Sgt. Fury #18. I know Sgt Fury was bit a realistic war comic, but this one really want all the way.
The cover blurb "Killed in Action." and you expect some minor character or one of the Commandos biting it but then there was the ending.
Spoiler
Fury's wife to be Pamela Hawley, a British nurse, a noncombatant, of all people being killed, drove it home like no other story has, (or for me) since.
The impact is still there.
2007-01-14 23:32:39
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answer #1
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answered by mitchell2020 5
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That’s hard to say. Because there were so many stories that Stan Lee was credited for, without having written. There were many artists and writers working for Marvel whose contracts did not explicitly state that any and all rights in their creations belonged to Marvel, but they found this out (to their great dismay) when they finally tried to leave. For years, Stan Lee was listed as the artist or writer on many titles on which he had no input other than editorial decisions.
However, try the early Avengers, the early X-men, and (I know this is a little later, but they are well worth reading) the early Luke Cage, Hero for Hire.
15 JAN 07, 1610 hrs, GMT.
2007-01-15 11:05:50
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answer #2
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answered by cdf-rom 7
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Doctor Strange.
After debuting in Strange Tales #110 and returning in the next issue, the nine- to 10-page feature "Dr. Strange" skipped two issues and then returned permanently with #114 (Nov. 1963). Steve Ditko's surrealistic mystical landscapes and increasingly head-trippy visuals helped make the feature a favorite of 1960s college students, according to contemporaneous accounts.
Take care!
2007-01-15 01:09:17
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answer #3
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answered by Mary R 5
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I used to love the "Thor" series. There were also these comic series called "SGT. Rock" and "The Unknown Soldier". They were AWESOME!
There was one comic, my all-time fave, and it was "The Thing vs. The Hulk". What a scrap! Read it 200+ times.
Iron Man, The Green Lantern, and there was this 'Western' comic series that had great creepy stories, were all great too.
2007-01-15 01:09:57
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answer #4
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answered by krazykritik 5
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Anything dealing with the Silver Surfer!!! It was like reading Shakespear in Space! The grandness, the dialog, the scope... Some people STILL cannot get it!
2007-01-15 12:11:46
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answer #5
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answered by doctor_76 4
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Captain America #3 - was his first published work. (excellent art work by Alex Shomberg) While this may not have been his best it most certainly was the catalyst for his great creativity and opened a lot of doors.
2007-01-15 01:20:20
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answer #6
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answered by bear_net 1
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I'd go with Strange Tales (because I love Dr. Strange).
2007-01-15 01:10:13
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answer #7
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answered by Cruel Angel 5
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Uncanny X-Men #1, of course! It started it all.
2007-01-15 01:33:11
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answer #8
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answered by Genius 2
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