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PUBLISHER: Marvel
COMMENTS: white pages; QES certified - criteria met: preferred staple placement + perfect staple area + perfect spine + exceptional cover edges
Jack Kirby cover/art; Steve Ditko Inks; 2nd app of Puppet Master; COMIC BOOK IMPACT rating of 7 (CBI)
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white pages; QES certified - criteria met: preferred staple placement + perfect staple area + perfect spine + exceptional cover edges
Jack Kirby cover/art; Steve Ditko Inks; 2nd app of Puppet Master; COMIC BOOK IMPACT rating of 7 (CBI)When Prince Namor, the Sub-Mariner, made his Silver Age debut in Fantastic Four #4 after a nearly two-decade absence, comic book readers rejoiced. Namor was always more of an anti-hero due to his persistent frustration with man's ignorant exploits concerning the sea, and of course, his obsession with the Invisible Woman. In FF #14, Namor comes back to duke it out with the Fantastic Four after once again abducting Sue Richards. Not a good look for Namor in these modern times, but such things were de rigueur in the 1960s.
Jack Kirby cover/art; Steve Ditko Inks; 2nd app of Puppet Master; COMIC BOOK IMPACT rating of 7 (CBI)
Jack Kirby cover/art; Steve Ditko Inks; 2nd app of Puppet Master; COMIC BOOK IMPACT rating of 7 (CBI)