Featuring: X-Men Release: October 11, 1966 Cover: December 1966 12 cents Edited by Stan Lee Scripted by Roy Thomas Drawn by Werner Roth Inked by Dick Ayers Lettered by Sam Rosen (Wouldja believe Artie Simek?) 20 pages
…as long as there are evil mutants abroad in the world, the X-Men must remain vigilant!
Recall last issue ended with Cyclops accidentally (or so he claims) injuring Angel. Meanwhile, Jean Grey ran into Cal Rankin at Metro College. Cal Rankin had fought the X-Men as Mimic, but he doesn’t recall the encounter because Professor X futzed with his brain.
We pick up with the X-Men battling Mimic again, now seeming to recall their last encounter. After the in media res opening, we see how we got here.
Featuring: X-Men Release: September 1, 1966 Cover: November 1966 12 cents Editing.. Stan Lee Script.. Roy Thomas Art… Werner Roth Inks.. Dick Ayers Lettering… Sam Rosen Mayan headdresses… Irving Forbush 20 pages
I hate to sound like a poor man’s Hawkeye, but I can’t seem to stop myself! Why should Jean prefer Scott over me?
Last issue, the gem-hunter El Tigre found a pendant which transformed him into the Mayan feathered-serpent god Kukulcán. He now has the power of the sun. Which sounds pretty powerful.
This seems to be basically what happened to Don Blake. He found a mystic artifact and now finds himself the avatar for a god.
Featuring: X-Men Release: August 2, 1966 Cover: October 1966 12 cents Edited by: Stan Lee Scripted by: Roy Thomas Illustrated by: Werner Roth Inked by: Dick Ayers Lettered by: Sam Rosen Imitated by: Brand Echh 20 pages
At some point, we are faced with the question, are all these heroes interchangeable, or are their distinctions amongst the titles, making some stories more suitable for one title than another.
There are hints here of what I think the X-Men are about. Moments.
Featuring: X-Men Release: June 30, 1966 Cover: September 1966 12 cents Editing by: Stan (Busy Bee) Lee Script by: Roy (Bookworm) Thomas Art by: Werner (Worker-ant) Roth Inking by: Dick (Doodlebug) Ayers Lettering by: Sam (Pussycat) Rosen 20 pages
“Grow! Grow! Grow! Let not one X-Man survive!” “Now, how does a rational person argue with sentiments like those?”
As we learned last issue, Jean is leaving the X-Men to go to college. She’ll be at Metro College, the same college as Johnny Storm. We just saw that Johnny Storm was on school break with Wyatt Wingfoot, and using that break to travel to the Great Refuge to try to free the Inhumans.
The Narrator notes Johnny and Wyatt are in the Himalayas. Last we saw them, they were traveling from Wakanda in Africa and on their way to the Great Refuge, which had been in the Andes, not the Himalayas. Perhaps they got lost.
Featuring: Fantastic Four Release: February 10, 1966 Cover: May 1966 12 cents Script: Stan Lee Art: Jack Kirby Inks: Joe Sinnott Lettering: S. Rosen 20 pages
Master! For the first time I realize the dread enormity of what you plan to do! You must not tamper with other worlds! You cannot destroy the entire human race!
Would you hesitate to tread upon an ant hill? These creatures are of no consequence to Galactus!
These are not ants, Master! They think… they feel… they have even created the primitive civilization which we see all about us!
Master! Say we may leave this world! My heart grieves at battling one with whom I shared… a universe!
You speak of me as though I am a monster! Do not the humans themselves slay the lesser beasts for food… for sustenance? Galactus does no less!
Galactus is not evil! He is above good.. or evil! He does what he must… for he is Galactus!
Emulate the Watcher! Stand and observe! Try to fathom the cataclysmic forces which have been unleashed! For you shall never see their like again!
Long have I cherished the stumbling, bumbling, but always aspiring human race!
Consider the courage they display! Though they are still in their infancy, you must not disdain them! Did not your race… and mine… evolve from such humble beginnings? Do they not possess the seed of grandeur within their frail, human frames?
And at last I perceive the glint of glory within the race of man! Be ever worthy of that glory, humans… be ever mindful of your promise of greatness! …For it shall one day lift you beyond the stars.. or bury you within the ruins of war!! The choice is yours!!
Generally, my plan is to pick a single quote from each issue to open these posts. I cheated last issue and am doing so again this issue. Too many great quotes. Also too many great images.
This isn’t the worst cover we’ve seen, but it is the most disappointing. Compare it to the awesome first page.
That’s a cool image. But the cover? No Galactus? The FF just as floating heads? Just a shot of the Silver Surfer. With the corner of the cover devoted to Johnny at college? What?
Notice they seem to have gotten the coloring of Galactus basically right now. Purple over red, wearing pants. Still bare arms, but that’s fine. Third time’s the charm. Here’s how it looks in the digital version with modern coloring.
I think the conclusion of the Galactus saga is excellent, but the structuring of this issue is again weird. To appreciate that, I’d like to peek ahead a few pages.
Recall where we were. Galactus is about to destroy the entire world in order to convert its resources into energy to feed himself. His herald has been convinced by Alicia that human life matters, so Silver Surfer has decided for the first time in countless eons to defy his master. Meanwhile, the Human Torch has journeyed across the universe to the giant space station that is Galactus’ home, to find the one weapon that may yet save them.
With all that to wrap up ahead of us, this is page 15.
We meet Coach Thorpe, who is very concerned his college football team is performing poorly. And his star quarterback is giving him attitude.
I cannot even begin to explain the surreality of the contrast between the first and fifteenth page of this comic.