The 1939 creation of the Sub-Mariner for the first issue of Marvel Comics
assures Bill Everett a place in history. Co-creating Daredevil, the Man Without
Fear, for Marvel Comics in 1964 gave Everett a link to one of the most popular superheroes of the past 50 years. And producing over 400 additional pages
of superhero-related work in the very early days of the Golden Age of Comics
(1938-42) makes Bill Everett a legend.
This book collects over 200 pages of this never-before-reprinted work from
titles such as Amazing Mystery Funnies (1938), Amazing-Man Comics (1939),
Target Comics (1940), Heroic Comics (1940), and Blue Bolt Comics (1940). These titles feature an endless array of great
vintage Everett characters such as Amazing-Man, Hydroman, Skyrocket Steele, Sub-Zero, The Chameleon, and many
more, all produced by Everett’s shop Funnies, Inc. for such clients as Centaur, Novelty Press, and Eastern Color, and all
displaying Everett’s brilliant cartooning and energetic storytelling.
Edited and compiled by best-selling author and comic-book historian Blake Bell (Strange and Stranger: The World
of Steve Ditko), Amazing Mysteries: The Bill Everett Archives is a stunning companion to Bell’s 2010 critically acclaimed
Everett biography and art book, Fire and Water: Bill Everett, The Sub-Mariner and the Birth of Marvel Comics. This
volume follows the format of Bell’s Steve Ditko Archives series; never-before-reprinted,
beautifully restored, full-color stories from one of comic books’ greatest visionaries and most accomplished artists. Also
includes an introduction by Bell that delves even deeper into Everett’s life, fiery personality, and the history of the era.
The resultant package enhances Everett’s place in history as one of the first and best comic-book creators of all time.
"Dating from 1938–42, most [stories] feature
superheroes designed to compete with the then-new Superman, such as Amazing-Man, who gained his
powers from the Tibetan monks who raised him; the Flash Gordon-derived Skyrocket Steele; and
Hydroman, who could transform himself into a waterspout. The stories and artwork are laughably crude by
modern standards, although no more so than those in other comic books from the period. But even the
earliest ones show traces of the sleek polish that would become Everett’s hallmark. By the later stories, his
mature style is firmly in place, a sign that future volumes in the series will be of even greater interest."
– Gordon Flagg, Booklist
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