Showcase Presents Strange Adventures volume 1


By John Broome, Otto Binder, Edmond Hamilton, Joe Samachson, Gardner Fox, Carmine Infantino, Gil Kane, Sid Greene & various (DC Comics)
ISBN13: 978-1-4012-1544-6

As the 1940s closed, masked mystery-men dwindled in popularity and the American comicbook industry found new heroes. Classical genre titles flourished; anthologies dedicated to crime, war, westerns and horror, were augmented by newer fads like funny animal, romance and especially science fiction which in 1950 finally escaped its glorious thud and blunder/ray guns/bikini babes in giant fishbowl helmets pulp roots (as perfectly epitomised in the uniquely wonderful Golden Age icon Planet Comics) with the introduction of Strange Adventures.

Packed with short adventures from jobbing SF writers and a plethora of new heroes such as Chris KL99, Captain Comet, the Atomic Knights and others, the magnificent monthly compendium (which was supplemented a year later with sister-title Mystery in Space) introduced wide-eyed youngsters to a fantastic but intrinsically rationalist universe and the wonders it might conceal…

This spectacular and economical monochrome collection features stories from the inception of the self-regulatory Comics Code (issues #54-73, covering March 1955 to October 1956) right up to the start of the Silver Age when superheroes began to successfully reappear, offering wide-eyed technological wonderment and the sure and certain knowledge that there were many and varied somethings “Out There”.

On a thematic note: a general but by no means concrete rule of thumb was that Strange Adventures generally occurred on Earth or were at least Earth-adjacent whilst as the name suggests Mystery in Space offered readers the run of the rest of the universe…

Moreover many of the plots, gimmicks, maguffins and even art were recycled for the later technologically-based Silver Age superhero revivals…

This mind-blowing, physics-challenging monochrome colossus opens with the March 1955 issue and four classic vignettes, beginning with ‘The Electric Man!’ by John Broome & Sy Barry, wherein a geologist in search of new power sources accidentally unleashes destructive voltaic beings from the centre of the Earth. As always – and in the grand tradition of legendary pulp sci-fi editor John Campbell – human ingenuity and decency generally solves the assorted crises efficiently and expeditiously…

‘The World’s Mightiest Weakling!’ from Otto Binder, Carmine Infantino & Bernard Sachs offered a charming yet impossible conundrum when a puny stripling gained incomprehensible mass and density during the course of an experiment, whilst ‘Interplanetary Camera!’ (Binder, Gil Kane & Sachs) gave a photographer a glimpse of the unknown when he found an alien image recorder and uncovered a plot to destroy Earth. The issue concluded with another Binder blinder in the taut thriller ‘The Robot Dragnet!’ illustrated by Harry Sharp & Joe Giella, with a rip-roaring romp of rampaging robotic rage.

This tale was actually the sequel to an earlier yarn but sufficiently and cleverly recapped so that there’s no confusion or loss of comprehensibility…

Issue #55 led with ‘The Gorilla who Challenged the World’ by Edmond Hamilton & Barry, wherein an ape’s intellect was scientifically enhanced to the point where he became a menace to all mankind. So great was his threat that this tale also was carried over to the next issue…

During this period editors were baffled by a bizarre truism: every issue of any title which featured gorillas on the cover always produced increased sales. Little wonder then that so many DC comics had hairy headliners…

‘Movie Men from Mars!’ (Hamilton, Sharp & Giella) found our world the unwilling location for cinematographers from the Red Planet. Unfortunately they were making a disaster movie…

‘A World Destroyed!’ by Joe Kubert offered a fanciful but gripping explanation for how the asteroid belts between Mars and Jupiter were formed and the cataclysm theme continued in ‘The Day the Sun Exploded!’ with Broome, Kane & Sachs depicting a desperate dash by scientists to save Earth from melting, after which Sid Gerson, Murphy Anderson & Giella revealed the baffling puzzle of ‘The Invisible Spaceman!’

Strange Adventures #56 opened whimsically with ‘The Fish-Men of Earth!’ (Broome, Infantino & Sachs) as air density went temporarily askew thanks to invading aliens, ‘Explorers of the Crystal Moon!‘ (Broome, Sharp & Sachs) found a little boy going for a secret solar safari with visiting extraterrestrials, and artist Paul Paxton inadvertently became ‘The Sculptor Who Saved the World!’ when future-men asked him to make some highly specific pieces for them. A fast-paced yarn by Broome, Kane & Giella saw penitent Dr. Jonas Mills correct his evolutionary error by finally defeating his mutated gorilla in the concluding part of the simian saga ‘The Jungle Emperor!’ by Hamilton & Barry.

Broome, Sid Greene & Sachs’ ‘The Spy from Saturn!’ opened issue #57 with a Terran scientist replaced by a perfect impostor, whilst ‘The Moonman and the Meteor!’ (Bill Finger & Barry) found millionaires and aliens trying to buy or inveigle a fallen star from a humble amateur astronomer for the best and worst of reasons, after which Binder, Kane & Giella proffered ‘The Riddle of Animal “X”’ when a small boy found a pet like no other creature on Earth, before ‘Spaceship Under the Earth!’ (Broome, Infantino & Giella) revealed an incredible ancient find to a Uranium prospector and some fugitive convicts desperate enough to try any means of escape…

Issue #58 began with a police chief’s frantic search for a superhuman felon in ‘I Hunted the Radium Man!’ (Dave Wood & Infantino) whilst ‘Prisoner of Two Worlds!’ by Finger & Barry saw the long awaited return of genius detective Darwin Jones of the Department of Scientific Investigation.

Although an anthology of short stories Strange Adventures featured a number of memorable returning characters and concepts such as Star Hawkins or Space Museum during its run. Jones debuted in the very first issue, solving fringe science dilemmas for the Federal Government and making thirteen appearances over as many years. In this third adventure he assisted alien peace-officers in preventing a visiting extraterrestrial from taking a commonplace earth object back to his homeworld where it would be a ghastly terror-weapon…

‘Dream-Journey Through Space!’ (Broome, Kane & Sachs) saw an ordinary human plucked from Earth to rescue an ancient civilisation from destruction and a humble but cunning ventriloquist save our world from invasion by invincible aliens in Finger, Greene & Giella’s ‘The Invisible Masters of Earth!’

A young married couple had to find a way to prove they weren’t animals on ‘The Ark from Planet X’ (Broome, Greene & Giella) which opened #59, whilst ‘The Super-Athletes from Outer Space!’ came to our world to train in a heavier gravity environment and found the galaxy’s greatest sports-coach in a charming tale by Binder, Kane & Sachs.

Ed “France” Herron & Infantino then explored the domino theory of cause and effect in ‘Legacy from the Future!’ before Broome & Barry delved into ancient history and doomsday weaponry to discover the secret of our solar system and ‘The World that Vanished!’

Strange Adventures #60 featured a light-hearted time-travel teaser by Broome, Jerry Grandenetti & Giella when historians gathered together famous historic personages from ‘Across the Ages!’ but ‘The Man Who Remembered 100,000 Years Ago!’ (Binder, Kane & Sachs) was a terse, tense thriller as lightning provoked ancestral memories of a previous civilisation just in time for a scientist to cancel the self-same experiment which had eradicated them…

Broome, Greene & Sachs then followed the life of a foundling boy who turned out to be an ‘Orphan of the Stars!’ and the issue ended with a future-set thriller where schoolboy Ted Carter won a place on a multi-species outing to the ‘World at the Edge of the Universe!’ (Binder & Barry).

In #61, ‘The Mirages from Space!’ (Binder, Kane & Sachs) were a portal into a fantastic other world and the secret of Earth’s ultimate salvation; ‘The Thermometer Man’ by Binder, Greene & Giella saw an scientist striving to save a stranded Neptunian from melting in the scorching hell of our world and a lighthouse keeper was forced to play smart to counter a Plutonian invasion with ‘The Strange Thinking-Cap of Willie Jones!’ (Herron & Barry) before Binder, Greene & Giella’s ‘The Amazing Two-Time Inventions’ found an amateur inventor making fortuitous contact with his counterparts in 3000AD…

Strange Adventures #62 introduced ‘The Fireproof Man’ (Broome, Infantino & Sachs) whose equally astounding dog foiled an alien invasion whilst an ordinary handyman fell into another dimension to become a messiah and ‘The Emperor of Planet X’ (Broome, Greene & Giella). Binder, Kane & Giella then reported an abortive ‘Invasion from Inner Space!’ before ‘The Watchdogs of the Universe!’ recruited their first human agent in a tantalising tale by Binder, Greene & Giella.

‘I Was the Man in the Moon!’ by Joe Samachson, Grandenetti & Giella started #63 with an intriguing puzzler as an ordinary Joe awoke to find aliens had inexplicably re-sculpted the lunar surface with his face whilst a Native American forest ranger was the planet’s only hope of translating an alien warning in The Sign Language of Space!’ (Binder, Greene & Giella).

‘Strange Journey to Earth!’ by Jerry Coleman & Kane Giella saw an ordinary school teacher deduce an alien’s odd actions and save the world and the issue ended in ‘Catastrophe County, U.S.A.!’ where Hamilton, Greene & Giella introduced scientists to the Government’s vast outdoor natural disaster lab…

Sales-boosting simians were back in #64 as Finger, Infantino & Sachs introduced hostile ‘Gorillas in Space!’ who were anything but, whilst a first contact misunderstanding resulted in terror and near-death for an Earth explorer lost in ‘The Maze of Mars’ (Binder, Greene & Sachs) after which a technological Indiana Jones became ‘The Man Who Discovered the West Pole!’ (Binder, Kane & Giella) and Samachson & Grandenetti crafted a canny tale of planetary peril in ‘The Earth-Drowners!’

In #65 (February 1956) ‘The Prisoner from Pluto!’ by Binder, Greene & Giella, featured an alien trying to warn Earth of imminent Saturnian attack and forced to extreme measures to accomplish his mission whilst a different kind of cultural upheaval was referenced in the quaint but clever tale of ‘The Rock-and-Roll Kid from Mars!’ by Samachson, Kane & Giella. A stage mentalist outfoxed genuine telepaths in ‘War of the Mind Readers!’ by Binder, Infantino & Sachs and a biologist turned temporary superhero to foil an alien attack in ‘The Man who Grew Wings!’ by Binder, Greene & Giella to end the issue.

Issue #66 opened with Broome & Infantino’s tale of ‘The Human Battery!’ as an undercover cop suddenly developed an incredible power, a guy in a diner mistakenly picked up ‘The Flying Raincoat!’ (Samachson, Greene & Giella) and accidentally averted an insidious clandestine invasion of our world before Binder, Kane & Sachs had Darwin Jones solve the ‘Strange Secret of the Time Capsule!’ and the metamorphic ‘Man of a Thousand Shapes!’ (Samachson, Infantino & Sachs) proved to be a being with a few secrets of his own…

Broome, Kane & Giella’s ‘The Martian Masquerader!’ in Strange Adventures #67 played clever games as editor Julie Schwartz (aka “Mr. Black”) was approached by an alien in need of assistance in tracking down an ET terrorist whilst Hamilton, Greene & Giella honed in on a subatomic scientist desperate to find his infinitesimal homeworld in ‘Search for a Lost World!’

‘The Talking Flower!’ in chemist Willie Pickens’ buttonhole was a lost alien who helped him save the world in Samachson, Infantino & Sachs’ charming romance but the time travelling travails experienced by archaeologist Roger Thorn after he discovered the ‘Gateway Through the Ages!’ (Hamilton, Greene & Giella) led only to danger and hard-earned knowledge.

Issue #68 opened with ‘The Man who Couldn’t Drown!’ (Broome, Infantino & Sachs): a tale of genetic throwbacks and unfathomable mystery whilst a ‘Strange Gift from Space!’ (Samachson, Greene & Giella) led to a safer planet for all, after which a chance chemical discovery produced a happy salvation in ‘The Balloons That Lifted a City!’ (Samachson, Kane & Giella) and a common thief got in way over his head when he robbed a laboratory in Samachson, Greene Sachs’ witty ‘The Game of Science!’

In #69 a time-traveller voyaged into pre-history and helped the dawning humans overcome ‘The Gorilla Conquest of Earth’ (Broome, Kane & Sachs) whilst the arrival of ‘The Museum from Mars’ (Gardner Fox, Greene & Giella) offered almost irresistible temptation and deadly danger to humanity and ‘The Man with Four Minds!’ (Hamilton & Infantino) saw a man with too much knowledge and power eschew it all for normality before ‘The Human Homing Pigeon!’ (Samachson, Greene & Giella) burned out his own unique gift in the service of his fellows…

The Triple Life of Dr. Pluto!’ by Broome, Greene & Giella in #70 dealt with the dangers of a human duplicating ray and Darwin Jones was faced with a deadly puzzle when warring aliens both claimed to be our friends and ‘Earth’s Secret Weapon!’ (Samachson, Kane & Giella). An early computer fell into the hands of a petty thief with outrageous consequences in ‘The Mechanical Mastermind!’ by Samachson & Infantino whilst the ‘Menace of the Martian Bubble!’ (Broome, Greene & Giella) was foiled by a purely human mind and the skills of a stage magician.

Issue #71 featured ‘Zero Hour for Earth!’ (Broome & Barry) as a scientist at world’s end sent a time twisting thought-message back to change future history, whilst invisible thieves of the planet’s fissionable resources were thwarted by a scientist with a unique visual impairment in ‘Raiders from the Ultra-Violet!’ by Binder, Greene & Giella, after which writer Ray Hollis saw a star fall and encountered ‘The Living Meteor!’ (Fox, Kane & Sachs) and a guy with a weight problem discovered he had become ‘The Man Who Ate Sunshine!’ in a clever conundrum from Samachson, Grandenetti & Giella.

Strange Adventures #72 began with a fabulous, self-evident spectacular in ‘The Skyscraper that Came to Life!’ by Broome, Greene & Giella, whilst a shooting star revealed an ancient ‘Puzzle from Planet X!’ which promised friendship or doom in a classy yarn from Hamilton, Greene & Sachs, after which ‘The Time-Wise Thief!’ (Gerson & John Giunta) provided a salutary moral for a bandit with too much technology and temptation before ‘The Man Who Lived Nine Lifetimes!’ (Binder, Kane & Giella) was aroused from a sleep of ages to save us all from robot invasion…

The initial flight of fantasy concludes with the contents of issue #73, beginning with ‘The Amazing Rain of Gems!’ by Broome, Greene & Giella wherein a sentient jewel almost beguiles the entire world, humans are hijacked to attend a ‘Science-Fiction Convention on Mars’ (Fox, Kane & Giella), ‘The Man With Future-Vision!’ (Fox, Infantino & Sachs) discovers that knowing what’s coming isn’t necessarily enough, and the imaginative inspiration ends with a clever time-paradox fable in Hamilton, Greene & Giella’s ‘Reverse Rescue of Earth!’

Conceived and edited by the brilliant Julie Schwartz and starring the cream of the era’s writers and artists, Strange Adventures set the standard for mind-boggling all-ages fantasy fiction. With stunning, evocative covers from such stellar art luminaries as Murphy Anderson, Carmine Infantino, Gil Kane and Ruben Moreira, this titanic tome is a perfect portal to other worlds and, in many ways, far better times.

If you dream in steel and plastic and are still wondering why you don’t own a personal jet-pack yet, this volume might go some way to assuaging that unquenchable fire for the stars…
© 1955, 1956, 2008 DC Comics. All Rights Reserved.