Comic Collector Pro v4.2.1

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As you can see, this is not a comic book, but the tool that can help you to organize your Comic Collections.

Catalog your comic collection automatically
Creators, characters & cover images for all issues
Download it all from our online comic database

Create a comprehensive personal comic database
- Catalog publisher, imprint, date, title and cover images (front and back)
- For each issue, list all creators: writers, pencillers, colorists, inkers, letterers, editor, cover artists, etc...
- List the characters that appear including their alias and real names.
- Track story lines using the Story Arc and Crossover fields.

Then enjoy browsing your comic database on your computer
- View your comic database as a list or as gallery of cover images.
- Group comics by series, publisher, crossover or any other property.
- Find comics quickly, either by title, creator or anything you want.


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If you want to find out more, visit Official Comic Collector Site
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Number 370


"Dragged to your death!"


I'm not a big Western fan, not of movies, books or comics, but I do enjoy the occasional story if it's well done. Robert Kanigher, editor, scripted this story for Alex Toth, artist, and Frank Giacoia, inker. It appeared in All-American Western #107, April-May 1949. I love Toth's dynamic, action-filled artwork. Giacoia inked it in DC's late-1940s house style, borrowed from Milton Caniff.

The Indian characters are treated the same way they were treated in movies, as stereotypes.

I like Johnny Thunder's rock 'n' roll hairstyle, anticipating the look of a decade hence. Something that bugs me is how a white horse can be called Black Lightning. And wasn't Johnny Thunder a name borrowed from another DC character of a couple years earlier? And wasn't Black Lightning the name of a superhero two or three decades later? I guess comic books were the original recyclers: plots, art, names, everything used again and again!












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100 Bullets. Volume 1. Number 93

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100 Bullets. Volume 1. Number 93
September 2008 | CBR | 28 pages | 12.4MB

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Blueberry 03 - Lone Eagle

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Blueberry 03 - Lone Eagle
49 pages | CBR | 26.3MB

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The Last Defenders. Limited Series. Volume 1. Number 5

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The Last Defenders. Limited Series. Volume 1. Number 5
September 2008 | 24 pages | PDF | 16.9MB

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Tank Girl: Apocalypse. Issue 1

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Tank Girl: Apocalypse. Issue 1
25 pages | CBR | 6.2MB

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Okay, Who Came Up With This?

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Meet Little Ambrose:



That's him at the top of the ladder. More to the point is the chap at the bottom of the ladder. That's Little Archie, aka, Archie Andrews, the character who sold more comic books in the Silver Age than anybody. And what is he doing? Well, it looks like he's rather cleverly painted the ladder so that Little Ambrose can't come down.

From this you might assume that Little Ambrose was some hate-worthy villain like Reggie or Lex Luthor or even Gladstone Gander.

But no. Little Ambrose was the youngster in Archie Andrews' neighborhood that Little Archie bullied. And I am not kidding about that. Consider these scenes from that first issue:



And:



And:



And incredibly:



Little Archie made him an offer he couldn't refuse.

Horrific characterization for one of the most important comic book characters of all time. Little Archie and Archie himself were always good characters; when they joined the Superhero craze, Archie became Pureheart the Powerful, but in Little Ambrose, Archie should be Brutus the Bully.

Fortunately Little Ambrose did not survive past his inaugural issue; I assume that he had appeared in the Little Archie mags as well. I'm pretty sure he did not appear in any of the teenage Archie mags in the Silver Age. There is nothing particularly wrong with the character of Little Ambrose; he's the underdog who comes out on top. That's admirable.

The problem is making his tormentor Archie.
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100 Bullets. Volume 1. Number 91

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100 Bullets. Volume 1. Number 91
July 2008 | 33 pages | CBR | 15.9MB

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American Splendor. Volume 2. Number 2

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American Splendor. Volume 2. Number 2
July 2008 | 33 pages | PDF | 14MB

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The Last Defenders. Limited Series. Volume 1. Number 4

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The Last Defenders. Limited Series. Volume 1. Number 4
August 2008 | 24 pages | PDF | 19.1MB

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100 Bullets. Volume 1. Number 90

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100 Bullets. Volume 1. Number 90
June 2008 | 32 pages | PDF | 19.8MB

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100 Bullets. Volume 1. Number 89

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100 Bullets. Volume 1. Number 89
May 2008 | 29 pages | CBR | 13.6MB

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Tank Girl - The Movie

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Tank Girl - The Movie
CBZ | 66 pages | 17.4MB

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The Last Defenders. Limited Series. Volume 1. Number 3

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The Last Defenders. Limited Series. Volume 1. Number 3
July 2008 | 24 pages | PDF | 13MB

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Tank Girl Graphic Novel

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Tank Girl Graphic Novel
128 pages | CBR | 38.4MB

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100 Bullets. Volume 1. Number 88

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100 Bullets. Volume 1. Number 88
April 2008 | 31 pages | CBR | 14.2MB

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#059.Spider Man

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Amazing Fantasy was a comic book anthology series published by Marvel Comics. It is best known as the title that introduced the popular character Spider Man which was created by writer-editor Stan Lee and artist Steve Ditko.

Here is very first
Spider Man comic.




Vol1N15-1962- Spider Man




All thanks and credits for providing this rare comic go to our friend
Dr. Krishna Raman.
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100 Bullets. Volume 1. Number 87

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100 Bullets. Volume 1. Number 87
March 2008 | 25 pages | PDF | 8.9MB

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Friday Trivia Quiz #7: Superman

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I decided to try something different this week. I've combined bits and pieces from several different covers from the Superman family of comics. Can you identify all the covers. Some of the covers may give you a clue. For example, note the super tots frolicking in #1; is there something unusual about the Superman uniforms they're wearing?
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Number 369


Supermouse goes ape!


I was going to make a comment about Supermouse and the 800-pound gorilla...but in this story, "The Great Gorilla Plot," that gorilla looks like he weighs more than 800 pounds. A lot more.

This entry in the Supermouse series by the great cartoonist, Milt Stein, is from Supermouse #22, December 1952. To see more of the stories posted on Pappy's, click on the Supermouse link in the labels below. For more cartoon funny animals go to the great blog, Sherm Cohen's CartoonSNAP. To see Sherm's links to more Supermouse go here.

















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