Wednesday, August 7, 2013

Siegel and Shuster: Dateline 1930's #1


Sometime around 1937, right before National Periodicals picked up Superman to star in Action Comics, the duo of Siegel and Shuster created a tabloid comic for a Cleveland newspaper. It contained dozens of new comic strips, but never saw the light of day. That is until the early 80s, when Eclipse Comics printed it for the first time ever.

This book was intended to be the first of many weekly comics. So, expect lots of cliffhangers with unresolved plots. However, for it’s historical significance, it’s a treasured piece of comic history. Imagine if this had become a weekly piece of a small potatoes Cleveland rag. There might have never been a Superman. The Superhero may have never become the “flavor or the month” for publishers. The comics industry might look very different or have never existed at all. The possibilities are endless and frightening.

Worth Consuming!

Rating: 8 out of 10 stars.

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