Strange Worlds (Avon Comics) Explained

Strange Worlds
Schedule:Bimonthly
Ongoing:y
Publisher:Avon Comics
Issues:15
Startmo:Nov.
Startyr:1950
Endmo:Sept./Oct.
Endyr:1955
Format:anthology
Scifi:y
Artists:Wally Wood, Joe Kubert, Everett Raymond Kinstler, Charles Sultan, Alvin Hollingsworth
Sort:Strange Worlds

Strange Worlds is an American science-fiction anthology comic-book series published by Avon Comics over 15 issues between November 1950 and September/October 1955.[1] The series ran in two sequences. Issues #1–10 ran cover-dated November 1950 to November 1952. No issues #11–17 were released, and the series began publication again with #18, having taken over the numbering of the defunct Avon comic Eerie. This second sequence ran through issue #22 (Oct./Nov. 1954 – Sept./Oct. 1955).

While Avon was a minor comics publisher in relation to such contemporaneous industry leaders as Atlas Comics, DC Comics, and EC Comics, Strange Worlds featured artwork by such top talents as Wally Wood, who would soon go on to become an industry star at EC; Joe Kubert, later a signature artist of DC's Hawkman and Sgt. Rock; portrait painter Everett Raymond Kinstler and Western-art painter Charles Sultan, early in their careers; and seminal African-American comics artist Alvin C. Hollingsworth a.k.a. Alvin Holly.

Stories

One ongoing feature in the otherwise anthological title was "Kenton of the Star Patrol".

Reprinted stories include:

reprinted Golden-Age Greats Volume 12 (Paragon Publications / AC Comics, 1998)

reprinted The Heap #1 (Skywald Publications, Sept. 1971)

reprinted The Heap #1 (Skywald Publications, Sept. 1971; retitled "Curse of the Broken Balcony")

Notes and References

  1. Book: Schelly . William . American Comic Book Chronicles: The 1950s . 2013 . TwoMorrows Publishing . 9781605490540 . 41.