Verlag: Co. & Sons, San Francisco, 1972
Anbieter: Books Do Furnish A Room, Durham, NC, USA
Comic Book (saddle-stitched). Zustand: Very Good. Ned Sonntag; Jay Kinney; Dennis Hermanson; Peter Bramley; Bill SkurskyTom Hachtman; Joey Epstein (illustrator). Pages unmarked. Paper tanning. Front cover moderately shelfworn; scuffed spot on back cover. Binding firm.
Verlag: Berkeley: Last Gasp., 1977
Anbieter: Wittenborn Art Books, San Francisco, CA, USA
Manuskript / Papierantiquität
Zustand: Good. Comic book with cover and illustrated story on the sexual delights of the young Red Guard Chinese Communists by Jan Kinney, dedicated to Chou Yang. 32 pp. Fine.We also have the original drawing for the fabulous cover.
Verlag: Marvel Comics Group, New York, 1980
Anbieter: Ground Zero Books, Ltd., Silver Spring, MD, USA
Erstausgabe
Wraps. Sonntag, Ned and Severin, Marie (illustrator). Presumed first edition/first printing. 68 p. Includes illustrations. Page count includes cover. From Wikipedia: "Howard the Duck is a comic book character in the Marvel Comics universe created by writer Steve Gerber and artist Val Mayerik. The character first appeared in Adventure into Fear #19 (Dec. 1973) and several subsequent series have chronicled the misadventures of the ill-tempered, anthropomorphic, "funny animal" trapped on human-dominated Earth. Howard's adventures are generally social satires, while a few are parodies of genre fiction with a metafictional awareness of the medium. The book is existentialist, and its main joke, according to Gerber, is that there is no joke: "that life's most serious moments and most incredibly dumb moments are often distinguishable only by a momentary point of view." This is diametrically opposed to screenwriter Gloria Katz, who in adapting the comic to the screen declared, "It's a film about a duck from outer space.It's not supposed to be an existential experience.Howard the Duck was created in 1973 by Steve Gerber and Val Mayerik in Adventure into Fear as a secondary character in that comic's Man-Thing feature. He graduated to his own backup feature in Giant-Size Man-Thing, confronting such bizarre horror-parody characters as the Hellcow and the Man-Frog, before acquiring his own comic book title with Howard the Duck #1 in 1976.in 1979 Marvel launched the series as a bimonthly magazine, with scripts by Mantlo, art by Colan and Michael Golden and unrelated backup features by others; this series was canceled after nine issues. Good. No dust jacket. Cover has some wear and soiling. Cover has tear at front top edge.