When I first starting reading comics, most comics publishers would put their numbers on the front cover - and would encourage you to start collecting the series. This led to comic shops with back issues, so that one could buy issues they missed. I recall buying comics with numbering in the 300s, inspiring me to think that maybe one day I would get those earlier numbers. How things have changed.
From the March 2014 Diamond catalogue for comics to be sold in May.
Longest running series:
Marvel
Avengers #30
Dark Horse
BPRD Hell on Earth #119
DC
Scooby-Doo, Where Are You #45
(Looney Tunes published bi-monthly, and not out this month)
IDW
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #34
image
Spawn #243
Witchblade #175
Savage Dragon #197
the Walking Dead #127
Invincible #112
and others over 100 issues
AC:
Femforce #167
Antartic Press:
Gold Digger #212
Ninja High School solicited an issue recently
Archie:
Archie #656
Archie Double Digest #251
Sonic The Hedgehog #261
and other bi-monthly titles not offered this month
Bongo:
no Simpson Comics offered this month
Zenescope:
Grimm Fairy Tales #97 (sure to make 100)
It's possible I missed some, but obviously the trend is toward mini-series and away from long running
comics. It may make very good economic sense for the company, but it does make long consecutive runs of a title much less likely for a collector to collect. Therefore a massive change, and likely to deeply affect "the hobby".
personal note: so where have I been?
1) moved from the east coast to the Rocky Mountains
2) various illnesses and surgeries, an illness that saps the energy being the worst
3) annoyance at doing research and having folks re-write an article as their own.
And how has your year gone?
Hi,
ReplyDeleteI hav ebeen asked t write an article on the Beetle Bailey comic bokd and it has been hard to get information about them. I noticed you left a list of artists on my blog when I posted some of the first book in 208. Can you tell me where you got that information and if there is more to be had? Any help will be greatly appreciated and noted.
Ger- as I was a senior editor of Jerry Bails' Who's Who of American Comic books, no doubt it came from there (www.bailsprojects.com). Most of the Beetle Baileys were produced by the Mort Walker studio, so you might ask him (or his sons) what they know about them
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