Featuring: Human Torch
Release: February 16, 1949
Cover: June 1949
10 cents
14 pages
| Previous | Next | |
|---|---|---|
| All-Winners Comics #19 | PRELUDE | Young Men #24 |
| Fantastic Four #56 | Reading order | Fantastic Four Annual 4 |
The Academy then publicly reinstated Horton, and recognized his greatest achievement, the Human Torch!
The popularity of superheroes waned post World War II, and in 1949, Marvel was ready to give up on the genre completely. This final issue of Marvel Mystery Comics features the last Human Torch story, as well as a Captain America story.
The series will change its name to Marvel Tales and become a horror anthology.
Human Torch’s own series ended with Human Torch #35 two months earlier. In that story, Human Torch travels to Venus to deal with some interplanetary diplomacy. Given that we know his flame is powered by oxygen, it’s not clear how he made it all the way there.
In a few months, Sub-Mariner’s story will come to an end, and later that year Captain America would have his final adventure in Captain America’s Weird Tales before the book became a full horror anthology.
Human Torch was created by Professor Horton. He then turned on and killed his creator. Or did he? It was later revealed Horton was alive and working secretly for the US government. Any old conflict between Horton and the Torch seemed to be in the past. And the Torch later saved Horton’s niece Doris from foreign spies.
Now, we learn Professor Horton is dead. Again. We also learn I think for the first time his full name: Professor Albert Horton.

The Human Torch notes it’s been 10 years since he’s seen Horton. Either he’s rounding or something off. They were together in 1942, and certainly those stories take place after the US joined the war.
But this issue seems to not acknowledge those 1942 stories and wants to claim Human Torch hasn’t seen Horton since his first adventure in 1939.
We get a retelling of the Torch’s origin. Apparently thousand of readers have asked to hear the origin of the Human Torch. Why not just track down Marvel Comics #1?
And did these readers want to read the origin of the Human Torch only to then never read another Human Torch story again? Because that’s what they’re getting.
Continue reading “PRELUDE: Marvel Mystery Comics #92”
