For more information go to http://www.officialsmithereens.com/NEW YORK, NY--April 14, 2008--KOCH Records is pleased to announce the newest album by rock band The Smithereens. "Live In Concert - Greatest Hits and More" features music from The Smithereens' four-night stint at The Court in New Brunswick, New Jersey, a musical home away from home for the group, which took place January 30th - February 2nd, 2008. The band, all hailing from surrounding Central Jersey towns, played the Court Tavern often at the start of their career.
The album features live recordings of two brand new songs, "Any Other Way" and "Since You Went Away." The set also includes Buddy Holly's classic (and a big influence for The Smithereens) "Well Alright," and the ripping interpretation of the "Batman" theme, a live staple for the band.
For the past 25 years, The Smithereens have toured non-stop, recording and releasing Gold and Platinum albums that spawned Top 40 radio hits such as "A Girl Like You," "Too Much Passion," "Blood And Roses," "Only a Memory" and "Behind The Wall Of Sleep." But at the beginning of that long and successful road, the loved group spent many sweaty, rock filled evenings in the damp, close quartered basement of The Court.
Live at The Court takes us back to that hallowed ground and brings back the energy and edginess that was present at the beginning of The Smithereens' career. The club was packed for every performance, and the love and energy for the Smithereens is evident on each track. This album features the Smithereens in their natural habitat, playing great music for their hometown fans. It shines a light on the love of their fans, and what the group is about.
Friday, April 25, 2008
The Smithereens on Meth
Looks like I'll be writing the liner notes for the next Smithereens album, which is quite a thrill. I'm a huge fan of liner notes in general and absorbed them, like I did album credits, from my earliest childhood albums, the first being Veejay's "Introducing the Beatles." Coincidentally, the next 'Reens album will have more than a Beatles flavour (I can say that, can't I Pat?) Also, coincidental to this blog, it will feature a cover painting by one of the legendary comic artists. More details to come. In the mean time, here's the latest from Pat DiNizio's gang of four:
Thursday, April 17, 2008
Celebrity Sightings
As Ted Adams mused over lunch, it wouldn’t be Hollywood without at least one celeb sighting. We were sitting in my favorite Beverly Hills restaurant, The Milky Way, which is owned and hosted by Steven Spielberg’s mother, the lovely, petite Leah Adler, who, at 88, could have retired years ago. But Leah likes to meet and greet everyone who comes in the restaurant. “Your son’s worth $2 billion and he still makes you work?” I always tease. Like she’s never heard that before (like every mutton head with delusions of drollness who asks me if I have a sister name Crystal… but I digress). We’d just started our meal when a guy in a baseball cap walked in.“Does that look like Steven Spielberg?” I asked my one of companions.
“Nah. Looks like someone trying to look like Spielberg.”
I took another gander. “You think every Spielberg look-alike hugs Leah like that?”
I got up and asked Leah for an introduction... and Steven was as nice as can be.
Also ran into Josh Olson while having coffee at CAA. Does that count, Josh?
Labels:
Josh Olson,
Leah Adler,
Steven Spielberg
Tuesday, April 15, 2008
Somebody loves me
I'm in Los Angeles for the next few days for meetings but awoke this morning to a startling review of my book One Small Voice (IDW Publishing) at Art Blog by Bob.
There's a lot more to the review which you can read here.
Of course the danger in accepting a reviewer's praise means I must also consider taking the guy who called Snaked "a dead platypus laying in the middle of the road" seriously, too. Right, doctor?
Mr. Meth, I see our time is up.
Meth’s film noir-esque, combative spirit energizes his writing. “Turn the other cheek: The battle cry of the slapped,” he writes. The meek may inherit the earth, but Meth inherits the legacy of writers such as Vonnegut in his clear-eyed take on life, love, and god, if there is one. Meth’s writing seems perfectly suited to the short format used in One Small Voice. Longer exposure would be overwhelming. Meth in small doses acts like homeopathic medicine, poisoning you just enough to make you better and stronger.
There's a lot more to the review which you can read here.
Of course the danger in accepting a reviewer's praise means I must also consider taking the guy who called Snaked "a dead platypus laying in the middle of the road" seriously, too. Right, doctor?
Mr. Meth, I see our time is up.
Monday, April 14, 2008
Meet the Smithereens
As the weather warms, The Smithereens will be playing a number of shows on both coasts. Visit their website--mark your calender... To help buzz the launch of their last CD, Meet the Smithreens, I penned a feature on the band last year for The Aquarian, New Jersey's rock paper. Here's the unedited long-form of that interview with my pal, lead singer/writer Pat DiNizio:Meth: Tell me about playing with Paul McCartney.
DiNizio: Gary Talent of the E Street band, who was a friend of ours, gave me a call and said he was the music director for the annual Buddy Holly Celebration that McCartney puts together every year. This time it was going to be held in NY City at The Lonestar Roadhouse to herald the debut of The Buddy Holly Story on Broadway. I remember the date vividly—this was Sept. 4 of 1990 and I was getting married on Sept. 1 in Chicago. I asked Gary if there was any chance that Paul would be there and he said most likely; that whenever he does one of these annual Buddy Holly events he’s usually there. I thought, well, if he’s ever going to be there, he’ll be there for this event because he owns the Buddy Holly song catalogue and he’s obviously going to push the musical. So we changed our honeymoon plans—we delayed our honeymoon by a week and eventually we went to Japan. I just had the feeling that Paul was going to be there so I went. And for me, as one of millions of kids who saw the Beatles the first time on The Ed Sullivan Show, and who dreamed of nothing else but being in a band like The Beatles, it was a dream come true. I actually found myself later in the evening on stage with him and the rest of the musicians who played that evening—it was sort of an All-Star band that was thrown together. I played bass and Paul sand “Lucille” by Little Richard, a great, old rocker. It was one of those moments when you wished that someone had snuck in a video camera because there were no cameras allowed for the event and very few people had video cams that were portable back in 1990. About a year later, I went to pick up the mail and I opened the mail up and there was a videocassette with a little note that said, “I thought you might like this.” And it was whole event on video.
Meth: Did the rest of the Smithereens play that night, too?
DiNizio: No, just me. I played because I had written a song on Smithereens 11, an homage to Buddy Holly, a tribute to his early relationship and his widow Maria Elena. The song is called “Maria Elena”. I had sent her a copy and met her and her daughter and we all became friends. She was there, as well, and they asked me specifically to come and sing that song because it was obviously part of an album that was doing very well for us at the time.
Meth: I’m just feeling your place here, Pat.
DiNizio: It’s a good feeling, Clifford. It’s quiet.
Meth: It reminds me of my old Fraternity House. We had a big, old house in Dover, New Jersey.
DiNizio: So you used to go hang out at The Showplace.
Meth: Yeah. My band played there several times. It was a big deal for us because the Ramones had just played there that weekend.
DiNizio: We couldn’t really secure a gig there. It was too far from where we were based and we didn’t have a fan base in that area. But we’d go up there and pay them a fee to do some recording. We’d get up there on a Monday night when nobody was around. We’d hook up a reel-to-reel tape recorder and get a live board mix. It was a very live-sounding room, which I liked about it. We used it to record early demos—we’d do live backing tracks without vocals at The Showplace and we’d come home and transfer that tape in a recording studio and we’d add vocals. It really gave it a dynamic sound because we hadn’t figured out yet how to bridge the gap between the live sound of the band and what would become the studio sound of the band. They are two distinctly different things. Other bands make the mistake of trying to sound exactly like they sound live, but smart bands don’t make that mistake. There was a studio Beatles and there was a live Beatles.
Meth: What do you prefer?
DiNizio: I enjoy the immediacy of a live performance—I enjoy the immediate feedback that you get from an audience; you know whether you are on your game or not, whether people are enjoying it. It’s thrilling to play live and we still put 200% into everything that we do. But the studio is also fulfilling on another level. It’s more difficult to get to the point where you can say I enjoy listening to it because it’s a building stage. You’re starting with your basic tracks and you’re adding guitars and you’re layering and you’re putting your vocals on and you’re mixing. You don’t know really, until the eleventh hour of the project whether what you’ve done has any merit at all. In other words, it’s a longer process. The only real moment of enjoyment is when you’re listening to the final product and you know you’ve done a good job. And hopefully other folks might find enjoyment in the recordings you’ve created. But for me, going in the studio is very difficult. I don’t necessarily enjoy the process. I appreciate it. I’m happy to still have the ability to make records. But it’s not fun.
It was fun in the early days, when we hadn’t yet made records, but it was always pressure. It was thrilling. It’s still thrilling. I still get that tingling, that sense of excitement whenever we go in the studio, but there’s nothing about it I take for granted. It’s extremely challenging and stressful because I really work at it and I want everything to be the best that I can get.
Meth: How involved are you in the production?
DiNizio: I would say that on all The Smithereens albums, although we’re not credited, we certainly co-produced those records. There’s so much input of ours on everything.
Meth: You don’t get on the board?
DiNizio: I sit behind the producer but I don’t operate the board. I think my energy is best spent on thinking of good, creative melodic ideas and arrangement parts, not worrying about the technical aspects of the recordings. I leave that in the hands of the professionals. It’s a blessing when you find yourself in the studio with someone who really does get it, who really understands what the band is all about. That was a process of elimination in the early days. Our first demos were done with individuals who, while well-meaning, didn’t really understand the band, you know? They didn’t really know how to capture the sound of the band in a recording studio.
Meth: Who did you want to sound like, other than The Beatles?
DiNizio: I don’t know that we were really going for a sound. I think it just happened. In fact, the band today stills sounds very much the way we sounded when we first sat down and played together in my dad’s basement right here in Scotch Plains in March of 1980. It hasn’t changed that much except, perhaps, the songs have grown and matured. Some of the first songs I wrote, while charming, are not great compositions. It’s someone learning how to write songs. Yet some of the songs—in fact my first composition, “I Don’t Want to Lose You” wound up on Especially For You and a lot of folks like that song. “Elaine” was song number two and it wound up on “Green Thoughts.” So you never know. It just took a long time to get to that point—to actually sit down and attempt to wrestle with that beast. Understanding how songs work, the mechanics of songs, having to dig deep inside and come up with melodies that are memorable... The hurdle that I had to get over in terms of my live performances—it dawned on my on stage one evening at Kenny’s Castaways, that I was singing original material that contained lyrics that revealed a lot of my inner life and my personal life, to complete strangers.
Meth: Standing naked in front of strangers.
DiNizio: Exactly. And I felt uptight for a little bit but I eventually figured out that this is the job, this is what I do, this is the situation that I’ve put myself in. So I have to deal with it. After I came to terms with it, I started feeling comfortable because I realized that if the song lyrics were well written, then other folks would live through them as well.
Meth: Did you know you had a hit when you wrote certain songs? Songs like “Blood and Roses” for instance?
DiNizio: The only time that I had the feeling I had a hit was when I wrote “Girl Like You,” which was written for Cameron Crowe for his film “Say Anything.” And after a minor argument with the producer James L. Brooks, we decided to take the song back and save it for ourselves. And that being said, obviously I had a feeling at the time that it was a hit or we would have given it to them. We decided to save it for ourselves because it might have been released on a soundtrack album and got lost and then it would have had no meaning later on, on one of our records. But my feeling with that was based in part on the fact that the first album was a hit, the second album had a #1 rock radio single…we were on a roll and it was likely that radio would receive a song like this from us. I had that feeling. I didn’t know if it was a hit but I remember my wife at the time saying, “It’s a good song, but it’s not your best song.”
Meth: What did she think your best song was?
DiNizio: She never spoke of that.
Meth: How about your daughter?
DiNizio: She doesn’t have a favorite but she’s finally gotten a chance to come to some of the live shows, which is a big thrill for me, that she’s old enough now to attend the concerts and actually see what her dad has done for a living for the past 27 years. I remember while writing Smithereens 11 playing a demo of “Blue Period” and my wife Mary saying to me, “Did you really write this song?” Not saying how good it was but inferring that it baffled her that I was able to come up with it.
Meth: “Blue Period” might be my favorite.
DiNizio: Mary was also of the opinion that songs like “Blue Period” should have been hits. They weren’t. They were handled improperly or perhaps they were out of time. They might have hit in 1966 or 67. There were always problems on every level, with management, with distribution.
Meth: It’s been a long time since you’ve had a record contract. How did you end up with Koch?
DiNizio: It’s not really a contract. We’ve licensed this new recording—we own it and we’ve licensed it to Koch. It’s sort of the new model for 2007.

Meth: Let’s talk about this album, “Meet the Smithereens.” Without knowing anything, my guess was the seed for this disc was planted when The Smithereens did “I Want to Tell You” for Songs From The Material World (A Tribute to George Harrison).
DiNizio: No. Not at all. In fact, I was very much against recording that because the arrangement for “I Want to Tell You” was absolutely perfect as it is on Revolver and I couldn’t imagine any way that we could improve it. In fact, in terms of our history, for many years we were asked to do cover songs for movies. We did a version of “Time Won’t Let Me” for “Time Cop,” the Jean-Claude Van Damm film, and it was an okay version. Mr. King, who wrote the song for the original Outsiders, who recorded it in 1966, said that it was the best version of the song that he ever heard. So we got the vote of approval from the guy who wrote it, which meant a lot to us. But there’s not too much you can do with it. So I was very anti doing cover songs unless we could absolutely make them our own. Somehow, we did achieve that with “I Want to Tell You”—it’s a little different.
Meth: I’m not saying this because we’re friends or because I’m sitting in your kitchen drinking your bad coffee—
DiNizio: You don’t like the coffee?
Meth: —but it’s the best track on that album, by far. Most of those tracks weren’t repeatable—not Bill Wyman’s, not John Entwhistle’s.
DiNizio: The track works well because it’s kind of like The Who meets The Beatles meets The Smithereens. And it sounds like us. So I was pleased. I came and I did my vocals and split. But we have a lot of covers—some are good and some are not so good. I remember when they were making this Christian Slater movie when he was a big star in the early ‘90s called “Kuffs”—they wanted The Smithereens to record a version of The Who’s “Shaking All Over” from “Live at Leeds”—but they wanted it to sound like The Talking Heads. And it’s like, “What are you, dreaming? We’re The Smithereens, not The Talking Heads.” So we did a version of it and it’s okay. We did “Wooly Bully” for “Encino Man” and a version of Ringo’s hit “It Don’t Come Easy” and then I didn’t want to do anything that we couldn’t improve on. But that being said, when it came time to record our most recent studio album, which was also for Koch, “God Save the Smithereens” (1999) I felt strongly that based on the theme of the record, which was originally about Apocalypse 2000. There was a tremendous amount of concern and fear and loathing surrounding the millennium, as you recall, Clifford. And I had been listening to a lot of short-wave radio, picking up a lot of weird signs and signals from all over the place, and the album was really for me, initially, about the end of the world. So “Gloomy Sunday” was one of my favorite songs, which Billie Holliday originally recorded. The song was infamous for having inspired people to kill themselves. Whether what was true or not, I don’t know, but they pulled it off the market at a certain point and stopped playing it on the radio because it had this terrible effect—it was just so depressing. We did a version of it that ranks with anything, I believe, that anybody ever did in terms of covering that song. We did it Smithreens-Beatles style; we took the beat from “While My Guitar Gently Weeps” and we really did make it our own. I’m very proud of that particular recording. That’s when I realized that we could take a cover and do something totally different with it and turn it into something that sounded like we wrote it... In the case of “Meet the Smithereens,” which is our song-for-song recreation and interpretation of the first American release by The Beatles on Capital, we follow very closely the structure of the songs while maintaining our own identity as The Smithereens.
Meth: Often when I’ve seen you play, even in your solo performances, you’ve often thrown in a Beatles song.
DiNizio: When we first started playing…we all learned from the masters, from The Beatles, The Byrds, The Beau Brummels. We learned from newer groups like The Jam about live performance. The Stranglers. These were contemporaries of ours at the time, but you take different things for different sources. What we were trying to achieve with Meet the Smithereens was to capture the subtle background sounds of The Beatles and not lose our identity. Come on—let’s play a couple tracks.
© 2007, Clifford Meth
Sunday, April 13, 2008
Free Meth
As a promotion to re-invigorate its mailing list, Aardwolf Publishing will be giving away free signed copies of some of its books and comics. Jim Reeber, Aardwolf’s chief bottle washer, says the freebies will include STRANGE KADDISH (signed by Harlan Ellison), THE FUTURIANS #0 (signed by Dave Cockrum), and PERVERTS, PEDOPHILES & OTHER THEOLOGIANS (signed by Gene Colan and myself). “Prizes will be awarded randomly,” said Reeber.To be eligible, just email aardwolfpublishing@gmail.com with the words GIMME FREE STUFF in the subject line; include your name and mailing address in the body of the email.
Labels:
Aardwolf Publishing,
Dave Cockrum,
Gene Colan,
Harlan Ellison
Thursday, April 10, 2008
About Last Night
Once you've pulled a feather out of the pillow, it's tough to shove it back in. Nevertheless, some of you will notice that my post "A Night at the Opera" has been deleted, along with the comments and pending comments that were associated with the entry. Sorry. There's few things I love more than my freedom to write about whatever I fancy writing about--and, in particular, stories that I think need telling--but one of those things are my friends.
Harlan has asked me to drop this topic. Now I ask each of you to do the same.
Harlan has asked me to drop this topic. Now I ask each of you to do the same.
Wednesday, April 9, 2008
My Classical Shotokan Roots
Some yutz has been obsessively writing me to "question" the authenticity of my martial arts training, considering, as he put it, my tendency towards occasionally using it. Frankly, I couldn't be happier for the opportunity to break out the family album.

I received my shodan (1st degree blackbelt) directly from Grand Master Richard Lenchus, founder and O'Sensei of the Legend Shotokan System, a worldwide syndicate of dojos based on traditional Shotokan plus Lenchus' own inimitable style of kata and kumite. A Legend blackbelt takes anywhere from seven to ten years to achieve. Unlike what's found in American Tae Kwon Do and many other U.S. dojos, rank in the Legend system cannot be bought--it must be fought for, on every level. Information on Sensei Lenchus and "The Legend" is available all over the web, including numerous articles that it has been my honor to pen.

My Sensei trained with and received rank from Kawanabe Sensei in Atsugi, Japan in 1958. I have had the good fortune of corresponding with my teacher's teacher, who is regarded as a pioneer in Shotokan.

Kawanabe Sensei received his training and rank directly from the legendary Funakoshi Sensei, the founder of Shotokan and pioneer of modern-day Japanese martial arts. Funakoshi Sensei's legacy rests in a document containing his philosophies of karate training now referred to as the niju kun. These rules are the premise of training for all Shotokan karateka and are published in The Twenty Guiding Principles of Karate wherein Funakoshi lays out 20 rules by which students of karate become better human beings.
I currently hold the rank of Sensei in Legend Shotokan but am no longer actively training nor teaching. I also have a blackbelt in Tae Kwon Do as well as training in Ishin Ru and American Combat Karate.
My two oldest sons, Avi (20) and Benjy (18), both trained in Shotokan and Tae Kwon Do as children. Each of them are accomplished wrestlers, too, and actively training in Brazilian Jui-Jitsu schools within the Gracie system (the top of the food chain). Benjy, whose wrestling record was 21 and 2 his senior year, recently took first place in his very first BJJ tourament--an invitational in Haifa, Israel.
Benjy Meth
Labels:
Kawanabe Sensei,
Legend Shotokan,
Richard Lenchus,
Shotokan
Tuesday, April 8, 2008
Dreams with Sharp Teeth
Thursday, April 3, 2008
Tuesday, April 1, 2008
Herb Trimpe on Wolverine's Humble Origins
Herb Trimpe, who brought us the first appearance of Wolverine in the last panel of Incredible Hulk #180, weighs in on my previous post regarding Wolvie's birth:[The creation] was a kind of a group grope with John [Romita] doing the final model sheet. Len's concept, I believe, or Roy, but I think Len. I, being present in the bullpen at the time, was privy to what was going on. I like to think that they sewed the monster together and I brought it to life. All this of course with Stan's approval.--Herb
Friday, March 28, 2008
Son of Meth
On the Origins of the Wolverine
With a Wolverine movie in the works, this question from my son was inevitable: “Who made up Wolverine?”
“Let's ask,” I said.
I started with a call to my friend Roy Thomas who was Marvel’s EiC when Wolverine first came on the scene in 1974. Roy had once noted that Dave Cockrum had a Wolverine character in his now legendary sketchbook.
“I have no doubt that Dave [Cockrum] and Mike Friedrich were telling the truth about his having a Wolverine character,” said Roy, “though I have no conscious knowledge of seeing it. It can't have had too much of an influence on me, because when I decided we should have a Canadian character and even that it would be named after a fierce Northern animal, I know I was conflicted between ‘Wolverine’ and ‘Badger’--finally decided Badger had the connotation of mere heckling or nagging, while Wolverine virtually had the word wolf in it.
“So I met with Len Wein at lunch and told him to create for the Hulk a hero-villain who would be Canadian, short (because a wolverine is a small animal), and very fierce... and Len remembers my telling him I wanted to see how he'd handle a Canadian accent or some such thing, because I'd admired his Jamaican patois for Brother Voodoo.
“After that, I left it to Len and artist Herb Trimpe--and [John] Romita, who worked with Len on the character design. John doesn't recall being told to make the guy small but did so anyway... but if he hadn't been small, as editor I would have had it changed, and John may simply have forgotten either Len or myself telling him that. I had no particular input on the costume or look that I can recall... nor was it my idea that he have adamantium claws, though I had created adamantium.”
Of course, it was Dave Cockrum who unmasked Logan, and Chris Claremont who developed his winning personality, bub.
I'll let you folks know if Len or Herb have anything interesting to add.
“Let's ask,” I said.
I started with a call to my friend Roy Thomas who was Marvel’s EiC when Wolverine first came on the scene in 1974. Roy had once noted that Dave Cockrum had a Wolverine character in his now legendary sketchbook.
“I have no doubt that Dave [Cockrum] and Mike Friedrich were telling the truth about his having a Wolverine character,” said Roy, “though I have no conscious knowledge of seeing it. It can't have had too much of an influence on me, because when I decided we should have a Canadian character and even that it would be named after a fierce Northern animal, I know I was conflicted between ‘Wolverine’ and ‘Badger’--finally decided Badger had the connotation of mere heckling or nagging, while Wolverine virtually had the word wolf in it.
“So I met with Len Wein at lunch and told him to create for the Hulk a hero-villain who would be Canadian, short (because a wolverine is a small animal), and very fierce... and Len remembers my telling him I wanted to see how he'd handle a Canadian accent or some such thing, because I'd admired his Jamaican patois for Brother Voodoo.
“After that, I left it to Len and artist Herb Trimpe--and [John] Romita, who worked with Len on the character design. John doesn't recall being told to make the guy small but did so anyway... but if he hadn't been small, as editor I would have had it changed, and John may simply have forgotten either Len or myself telling him that. I had no particular input on the costume or look that I can recall... nor was it my idea that he have adamantium claws, though I had created adamantium.”
Of course, it was Dave Cockrum who unmasked Logan, and Chris Claremont who developed his winning personality, bub.
I'll let you folks know if Len or Herb have anything interesting to add.
Thursday, March 20, 2008
The Company You Keep
Tuesday, March 18, 2008
And now…The Dave & Paty Cockrum Scholarship

I was privy to a few moments of sunshine last week when I introduced Paty Cockrum to Joe Kubert.
“Thrilled to meet you, sir,” said Paty in a voice I didn’t recognize as hers. Sir? Hell, this is the toughest old gal I’ve ever known, famous for dragging men out of burning buildings and pointing shotguns at strangers. The occasion was the initiation of The Dave & Paty Cockrum Scholarship Fund, which I’ve been planning for a number of months.
“You were one of the first comic artists that I was truly a fan of,” Paty said to the blushing legend. “You and Bill Everett were the only two who signed your work back then, but you were the only one who knew how draw horses. Everyone else bent their legs the wrong way.”
Joe, who always has an easy smile, had a good laugh. “I had great respect for your husband’s work,” he said. “I watched it very carefully.”
“Well, your Hawkman was formative in his design concepts,” said Paty. “He revered you as an inspiration.”
I’m proud to sit on the committee that will give the newly established scholarship each year to a student at the Joe Kubert School of Cartoon Graphic Art, Inc. The school currently has about 120 students and has graduated more than 3,000 since its founding in 1976, including some of today’s leading artists and many of my pals.
The scholarship will be funded by the sale of Dave Cockrum’s personal comics collection, which you can see here.
Application deadline is April 30. The winner will be announced at HeroesCon in South Carolina in June. For more information, contact Mike Chen at mchen@kubertsworld.com.
“Thrilled to meet you, sir,” said Paty in a voice I didn’t recognize as hers. Sir? Hell, this is the toughest old gal I’ve ever known, famous for dragging men out of burning buildings and pointing shotguns at strangers. The occasion was the initiation of The Dave & Paty Cockrum Scholarship Fund, which I’ve been planning for a number of months.
“You were one of the first comic artists that I was truly a fan of,” Paty said to the blushing legend. “You and Bill Everett were the only two who signed your work back then, but you were the only one who knew how draw horses. Everyone else bent their legs the wrong way.”
Joe, who always has an easy smile, had a good laugh. “I had great respect for your husband’s work,” he said. “I watched it very carefully.”
“Well, your Hawkman was formative in his design concepts,” said Paty. “He revered you as an inspiration.”
I’m proud to sit on the committee that will give the newly established scholarship each year to a student at the Joe Kubert School of Cartoon Graphic Art, Inc. The school currently has about 120 students and has graduated more than 3,000 since its founding in 1976, including some of today’s leading artists and many of my pals.
The scholarship will be funded by the sale of Dave Cockrum’s personal comics collection, which you can see here.
Application deadline is April 30. The winner will be announced at HeroesCon in South Carolina in June. For more information, contact Mike Chen at mchen@kubertsworld.com.
Labels:
Dave Cockrum,
Joe Kubert,
Paty Cockrum
Saw off her other leg
Monday, March 17, 2008
If I Should Fall From Grace with G-d

It was worth an occassional elbow and being continually crushed forward by 5,000 drunken Irishmen to stand front and center for the Pogues triumphant return to New York City tonight at the Roseland Ballroom. Shane McGowan, one of the greatest writers of my generation, only fell down once during the entire two-hour performance, and never off the stage. You've gotta love a guy who dropped so much acid one night that he broke all his teeth trying to eat a Beachboys album.
Friday, March 14, 2008
The Bully Incident: Part II
Three months to the day after my son was forced to knock the bejeezus out of a bully at the Joseph Kushner Hebrew Academy, I received a phone call from Rabbi Daniel Price.
"Hello, Mr. Meth. I hope everything is well. I’m calling to check up on how Jesse is doing with his psychologist."
"With his what?"
"Psychologist."
"I thought you said that. My son doesn’t see a psychologist."
"I believe that was our agreement."
"And which left field did this just come out of?"
"Excuse me?" said the rabbi.
"Are you telling me," I asked, "that there’s been another incident?"
"No," said Price. "Everything is fine."
"Then why are you calling me?"
"Because our agreement was—"
"Our agreement," I interrupted, "was that my son would see a psychologist once so you could ascertain that he was no danger to your other students; that you weren’t on the verge of a Colunbine incident. And we complied. He went. Once. Your school shrink received a letter from her colleague declaring that my boy was fine, and he was re-admitted. In other words, you covered your ass. Now why are you really calling?"
Rabbi Price explained that, according to his notes, there was an agreement was that my child would attend regular sessions with a psychologist—sessions designed to help the boy deal with anger management and any potential rage issues.
Now watch two adults deal with theirs.
"Is there something wrong with your memory, rabbi?" I asked.
"I don’t believe so, Mr. Meth."
"Then you must have completely tuned out three months ago. My son didn’t have a rage issue; he knocked shit out of the school bully following your personal failure to curtail that misanthrope’s behavior. What my son did was GOOD and RIGHT and PROPER and by every stretch of the imagination NORMAL." I took a breath.
"What your son did," said Price, his voice rising, "was cold and calculated. He beat the boy senseless and without mercy."
"Exactly," I said. "After months of being tormented, and your office doing nothing about it, my son put the little fucker out of everyone’s misery. And he did it precisely because his father told him to do it."
"He should have refused," said Price. "He should have told you that it was foolish—"
"Perhaps that’s how you spoke to your father, rabbi, but in my home, children don’t talk that way to parents."
This was going nowhere. We were about to start insulting each other’s mothers. I could smell the threat of suspension for my son until I complied with this mandatory psychologist edict, so I refreshed Price’s memory once more. Apparently he hadn’t paid attention in October, 2007, when I warned him that if he didn’t solve the bullying problem in his school, then I would. Apparently he hadn’t heard my warning that I was ready to level a negligence suit against his school, and him personally, for ignoring repeated warnings that my son was being tormented by another boy with a thick file of complaints from yet other parents. Apparently our young rabbi doesn’t read this blog!
So I painstakingly refreshed his memory, yet again, concluding with the lawsuit.
"It’s not something I want to do," I said, meaning sue a yeshiva, "but if you leave me no choice..."
"Are you serious?" Price screamed. "You’re going to sue us? Your son beats up another child and you have the audacity to threaten a suit against us? If anything, the other parent should be suing you!"
"They can certainly try," I replied, "but that’s not what we’re talking about. I have a solid case against you for the months of neglect, despite repeated warnings, which forced this situation to a head. And my attorney is only too happy to take this case on a contingency. He smells a payday. And don’t think this won’t hit the papers and internet, rabbi. That’s what Tiggers do best."
I can’t remember who hung up on who first. I suspect it was mutual. No one actually said fuck you but it was in our voices. Two things were clear: Daniel Price was going to chase this up a tree. He was going to borrow trouble just to prove that in his role as “educator” he didn’t have to take shit off nobody.
And I was going to sue his ass.
This morning, I entered the Joseph Kushner Hebrew Academy at 8:20. I signed in at the security desk, then proceeded to the school office and requested that the yeshiva send my son’s transcripts to the local public school. On the advice of my attorney, pending our lawsuit, I was withdrawing my boy from the yeshiva before they had an opportunity to harass him further.
Two hours later, my ex-wife phoned. I was sitting outside the office of the Kalever Rebbe, shilta, waiting for my appointment with the Ohave Yisroel when I got the call.
“They don’t want any trouble,” said my ex.
“They who?”
“Kushner. The school. Mrs. Deitsch just called me. They’re backing down.”
“And they called you?”
“Apparently they’re afraid of you. Please don’t sue them.”
Uncle Harlan loved this story. And I loved bringing him good news for a change. He said it was a monument to personal responsibility. Had his missus call me 20 minutes later just so I could repeat it.
I was going to end it with, and then I went in and got a brocha from the Kalever Rebbe. He told me to be more b’simcha.But I’m going to end like this:
If this school ever forces my hand, I'll sue them—win, lose or draw. And I’ll report on it. And I’ll expect all of you—my friends with blogs and newspaper columns and other media at your disposal—to report on it, too. And to name names.
I’ll owe you one. Or perhaps you’ll be repaying one you owe me.
And I’ll enjoy every moment of it. B’simcha.
Personal responsibility. With fanfare.
That’s what Tiggers do best.
"Hello, Mr. Meth. I hope everything is well. I’m calling to check up on how Jesse is doing with his psychologist."
"With his what?"
"Psychologist."
"I thought you said that. My son doesn’t see a psychologist."
"I believe that was our agreement."
"And which left field did this just come out of?"
"Excuse me?" said the rabbi.
"Are you telling me," I asked, "that there’s been another incident?"
"No," said Price. "Everything is fine."
"Then why are you calling me?"
"Because our agreement was—"
"Our agreement," I interrupted, "was that my son would see a psychologist once so you could ascertain that he was no danger to your other students; that you weren’t on the verge of a Colunbine incident. And we complied. He went. Once. Your school shrink received a letter from her colleague declaring that my boy was fine, and he was re-admitted. In other words, you covered your ass. Now why are you really calling?"
Rabbi Price explained that, according to his notes, there was an agreement was that my child would attend regular sessions with a psychologist—sessions designed to help the boy deal with anger management and any potential rage issues.
Now watch two adults deal with theirs.
"Is there something wrong with your memory, rabbi?" I asked.
"I don’t believe so, Mr. Meth."
"Then you must have completely tuned out three months ago. My son didn’t have a rage issue; he knocked shit out of the school bully following your personal failure to curtail that misanthrope’s behavior. What my son did was GOOD and RIGHT and PROPER and by every stretch of the imagination NORMAL." I took a breath.
"What your son did," said Price, his voice rising, "was cold and calculated. He beat the boy senseless and without mercy."
"Exactly," I said. "After months of being tormented, and your office doing nothing about it, my son put the little fucker out of everyone’s misery. And he did it precisely because his father told him to do it."
"He should have refused," said Price. "He should have told you that it was foolish—"
"Perhaps that’s how you spoke to your father, rabbi, but in my home, children don’t talk that way to parents."
This was going nowhere. We were about to start insulting each other’s mothers. I could smell the threat of suspension for my son until I complied with this mandatory psychologist edict, so I refreshed Price’s memory once more. Apparently he hadn’t paid attention in October, 2007, when I warned him that if he didn’t solve the bullying problem in his school, then I would. Apparently he hadn’t heard my warning that I was ready to level a negligence suit against his school, and him personally, for ignoring repeated warnings that my son was being tormented by another boy with a thick file of complaints from yet other parents. Apparently our young rabbi doesn’t read this blog!
So I painstakingly refreshed his memory, yet again, concluding with the lawsuit.
"It’s not something I want to do," I said, meaning sue a yeshiva, "but if you leave me no choice..."
"Are you serious?" Price screamed. "You’re going to sue us? Your son beats up another child and you have the audacity to threaten a suit against us? If anything, the other parent should be suing you!"
"They can certainly try," I replied, "but that’s not what we’re talking about. I have a solid case against you for the months of neglect, despite repeated warnings, which forced this situation to a head. And my attorney is only too happy to take this case on a contingency. He smells a payday. And don’t think this won’t hit the papers and internet, rabbi. That’s what Tiggers do best."
I can’t remember who hung up on who first. I suspect it was mutual. No one actually said fuck you but it was in our voices. Two things were clear: Daniel Price was going to chase this up a tree. He was going to borrow trouble just to prove that in his role as “educator” he didn’t have to take shit off nobody.
And I was going to sue his ass.
This morning, I entered the Joseph Kushner Hebrew Academy at 8:20. I signed in at the security desk, then proceeded to the school office and requested that the yeshiva send my son’s transcripts to the local public school. On the advice of my attorney, pending our lawsuit, I was withdrawing my boy from the yeshiva before they had an opportunity to harass him further.
Two hours later, my ex-wife phoned. I was sitting outside the office of the Kalever Rebbe, shilta, waiting for my appointment with the Ohave Yisroel when I got the call.
“They don’t want any trouble,” said my ex.
“They who?”
“Kushner. The school. Mrs. Deitsch just called me. They’re backing down.”
“And they called you?”
“Apparently they’re afraid of you. Please don’t sue them.”
Uncle Harlan loved this story. And I loved bringing him good news for a change. He said it was a monument to personal responsibility. Had his missus call me 20 minutes later just so I could repeat it.
I was going to end it with, and then I went in and got a brocha from the Kalever Rebbe. He told me to be more b’simcha.But I’m going to end like this:
If this school ever forces my hand, I'll sue them—win, lose or draw. And I’ll report on it. And I’ll expect all of you—my friends with blogs and newspaper columns and other media at your disposal—to report on it, too. And to name names.
I’ll owe you one. Or perhaps you’ll be repaying one you owe me.
And I’ll enjoy every moment of it. B’simcha.
Personal responsibility. With fanfare.
That’s what Tiggers do best.
Monday, March 10, 2008
SNAKED heads for the BIG SCREEN

from today's Variety...
Saperstein takes on 'Snaked'
Producer options film rights to Meth series
Producer Richard Saperstein has optioned the film rights to Clifford Meth's comicbook series "Snaked" from IDW Publishing, the company behind "30 Days of Night."
Based on an original story by Meth, "Snaked" is a horror-noir that follows the personal and political exploits of a government employee with supernatural, snakelike abilities.
"The political arena forms the perfect backdrop for Clifford Meth's heady mix of horror, sex and mayhem," said Saperstein, former prexy of production at Dimension Films, who has overseen pics including "1408," "Rob Zombie's Halloween" and "The Mist."
IDW released the first installment of "Snaked," whose publishers call it the most "controversial book" it's ever published, in December. The third book in the series was released on Feb. 13.
Meth will pen the screenplay, and he will exec produce with IDW Publishing prexy and founder Ted Adams. Shara Kay will co-produce.
Meth will pen the screenplay, and he will exec produce with IDW Publishing prexy and founder Ted Adams. Shara Kay will co-produce.
Labels:
IDW Publishing,
RichardSaperstein,
Snaked
The God of Hate
The Palestinian official daily newspaper has honored the terrorist who, last week, gunned down eight high school students (that's students--not soldiers) with the status of shahid ("holy" Islamic martyr). The March 8 edition of Al-Hayat Al-Jadida prominently placed a picture of the scumbag on the front page, with the caption, "The Shahid Alaa Abu Dheim." In a page one article on the massacre at the yeshiva, his crime was again defined as an act of martyrdom.
Selling My Key Marvels



Fear not, true believers: Mister Meth has not abandoned the faith--he's just selling his doubles. There are some very nice books here.
Matzoh & Metal

This interview with Leslie West of Mountain is about to appear at a pal's website.
Tough Questions for Tough Jews:
Clifford Meth: Tell us about the new album.
Leslie West: We’ve started working on Mountain does Dylan. We’re not quite finished with it but I’m hoping by the end of the summer. I did some arrangements of Bob Dylan’s songs that are quite different. I actually did one on my very first album This Wheel’s On Fire, then I got motivated over in Europe last year listening to some of his lyrics and I came up with some ideas.
Meth: You’ve never played with Dylan.
West: No, I haven’t had that pleasure. I wasn’t a fan of his voice but I sure am of his lyrics and songs.
Meth: So who were you a fan of when you were growing up?
West: Well, what growing up are you talking about? Ten?
Meth: When you were growing up musically.
West: When I really started to play, it was Blues Breakers and Cream. Then Hendrix and The Stones. Listening to Cream, though--that’s who I am. That’s the reason I play like I play. That probably changed and influenced me more than anything.
Meth: Who do you listen to now?
West: Believe it or not, I listen to a lot of Black Sabbath. They did their first tour with us in ’69 and I just recently did “Mississippi Queen” with Ozzy and we put it out as a single.
Meth: How did that come about?
West: I just went over to Ozzy's house and did it. I had this show called “Metal Mania Weekend” once in awhile on VH1 Classic and I dug up some really old Black Sabbath stuff. Ozzy’s always had good guitar players with him.
Meth: Gene Marchello almost went on tour as Ozzy's guitarist.
West: Gene Marchello. Yeah. He should of somehow caught a break somewhere. He's good. I like the way he plays.
Meth: Let’s get back to working with Ozzy. Was this the first time you played together?
West: I did 150 dates with Black Sabbath and we got together in England and here. We hung out together. I was with him the other day in NY City doing some press and it’s amazing how he remembers everything about all those tours and all those dates; getting snowed in in Detroit for four days when we couldn’t leave the hotel. And another time when we were going to Cleveland and they were on the bill with Johnny Winter and we couldn’t get there because our plane had to make an emergency landing and they had to do a three-hour set. He remembers everything. It’s amazing how sharp he is.
Meth: I haven’t spoken with Ozzy in years but he was fun to chat with. He’s very funny.
West: Plus he’s a really great singer. Especially when he sings Beatle songs. People don’t give him credit for really singing but he can REALLY sing. His voice reminds me of a melodic guitar, actually.
Meth: How long did this new “Mississippi Queen” session take?
West: Two hours. They had the track sort of down and I put my rhythm and lead on it and then Mark Hudson produced it. We did it at Ozzy’s studio in his house. It really sounds great.
Meth: It must be fun to hear that on the radio again.
West: Mountain does it just like that now on stage. It’s a little different--a little slower. We put a new riff in it. I love it.
Meth: What did you make of the Cream reunion?
West: We do a Cream tribute during the show. We show a film of West, Bruce and Lang and Felix and Mountain and Cream all tied together. It runs around seven minutes and then we do four Cream songs. But this tour especially is great--it ties the whole thing together.
Meth: Which musicians do you hang out with?
West: I don’t really hang out with musicians… I’m trying to think of someone I hang out with... I tell you someone who I love--it’s Eddie Van Halen.
Meth: You once told me Eddie was just about the best guitarist you’d ever heard.
West: Yeah... A couple of years ago I had this contest at The House of Blues where I had these guitar players come down in the afternoon to audition, like in American Idol. I was going to pick one to play with us that night. I got up on stage to announce the winner and I said, “The winner is, uh...Ed...Van Halen!” And Ed came out and played. I played with him at Jones Beach—he brought me out to play one night. When I heard him it just made me want to play the guitar again. He’s just incredible.
Meth: I recently bought a guitar at a shop that you frequent in Teaneck.
West: Sure--Lark Street. That’s a famous store from Albany, New York. They have good stuff there.
Meth: You were born Leslie Weinstein. Where did you grow up?
West: Forest Hills.
Meth: You had a strong Jewish identity growing up?
West: Yeah. Did you see the special for VH1 Classic with Scott Ian from Anthrax, myself and Dee Snyder called "Matzoh and Metal"? We did a real Sedar. And we around and talked about the stories and we did all the prayers and everything--had the meal there.
Meth: Whose idea was that?
West: The president of VH1 Classic, Eric Sherman came up with it. He said he got the idea from me because we were in Hawaii and I was talking to him about how many Jewish rock musicians I’d found out there are. I didn’t realize there were that many--seems like more now than ever. And he was looking for ideas and he came up with that. So we shot it the other day in New York and it was a lot of fun.
Meth: Was your family traditional?
West: No... Well, I shouldn’t say that. My father was going to be a cantor and I grew up in Boro Park but I never... I don’t know. But my mom changed our name--I didn’t change my name. When I was in sixth grade my parents divorced and she just wanted to change her name so she gave me a choice of West or Winston. And I said West. Why not? Like Jackie Mason says, you can find a homeless person in New York sleeping on a piece of cardboard and he can get a perfectly good night sleep, but a Jew with a $5 million condo in Florida, "Oi! I had such a rough night! The light in the refrigerator kept waking me up."
Meth: You didn’t run into a lot of anti-Semitism in Forest Hills and Boro Park.
West: No. Not there. I mean I have run into it a couple of times, but not there.
Meth: In the music industry?
West: No. But when I was a kid, my grandparents had this big estate in Woodstock. There had 150 acres and a big lake and everybody else had a quarter acre and they wanted to buy land from my grandfather and he didn’t want to sell it--he didn’t want to break up our place. And my grandmother kept telling me she wasn’t Jewish. And I said, "What, are you ashamed of that?" And she said, "No! I’m not Jewish!" And my grandfather said, "She’s Jewish. She just doesn’t want people to take it out on you." She was afraid that people would find out and be mad about the land. That was when I first had the notion that there was some kind of resentment about those things.
Meth: Did that bother you?West: It did that she didn’t want to admit she was Jewish! You know, with a name like Glickman, how do you pass? (laughs) But I understood she was doing it to protect me and my brother. People up there were jealous.
Meth: Tell me more about the VH1 sedar.
West: Me, Scott Ian from Anthrax, JJ French and Dee Snyder. Dee’s half Jewish. I wanted to have a shmoyal [sic] there and have him to a bris, but Dee said he was circumcised already. It was fun. We said the prayers, talked about how that might have influenced our music--just four guys sitting at the table doing the wine, the prayers, the plagues, the bitter herbs. It can’t get more bitter than having Anthrax at the table. It was really fun. I thought it was going to be stupid, but it wasn’t. It was great. Maneshevitz sponsored it.
Meth: Speaking of Dee, there was a Long Island rock fraternity going on for a while.
West: Sure. Blue Oyster Cult, The Vagrants, The Ramones. Eric Bloom from BOC is Jewish. He’s also Howard Stern’s Cousin. The Vagrants are all Jewish, except for the lead singer. Joey Ramone.
Meth: Were The Dictators part of your crowd?
West: No, they were a little younger. But it is a fraternity. I was talking about that the other day, that when you’re in a rock group it’s like a very exclusive club. You know, it’s like a family.
Meth: That’s certainly your first circle, but the circle around that is the other bands, no? They’re the only ones who can identify with what you’re going through.
West: Yeah. It’s certainly a unique situation. When you think about it, we’re pretty lucky to have made it. Even if you have talent, everything has to fall into place. I produced this group called Clutch a couple of years ago and, well, if I were starting out now I don’t know if I would start out now. It’s a different world and a different business. You could go into a record store a few years ago and find pretty much anything. Now you have to search the web for it. It’s not the same as looking through albums. Probably record stores will be nonexistent in a few years.
Meth: The business changes, but the music survives.
West: I used to think that a lot of groups sounded alike when we were coming up, but they didn’t. You know, you had Procol Harem and Jethro Tull and Ten Years After... Cream, Hendix, The Stones, The Beatles, they all had their own sounds. But if you listen to MTV now--listen to rap, I mean I like some of it, but it’s pretty much the same. There’s a kid named Gavin DeGraw who plays the piano and sings, a young kid that’s really good--I’m impressed with him. So some of it is pretty good, but most of it seems like a formula that comes out of the kitchen.
Meth: What do you read?
West: I’m reading Bob Dylan’s book now. I mean he never wanted to be this. I saw him on "60 Minutes" a while ago and Ed Bradley asked him, "Could you write these kinds of songs again?" and he laughed and said, "No." He did it. You know, how are you gonna write some of that stuff again? We did "Subteranean Homesick Blues," "Blowin’ In the Wind," and "Serve Somebody," but it doesn’t sound like the Dylan versions, believe me. It sounds like Mountain doing''em. But some of the lyrics are incredible.
Meth: Even the new albums are two steps beyond everyone else. But I think he also surprised everybody with how well written Chronicles is.
West: I think there’s going to be a couple more. I put myself in the Village because the Vagrants used to hang around the Café Wha and all these places. All Dylan wanted to do was play and sing.
Meth: Dylan is very conscious of the nexus--who and where he came from. I was trying to approach that with you earlier when you said Cream--
West: I was never really into the Blues, although I did a Blues album last year called "Blues to Die For" that went to #6 on the BBC in England. And I have another one coming out in two months called "Got Blues?" that I did with Ansley Dunbar that’s real Black Blues songs that I never got a chance to do before. Playing with Ansley was great because he played with the Blues Breakers.
Meth: I read an interesting interview that Bono did with Dylan 10 or 12 years ago. Maybe 15 years. He says to Dylan, "You know, I’m jealous of you because you have roots--you have some place you came from."
West: I guess American Blues is... when The English started doing it, they were copying Blacks, and then when it came out over here we were copying the English who were copying us. It sort of reminds me of the old Amos and Andy Show on the radio, where there were these white guys doing Black guys--then on the TV show, they’d have Blacks imitating the white guys doing the Black guys. There’s not too much original stuff. There’s only eight notes.
Meth: So we're back to the beginning. Do you think you’ll get the chance to work with Dylan?
West: We let his management know that we’re doing this album and he wanted Bob to hear it because he said he might like to write some new verses. What I really wanted to do was get him on one of the songs. I know Michael Shanker is going to play on it and Ozzy told me the other day he’d love to sing on it.
© 2008 Clifford Meth
Tough Questions for Tough Jews:
Clifford Meth: Tell us about the new album.
Leslie West: We’ve started working on Mountain does Dylan. We’re not quite finished with it but I’m hoping by the end of the summer. I did some arrangements of Bob Dylan’s songs that are quite different. I actually did one on my very first album This Wheel’s On Fire, then I got motivated over in Europe last year listening to some of his lyrics and I came up with some ideas.
Meth: You’ve never played with Dylan.
West: No, I haven’t had that pleasure. I wasn’t a fan of his voice but I sure am of his lyrics and songs.
Meth: So who were you a fan of when you were growing up?
West: Well, what growing up are you talking about? Ten?
Meth: When you were growing up musically.
West: When I really started to play, it was Blues Breakers and Cream. Then Hendrix and The Stones. Listening to Cream, though--that’s who I am. That’s the reason I play like I play. That probably changed and influenced me more than anything.
Meth: Who do you listen to now?
West: Believe it or not, I listen to a lot of Black Sabbath. They did their first tour with us in ’69 and I just recently did “Mississippi Queen” with Ozzy and we put it out as a single.
Meth: How did that come about?
West: I just went over to Ozzy's house and did it. I had this show called “Metal Mania Weekend” once in awhile on VH1 Classic and I dug up some really old Black Sabbath stuff. Ozzy’s always had good guitar players with him.
Meth: Gene Marchello almost went on tour as Ozzy's guitarist.
West: Gene Marchello. Yeah. He should of somehow caught a break somewhere. He's good. I like the way he plays.
Meth: Let’s get back to working with Ozzy. Was this the first time you played together?
West: I did 150 dates with Black Sabbath and we got together in England and here. We hung out together. I was with him the other day in NY City doing some press and it’s amazing how he remembers everything about all those tours and all those dates; getting snowed in in Detroit for four days when we couldn’t leave the hotel. And another time when we were going to Cleveland and they were on the bill with Johnny Winter and we couldn’t get there because our plane had to make an emergency landing and they had to do a three-hour set. He remembers everything. It’s amazing how sharp he is.
Meth: I haven’t spoken with Ozzy in years but he was fun to chat with. He’s very funny.
West: Plus he’s a really great singer. Especially when he sings Beatle songs. People don’t give him credit for really singing but he can REALLY sing. His voice reminds me of a melodic guitar, actually.
Meth: How long did this new “Mississippi Queen” session take?
West: Two hours. They had the track sort of down and I put my rhythm and lead on it and then Mark Hudson produced it. We did it at Ozzy’s studio in his house. It really sounds great.
Meth: It must be fun to hear that on the radio again.
West: Mountain does it just like that now on stage. It’s a little different--a little slower. We put a new riff in it. I love it.
Meth: What did you make of the Cream reunion?
West: We do a Cream tribute during the show. We show a film of West, Bruce and Lang and Felix and Mountain and Cream all tied together. It runs around seven minutes and then we do four Cream songs. But this tour especially is great--it ties the whole thing together.
Meth: Which musicians do you hang out with?
West: I don’t really hang out with musicians… I’m trying to think of someone I hang out with... I tell you someone who I love--it’s Eddie Van Halen.
Meth: You once told me Eddie was just about the best guitarist you’d ever heard.
West: Yeah... A couple of years ago I had this contest at The House of Blues where I had these guitar players come down in the afternoon to audition, like in American Idol. I was going to pick one to play with us that night. I got up on stage to announce the winner and I said, “The winner is, uh...Ed...Van Halen!” And Ed came out and played. I played with him at Jones Beach—he brought me out to play one night. When I heard him it just made me want to play the guitar again. He’s just incredible.
Meth: I recently bought a guitar at a shop that you frequent in Teaneck.
West: Sure--Lark Street. That’s a famous store from Albany, New York. They have good stuff there.
Meth: You were born Leslie Weinstein. Where did you grow up?
West: Forest Hills.
Meth: You had a strong Jewish identity growing up?
West: Yeah. Did you see the special for VH1 Classic with Scott Ian from Anthrax, myself and Dee Snyder called "Matzoh and Metal"? We did a real Sedar. And we around and talked about the stories and we did all the prayers and everything--had the meal there.
Meth: Whose idea was that?
West: The president of VH1 Classic, Eric Sherman came up with it. He said he got the idea from me because we were in Hawaii and I was talking to him about how many Jewish rock musicians I’d found out there are. I didn’t realize there were that many--seems like more now than ever. And he was looking for ideas and he came up with that. So we shot it the other day in New York and it was a lot of fun.
Meth: Was your family traditional?
West: No... Well, I shouldn’t say that. My father was going to be a cantor and I grew up in Boro Park but I never... I don’t know. But my mom changed our name--I didn’t change my name. When I was in sixth grade my parents divorced and she just wanted to change her name so she gave me a choice of West or Winston. And I said West. Why not? Like Jackie Mason says, you can find a homeless person in New York sleeping on a piece of cardboard and he can get a perfectly good night sleep, but a Jew with a $5 million condo in Florida, "Oi! I had such a rough night! The light in the refrigerator kept waking me up."
Meth: You didn’t run into a lot of anti-Semitism in Forest Hills and Boro Park.
West: No. Not there. I mean I have run into it a couple of times, but not there.
Meth: In the music industry?
West: No. But when I was a kid, my grandparents had this big estate in Woodstock. There had 150 acres and a big lake and everybody else had a quarter acre and they wanted to buy land from my grandfather and he didn’t want to sell it--he didn’t want to break up our place. And my grandmother kept telling me she wasn’t Jewish. And I said, "What, are you ashamed of that?" And she said, "No! I’m not Jewish!" And my grandfather said, "She’s Jewish. She just doesn’t want people to take it out on you." She was afraid that people would find out and be mad about the land. That was when I first had the notion that there was some kind of resentment about those things.
Meth: Did that bother you?West: It did that she didn’t want to admit she was Jewish! You know, with a name like Glickman, how do you pass? (laughs) But I understood she was doing it to protect me and my brother. People up there were jealous.
Meth: Tell me more about the VH1 sedar.
West: Me, Scott Ian from Anthrax, JJ French and Dee Snyder. Dee’s half Jewish. I wanted to have a shmoyal [sic] there and have him to a bris, but Dee said he was circumcised already. It was fun. We said the prayers, talked about how that might have influenced our music--just four guys sitting at the table doing the wine, the prayers, the plagues, the bitter herbs. It can’t get more bitter than having Anthrax at the table. It was really fun. I thought it was going to be stupid, but it wasn’t. It was great. Maneshevitz sponsored it.
Meth: Speaking of Dee, there was a Long Island rock fraternity going on for a while.
West: Sure. Blue Oyster Cult, The Vagrants, The Ramones. Eric Bloom from BOC is Jewish. He’s also Howard Stern’s Cousin. The Vagrants are all Jewish, except for the lead singer. Joey Ramone.
Meth: Were The Dictators part of your crowd?
West: No, they were a little younger. But it is a fraternity. I was talking about that the other day, that when you’re in a rock group it’s like a very exclusive club. You know, it’s like a family.
Meth: That’s certainly your first circle, but the circle around that is the other bands, no? They’re the only ones who can identify with what you’re going through.
West: Yeah. It’s certainly a unique situation. When you think about it, we’re pretty lucky to have made it. Even if you have talent, everything has to fall into place. I produced this group called Clutch a couple of years ago and, well, if I were starting out now I don’t know if I would start out now. It’s a different world and a different business. You could go into a record store a few years ago and find pretty much anything. Now you have to search the web for it. It’s not the same as looking through albums. Probably record stores will be nonexistent in a few years.
Meth: The business changes, but the music survives.
West: I used to think that a lot of groups sounded alike when we were coming up, but they didn’t. You know, you had Procol Harem and Jethro Tull and Ten Years After... Cream, Hendix, The Stones, The Beatles, they all had their own sounds. But if you listen to MTV now--listen to rap, I mean I like some of it, but it’s pretty much the same. There’s a kid named Gavin DeGraw who plays the piano and sings, a young kid that’s really good--I’m impressed with him. So some of it is pretty good, but most of it seems like a formula that comes out of the kitchen.
Meth: What do you read?
West: I’m reading Bob Dylan’s book now. I mean he never wanted to be this. I saw him on "60 Minutes" a while ago and Ed Bradley asked him, "Could you write these kinds of songs again?" and he laughed and said, "No." He did it. You know, how are you gonna write some of that stuff again? We did "Subteranean Homesick Blues," "Blowin’ In the Wind," and "Serve Somebody," but it doesn’t sound like the Dylan versions, believe me. It sounds like Mountain doing''em. But some of the lyrics are incredible.
Meth: Even the new albums are two steps beyond everyone else. But I think he also surprised everybody with how well written Chronicles is.
West: I think there’s going to be a couple more. I put myself in the Village because the Vagrants used to hang around the Café Wha and all these places. All Dylan wanted to do was play and sing.
Meth: Dylan is very conscious of the nexus--who and where he came from. I was trying to approach that with you earlier when you said Cream--
West: I was never really into the Blues, although I did a Blues album last year called "Blues to Die For" that went to #6 on the BBC in England. And I have another one coming out in two months called "Got Blues?" that I did with Ansley Dunbar that’s real Black Blues songs that I never got a chance to do before. Playing with Ansley was great because he played with the Blues Breakers.
Meth: I read an interesting interview that Bono did with Dylan 10 or 12 years ago. Maybe 15 years. He says to Dylan, "You know, I’m jealous of you because you have roots--you have some place you came from."
West: I guess American Blues is... when The English started doing it, they were copying Blacks, and then when it came out over here we were copying the English who were copying us. It sort of reminds me of the old Amos and Andy Show on the radio, where there were these white guys doing Black guys--then on the TV show, they’d have Blacks imitating the white guys doing the Black guys. There’s not too much original stuff. There’s only eight notes.
Meth: So we're back to the beginning. Do you think you’ll get the chance to work with Dylan?
West: We let his management know that we’re doing this album and he wanted Bob to hear it because he said he might like to write some new verses. What I really wanted to do was get him on one of the songs. I know Michael Shanker is going to play on it and Ozzy told me the other day he’d love to sing on it.
© 2008 Clifford Meth
Labels:
Leslie West,
Mountain,
Tough Jews
Friday, March 7, 2008
Dancing in the streets
Eight students in Jerusalem (not soldiers) between the ages of 15 and 19 shot in the back last night while they studied. The reaction in Gaza?
From the Associated Press...
About 7,000 Gazans marched in the streets of Jebaliya, firing in the air in celebration... In the southern town of Rafah, residents distributed sweets to moving cars, and militants fired mortars in celebration.
From the Associated Press...About 7,000 Gazans marched in the streets of Jebaliya, firing in the air in celebration... In the southern town of Rafah, residents distributed sweets to moving cars, and militants fired mortars in celebration.
Monday, March 3, 2008
Obama Nation
I hate to be a party pooper, but we found the new Security Checkpoint toy from Playmobile somewhat disappointing. My six-year-old nephew pointed out that the passenger's shoes can’t be removed, and when we placed some potentially dangerous peanut butter beneath the passenger's jacket, neither the passageway detector nor the security wand picked it up. “That's the worst security ever!” said my nephew. But it turned out okay because when the passenger got on the Playmobil 757 and tried to hijack it, several heroic passengers kicked the crap out of her.My son wants the Playmobil Neighborhood Surveillance System set for Chanukah. I've heard the cameras on that thing have shitty motion detection, so I'm getting him the Playmobil Abu-Gharib Interrogation Set instead.
Sunday, March 2, 2008
Cockrum Estate Update

We can't seem to keep any of Dave's file copies in stock; they sell as fast as I post them... Sooner or later, a dealer will make Paty Cockrum an offer I can't refuse and you'll have to find these books in their auction or store, so buy them while they're here and less expensive.
Another small batch of Dave's books will go up today. Click here to see the comics being offered.
Syd Shores - Correction
I mistakenly reported that Syd Shores--my long, lost cousin--lived in Mt. Freedom. Mike Sturm, our mutual cousin and family historian, updates me.
I think I misled you: The Shores lived on Long Island. Syd's wife, Selma (nee Hirschhorn) Shores came from Mt. Freedom. Selma's father, Bernard Hirschhorn was the "Patriarch" of the Hirschhorn family, who sponsored his parents and siblings including my grandmother, when they came over from Galicia. He made his fortune in the garment center and settled in Mt Freedom. Ben was one of the founders of the Mt. Freedom Jewish Center, which is why Syd, Selma and many of the Hirschhorn descendents are buried there.
Friday, February 29, 2008
Cousin Syd
Oddly enough, my cousin Syd Shores lived just a few towns over from where I grew up. Mutual cousin Mike Sturm--our family historian--brought me up to speed today and sent me some photos from the family archives. I must have dozens of Syd's inking jobs in my personal comics collection. I regret that we never met.
Wednesday, February 27, 2008
Syd Shores - Mishpacha!

My cousin Mike Sturm just informed me that Marvel inker Syd Shores is famiglia.
So now I have to go buy one of these.
Don't know if you know this but the recent Marvel Comics stamps that the Post Office produced contains a cover by our cousin, Syd Shores. Syd was married to a first cousin of my father's side (the Hirschorn side). Apparently, he drew and dad wrote a whole lot of books together. Other than the books I have, I really didn't know much about my father's early career in comics - still don't.I didn't know Mike's father's work either, so I looked it up. Turns out that Phil Sturm (Mike's father and my father's first cousin) was a writer on All Hero Comics #1 from Fawcett (1943), Blue Ribbon Comics #3 from Archie (1939), and the following Marvel-Timely books: Daring Mystery Comics #3 (1940), Mystic Comics #5, and USA Comics #1, #2, #3, and #4 (1941).
So now I have to go buy one of these.
Labels:
comics,
Phil Sturm,
Syd Shores
Dave Cockrum's X-Men File Copies
Mike Pascale yelled at me last night for selling Dave's X-Men file copies too inexpensively and for driving drunk. The file copies seem to sell as quickly as I list them. Paty informs me that Dave only received two or three copies (sometimes five, but rarely) when he did a comic for Marvel, and he usually gave them away. So I guess Pascale is right about the supply and demand.
More X-Men file copies will be listed soon... and the prices will go up. Unless I get into an accident and get myself killed, which would be shit and no toilet paper because I'd have to spend eternity hearing Pascale nattering, "I told you so!"
More X-Men file copies will be listed soon... and the prices will go up. Unless I get into an accident and get myself killed, which would be shit and no toilet paper because I'd have to spend eternity hearing Pascale nattering, "I told you so!"
Tuesday, February 26, 2008
Paty Cockrum on Grabbing Dave’s Ass

Beginning a tell-all interview with Paty Cockrum (a.k.a. Paty Greer), who worked in Marvel’s legendary bullpen, penciled, inked and colored a number of Marvel’s comics (including Claws of the Cat #3 and Amazing Spider-Man #247), and is notorious for saying whatever’s on her mind...
Cliff: It's been slightly more than a year since Dave passed. Does he still visit?
Paty: Yes. He often comes visiting both in the studio and in the house. I am sure he roams the grounds too... He loved the pond area so I am sure he is out there. He has been with Boo and I on several trips, too. When something interesting comes on the TV, like recent discoveries in dinosaurs, I cannot help but say to the ether, “You listening to this, furface?” And I have the distinct impression he is.
Cliff: Tell me again how you and Dave met. I seem to recall that you pinched his ass.
Paty: (laughing) Not quite. The bullpen at Marvel, at that time, was a wide open large room with two half-walls that drawing boards butted up against. You had the window wall with Danny Crespi, head letterer, and Morrie Kuramoto, his erstwhile second in command, and they faced away from the windows. On the other side of their wall were three drawing boards butted up against the half-wall—those were usually reserved for freelancers to come in and have a place to do corrections or finish off something. Across from them were three more boards up againstthe second half-wall—mine and two others. Across from all that was a Xerox machine and a long table for people using the Xerox machine to lay out stuff they were doing, and another drawing board at the end. At either end there was an aisle and at the far end of the room was a long office that was the domain at the time of JJ (John) Verpoorten, the Production Manager. On my end of the room Johnny Romita Sr. had his office and there was an alcove with two desks where Mike Esposito and Frank Giacoia, both inkers, usually hung out. The door to the hallway that led to editorial offices.
Now I was correcting some art on a couple of pages or doing paste-ups of indicias and such, and Duffy Vohland was on the board next to me doing whatever Duffy did. There were people in and out of the room with all kinds of pages so when I heard the copier operating I looked up and saw this guy Xeroxing pages. Nice looking guy with a beard. I asked Duffy who that was and he said, “Oh, that's Dave Cockrum. He’s doing the new revival of the X-Men book.” I picked up the pages I had finished and walked the long way around, towards JJ's office, to get a better look at this guy. I knew his art from Fantastic Fanzine as well as some good work he had done over at DC on the Legion of Superheroes where he had redesigned the costumes of the characters (thank goodness! the 1950’s uniforms were awful and lacked any kind of style and pizzazz). So I was impressed with his art. Dave was busily Xeroxing and Duffy noticed that I took the long way around so he stood up to get a look at what I was up to because ordinarily I would have just walked out my side of the half-walls and gone out the door. As I walked leisurely from JJ's end of the room, I looked Dave up and down, liked what I saw, and, as I passed behind him, I patted him on the fanny and said, “Nice ass,” and then I was through the door.
Duffy later regaled me with what happened after I exited the bullpen. Dave looked up, his big blue eyes wide, looked both ways and asked wildly, “Uh...Who-waz-that? What? Who?” Duffy is, by this time howling and nearly falling down. Duffy was the human embodiment of Volstagg from the Thor series, with girth and flaming red hair and beard to match, so when he laughed, it was rolling. “Oh,” sez he to a totally startled and befuddled Dave, “that's just Paty. She's harmless.”
That's how much Duffy knew! BWAHAHAHAHAHA!
Cliff: It's been slightly more than a year since Dave passed. Does he still visit?
Paty: Yes. He often comes visiting both in the studio and in the house. I am sure he roams the grounds too... He loved the pond area so I am sure he is out there. He has been with Boo and I on several trips, too. When something interesting comes on the TV, like recent discoveries in dinosaurs, I cannot help but say to the ether, “You listening to this, furface?” And I have the distinct impression he is.
Cliff: Tell me again how you and Dave met. I seem to recall that you pinched his ass.
Paty: (laughing) Not quite. The bullpen at Marvel, at that time, was a wide open large room with two half-walls that drawing boards butted up against. You had the window wall with Danny Crespi, head letterer, and Morrie Kuramoto, his erstwhile second in command, and they faced away from the windows. On the other side of their wall were three drawing boards butted up against the half-wall—those were usually reserved for freelancers to come in and have a place to do corrections or finish off something. Across from them were three more boards up againstthe second half-wall—mine and two others. Across from all that was a Xerox machine and a long table for people using the Xerox machine to lay out stuff they were doing, and another drawing board at the end. At either end there was an aisle and at the far end of the room was a long office that was the domain at the time of JJ (John) Verpoorten, the Production Manager. On my end of the room Johnny Romita Sr. had his office and there was an alcove with two desks where Mike Esposito and Frank Giacoia, both inkers, usually hung out. The door to the hallway that led to editorial offices.
Now I was correcting some art on a couple of pages or doing paste-ups of indicias and such, and Duffy Vohland was on the board next to me doing whatever Duffy did. There were people in and out of the room with all kinds of pages so when I heard the copier operating I looked up and saw this guy Xeroxing pages. Nice looking guy with a beard. I asked Duffy who that was and he said, “Oh, that's Dave Cockrum. He’s doing the new revival of the X-Men book.” I picked up the pages I had finished and walked the long way around, towards JJ's office, to get a better look at this guy. I knew his art from Fantastic Fanzine as well as some good work he had done over at DC on the Legion of Superheroes where he had redesigned the costumes of the characters (thank goodness! the 1950’s uniforms were awful and lacked any kind of style and pizzazz). So I was impressed with his art. Dave was busily Xeroxing and Duffy noticed that I took the long way around so he stood up to get a look at what I was up to because ordinarily I would have just walked out my side of the half-walls and gone out the door. As I walked leisurely from JJ's end of the room, I looked Dave up and down, liked what I saw, and, as I passed behind him, I patted him on the fanny and said, “Nice ass,” and then I was through the door.
Duffy later regaled me with what happened after I exited the bullpen. Dave looked up, his big blue eyes wide, looked both ways and asked wildly, “Uh...Who-waz-that? What? Who?” Duffy is, by this time howling and nearly falling down. Duffy was the human embodiment of Volstagg from the Thor series, with girth and flaming red hair and beard to match, so when he laughed, it was rolling. “Oh,” sez he to a totally startled and befuddled Dave, “that's just Paty. She's harmless.”That's how much Duffy knew! BWAHAHAHAHAHA!
Labels:
Dave Cockrum,
Marvel Bullpen,
Paty Cockrum
Shocker at the Inker Oscars

Bob McLeod stops by to refuse his award on behalf of Native Americans without casino licenses:
Cliff--Thank you very much for the post about my inking. I've never been a fan if inking awards, because people tend to just vote for whomever's inking their favorite comic. But it's good to see inkers get some recognition, at least.
Monday, February 25, 2008
If I Could Draw Like This, I Wouldn't Take Shit From Anybody
Matt Haley gives us a plug at his his handsome blog and reminds me why I selected his art, out of more than 100 submissions, to be the back cover of THE UNCANNY DAVE COCKRUM from Aardwolf Publishing.
Four-Color Cockrum

I've been using a B&W photo of Dave Cockrum that I swiped off the web to advertise the sale of Dave's personal comics collection. But here's the original photo, taken at Wonderfest in Louisville, KY, in 1995 courtesy of the photographer, Anthony Taylor.
Cold Comfort for Change

Pat "She had hair like Jeanie Shrimpton back in 1969" Dinizio just told me that Ben Chapman died. Chapman (no relation, at least none that I know of, to Mark David Chapman, that piece of shit who shot John Lennon) had bit parts in a few films but scored more than his 15 minutes as the guy in the gill suit in "Creature From the Black Lagoon," the classic 1954 3D monster movie that my pal Dave Cockrum adored. Chapman was a 6'5" ex-Marine, if there is such a thing; my brother Dave (a lance corporal) says there ain't.
The LA Times trivializes Chapman's passing pretty much the way this blog trivializes everything it discusses. I'm paraphrasing Jim Reeber who called to tell me he enjoys the blog but wishes I'd get back to real writing. "There's lots of bloggers, Cliff, but very few writers." Bukowski used to say that about there were more poets than poems. Reeber has a point, and the point is lodged so firmly in my patellar guilt reflex that I will likely commit blogocide and disappear from the airwaves until I finish my next novella, which I haven't started yet, which is the whole point.
Back to trivializing Chapman: The actor, who was briefly a contract player at Universal in the early '50s, said landing the Creature role was a matter of being in the right place at the right time. "They were looking for an imposing creature, and at 6'5", I filled the bill." He described the Creature suit as a one-piece outfit that zipped down the back with dorsal fins, hands that were gloves, and feet that were like boots. "They had me lay on a table, take a complete plaster of Paris mold of my body, then design this costume. I couldn't lose or gain weight, or it wouldn't fit right. The whole experience was like climbing into a large body stocking with creases." Chapman got so hot on the sound stage wearing the costume, which included a large helmet-like head, that someone had to stand by with a water hose to cool him off.
Chapman retired as a Honolulu real estate salesman and died Thursday of congestive heart failure.
Jeanie Shrimpton, the retired model, eventually found love with her photographer husband Michael Cox and was last reported to be running a small hotel in Penzance, Cornwall.
Pat Dinizio is currently playing livingroom concerts and occasional gigs with The Smithereens.
John Lennon is still dead.
Mark David Chapman, the piece of shit who killed Lennon, is in Attica State Prison.
Charles Bukowski is still dead.
Dave Cockrum is still dead.
The people my brother Dave has gone after are either dead or at least feeling cheap.
Jim Reeber, who has way more talent than I do, is still playing with a local cover band called Hoi Polloi. And he has the audacity to call blogging creative death.
Clifford Meth was once a writer who tripped the path of least resistance into a blog addiction until Hank Magitz put an ice pick through the back of his skull.
The LA Times trivializes Chapman's passing pretty much the way this blog trivializes everything it discusses. I'm paraphrasing Jim Reeber who called to tell me he enjoys the blog but wishes I'd get back to real writing. "There's lots of bloggers, Cliff, but very few writers." Bukowski used to say that about there were more poets than poems. Reeber has a point, and the point is lodged so firmly in my patellar guilt reflex that I will likely commit blogocide and disappear from the airwaves until I finish my next novella, which I haven't started yet, which is the whole point.
Back to trivializing Chapman: The actor, who was briefly a contract player at Universal in the early '50s, said landing the Creature role was a matter of being in the right place at the right time. "They were looking for an imposing creature, and at 6'5", I filled the bill." He described the Creature suit as a one-piece outfit that zipped down the back with dorsal fins, hands that were gloves, and feet that were like boots. "They had me lay on a table, take a complete plaster of Paris mold of my body, then design this costume. I couldn't lose or gain weight, or it wouldn't fit right. The whole experience was like climbing into a large body stocking with creases." Chapman got so hot on the sound stage wearing the costume, which included a large helmet-like head, that someone had to stand by with a water hose to cool him off.
Chapman retired as a Honolulu real estate salesman and died Thursday of congestive heart failure.
Jeanie Shrimpton, the retired model, eventually found love with her photographer husband Michael Cox and was last reported to be running a small hotel in Penzance, Cornwall.
Pat Dinizio is currently playing livingroom concerts and occasional gigs with The Smithereens.
John Lennon is still dead.
Mark David Chapman, the piece of shit who killed Lennon, is in Attica State Prison.
Charles Bukowski is still dead.
Dave Cockrum is still dead.
The people my brother Dave has gone after are either dead or at least feeling cheap.
Jim Reeber, who has way more talent than I do, is still playing with a local cover band called Hoi Polloi. And he has the audacity to call blogging creative death.
Clifford Meth was once a writer who tripped the path of least resistance into a blog addiction until Hank Magitz put an ice pick through the back of his skull.
Sunday, February 24, 2008
Can't Get SNAKED?
Own Dave Cockrum's Personal Copy of Giant-Size X-Men #1

Dave likely received a handful of copies of Giant-Size X-Men #1 from Marvel when they were first published 30 years ago, but hard times often forced my friend to sell his personal items. Nevertheless, he hung on to one copy through the years and now it can be yours.
Take a look at the other Dave Cockrum X-Men file copies now available from his widow Paty, as well as some terrific finds from Dave's personal Silver and Golden Age collections. The prices are right, too. Click here.
Friday, February 22, 2008
Yer Blues
Howard Zimmerman rescued me from an otherwise dismal personal appearance at Midtown Comics last night. I write this after several hours sleep and a strange dream that included Sarah Dylan explaining why Bob hadn’t sent me a hundred-dollar check yet but would I please wear the silver ribbon, then ended abruptly as I heard the dogs howling upstairs in the kitchen. So I dragged my ass off the couch where I’d passed out fully clothed and trod up the thirteen steps to walk them. Only to find eight inches of snow in front of my front door and everyone else’s and still falling madly as the dogs and I moved slowly about at 6:30 a.m. looking for a place to squat. This would be bad enough with sufficient sleep and no hangover but I’m not that lucky. And only the Bob Dylan part was dreamt—the rest, brutal reality as I type. Even those wet dogs, back in the kitchen now after shitting themselves silly, feel better at the moment.
Gahl, my host at Midtown Comics, was amiable as always and there’s no slight intended. His shop is my favorite one in the city. It’s just that signings are a no-win unless you can sketch for a few bucks, and no one knows who the fuck I am anyway, and neither, it seems, do I. Spent most of two hours exchanging industry gossip and hoping a certain reader wouldn’t show up because her constant, endless, maddened emails and attempts to instant-message me have made me so uncomfortable that I’m about ready to send in my brother Dave, and that’s never pretty.
Back to Howard, my first reaction to him some fifteen years ago was in response to his first reaction to me, which carried his discomfort with my smashing some wise-mouth skinhead in the teeth at NBC Studios. At least that’s how I remember it. Harlan remembers me hitting three guys, and all that without a single beer. Though I see him only on occassion (or perhaps because of it), I enjoy Howard’s company more than I do most people’s, a keen repository of accurate information and sense and good humor, this man—“He was the voice of sanity at an otherwise insane publishing house,” as Bob Silverberg recently described him to me. Howard had several vodkas, then caught a train home from Port Authority, while I had to walk with a bellyfull of tequila and ale and no dinner back to a parking lot to locate my Toyota. It wasn’t hard to find; some dickless piece of shit had sideswiped it, leaving me without a sideview mirror. Not a lot of cars look like that. I drove through the Lincoln Tunnel, worse for tequila, and phoned a few friends until the cell kicked out, an asshole move that late at night but almost forgivable given my state of un-mind. Made it as far as Passaic before hunger overtook me, so I pulled off the road and found an all-night glatt-kosher Chinese takeout joint, then ate lo mein in my front seat.
Somehow made it back to Rockaway. All roads lead to Rockaway. Home again, I collapsed on the couch then let the tequila take over. Dreamed that I raped my wife in the bathroom. Not sure how Sarah Dylan fit in. In all, a weird way to start my 47th birthday.
Gahl, my host at Midtown Comics, was amiable as always and there’s no slight intended. His shop is my favorite one in the city. It’s just that signings are a no-win unless you can sketch for a few bucks, and no one knows who the fuck I am anyway, and neither, it seems, do I. Spent most of two hours exchanging industry gossip and hoping a certain reader wouldn’t show up because her constant, endless, maddened emails and attempts to instant-message me have made me so uncomfortable that I’m about ready to send in my brother Dave, and that’s never pretty.
Back to Howard, my first reaction to him some fifteen years ago was in response to his first reaction to me, which carried his discomfort with my smashing some wise-mouth skinhead in the teeth at NBC Studios. At least that’s how I remember it. Harlan remembers me hitting three guys, and all that without a single beer. Though I see him only on occassion (or perhaps because of it), I enjoy Howard’s company more than I do most people’s, a keen repository of accurate information and sense and good humor, this man—“He was the voice of sanity at an otherwise insane publishing house,” as Bob Silverberg recently described him to me. Howard had several vodkas, then caught a train home from Port Authority, while I had to walk with a bellyfull of tequila and ale and no dinner back to a parking lot to locate my Toyota. It wasn’t hard to find; some dickless piece of shit had sideswiped it, leaving me without a sideview mirror. Not a lot of cars look like that. I drove through the Lincoln Tunnel, worse for tequila, and phoned a few friends until the cell kicked out, an asshole move that late at night but almost forgivable given my state of un-mind. Made it as far as Passaic before hunger overtook me, so I pulled off the road and found an all-night glatt-kosher Chinese takeout joint, then ate lo mein in my front seat.Somehow made it back to Rockaway. All roads lead to Rockaway. Home again, I collapsed on the couch then let the tequila take over. Dreamed that I raped my wife in the bathroom. Not sure how Sarah Dylan fit in. In all, a weird way to start my 47th birthday.
Labels:
comics,
Howard Zimmerman,
Midtown Comics
Own Dave Cockrum's and Gene Colan's Personal Comics and File Copies

This entry is updated regularly and includes Dave Cockum's and Gene Colan's personal File Copies, as well as many comics signed by folks like Stan Lee and Joe Kubert. Books were specifically signed to raise money for varied causes. I don't think you will find better prices on Silver & Bronze-Age Comics.
The lists below is updated regularly with new comics. Last update was 6/27/10
The first list is Dave Cockrum's personal collection and file copies. Dave created many of The X-Men--Nightcrawler, Storm, Colossus, Thunderbird, Phoenix--as well as Mystique, The Black Cat, Ms. Marvel, The Starjammers, The Imperial Guard, The Brood, The Futurians. Some books, as indicated, were Dave's personal file copies (i.e., comics he pencilled or inked and filed as his personal file copies). Working with the Dave Cockrum Estate, CGC created the "Dave Cockrum Estate" pedigree (only books marked CGC underwent this process -- see "CGC'd books" category at the end). New comics are added often so check back frequently.
You'll also find many comics from Gene Colan's personal collection (file copies are indicated) as well as comics that were signed by Gene and Stan Lee.
Sales from the Cockrum Estate benefit Dave's widow Paty and The Dave & Paty Cockrum Scholarship awarded each year at the Joe Kubert School for Comic & Graphic Art.
Sales from the Gene Colan collection benefit Gene Colan.
Comics come bagged, boarded and sealed with a seal of authenticity, indicating provinance. A letter of authenticity from the Estate can also be arranged. Checks should be payable to Paty Cockrum or Gene Colan and mailed c/o Clifford Meth, 179-9 Rt. 46 West, Box 252, Rockaway, NJ 07866. Email cliffmeth@aol.com to reserve your comics. Discounts are given for multiple purchases.
We recently found four (4) copies of THE UNCANNY DAVE COCKRUM TRIBUTE (paperback) signed by Dave (he signs, "Thanks for Contributing --Dave Cockrum"). This was a short-print and only a few dozen were signed. These go for $35 ea.
Now here's Dave Cockrum's personal collection:
AARDWOLF (Aardwolf Publishing)
1 (signed by Cockrum) $6
ATOM (DC) (take an additional 30% off)
2 VG+ (4.5) $70
3 VG (4.0) $48
5 VG (4.0) $38
8 VG/FN (5.0) $38
15 VG (4.0) $22
16 FN- $22
18 FN (6.0) $28
19 FN/VF (7.0) $40
20 FN (6.0) $25
21 VF- $45
22 VF+ $65
23 FN+ $30
24 VF $55
25 VF- $45
26 VF $50
27 (would be VF but missing staples) VG+ $20
28 VF (8.0) $50
29 (1st solo Golden Age Atom) FN+ $50
30 VF $50
31 VF/NM (9.0) $70
32 VF (8.0) $42
33 VF/NM (9.0) $70
36 (G. Age Atom x-over) VF/NM (9.0) $80
37 (Hawkman cameo) VF/NM (9.0) $70
ATOM and HAWKMAN (DC) - take an additional 30% off
39 VF/NM $55
AVENGERS (Marvel) - 10% off
49 FN/VF $28
56 FN/VF $28
57 (1st Vision appearance) VG $35
58 (Origin of the Vision) FN $27
59 (1st Yellow Jacket) VF $34
60 FN/VF $22
61 VF $32
63 (Goliath becomes Yellow Jacket) VF- $29
65 VF $$32
66 FN $15
68 FN/VF $20
74 VF $25
75 FN/VF $18
76 FN/VF $20
76 VF/NM $44
77 VF $30
78 VF $30
80 GD $8
81 GD+ $8
93 FN/VF (1st Neal Adams Avengers) $60
94 FN- (Neal Adams) $20
95 VG (Neal Adams) $14
96 FN (Neal Adams) $21
97 FN $15
98 VF $26
99 VF $26
106 VF/NM Cockrum Art (1st Cockrum Avengers); Dave's file copy - $200
107 VF+ Cockrum Art; Dave's file copy - $95
107 VF/NM Cockrum Art; Dave's file copy - $110
108 FN- Cockrum Art; Dave's file copy - $75
108 VF/NM Cockrum Art; Dave's file copy - $110
109 VF/FN Cockrum Art; Dave's file copy - $70
111 (X-Men x-over) VF+ $36
112 FN (1st Mantis) $12
113 VF+/NM $28
114 VF+ $18
115 VF/NM $28
116 NM- $50
117 NM $50
118 VF/NM $37
119 FN/VF $14
124 VF/NM - COCKRUM ART; Dave's file copy - $65
132 VF/NM $18
138 VF $12
181 MINT $10
Annual #1 VF - $70
GIANT-SIZE AVENGERS
1 FN $15
2 VG/FN (Cockrum pencils; Dave's file copy) $60
3 VG/FN (Cockrum pencils; Dave's file copy) $45
3 untrimmed cover (cvr larger than comic) otherwise FN - Cockrum art - $12
BATMAN
237 FN (Neal Adams, Harlan Ellison) $36
243 FN (Neal Adams) $21
245 FN+ (Neal Adams) $25
245 VF (Neal Adams) $45
247 VF+ $28
BEWARE THE CREEPER (DC - 1968 series)
2 VF/NM (Ditko) $55
3 VF+ (Ditko) $40
4 VF+ (Ditko) $40
6 VF/NM (Ditko) $55
BLACKHAWK (DC - 1946 series) -- TAKE 65% off !
38 cvr separated otherwise FN+ 160
41 FN $112
42 FN $112
43 G/VG (cvr separated) $49
44 overall FN- (some chipping) $92
45 VG+ $86
46 GD $40
48 GD $40
49 VG/FN $96
50 (1st Killer Shark) VG/FN $105
51 FN- $105
52 VG $90
53 VG+ $86
54 Fair $16
55 VG/FN $98
56 VG/FN $98
57 VG+ $86
58 VG/FN $98
59 VG $82
60 VG $82
62 VG/FN $87
63 VG+ $75
64 VG+ $85
65 VG $72
66 VF $190
68 VG/FN $85
69 FN+ $105
70 VG+ $75
71 (origin retold) VG+ $88
72 VG $72
73 FN+ $105
74 FN- $92
75 FN $98
76 VG+ $76
77 FN+ $145
78 VG (cvr separated) $72
79 FN $98
80 VG $95
81 FN- (white pgs) $85
83 FN $89
84 FN $89
97 FN+ $80
99 FN/VF $105
170 FN+ $25
178 FN $24
183 VF/VF+ $40
184 NM- $85
185 NM- $85
186 VF/NM $64
187 VF+ $45
188 FN+ $27
189 VF+ $42
190 VF- $38
204 VF/NM $46
228 (Justice League x-over) VF- $28
240 NM $45
241 NM $45
242 VF+ $30
243 VF/NM $37
CAPTAIN MARVEL ADVENTURES (Fawcett) - 25% off
91 G/VG $35
119 - FAIR (cvr separated) $10
CAPTAIN MARVEL JUNIOR (Fawcett) - 25% off
20 FAIR $15
51 VG+ $56
52 VG+ $56
DETECTIVE COMICS (DC)
429 VF/VF+ $18
437 (1st Manhunter by Walt Simonson) FN+ $20
DOCTOR STRANGE (Marvel) - 25% off
2 FN/VF (Brunner) $15
172 VF $30
176 VF $30
178 VF $30
180 FN/VF $20
182 NM $45
183 NM $45
FLASH (DC)
155 FN+ $38
THE FLY (Archie / Red Circle)
2 (Steranko cvr.) NM- $5
FUTURIANS (Lodestone)
2 Cockrum art; Dave's file copy VF/NM $40
GIANT-SIZE AVENGERS #1 FN $15
GIANT-SIZE X-MEN #1 (VG) Dave's file copy - sold
GORGO (Charlton, 1961) (take 50% off this title)
4 (Ditko cover) FN $24
7 VF $49
8 VF $49
9 VF $49
RETURN OF GORGO (Charlton) #2 VF (Ditko cover) $49
GORGO'S REVENGE (Charlton) #1 VF+ (Ditko cover) $45
JUSTICE LEAGUE QUARTERLY (DC)
8 - Cockrum cover (swipe of X-Men #100!); Dave's file copy VF/NM: $45
MARVEL FAMILY (Fawcett) - 25% off
38 GD $15
49 GD/VG $20
66 VG $30
69 VG- $25
86 GD- (fully taped cvr) $10
88 VG- $28
MARVEL TEAM-UP
King-Size Annual #1 - VF - Cockrum Art; Dave's file copy $45
MARY MARVEL (Fawcett) (take 50% off this title)
10 VG+ $75
12 VG+ $65
MS. MARVEL (Marvel) (note: Dave Cockrum designed Ms. Marvel)
7 NM - Cockrum art; Dave's file copy - $45
17 NM - Cockrum art; Dave's file copy - $35
18 NM - Cockrum art; Dave's file copy - $35
MYSTERY IN SPACE (DC) - 25% off
62 FR/GD $10
63 FN/VF $90
68 GD/VG $25
69 GD/VG $25
70 FN- $50
72 FN+ $45
73 VG $25
74 VG $25
76 VG- $20
77 FN $40
78 VG $28
79 FN- $35
80 VF $90
81 FN $35
86 VG+ $25
90 (1st Adam Strange & Hawkman team-up) FN/VF $85
NATURE BOY (Charlton, 1956)
5 (early John Buscema art) FN- $35
NICK FURY, AGENT OF SHIELD (Marvel, 1968 series)
7 VF+ (Steranko) $40
8 FN $12
9 VF $22
10 FN/VF $17
11 VF $22
12 FN $18
12 VF $23
13 VF $22
14 FN/VF $14
15 (1st Bullseye) VF $55
16 FN/VF $12
17 FN $9
NICK FURY AND HIS AGENT OF SHIELDS (Marvel)
1 NM- $35
NIGHTCRAWLER (4-issue ltd. series) (Marvel) - Cockrum plot/scipt/art in all
2 NM - Dave Cockrum's file copy - $60
4 NM - Dave Cockrum's file copy - $55
PHANTOM STRANGER (DC, 1969 series) - 25% off
8 VF $20
10 VF+ $28
11 VF/NM $35
12 VF+ $28
13 VF- $20
14 VF/NM $35
SILVER SURFER (Marvel, 1st series)
6 FN/VF $60
7 VG/FN $32
8 FN- $25
9 FN/VF $50
10 VF $65
11 VF $62
12 FN/VF $40
13 FN+ $25
14 VG/FN $25
15 (Surfer vs. Human Torch) VF $50
16 VF $60
THE SPECTRE (DC)
4 VF $75
5 VF $65
6 FN $42
7 VF $48
8 FN+ $28
9 VF $58
10 FN $22
STRANGE ADVENTURES (DC) - 25% off
217 VF- $12
218 VF $13
219 VF $13
220 VF $12
221 VF $13
222 VF/NM $18
223 VF/NM $18
224 NM $22
225 NM $22
STRANGE TALES (Marvel)
135 VF- (1st Nick Fury Agent of Shield) $105
137 FN+ $20
139 FN- $16
140 VG/FN $17
144 FN $15
145 FN $15
148 FN- $18
149 FN- $12
150 (John Buscema's 1st work at Marvel) FN $22
151 (Jim Steranko's 1st work at Marvel) VG/FN $22
152 (Steranko) VF+ $45
153 (Steranko) FN- $23
155 (Steranko) VG/FN $15
156 (Steranko) VG/FN $15
157 (Steranko) FN+ $22
158 (Steranko) VF+ $50
159 (Fury origen retold; Cap. America vs. Fury cover by Steranko) VG $12
160 FN- (Steranko) $15
161 FN (Steranko) $18
162 FN/VF (Steranko) $28
163 VF- (Steranko) $35
164 FN+ (Steranko) $20
165 VF (Steranko) $35
167 FN/VF (Steranko) $30
168 FN/VF (Steranko) $25
SUB-MARINER (Marvel, 1968 series) (take 30% off this title)
2 FN/VF $40
3 FN/VF $30
4 FN+ $28
5 (1st Tiger Shark) FN $18
6 FN $15
7 FN $12
8 (Submariner vs. Thing) VF $58
9 VF $30
11 FN+ $14
12 FN/NM $37
20 FN/NM $25
35 (1st Defenders - Namor/Hulk/Surfer vs. Avengers) FN+ $25 (no discount)
King-Size Special #1 FN $9
WEIRD WORLDS (DC)
5 (Kaluta cover) VF/NM $5
WONDER WOMAN (DC)
1 (G. Perez) NM $5
X-MEN (Marvel, 1st series) - - 10% off
67 VG+ $15
95 Cockrum art; Dave's file copy - sold
96 Cockrum art; Dave's file copy - sold
97 Cockrum art; Dave's file copy - sold
98 Cockrum art; Dave's file copy - sold
99 Cockrum art; Dave's file copy - sold
100 Cockrum art; Dave's file copy - sold
101 Cockrum art; Dave's file copy - sold
102 (origin of Storm) FN+ Cockrum art; Dave's file copy (sold)
103 VF/VF+ Cockrum art; Dave's file copy $125
104 (1st Starjammers) VF/NM Cockrum art; Dave's file copy $200
105 VF+ Cockrum art; Dave's file copy (sold)
106 NM - Cockrum art; Dave's file copy $200
107 (1st full Starjammers) - cvr detached otherwise FN - Cockrum art; Dave's file copy $55
107 (1st full Starjammers) - VF/NM - Cockrum art; Dave's file copy $185
108 (1st Byrne X-Men) NM - Cockrum cover art; Dave's file copy $200
109 (1st Vindicator) VF/NM $80
110 VF/NM - Cockrum art; Dave's file copy $135
111 NM $75
112 NM $75
113 NM- $75
114 NM $75
124 VF/NM - Cockrum art; Dave's file copy
135 - cvr partially deatached, otherwise FN - $10
136 (never stapled, untrimmed cover else VG) - Cockrum art; Dave's file copy - $40
143 GD+ Cockrum art; Dave's file copy - $25
147 VG (never stapled) - Cockrum art; Dave's file copy - $40
149 VF/NM Cockrum art; Dave's file copy - $40
153 VF+ Cockrum art; Dave's file copy $40
154 VF/NM Cockrum art; Dave's file copy $40
156 FN+ Cockrum Art; Dave's file copy - $45
157 VF Cockrum Art; Dave's file copy - $50
161 (origin of Magneto) VF+ Cockrum Art; Dave's file copy - (sold)
163 VF/NM Cockrum Art; Dave's file copy - $40
164 FN+ Cockrum Art; Dave's file copy - $50
165 NM/M $13
166 NM- $10
167 VF+/NM- stamped by Marvel "complimentary copy" $8
168 VF+/NM- stamped by Marvel "complimentary copy" $8
175 NM $10
256 NM/Mint $10
257 Mint $10
282 NM/Mint $10
283 Mint $12
KING-SIZE ANNUAL #3 VF $12
X-MEN SPOTLIGHT on STARJAMMERS#1 (Marvel) - Cockrum art; Dave's file copy (NM/MINT) - $25
The X-MEN CHRONICLES (Fanzine for X-Men fans) - full color - Cockrum art; Dave's file copy - rare - $25
CGC'd Books - 15% off
The following Golden Age books are certified "FROM THE ESTATE OF DAVE COCKRUM" by CGC and graded by CGC:
Airboy Comics #v7 #4 (4.5) cream to off-white pages $45
Blackhawk 9 (4.0) first issue $700
Blackhawk 11 (apparant 4.0) restoration includes small amnt of color touch on cover; one piece of tape on interior cover $165
Blackhawk 12 (3.0) cream to off-white pages $125
Blackhawk 13 (4.0) restoration includes small amnt of color touch on cover; four pcs of tape on cvr; off-white to white pages $165
Blackhawk 14 (3.0) off-white pages $125
Blackhawk 15 (2.0) off-white pages $85
Blackhawk 16 (3.5) off-white pages $120
Blackhawk 18 (3.0) cream to off-white pages $100
Blackhawk 19 (6.5) off-white pages $260
Blackhawk 26 (4.5) cream to off-white pages $100
Blackhawk 27 (4.5) off-white pages $100
Blackhawk 30 (5.0) cream to off-white pages $115
Blackhawk 33 (5.5) off-white pages $100
Blackhawk 37 (5.0) off-white pages $95
Captain Marvel Adventures 14 (4.0) cream to off-white pages $185
Captain Marvel Adventures 86 (4.0) restoration includes small amnt of glue on 4 center wraps; off-white pages $60
Captain Marvel Jr. 3 (4.5) cream to off-white pages $250
Captain Marvel Jr. 40 (3.0) cream to off-white pages $50
Captain Marvel Jr. 54 (5.5) cream to off-white pages $70
Captain Marvel Jr. 101 (4.5) off-white to white pages $45
Captain Marvel Jr. 105 (2.5) 1 piece of tape on spine of cover; cream to off-white pages $35
Captain Midnight 39 (6.0) cream to off-white pages $95
Marvel Family 4 (7.5) cream to off-white pages $240
Marvel Family 20 (5.5) white pages $80
Marvel Family 24 (4.5) slightly brittle pages $58
Marvel Family 44 (6.5) cream to off-white pages $58
Sub-Mariner 39 (4.5) (Atlas Comics) cream to off-white pages $185
AUTOGRAPHED COMICS
The following AUTOGRAPHED books, graphic novels & comic books are not from the Cockrum Estate (unless indicated); sales of these books help fund the Dave & Paty Scholarship at the Joe Kubert School or Gene Colan:
Tales of Suspense #84 (Iron Man) signed by Stan Lee and Gene Colan $60.
Tales of Suspense #86 (Iron Man) signed by Stan Lee and Gene Colan $60.
Tales of Suspense #97 (1st Whiplash vs. Iron Man) signed by Stan Lee and Gene Colan $100.
Capt. America #116 (VF) signed by Gene Colan $30
Capt. America #121 (VF+) signed by Gene Colan $28
Capt. America #601 (NM/Varient Cover) signed by Gene Colan - Gene Colan File Copy - $50
Daredevil #27 signed by Gene Colan - Gene Colan File Copy - $50
Dr. Strange #177 (FN+) signed by Gene Colan $30
Dr. Strange #178 (VF) signed by Gene Colan $32
Tomb of Dracula #28 (Blade app.) (NM) signed by Gene Colan $50
Tomb of Dracula #33 (NM) signed by Gene Colan $35
Tomb of Dracula #34 (NM) signed by Gene Colan $35
Tomb of Dracula #35 (NM) signed by Gene Colan $35
Abadazad - signed by J.M. DeMatteis - $15
All American Men of War #113 (FN+) signed by Joe Kubert $25
All American Men of War #114 (VG+) signed by Joe Kubert $18
Blackhawk #244 (VF/NM) (The Dave Cockrum Estate) signed by Joe Kubert $12
Blackhawk #245 (NM-) (The Dave Cockrum Estate) signed by Joe Kubert $12
Cry for Dawn #9 - signed by Joe Linsner and Joe Monks - $5
Daredevil #1 - FN - signed on pg 1 by Stan Lee - $875 (on hold)
Dark Horse Presents #117 - signed by Gene Colan (from the Personal Collection of Gene Colan) $8
DC Universe #0 - signed by Geoff Johns
Drama #1 - signed by Joe Linsner - $5
Fantastic Four: The New Fantastic Four (hardcover) - signed by Dwayne McDuffie - $20
Flare #29 - signed by Frank Brunner - $2 (on hold)
Marvel Adventures #29 - signed by Peter David - $3
Our Army At War #240 (VF) (art by Neal Adams & Joe Kubert) - signed by Joe Kubert - $32
Our Army At War #268 (FN) - signed by Joe Kubert $12
Our Army At War #282 (VG/FN) - signed by Joe Kubert $10
Superman on the Couch - signed by author Danny Fingeroth - $15 (sold)
Tarzan (DC) #207 (VF) - signed by Joe Kubert $40
Tarzan (DC) #207 (FN) (The Dave Cockrum Estate) signed by Joe Kubert $22
Tarzan (DC) #212 (VF/NM) (The Dave Cockrum Estate) signed by Joe Kubert $23
Tarzan (DC) #213 (NM-) (The Dave Cockrum Estate) signed by Joe Kubert $26
Tarzan (DC) #214 (FN) (The Dave Cockrum Estate) signed by Joe Kubert $18
Tarzan (DC) #215 (VF+) (The Dave Cockrum Estate) signed by Joe Kubert $12
Tarzan (DC) #217 (VG+ cvr taped) (The Dave Cockrum Estate) signed by Joe Kubert $7
Tarzan (DC) #223 (NM-) (The Dave Cockrum Estate) signed by Joe Kubert $20
Tarzan (DC) #224 (VF/NM) (The Dave Cockrum Estate) signed by Joe Kubert $18
Tarzan (DC) #225 (VF/NM) (The Dave Cockrum Estate) signed by Joe Kubert $18
Tarzan (DC) #227 (VF/NM) (The Dave Cockrum Estate) signed by Joe Kubert $18
Tomb of Dracula - graphic novel #2 - signed by Gene Colan - (file copy from the personal collection of Gene Colan) -$15
Gene Colan File Copies - Added on 12/19/09
The following comics & graphic novels all contain art by Gene Colan and were Colan's personal file copies; they come bagged, boarded and sealed authenticating them as Gene Colan's personal file copies:
Blade II (Marvel) graphic novel - NM- $15
Bob Marley Graphic Novel (Marvel) NM- $6
Curse of Dracula (Dark Horse) graphic novel - NM - $10
Daredevil #-1 (1997) NM- (special Marvel edition) $10
Daredevil #89 GD $4
Daredevil #363 VF/NM $8
Daredevil #367 NM- $8
Daredevil #370 NM- $8
Dr. Strange #19 VF/NM $7
The Escapist (Dark Horse) graphic novel VF/NM - $8
Howard the Duck #19 VG $4
Jemm, Son of Saturn (DC) #8 NM- $8
Jemm, Son of Saturn (DC) #10 NM- $8
La Maleddiction de Dracula (French graphic novel) NM- $6
Marvel Comics Presents #103 VF/NM (Colan draws Wolverine) $6
Marvel Comics Presents #107 VF/NM (Colan draws Wolverine) $6
Marvel Super Heroes Vo. 2 #13 NM- $7
Nathaniel Dusk #1 VF/NM- $12
Nathaniel Dusk II #1 #2 and #3 (full set) all VF/NM- $20
Night Force #1 (DC) VF/NM - $10
Night Force #12 (DC) NM- $6
Predator: Hell & Hot Water (Dark Horse) graphic novel - NM- $7
Savage Return of Dracula (Marvel) #1 - NM/NM - $8
Silverblade (DC) #3 NM- $6
Silverblade (DC) #8 NM- $6
Wonder Woman (DC) #291 FN/VF - $6
Wonder Woman (DC) #302 VF - $6
--------------
The following books are not from the Cockrum Estate--they are being sold by me. Prices are negotiable, especially for multi-book purchases:
AMAZING ADVENTURES (Marvel)
6 (Neal Adams) VF/NM $48
AMAZING SPIDER-MAN (Marvel)
19 GD/VG (3.0) $60
44 FN+ (6.5) $60
46 (1st Shocker) VG $30
47 VG $30
48 FN/VF (7.0) $78
49 FN $45
54 VF- (7.5) $78
83 VF $58
124 (1st Manwolf) VF $45
126 FN $15
134 FN- $12
140 VF $21
143 FN $22
144 VF $22
148 VG/FN $10
150 FN/VF $19
158 VF- $16
162 FN $10
171 VG/FN $7
179 FN $9
180 FN $9
182 FN/VF $11
183 FN $6
184 VG $4
186 GD+ $2
191 VG $4
251 NM $16
253 (1st Rose) NM-/NM $10
260 NM $11
283 VF/NM $5
284 VF $6
285 NM $10
286 VF/NM $8
287 (Spidey vs. Daredevil) VG/FN $4
287 (Spidey vs. Daredevil) NM $10
289 (1st Hobgoblin) NM-/NM $24
301 NM-/NM $16
328 VF+ $6
330 NM $4
331 FN $2
347 NM $7
361 (1st Carnage) NM $15
AVENGERS (Marvel, 1st series)
9 (1st Wonderman) GD-/GD $35
15 VG+ $38
16 (1st New Avengers lineup) VG- (cvr separated) $35
18 VG- $22
19 (1st Swordsman) FN+ (6.5) $55
20 (Wood inks) FN $27
21 FN- $24
21 VF- $59
22 VG $18
22 FN (6.0) $27
22 FN+ (6.5) $36
23 FN/VF (7.0) $39
27 FN $24
37 VG/FN (5.0) $17
45 VG/FN (5.0) $15
49 VF- $34
58 (origin of The Vision) VG/FN $20
59 FN/VF $23
85 VG $8
93 (Neal Adams) GD $12
95 (Neal Adams) FN- $16
99 VG+ $9
103 VG/VG+ $6
113 FN+ $10
116 (Avengers v. Defenders; Vision vs. Silver Surfer) FN+ $14
King-Size Special 1 VG $20
BRAVE AND THE BOLD (DC)
70 FN
74 VF
CAPTAIN AMERICA (Marvel)
102 VF- $37
103 VF/NM $65
105 VF- $30
105 VF $34
106 VF+ $36
108 FN $15
108 VF+ $36
111 (Steranko) VG $16
111 (Steranko) VG/FN $20
112 FN $15
113 (Steranko) GD $8
115 NM $45
117 (1st Falcon) VF $62
118 VF $22
120 VF/NM $34
123 VF/NM $23
125 VF/NM $23
126 FN+ $10
127 VF- $14
153 (1st Jack Monroe) FN $6
154 FN $6
155 VG/FN $5
156 VG $4
159 VG $4
165 NM $12
169 NM $12
170 VF $8
181 (Intro/origin New Cap) NM $18
200 VF/NM $16
383 (Jim Lee) NM $4
CAPTAIN MARVEL (Marvel)
1 FN+ $40
2 VG/FN $15
3 FN $15
4 FN- $13
5 VG/FN $13
6 FN- $7
7 VG/FN $7
7 FN/VF $14
8 FN/VF $14
9 FN $9
10 VF $20
11 FN $9
12 VF $14
13 VF/NM $19
14 VF/NM $30
15 VF $14
15 VF $14
CHAMPIONS (Marvel)
1 VF $
2 VF $
3 NM $
5 FN $
7 FN/VF $
8 FN $
9 VG/FN $
12 FN $
13 FN+ $
14 VF/NM $
15 FN/VF $
16 VF/NM $
CONAN THE BARBARIAN (Marvel)
6 VG $12
16 VG (cvr separated) $10
17 FN/VF $18
19 FN/VF $ 23
DAREDEVIL (Marvel)
1 FN - signed on pg 1 by Stan Lee - $875
9 VF+ (orig. bookstore cvr stamp) $120
12 FN/VF $50
14 (Romita) VG/FN $25
15 FN+ $35
18 (1st Gladiator) FN $30
21 VG/FN $15
22 VG/FN $15
24 FN/VF $29
26 VG+ $14
26 VG+/FN $15
28 VF- $36
28 VF $41
31 VG+ $12
31 FN+ $18
32 VF $34
36 VF $34
39 FN/VF $24
42 (1st Jester) VF $30
43 (vs. Capt. America - classic Kirby cover) VF $42
47 VF $30
55 GD $3
185 (Frank Miller) NM- $10
186 (Frank Miller) FN $6
186 (Frank Miller) VF/NM $8
187 (Frank Miller) NM- $10
188 (Frank Miller) NM- $10
226 (Frank Miller) NM- $5
DEFENDERS (Marvel)
1 FN/VF $56
1 FN/FN+ $36
3 VF- $25
4 VF $28
5 VF+ $32
6 VF/NM $27
6 VF-/VF $16
7 FN/VF $14
8 VF $22
9 VF/NM $34
10 (Hulk v. Thor) VG/FN $18
10 (Hulk v. Thor) FN/VF $35
11 VF- $20
11 FN- $10
FANTASTIC FOUR (Marvel) (take 25% off these)
29 FN $72
31 (early Avengers x-over) VG+ $45
35 VG $40
36 (1st Madame Medusa) VF- $125
37 FN+ $70
39 (Wood inks, early Daredevil x-over) FN/VF $100
39 (Wood inks, early Daredevil x-over) VF- $125
40 FN $60
41 GD $13
41 VG+ $28
42 FN+ $45
44 FN+ $45
44 VF- $88
45 (intro/1st Inhumans) VG $40
46 (1st Black Bolt-c Kirby) VG $28
46 (1st Black Bolt-c Kirby) VG+ $32
49 (2nd ap. Silver Surfer; 1st cvr Surfer & Galactus) FN $110
50 (Silver Surfer v. Galactus) overall GD/VG (tape on cvr; pg 1 cut but complete) $60
51 (Classic "This Man, This Monster") VF- $118
52 (1st Black Panther) VF- $195
55 (Thing v. Surfer) FN+ $60
57 FN $27
58 FN $27
59 FN $27
60 VF/NM $112
64 FN/VF $38
67 (1st Him/Warlock) FN/VF $58
67 (1st Him/Warlock) VF+ $90
72 (Silver Surfer c-story, pre-dates S. Surfer #1) VF $78
73 (Spider-Man, Thor, Daredevil x-over) FN- $28
74 VF/NM $100
78 VF/NM $66
79 VG- $10
79 FN $18
84 FN $18
85 VG+ $13
86 VG $12
86 VF- $34
87 FN/VF $27
89 NM- $70
90 VF/NM $50
91 NM- $70
111 VG+ $12
112 (Hulk v. Thing, classic cover) VG+ $32
113 FN/VF $18
115 VF- $22
122 FN- $10
134 NM- $35
141 VF/NM $27
142 FN+ $10
143 NM- $35
144 NM- $35
146 VF $16
152 FN $6
211 FN $3
FEAR (Marvel)
11 (Neal Adams' Manthing) FN+/VF- $10
GHOST RIDER (Marvel)
2 (1st Daimon Hellstrom) VF/NM $58
GIANT-SIZE DEFENDERS (Marvel)
2 VG $6
3 VG+ $7
HERO FOR HIRE (Luke Cage) (Marvel)
2 VF+ $35
3 VG+ $7
4 FN $9
7 VF $14
8 VF $14
HOUSE OF MYSTERY (DC)
143 (J'onn J'onzz, Manhunter behins) FN $57
INCREDIBLE HULK (Marvel) (take 30% off these)
108 FN/VF $30
109 NM- $75
147 FN/VF $11
148 VG/FN $7
156 FN/VF $11
158 VF/NM $20
163 FN+ $7
165 VF+ $12
167 VF/NM $16
169 FN $6
170 VG/FN $5
175 FN $6
179 FN+ $7
184 VF+ $8
202 VF+ $8
223 NM $5
343 (McFarlane) NM- $8
343 (McFarlane) NM $11
345 (McFarlane) NM- $8
IRON FIST (Marvel)
2 FN/VF $14
3 VG/FN $7
6 GD $3
6 VG/FN $7
10 VG/FN $7
IRON MAN (Marvel, 1st series)
3 VF $62
4 VF+ $55
5 VG+ $17
5 VF $54
5 VF+ $65
9 FN $20
10 VG+ $15
12 FN- $15
16 VF $28
19 VF+ $30
20 VF $28
21 VF- $18
22 VF $20
54 (Iron Man v. Sub-Mariner) FN+ $16
57 NM- $15
62 VF $9
64 VF/NM $13
74 NM $13
JOURNEY INTO MYSTERY WITH THOR (Marvel)
109 (Magneto cvr - 1st x-over) VG (taped) $76
117 FN $36
119 FN+ $34
120 VG/FN (5.0) $30
120 FN $36
123 FN+ (6.5) $48
124 (Hercules cover story) FN/VF $67
130 VG/FN $
131 VG+ $
132 VG $
133 FN/VF $
337 NM (1st Beta Ray Bill b y W. Simonson) $
338 VF+ $
JUDO MASTER (Charlton)
89 (3rd app. of JudoMaster) FN $12
91 (Sarge Steel begins) FN- $8
92 FN $9
MARVEL FEATURE (Marvel)
1 (1st Defenders) GD/VG $23
2 (2nd Defenders) VG+ $18
3 (3rd Defenders) FN- $16
MARVEL SUPER-HEROES (Marvel)
12 (1st app. Captain Marvel by Gene Colan) VG+/FN- $30
12 (1st app. Captain Marvel by Gene Colan) FN- $32
MARVEL TEAM-UP (Marvel)
1 FN $39
1 VF $95
NEW MUTANTS (Marvel)
87 (1st Cable) NM- $20
NOT BRAND ECHH (Marvel)
2 FN $12
3 FN $12
POWERMAN (Marvel)
17 (Hero For Hire Becomes PowerMan) NM- $20
PUNISHER Ltd. Series (5 issues) (Marvel)
5 (Zeck cover) VF+ $8
SECRET WARS (Marvel Super Heroes Secret Wars)
1 VF+ $5
1 VF/NM $6
SGT. FURY (Marvel)
13 (2nd solo Capt. America x-over outside Avengers) VG $70
19 GD/VG $12
41 FN- $10
44 FN/VF $18
45 VG/FN $10
60 VG/FN $7
SILVER SURFER (Marvel 1st series)
7 VG/FN $27
8 FN $27
9 VG/FN $22
9 FN $27
10 VF $63
10 NM- $150
11 VF/NM $93
12 VG/FN $20
12 VF+ $60
13 FN/VF $40
14 VG $24
14 VG/FN $30
15 (v. Human Torch) VF $56
15 (v. Human Torch) VF/NM $93
STRANGE TALES (Marvel)
129 FN $
138 VG+ $
139 VG/FN $
142 VG/FN $
145 VG+ $
151 (1st Steranko art) FN- $22
152 (Steranko) FN- $16
153 VG+ $
155 GD $
156 VG/FN $15
157 FN- $
160 VG/FN $
179 VF+ $
179 VF/NM $
181 VG+ $
SUB-MARINER (Marvel, Silver Age series)
35 (1st Avengers vs. Defenders) FN $18
TALES OF ASGARD (Marvel)
1 FN- $12
TALES OF SUSPENSE (Marvel) (take 15% off these)
60 (2nd app. Hawkeye) VG $40
81 FN $18
82 VF/NM $66
83 VF/NM $66
84 VF $40
85 VF+ $50
87 VF+ $50
88 VF+ $50
89 VF/NM $66
90 FN/VF $29
91 FN/VF $29
92 FN $18
92 VF $40
94 VF+ $46
95 VF/NM $66
96 VF $40
97 VF/NM $66
98 VF/NM $66
99 VF/NM $86
TALES TO ASTONISH (Marvel)
16 (1961, Ditko art, prototype issue) GD (missing 1/2 bk cvr) $29
51 VG+ (writing on cvr) $32
52 (1st app. Black Knight) VG+ (wormhole o/w) $37
54 VG- $27
54 FN+ $50
55 VG $30
58 VG+ $32
63 VF- $68
66 VF- $68
68 VF+ $78
71 VG $12
78 FN- $16
79 VG $12
84 VF $39
88 VG+ $13
89 FN $18
90 FN $18
92 VF+ $44
92 (1st Silver Surfer x-over outside of Fantastic Four) VF/NM $76
94 VF $39
95 FN+ $21
95 FN/VF $28
97 (X-Men cameo) FN+ $20
99 FN/VF $28
99 VF $39
100 (Hulk vs. Sub-Mariner) VF $49
THOR (Marvel)
130 VG/FN $
131 VG+ $
132 VG $
133 FN/VF $
137 FN/VF (7.0) $38
140 FN (6.0) $24
141 FN+ (6.5) $27
146 FN (6.0) $21
148 FN+ (6.5) $27
151 FN+ (6.5) $24
161 VG/FN (5.0) $12
161 VG+/FN (5.2) $13
177 VF/NM (9.0) $48
221 FN (6.0) $6
222 FN- (5.8) $5
225 (1st Firelord) FN (6.0) $9
337 (1st Beta Ray Bill by W. Simonson) NM- $10
338 (class Beta Ray Bill v. Thor cover by Simonson) VF+ $4
TOMB OF DRACULA (Marvel)
1 (Neal Adams cover) VF/VF+ $110
6 (Neal Adams) FN $18
7 VG+ $10
8 VG+ $8
9 FN $12
WEB OF SPIDER-MAN (Marvel)
1 NM- $15
26 NM $3
WEREWOLF BY NIGHT (Marvel)
2 VF+ $42
5 FN $
13 FN $
13 VF $
17 VF $
18 FN/VF $
21 FN $
25 VG $
25 FN $
26 VF $
41 FN $
WOLVERINE LIMITED SERIES (Marvel)
1 (Frank Miller) FN $15
X-MEN (Marvel)
16 FN/VF (7.0) $92
21 VF $99
25 VG/FN (5.0) $35
26 FN $42
27 FN/VF $70
27 VF $98
29 VG+ $32
29 VF $98
30 FN+ $54
31 FN $32
32 VF+ (8.2) $90
33 FN- (chipped cvr) $29
33 FN $32
34 VF $75
36 VF $75
37 VF+/NM $132
39 FN+ $40
41 NM-/NM $165
43 VG+ $22
44 (S.A. Angel) VF+ $72
49 (Steranko, 1st Lorna Dane) VF $67
51 VF $70
59 (Neal Adams) FN+ $38
62 FN/VF (7.0) $50
63 VF $70
65 GD/VG $15
201 NM- $7
204 NM- $7
206 NM $7
211 NM $24
212 VF- $14
214 NM $7
281 NM $7
289 NM $4
300 NM $6
(more comics will be added soon...)
The first list is Dave Cockrum's personal collection and file copies. Dave created many of The X-Men--Nightcrawler, Storm, Colossus, Thunderbird, Phoenix--as well as Mystique, The Black Cat, Ms. Marvel, The Starjammers, The Imperial Guard, The Brood, The Futurians. Some books, as indicated, were Dave's personal file copies (i.e., comics he pencilled or inked and filed as his personal file copies). Working with the Dave Cockrum Estate, CGC created the "Dave Cockrum Estate" pedigree (only books marked CGC underwent this process -- see "CGC'd books" category at the end). New comics are added often so check back frequently.
You'll also find many comics from Gene Colan's personal collection (file copies are indicated) as well as comics that were signed by Gene and Stan Lee.
Sales from the Cockrum Estate benefit Dave's widow Paty and The Dave & Paty Cockrum Scholarship awarded each year at the Joe Kubert School for Comic & Graphic Art.
Sales from the Gene Colan collection benefit Gene Colan.
Comics come bagged, boarded and sealed with a seal of authenticity, indicating provinance. A letter of authenticity from the Estate can also be arranged. Checks should be payable to Paty Cockrum or Gene Colan and mailed c/o Clifford Meth, 179-9 Rt. 46 West, Box 252, Rockaway, NJ 07866. Email cliffmeth@aol.com to reserve your comics. Discounts are given for multiple purchases.
We recently found four (4) copies of THE UNCANNY DAVE COCKRUM TRIBUTE (paperback) signed by Dave (he signs, "Thanks for Contributing --Dave Cockrum"). This was a short-print and only a few dozen were signed. These go for $35 ea.
Now here's Dave Cockrum's personal collection:
AARDWOLF (Aardwolf Publishing)
1 (signed by Cockrum) $6
ATOM (DC) (take an additional 30% off)
2 VG+ (4.5) $70
3 VG (4.0) $48
5 VG (4.0) $38
8 VG/FN (5.0) $38
15 VG (4.0) $22
16 FN- $22
18 FN (6.0) $28
19 FN/VF (7.0) $40
20 FN (6.0) $25
21 VF- $45
22 VF+ $65
23 FN+ $30
24 VF $55
25 VF- $45
26 VF $50
27 (would be VF but missing staples) VG+ $20
28 VF (8.0) $50
29 (1st solo Golden Age Atom) FN+ $50
30 VF $50
31 VF/NM (9.0) $70
32 VF (8.0) $42
33 VF/NM (9.0) $70
36 (G. Age Atom x-over) VF/NM (9.0) $80
37 (Hawkman cameo) VF/NM (9.0) $70
ATOM and HAWKMAN (DC) - take an additional 30% off
39 VF/NM $55
AVENGERS (Marvel) - 10% off
49 FN/VF $28
56 FN/VF $28
57 (1st Vision appearance) VG $35
58 (Origin of the Vision) FN $27
59 (1st Yellow Jacket) VF $34
60 FN/VF $22
61 VF $32
63 (Goliath becomes Yellow Jacket) VF- $29
65 VF $$32
66 FN $15
68 FN/VF $20
74 VF $25
75 FN/VF $18
76 FN/VF $20
76 VF/NM $44
77 VF $30
78 VF $30
80 GD $8
81 GD+ $8
93 FN/VF (1st Neal Adams Avengers) $60
94 FN- (Neal Adams) $20
95 VG (Neal Adams) $14
96 FN (Neal Adams) $21
97 FN $15
98 VF $26
99 VF $26
106 VF/NM Cockrum Art (1st Cockrum Avengers); Dave's file copy - $200
107 VF+ Cockrum Art; Dave's file copy - $95
107 VF/NM Cockrum Art; Dave's file copy - $110
108 FN- Cockrum Art; Dave's file copy - $75
108 VF/NM Cockrum Art; Dave's file copy - $110
109 VF/FN Cockrum Art; Dave's file copy - $70
111 (X-Men x-over) VF+ $36
112 FN (1st Mantis) $12
113 VF+/NM $28
114 VF+ $18
115 VF/NM $28
116 NM- $50
117 NM $50
118 VF/NM $37
119 FN/VF $14
124 VF/NM - COCKRUM ART; Dave's file copy - $65
132 VF/NM $18
138 VF $12
181 MINT $10
Annual #1 VF - $70
GIANT-SIZE AVENGERS
1 FN $15
2 VG/FN (Cockrum pencils; Dave's file copy) $60
3 VG/FN (Cockrum pencils; Dave's file copy) $45
3 untrimmed cover (cvr larger than comic) otherwise FN - Cockrum art - $12
BATMAN
237 FN (Neal Adams, Harlan Ellison) $36
243 FN (Neal Adams) $21
245 FN+ (Neal Adams) $25
245 VF (Neal Adams) $45
247 VF+ $28
BEWARE THE CREEPER (DC - 1968 series)
2 VF/NM (Ditko) $55
3 VF+ (Ditko) $40
4 VF+ (Ditko) $40
6 VF/NM (Ditko) $55
BLACKHAWK (DC - 1946 series) -- TAKE 65% off !
38 cvr separated otherwise FN+ 160
41 FN $112
42 FN $112
43 G/VG (cvr separated) $49
44 overall FN- (some chipping) $92
45 VG+ $86
46 GD $40
48 GD $40
49 VG/FN $96
50 (1st Killer Shark) VG/FN $105
51 FN- $105
52 VG $90
53 VG+ $86
54 Fair $16
55 VG/FN $98
56 VG/FN $98
57 VG+ $86
58 VG/FN $98
59 VG $82
60 VG $82
62 VG/FN $87
63 VG+ $75
64 VG+ $85
65 VG $72
66 VF $190
68 VG/FN $85
69 FN+ $105
70 VG+ $75
71 (origin retold) VG+ $88
72 VG $72
73 FN+ $105
74 FN- $92
75 FN $98
76 VG+ $76
77 FN+ $145
78 VG (cvr separated) $72
79 FN $98
80 VG $95
81 FN- (white pgs) $85
83 FN $89
84 FN $89
97 FN+ $80
99 FN/VF $105
170 FN+ $25
178 FN $24
183 VF/VF+ $40
184 NM- $85
185 NM- $85
186 VF/NM $64
187 VF+ $45
188 FN+ $27
189 VF+ $42
190 VF- $38
204 VF/NM $46
228 (Justice League x-over) VF- $28
240 NM $45
241 NM $45
242 VF+ $30
243 VF/NM $37
CAPTAIN MARVEL ADVENTURES (Fawcett) - 25% off
91 G/VG $35
119 - FAIR (cvr separated) $10
CAPTAIN MARVEL JUNIOR (Fawcett) - 25% off
20 FAIR $15
51 VG+ $56
52 VG+ $56
DETECTIVE COMICS (DC)
429 VF/VF+ $18
437 (1st Manhunter by Walt Simonson) FN+ $20
DOCTOR STRANGE (Marvel) - 25% off
2 FN/VF (Brunner) $15
172 VF $30
176 VF $30
178 VF $30
180 FN/VF $20
182 NM $45
183 NM $45
FLASH (DC)
155 FN+ $38
THE FLY (Archie / Red Circle)
2 (Steranko cvr.) NM- $5
FUTURIANS (Lodestone)
2 Cockrum art; Dave's file copy VF/NM $40
GIANT-SIZE AVENGERS #1 FN $15
GIANT-SIZE X-MEN #1 (VG) Dave's file copy - sold
GORGO (Charlton, 1961) (take 50% off this title)
4 (Ditko cover) FN $24
7 VF $49
8 VF $49
9 VF $49
RETURN OF GORGO (Charlton) #2 VF (Ditko cover) $49
GORGO'S REVENGE (Charlton) #1 VF+ (Ditko cover) $45
JUSTICE LEAGUE QUARTERLY (DC)
8 - Cockrum cover (swipe of X-Men #100!); Dave's file copy VF/NM: $45
MARVEL FAMILY (Fawcett) - 25% off
38 GD $15
49 GD/VG $20
66 VG $30
69 VG- $25
86 GD- (fully taped cvr) $10
88 VG- $28
MARVEL TEAM-UP
King-Size Annual #1 - VF - Cockrum Art; Dave's file copy $45
MARY MARVEL (Fawcett) (take 50% off this title)
10 VG+ $75
12 VG+ $65
MS. MARVEL (Marvel) (note: Dave Cockrum designed Ms. Marvel)
7 NM - Cockrum art; Dave's file copy - $45
17 NM - Cockrum art; Dave's file copy - $35
18 NM - Cockrum art; Dave's file copy - $35
MYSTERY IN SPACE (DC) - 25% off
62 FR/GD $10
63 FN/VF $90
68 GD/VG $25
69 GD/VG $25
70 FN- $50
72 FN+ $45
73 VG $25
74 VG $25
76 VG- $20
77 FN $40
78 VG $28
79 FN- $35
80 VF $90
81 FN $35
86 VG+ $25
90 (1st Adam Strange & Hawkman team-up) FN/VF $85
NATURE BOY (Charlton, 1956)
5 (early John Buscema art) FN- $35
NICK FURY, AGENT OF SHIELD (Marvel, 1968 series)
7 VF+ (Steranko) $40
8 FN $12
9 VF $22
10 FN/VF $17
11 VF $22
12 FN $18
12 VF $23
13 VF $22
14 FN/VF $14
15 (1st Bullseye) VF $55
16 FN/VF $12
17 FN $9
NICK FURY AND HIS AGENT OF SHIELDS (Marvel)
1 NM- $35
NIGHTCRAWLER (4-issue ltd. series) (Marvel) - Cockrum plot/scipt/art in all
2 NM - Dave Cockrum's file copy - $60
4 NM - Dave Cockrum's file copy - $55
PHANTOM STRANGER (DC, 1969 series) - 25% off
8 VF $20
10 VF+ $28
11 VF/NM $35
12 VF+ $28
13 VF- $20
14 VF/NM $35
SILVER SURFER (Marvel, 1st series)
6 FN/VF $60
7 VG/FN $32
8 FN- $25
9 FN/VF $50
10 VF $65
11 VF $62
12 FN/VF $40
13 FN+ $25
14 VG/FN $25
15 (Surfer vs. Human Torch) VF $50
16 VF $60
THE SPECTRE (DC)
4 VF $75
5 VF $65
6 FN $42
7 VF $48
8 FN+ $28
9 VF $58
10 FN $22
STRANGE ADVENTURES (DC) - 25% off
217 VF- $12
218 VF $13
219 VF $13
220 VF $12
221 VF $13
222 VF/NM $18
223 VF/NM $18
224 NM $22
225 NM $22
STRANGE TALES (Marvel)
135 VF- (1st Nick Fury Agent of Shield) $105
137 FN+ $20
139 FN- $16
140 VG/FN $17
144 FN $15
145 FN $15
148 FN- $18
149 FN- $12
150 (John Buscema's 1st work at Marvel) FN $22
151 (Jim Steranko's 1st work at Marvel) VG/FN $22
152 (Steranko) VF+ $45
153 (Steranko) FN- $23
155 (Steranko) VG/FN $15
156 (Steranko) VG/FN $15
157 (Steranko) FN+ $22
158 (Steranko) VF+ $50
159 (Fury origen retold; Cap. America vs. Fury cover by Steranko) VG $12
160 FN- (Steranko) $15
161 FN (Steranko) $18
162 FN/VF (Steranko) $28
163 VF- (Steranko) $35
164 FN+ (Steranko) $20
165 VF (Steranko) $35
167 FN/VF (Steranko) $30
168 FN/VF (Steranko) $25
SUB-MARINER (Marvel, 1968 series) (take 30% off this title)
2 FN/VF $40
3 FN/VF $30
4 FN+ $28
5 (1st Tiger Shark) FN $18
6 FN $15
7 FN $12
8 (Submariner vs. Thing) VF $58
9 VF $30
11 FN+ $14
12 FN/NM $37
20 FN/NM $25
35 (1st Defenders - Namor/Hulk/Surfer vs. Avengers) FN+ $25 (no discount)
King-Size Special #1 FN $9
WEIRD WORLDS (DC)
5 (Kaluta cover) VF/NM $5
WONDER WOMAN (DC)
1 (G. Perez) NM $5
X-MEN (Marvel, 1st series) - - 10% off
67 VG+ $15
95 Cockrum art; Dave's file copy - sold
96 Cockrum art; Dave's file copy - sold
97 Cockrum art; Dave's file copy - sold
98 Cockrum art; Dave's file copy - sold
99 Cockrum art; Dave's file copy - sold
100 Cockrum art; Dave's file copy - sold
101 Cockrum art; Dave's file copy - sold
102 (origin of Storm) FN+ Cockrum art; Dave's file copy (sold)
103 VF/VF+ Cockrum art; Dave's file copy $125
104 (1st Starjammers) VF/NM Cockrum art; Dave's file copy $200
105 VF+ Cockrum art; Dave's file copy (sold)
106 NM - Cockrum art; Dave's file copy $200
107 (1st full Starjammers) - cvr detached otherwise FN - Cockrum art; Dave's file copy $55
107 (1st full Starjammers) - VF/NM - Cockrum art; Dave's file copy $185
108 (1st Byrne X-Men) NM - Cockrum cover art; Dave's file copy $200
109 (1st Vindicator) VF/NM $80
110 VF/NM - Cockrum art; Dave's file copy $135
111 NM $75
112 NM $75
113 NM- $75
114 NM $75
124 VF/NM - Cockrum art; Dave's file copy
135 - cvr partially deatached, otherwise FN - $10
136 (never stapled, untrimmed cover else VG) - Cockrum art; Dave's file copy - $40
143 GD+ Cockrum art; Dave's file copy - $25
147 VG (never stapled) - Cockrum art; Dave's file copy - $40
149 VF/NM Cockrum art; Dave's file copy - $40
153 VF+ Cockrum art; Dave's file copy $40
154 VF/NM Cockrum art; Dave's file copy $40
156 FN+ Cockrum Art; Dave's file copy - $45
157 VF Cockrum Art; Dave's file copy - $50
161 (origin of Magneto) VF+ Cockrum Art; Dave's file copy - (sold)
163 VF/NM Cockrum Art; Dave's file copy - $40
164 FN+ Cockrum Art; Dave's file copy - $50
165 NM/M $13
166 NM- $10
167 VF+/NM- stamped by Marvel "complimentary copy" $8
168 VF+/NM- stamped by Marvel "complimentary copy" $8
175 NM $10
256 NM/Mint $10
257 Mint $10
282 NM/Mint $10
283 Mint $12
KING-SIZE ANNUAL #3 VF $12
X-MEN SPOTLIGHT on STARJAMMERS#1 (Marvel) - Cockrum art; Dave's file copy (NM/MINT) - $25
The X-MEN CHRONICLES (Fanzine for X-Men fans) - full color - Cockrum art; Dave's file copy - rare - $25
CGC'd Books - 15% off
The following Golden Age books are certified "FROM THE ESTATE OF DAVE COCKRUM" by CGC and graded by CGC:
Airboy Comics #v7 #4 (4.5) cream to off-white pages $45
Blackhawk 9 (4.0) first issue $700
Blackhawk 11 (apparant 4.0) restoration includes small amnt of color touch on cover; one piece of tape on interior cover $165
Blackhawk 12 (3.0) cream to off-white pages $125
Blackhawk 13 (4.0) restoration includes small amnt of color touch on cover; four pcs of tape on cvr; off-white to white pages $165
Blackhawk 14 (3.0) off-white pages $125
Blackhawk 15 (2.0) off-white pages $85
Blackhawk 16 (3.5) off-white pages $120
Blackhawk 18 (3.0) cream to off-white pages $100
Blackhawk 19 (6.5) off-white pages $260
Blackhawk 26 (4.5) cream to off-white pages $100
Blackhawk 27 (4.5) off-white pages $100
Blackhawk 30 (5.0) cream to off-white pages $115
Blackhawk 33 (5.5) off-white pages $100
Blackhawk 37 (5.0) off-white pages $95
Captain Marvel Adventures 14 (4.0) cream to off-white pages $185
Captain Marvel Adventures 86 (4.0) restoration includes small amnt of glue on 4 center wraps; off-white pages $60
Captain Marvel Jr. 3 (4.5) cream to off-white pages $250
Captain Marvel Jr. 40 (3.0) cream to off-white pages $50
Captain Marvel Jr. 54 (5.5) cream to off-white pages $70
Captain Marvel Jr. 101 (4.5) off-white to white pages $45
Captain Marvel Jr. 105 (2.5) 1 piece of tape on spine of cover; cream to off-white pages $35
Captain Midnight 39 (6.0) cream to off-white pages $95
Marvel Family 4 (7.5) cream to off-white pages $240
Marvel Family 20 (5.5) white pages $80
Marvel Family 24 (4.5) slightly brittle pages $58
Marvel Family 44 (6.5) cream to off-white pages $58
Sub-Mariner 39 (4.5) (Atlas Comics) cream to off-white pages $185
AUTOGRAPHED COMICS
The following AUTOGRAPHED books, graphic novels & comic books are not from the Cockrum Estate (unless indicated); sales of these books help fund the Dave & Paty Scholarship at the Joe Kubert School or Gene Colan:
Tales of Suspense #84 (Iron Man) signed by Stan Lee and Gene Colan $60.
Tales of Suspense #86 (Iron Man) signed by Stan Lee and Gene Colan $60.
Tales of Suspense #97 (1st Whiplash vs. Iron Man) signed by Stan Lee and Gene Colan $100.
Capt. America #116 (VF) signed by Gene Colan $30
Capt. America #121 (VF+) signed by Gene Colan $28
Capt. America #601 (NM/Varient Cover) signed by Gene Colan - Gene Colan File Copy - $50
Daredevil #27 signed by Gene Colan - Gene Colan File Copy - $50
Dr. Strange #177 (FN+) signed by Gene Colan $30
Dr. Strange #178 (VF) signed by Gene Colan $32
Tomb of Dracula #28 (Blade app.) (NM) signed by Gene Colan $50
Tomb of Dracula #33 (NM) signed by Gene Colan $35
Tomb of Dracula #34 (NM) signed by Gene Colan $35
Tomb of Dracula #35 (NM) signed by Gene Colan $35
Abadazad - signed by J.M. DeMatteis - $15
All American Men of War #113 (FN+) signed by Joe Kubert $25
All American Men of War #114 (VG+) signed by Joe Kubert $18
Blackhawk #244 (VF/NM) (The Dave Cockrum Estate) signed by Joe Kubert $12
Blackhawk #245 (NM-) (The Dave Cockrum Estate) signed by Joe Kubert $12
Cry for Dawn #9 - signed by Joe Linsner and Joe Monks - $5
Daredevil #1 - FN - signed on pg 1 by Stan Lee - $875 (on hold)
Dark Horse Presents #117 - signed by Gene Colan (from the Personal Collection of Gene Colan) $8
DC Universe #0 - signed by Geoff Johns
Drama #1 - signed by Joe Linsner - $5
Fantastic Four: The New Fantastic Four (hardcover) - signed by Dwayne McDuffie - $20
Flare #29 - signed by Frank Brunner - $2 (on hold)
Marvel Adventures #29 - signed by Peter David - $3
Our Army At War #240 (VF) (art by Neal Adams & Joe Kubert) - signed by Joe Kubert - $32
Our Army At War #268 (FN) - signed by Joe Kubert $12
Our Army At War #282 (VG/FN) - signed by Joe Kubert $10
Superman on the Couch - signed by author Danny Fingeroth - $15 (sold)
Tarzan (DC) #207 (VF) - signed by Joe Kubert $40
Tarzan (DC) #207 (FN) (The Dave Cockrum Estate) signed by Joe Kubert $22
Tarzan (DC) #212 (VF/NM) (The Dave Cockrum Estate) signed by Joe Kubert $23
Tarzan (DC) #213 (NM-) (The Dave Cockrum Estate) signed by Joe Kubert $26
Tarzan (DC) #214 (FN) (The Dave Cockrum Estate) signed by Joe Kubert $18
Tarzan (DC) #215 (VF+) (The Dave Cockrum Estate) signed by Joe Kubert $12
Tarzan (DC) #217 (VG+ cvr taped) (The Dave Cockrum Estate) signed by Joe Kubert $7
Tarzan (DC) #223 (NM-) (The Dave Cockrum Estate) signed by Joe Kubert $20
Tarzan (DC) #224 (VF/NM) (The Dave Cockrum Estate) signed by Joe Kubert $18
Tarzan (DC) #225 (VF/NM) (The Dave Cockrum Estate) signed by Joe Kubert $18
Tarzan (DC) #227 (VF/NM) (The Dave Cockrum Estate) signed by Joe Kubert $18
Tomb of Dracula - graphic novel #2 - signed by Gene Colan - (file copy from the personal collection of Gene Colan) -$15
Gene Colan File Copies - Added on 12/19/09
The following comics & graphic novels all contain art by Gene Colan and were Colan's personal file copies; they come bagged, boarded and sealed authenticating them as Gene Colan's personal file copies:
Blade II (Marvel) graphic novel - NM- $15
Bob Marley Graphic Novel (Marvel) NM- $6
Curse of Dracula (Dark Horse) graphic novel - NM - $10
Daredevil #-1 (1997) NM- (special Marvel edition) $10
Daredevil #89 GD $4
Daredevil #363 VF/NM $8
Daredevil #367 NM- $8
Daredevil #370 NM- $8
Dr. Strange #19 VF/NM $7
The Escapist (Dark Horse) graphic novel VF/NM - $8
Howard the Duck #19 VG $4
Jemm, Son of Saturn (DC) #8 NM- $8
Jemm, Son of Saturn (DC) #10 NM- $8
La Maleddiction de Dracula (French graphic novel) NM- $6
Marvel Comics Presents #103 VF/NM (Colan draws Wolverine) $6
Marvel Comics Presents #107 VF/NM (Colan draws Wolverine) $6
Marvel Super Heroes Vo. 2 #13 NM- $7
Nathaniel Dusk #1 VF/NM- $12
Nathaniel Dusk II #1 #2 and #3 (full set) all VF/NM- $20
Night Force #1 (DC) VF/NM - $10
Night Force #12 (DC) NM- $6
Predator: Hell & Hot Water (Dark Horse) graphic novel - NM- $7
Savage Return of Dracula (Marvel) #1 - NM/NM - $8
Silverblade (DC) #3 NM- $6
Silverblade (DC) #8 NM- $6
Wonder Woman (DC) #291 FN/VF - $6
Wonder Woman (DC) #302 VF - $6
--------------
The following books are not from the Cockrum Estate--they are being sold by me. Prices are negotiable, especially for multi-book purchases:
AMAZING ADVENTURES (Marvel)
6 (Neal Adams) VF/NM $48
AMAZING SPIDER-MAN (Marvel)
19 GD/VG (3.0) $60
44 FN+ (6.5) $60
46 (1st Shocker) VG $30
47 VG $30
48 FN/VF (7.0) $78
49 FN $45
54 VF- (7.5) $78
83 VF $58
124 (1st Manwolf) VF $45
126 FN $15
134 FN- $12
140 VF $21
143 FN $22
144 VF $22
148 VG/FN $10
150 FN/VF $19
158 VF- $16
162 FN $10
171 VG/FN $7
179 FN $9
180 FN $9
182 FN/VF $11
183 FN $6
184 VG $4
186 GD+ $2
191 VG $4
251 NM $16
253 (1st Rose) NM-/NM $10
260 NM $11
283 VF/NM $5
284 VF $6
285 NM $10
286 VF/NM $8
287 (Spidey vs. Daredevil) VG/FN $4
287 (Spidey vs. Daredevil) NM $10
289 (1st Hobgoblin) NM-/NM $24
301 NM-/NM $16
328 VF+ $6
330 NM $4
331 FN $2
347 NM $7
361 (1st Carnage) NM $15
AVENGERS (Marvel, 1st series)
9 (1st Wonderman) GD-/GD $35
15 VG+ $38
16 (1st New Avengers lineup) VG- (cvr separated) $35
18 VG- $22
19 (1st Swordsman) FN+ (6.5) $55
20 (Wood inks) FN $27
21 FN- $24
21 VF- $59
22 VG $18
22 FN (6.0) $27
22 FN+ (6.5) $36
23 FN/VF (7.0) $39
27 FN $24
37 VG/FN (5.0) $17
45 VG/FN (5.0) $15
49 VF- $34
58 (origin of The Vision) VG/FN $20
59 FN/VF $23
85 VG $8
93 (Neal Adams) GD $12
95 (Neal Adams) FN- $16
99 VG+ $9
103 VG/VG+ $6
113 FN+ $10
116 (Avengers v. Defenders; Vision vs. Silver Surfer) FN+ $14
King-Size Special 1 VG $20
BRAVE AND THE BOLD (DC)
70 FN
74 VF
CAPTAIN AMERICA (Marvel)
102 VF- $37
103 VF/NM $65
105 VF- $30
105 VF $34
106 VF+ $36
108 FN $15
108 VF+ $36
111 (Steranko) VG $16
111 (Steranko) VG/FN $20
112 FN $15
113 (Steranko) GD $8
115 NM $45
117 (1st Falcon) VF $62
118 VF $22
120 VF/NM $34
123 VF/NM $23
125 VF/NM $23
126 FN+ $10
127 VF- $14
153 (1st Jack Monroe) FN $6
154 FN $6
155 VG/FN $5
156 VG $4
159 VG $4
165 NM $12
169 NM $12
170 VF $8
181 (Intro/origin New Cap) NM $18
200 VF/NM $16
383 (Jim Lee) NM $4
CAPTAIN MARVEL (Marvel)
1 FN+ $40
2 VG/FN $15
3 FN $15
4 FN- $13
5 VG/FN $13
6 FN- $7
7 VG/FN $7
7 FN/VF $14
8 FN/VF $14
9 FN $9
10 VF $20
11 FN $9
12 VF $14
13 VF/NM $19
14 VF/NM $30
15 VF $14
15 VF $14
CHAMPIONS (Marvel)
1 VF $
2 VF $
3 NM $
5 FN $
7 FN/VF $
8 FN $
9 VG/FN $
12 FN $
13 FN+ $
14 VF/NM $
15 FN/VF $
16 VF/NM $
CONAN THE BARBARIAN (Marvel)
6 VG $12
16 VG (cvr separated) $10
17 FN/VF $18
19 FN/VF $ 23
DAREDEVIL (Marvel)
1 FN - signed on pg 1 by Stan Lee - $875
9 VF+ (orig. bookstore cvr stamp) $120
12 FN/VF $50
14 (Romita) VG/FN $25
15 FN+ $35
18 (1st Gladiator) FN $30
21 VG/FN $15
22 VG/FN $15
24 FN/VF $29
26 VG+ $14
26 VG+/FN $15
28 VF- $36
28 VF $41
31 VG+ $12
31 FN+ $18
32 VF $34
36 VF $34
39 FN/VF $24
42 (1st Jester) VF $30
43 (vs. Capt. America - classic Kirby cover) VF $42
47 VF $30
55 GD $3
185 (Frank Miller) NM- $10
186 (Frank Miller) FN $6
186 (Frank Miller) VF/NM $8
187 (Frank Miller) NM- $10
188 (Frank Miller) NM- $10
226 (Frank Miller) NM- $5
DEFENDERS (Marvel)
1 FN/VF $56
1 FN/FN+ $36
3 VF- $25
4 VF $28
5 VF+ $32
6 VF/NM $27
6 VF-/VF $16
7 FN/VF $14
8 VF $22
9 VF/NM $34
10 (Hulk v. Thor) VG/FN $18
10 (Hulk v. Thor) FN/VF $35
11 VF- $20
11 FN- $10
FANTASTIC FOUR (Marvel) (take 25% off these)
29 FN $72
31 (early Avengers x-over) VG+ $45
35 VG $40
36 (1st Madame Medusa) VF- $125
37 FN+ $70
39 (Wood inks, early Daredevil x-over) FN/VF $100
39 (Wood inks, early Daredevil x-over) VF- $125
40 FN $60
41 GD $13
41 VG+ $28
42 FN+ $45
44 FN+ $45
44 VF- $88
45 (intro/1st Inhumans) VG $40
46 (1st Black Bolt-c Kirby) VG $28
46 (1st Black Bolt-c Kirby) VG+ $32
49 (2nd ap. Silver Surfer; 1st cvr Surfer & Galactus) FN $110
50 (Silver Surfer v. Galactus) overall GD/VG (tape on cvr; pg 1 cut but complete) $60
51 (Classic "This Man, This Monster") VF- $118
52 (1st Black Panther) VF- $195
55 (Thing v. Surfer) FN+ $60
57 FN $27
58 FN $27
59 FN $27
60 VF/NM $112
64 FN/VF $38
67 (1st Him/Warlock) FN/VF $58
67 (1st Him/Warlock) VF+ $90
72 (Silver Surfer c-story, pre-dates S. Surfer #1) VF $78
73 (Spider-Man, Thor, Daredevil x-over) FN- $28
74 VF/NM $100
78 VF/NM $66
79 VG- $10
79 FN $18
84 FN $18
85 VG+ $13
86 VG $12
86 VF- $34
87 FN/VF $27
89 NM- $70
90 VF/NM $50
91 NM- $70
111 VG+ $12
112 (Hulk v. Thing, classic cover) VG+ $32
113 FN/VF $18
115 VF- $22
122 FN- $10
134 NM- $35
141 VF/NM $27
142 FN+ $10
143 NM- $35
144 NM- $35
146 VF $16
152 FN $6
211 FN $3
FEAR (Marvel)
11 (Neal Adams' Manthing) FN+/VF- $10
GHOST RIDER (Marvel)
2 (1st Daimon Hellstrom) VF/NM $58
GIANT-SIZE DEFENDERS (Marvel)
2 VG $6
3 VG+ $7
HERO FOR HIRE (Luke Cage) (Marvel)
2 VF+ $35
3 VG+ $7
4 FN $9
7 VF $14
8 VF $14
HOUSE OF MYSTERY (DC)
143 (J'onn J'onzz, Manhunter behins) FN $57
INCREDIBLE HULK (Marvel) (take 30% off these)
108 FN/VF $30
109 NM- $75
147 FN/VF $11
148 VG/FN $7
156 FN/VF $11
158 VF/NM $20
163 FN+ $7
165 VF+ $12
167 VF/NM $16
169 FN $6
170 VG/FN $5
175 FN $6
179 FN+ $7
184 VF+ $8
202 VF+ $8
223 NM $5
343 (McFarlane) NM- $8
343 (McFarlane) NM $11
345 (McFarlane) NM- $8
IRON FIST (Marvel)
2 FN/VF $14
3 VG/FN $7
6 GD $3
6 VG/FN $7
10 VG/FN $7
IRON MAN (Marvel, 1st series)
3 VF $62
4 VF+ $55
5 VG+ $17
5 VF $54
5 VF+ $65
9 FN $20
10 VG+ $15
12 FN- $15
16 VF $28
19 VF+ $30
20 VF $28
21 VF- $18
22 VF $20
54 (Iron Man v. Sub-Mariner) FN+ $16
57 NM- $15
62 VF $9
64 VF/NM $13
74 NM $13
JOURNEY INTO MYSTERY WITH THOR (Marvel)
109 (Magneto cvr - 1st x-over) VG (taped) $76
117 FN $36
119 FN+ $34
120 VG/FN (5.0) $30
120 FN $36
123 FN+ (6.5) $48
124 (Hercules cover story) FN/VF $67
130 VG/FN $
131 VG+ $
132 VG $
133 FN/VF $
337 NM (1st Beta Ray Bill b y W. Simonson) $
338 VF+ $
JUDO MASTER (Charlton)
89 (3rd app. of JudoMaster) FN $12
91 (Sarge Steel begins) FN- $8
92 FN $9
MARVEL FEATURE (Marvel)
1 (1st Defenders) GD/VG $23
2 (2nd Defenders) VG+ $18
3 (3rd Defenders) FN- $16
MARVEL SUPER-HEROES (Marvel)
12 (1st app. Captain Marvel by Gene Colan) VG+/FN- $30
12 (1st app. Captain Marvel by Gene Colan) FN- $32
MARVEL TEAM-UP (Marvel)
1 FN $39
1 VF $95
NEW MUTANTS (Marvel)
87 (1st Cable) NM- $20
NOT BRAND ECHH (Marvel)
2 FN $12
3 FN $12
POWERMAN (Marvel)
17 (Hero For Hire Becomes PowerMan) NM- $20
PUNISHER Ltd. Series (5 issues) (Marvel)
5 (Zeck cover) VF+ $8
SECRET WARS (Marvel Super Heroes Secret Wars)
1 VF+ $5
1 VF/NM $6
SGT. FURY (Marvel)
13 (2nd solo Capt. America x-over outside Avengers) VG $70
19 GD/VG $12
41 FN- $10
44 FN/VF $18
45 VG/FN $10
60 VG/FN $7
SILVER SURFER (Marvel 1st series)
7 VG/FN $27
8 FN $27
9 VG/FN $22
9 FN $27
10 VF $63
10 NM- $150
11 VF/NM $93
12 VG/FN $20
12 VF+ $60
13 FN/VF $40
14 VG $24
14 VG/FN $30
15 (v. Human Torch) VF $56
15 (v. Human Torch) VF/NM $93
STRANGE TALES (Marvel)
129 FN $
138 VG+ $
139 VG/FN $
142 VG/FN $
145 VG+ $
151 (1st Steranko art) FN- $22
152 (Steranko) FN- $16
153 VG+ $
155 GD $
156 VG/FN $15
157 FN- $
160 VG/FN $
179 VF+ $
179 VF/NM $
181 VG+ $
SUB-MARINER (Marvel, Silver Age series)
35 (1st Avengers vs. Defenders) FN $18
TALES OF ASGARD (Marvel)
1 FN- $12
TALES OF SUSPENSE (Marvel) (take 15% off these)
60 (2nd app. Hawkeye) VG $40
81 FN $18
82 VF/NM $66
83 VF/NM $66
84 VF $40
85 VF+ $50
87 VF+ $50
88 VF+ $50
89 VF/NM $66
90 FN/VF $29
91 FN/VF $29
92 FN $18
92 VF $40
94 VF+ $46
95 VF/NM $66
96 VF $40
97 VF/NM $66
98 VF/NM $66
99 VF/NM $86
TALES TO ASTONISH (Marvel)
16 (1961, Ditko art, prototype issue) GD (missing 1/2 bk cvr) $29
51 VG+ (writing on cvr) $32
52 (1st app. Black Knight) VG+ (wormhole o/w) $37
54 VG- $27
54 FN+ $50
55 VG $30
58 VG+ $32
63 VF- $68
66 VF- $68
68 VF+ $78
71 VG $12
78 FN- $16
79 VG $12
84 VF $39
88 VG+ $13
89 FN $18
90 FN $18
92 VF+ $44
92 (1st Silver Surfer x-over outside of Fantastic Four) VF/NM $76
94 VF $39
95 FN+ $21
95 FN/VF $28
97 (X-Men cameo) FN+ $20
99 FN/VF $28
99 VF $39
100 (Hulk vs. Sub-Mariner) VF $49
THOR (Marvel)
130 VG/FN $
131 VG+ $
132 VG $
133 FN/VF $
137 FN/VF (7.0) $38
140 FN (6.0) $24
141 FN+ (6.5) $27
146 FN (6.0) $21
148 FN+ (6.5) $27
151 FN+ (6.5) $24
161 VG/FN (5.0) $12
161 VG+/FN (5.2) $13
177 VF/NM (9.0) $48
221 FN (6.0) $6
222 FN- (5.8) $5
225 (1st Firelord) FN (6.0) $9
337 (1st Beta Ray Bill by W. Simonson) NM- $10
338 (class Beta Ray Bill v. Thor cover by Simonson) VF+ $4
TOMB OF DRACULA (Marvel)
1 (Neal Adams cover) VF/VF+ $110
6 (Neal Adams) FN $18
7 VG+ $10
8 VG+ $8
9 FN $12
WEB OF SPIDER-MAN (Marvel)
1 NM- $15
26 NM $3
WEREWOLF BY NIGHT (Marvel)
2 VF+ $42
5 FN $
13 FN $
13 VF $
17 VF $
18 FN/VF $
21 FN $
25 VG $
25 FN $
26 VF $
41 FN $
WOLVERINE LIMITED SERIES (Marvel)
1 (Frank Miller) FN $15
X-MEN (Marvel)
16 FN/VF (7.0) $92
21 VF $99
25 VG/FN (5.0) $35
26 FN $42
27 FN/VF $70
27 VF $98
29 VG+ $32
29 VF $98
30 FN+ $54
31 FN $32
32 VF+ (8.2) $90
33 FN- (chipped cvr) $29
33 FN $32
34 VF $75
36 VF $75
37 VF+/NM $132
39 FN+ $40
41 NM-/NM $165
43 VG+ $22
44 (S.A. Angel) VF+ $72
49 (Steranko, 1st Lorna Dane) VF $67
51 VF $70
59 (Neal Adams) FN+ $38
62 FN/VF (7.0) $50
63 VF $70
65 GD/VG $15
201 NM- $7
204 NM- $7
206 NM $7
211 NM $24
212 VF- $14
214 NM $7
281 NM $7
289 NM $4
300 NM $6
(more comics will be added soon...)
Labels:
comics,
Dave Cockrum,
Dave Cockrum Estate,
Silver Age Comics
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