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Amazing High Adventure

Amazing Adventures
Amazing Adventures #3 (Aug. 1961)
Cover art by Jack Kirby and Dick Ayers..
Publication information
Publisher Marvel Comics
Format Anthology
Genre Fantasy
Science fiction
Superhero
Publication date (Vol. 1) June 1961 – November 1961
(Vol. 2) August 1970 – November 1976
(Vol. 3) December 1979 – January 1981
Number of issues (Vol. 1) 6
(Vol. 2) 39
(Vol. 3) 14
Creative team
Writer(s) (Vol. 1) Stan Lee
(Vol. 2) Gerry Conway, Steve Englehart, Gary Friedrich, Jack Kirby, Don McGregor, Roy Thomas
Penciller(s) (Vol. 1) Steve Ditko, Jack Kirby
(Vol. 2) Neal Adams, Rich Buckler, John Buscema, Howard Chaykin, Gene Colan, Jack Kirby, P. Craig Russell, Jim Starlin, Tom Sutton, Herb Trimpe
Inker(s) Syd Shores

Amazing Adventures is the name of several anthology comic book series, all but one published by Marvel Comics.

The earliest Marvel series of that name introduced the company's first superhero of the late-1950s to early-1960s period fans and historians call the Silver Age of Comic Books. That same series also included the first comic book to be labeled "Marvel Comics".

The first series titled Amazing Adventures was a 1950s science fiction anthology produced by Ziff-Davis and featuring painted covers. It ran for six issues, beginning c. 1950. with the first two issues being undated. Subsequent issues were dated June, August, and November 1951, and Fall 1952. Its artists included Murphy Anderson, Bernard Krigstein, and Don Perlin, and at least one issue (#2) featured a cover painting by Alex Schomburg.

Marvel's first series of this title ran six issues, premiering with June 1961 cover-date. It featured primarily science fiction and drive-in movie-style monster stories, virtually all drawn by either Jack Kirby or Steve Ditko. Its first issue introduced the supernatural monster-hunter Doctor Droom, Marvel's first Silver Age of Comic Books superhero. Droom had powers of telepathy and hypnotic suggestion taught him by a Tibetan lama who had requested that someone travel from the U.S. to give him medical attention.

Doctor Droom vanished into obscurity for years when the comic was retitled and reformatted as Amazing Adult Fantasy from issues #7–14 (Dec. 1961 – July 1962). He resurfaced in the 1970s as Doctor Druid, having been renamed to avoid confusion with Doctor Doom. The series was retitled once more for its final issue, published as Amazing Fantasy #15 (Aug. 1962), the comic book that introduced Spider-Man.


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