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FIGHT COMICS (1940-54) #1
NM: 9.4
(Stock Image)
SOLD ON:  Monday, 05/02/2022 4:27 PM
$11,000
Sold For
1
Offers
PUBLISHER: Fiction House
COMMENTS: (The Mile High Fight #1 is restored)
classic Lou Fine skull cover; Eisner art
Denver Copy
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DESCRIPTION
(The Mile High Fight #1 is restored)
classic Lou Fine skull cover; Eisner art
Denver Copy
Jan. 1940. Fiction House premiered this war genre archetype early in 1940 with a cover skillfully designed and drawn by the great Lou Fine. How is this book that old and still look like that??????
The Denver Collection is one of 4 Pedigrees consisting of only #1s. The original owner purchased all of the books in the collection for investment purposes, with most being NM 9.4. With a fire engine red cover, sharp corners and great pages, Metropolis has never seen a nicer copy. It is important to note the Edgar Church copy is restored.ÿý

Artists Information

Louis Kenneth Fine was born in New York. He studied at the Grand Central Art School and Pratt Institute. He was partially crippled by childhood polio and longed to be an illustrator. Among his major influences were Dean Cornwell, J.C. Leyendecker, and Heinrich Kley. Fine joined the Eisner-Iger comic shop in 1938 and soon was drawing for the Fiction House and Fox lines on such features as 'Wilton of the West', 'The Count of Monte Cristo', and 'The Flame'. Within a short time he became one of their best artists. He drew parts of the 'Jumbo' and 'Sheena' comics, and he also produced several adventure comics. Between 1939 and 1943, he worked for the Arnold's Quality Comics group. He produced 'Black Condor', 'Stormy Foster' and several issues of 'Uncle Sam'. From early on, Fine's specialty was covers, and he turned out dozens of them. Lou Fine left the comic book industry in 1944 and moved into drawing Sunday advertising strips for the funnies. On his advertising work, he cooperated extensively with Don Komisarow. Together, they created characters like 'Charlie McCarthy' and 'Mr. Coffee Nerves' for Chase and Sanborn Coffee, and 'Sam Spade' for Wildroot Cream Oil. They also made 'The Thropp Family' for Liberty magazine, using the combined signature of Donlou (scripts by Lawrence Lariar). Next, Fine drew two newspaper strips, 'Adam Ames', and 'Peter Scratch', about a tough private eye who lived with his mother. Fine died in 1971 and according to Will Eisner, he was one of the greatest draftsmen ever.

Will Eisner is an American cartoonist, writer and entrepreneur who's one of the earliest cartoonist to contribute to the comics industry. Will is famous for his experiments in content and form in comics as well as popularizing the term "Graphic Novel". Will Eisner's most recognized works are The Spirit and A contract with God.

George Tuska who used a variety of pen names including Carl Larson, was an American comic book and newspaper comic strip artist best known for his 1940s work on various Captain Marvel titles and the crime fiction series Crime Does Not Pay and for his 1960s work illustrating Iron Man and other Marvel Comics characters. He also drew the DC Comics newspaper comic strip The World's Greatest Superheroes from 1978–1982.


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