. (The above pic of this very rare and collectable item is just a 'taster' for you. More to come before too long, along with a story behind this toy from my childhood.) Betcha can't wait, eh? (Hey, where'd everyone go?)
Thursday, 20 June 2024
TOYBOX TREASURES Of The PAST - The MAGNIFICENT SEVEN - DALEK ROLYKINS...
Copyright BBC TV and the Estate of TERRY NATION |
Friday, 14 June 2024
The 'HABITAT' - Or There And Back Again...
Hard as it is for me to believe, today is a whopping 52 years since my family first moved into the house in which I now reside. There were four of us back then, though I now stay by myself as all potentially eligible women realise I'd be too difficult to live with. Perhaps they know they'd never be able to meet my high standards and see me as too much of a challenge - or it could be that I'm just an ugly old buggah who doesn't appeal to them. You decide - not that I care a jot one way or another. (I'm quite comfortable with my own company.)
Anyway, as I was sitting contemplating that fateful day back in 1972, trying to remember my impressions of moving to yet another new home (my fifth in 13-and-a-half years), it suddenly dawned on me that I never spared a thought for the house we'd just moved from (or my old room), and never really missed it until around 12-odd years later when we'd flitted to yet another new house. I've shared my speculations as to why that might be with you before so I won't bother again this time around, but I find myself surprised by the fact.
But wait a minute - didn't I say my family moved in here 52 years ago? So what's all this talk of another house? Simple. As regular readers will be (painfully) aware, after 11 years here we moved once more, then just over four years later, moved back again. On August 1st I'll have been back here for 37 years, though that time span doesn't seem one whit longer than our first term in the house. 37 measured against 11 - how can they both feel of virtually equal duration? (No point asking me, 'cos I don't know.)
Anyway, not much to this post, but I didn't want the anniversary of my arrival here to pass unacknowledged. I still find it strange that I acclimatised to my new surroundings practically immediately, with nary a thought for my old house - a house which now has such a significance to me, lo, these many years later, that I often feel I could live there again. Having said that, I feel like that about every place I've ever lived in. I guess I'm just getting old, and one's youth always seems to grow more appealing in retrospect.
If this strikes a chord with anyone, do please feel free to leave a comment.
BABE Of The DAY - LYNDA CARTER...
Monday, 10 June 2024
A BONANZA OF SUPERMAN AND BATMAN TALES From The '30s To The '70s... (Updated)
Copyright DC COMICS |
From the 30's to the 70's (with the apostrophes after the zeros) never looked right to me. It's like writing CDs as CD's. Surely it should be From the '30s to the '70s? That's how I prefer to render it anyway so that's what I've done.
Oops, sorry, got distracted. The Superman and Batman companion volumes, first published in the US in 1971 by Crown Publishing, were/are great books, though looking at them now, I can see just how poor some of the reproduction was/is. They appeared in the UK in 1972, published in paperback by Hamlyn under their Spring Books imprint, who reissued them in 1979, with no updating in the Supes volume to take account of Superman the Movie from 1978. The contents of the two books were the same as before, though the spines were slimmer as ever-so slightly thinner paper was used inside.
However, when Bonanza Books (a division of Crown) issued new hardback editions in the States, the film was mentioned in the dust-jacket's front cover fold-over, though not anywhere else inside. Bonanza varied the size of the books, some editions being the same as the Crown printings, others being not-quite-so wide and around an inch or so taller, with the artwork on the Superman cover filling more space and with less margin. (See photo below.)
So why buy so many you're maybe wondering? You need to ask? Obviously I'm bonkers (though you knew that anyway), but the 'real' reason is just that I'm a compulsive collector who likes different versions of the same thing. However, another more practical reason is that back in 1982, I got my '79 paperbacks hardbound, which meant sacrificing the covers (though I retained them as pin-ups), so having the Bonanza editions means that I can scan the dust-jackets and print out new ones for my erstwhile paperback-now-hardback volumes. I did that for the Superman one a while back, and now I've got the Bonanza Batman, I'll be doing the same with it, too.
So there you go - how to create a post from the most trivial and inconsequential topics, just so that you Crivvies can have something to read. Of course, whether it's actually worth reading is up to you to decide. I'm sure you'll let me know either way. (At least, I hope you will.)
Saturday, 8 June 2024
DOCTOR WHO? NOT THE ONE I WATCHED AS A LAD...
Deary me, so the Time Lord is now officially a Gaylord! Won't be watching again. Why we as a nation put up with these insidious attempts at indoctrinating our kids I'll never know.
Friday, 7 June 2024
MAD #1 FACSIMILE EDITION... (Updated)
Here's a nice little facsimile edition you might be interested in - the very first issue of Mad comic, which lasted for 23 issues before being transformed into a 'magazine'. However, when it first debuted, it was a a regular comicbook, plain and simple. I actually have the Millennium edition of this issue, plus various reprints in books and magazines, but it's nice to now have it in something close to its original form to add to my ever-expanding collection.
'Close to'? Yeah, because today's comicbooks aren't the exact size that they were back in (at least) the '50s and '60s (and even into the '70s and maybe the '80s as well), so it'll be a few millimetres less wide than the original and possibly there'll be a slight discrepancy in height, though unless you have an actual first issue from 1952 with which to compare, you shouldn't be aware of the difference. (Apart from the fact that I just told you about it.)
So grab a piece of history while you can, because I hear this issue is selling well!
Thursday, 6 June 2024
TOYBOX TREASURES Of The PAST - THE MARX OF THE BAT... (Updated)
The surviving accessories from the figure above |
Tuesday, 4 June 2024
MARVEL'S FRANKENSTEIN MONSTER COVER GALLERY OMNIBUS...
Copyright MARVEL COMICS |