Superman: The Golden Age Sundays 1943-1946

by
,

Write a Review

  • Edited and designed by Dean Mullaney with an Introduction by Mark Waid, the
    first book in IDW's The Library of American Comics' Superman Sundays
    series collects 170 sequential Sunday pages that have never been reprinted.
    These classic comics, beginning May 9, 1943 and continuing through August 4,
    1946, fill another major gap in the Superman mythos.
  • In a partnership between IDW's The Library of American Comics and DC
    Entertainment, this volume begins a comprehensive archival program to bring back
    into print every one of the Superman Sunday newspaper strips. The
    complete comics will be published in three sub-sets, The Golden Age (1940s), The
    Atomic Age (1950s), and The Silver Age (1960s). The color Sundays and
    black-and-white dailies contained distinct storylines and will be released in
    separate, concurrent, series.

Superman: The Golden Age Sundays 1943-1946 Reviews | Toppsta

9781613777978

Share on

Videos

If you would like to provide a video review please sign up to our video panel.

Series

This is Book 1 in the Superman Golden Age Sundays Series. See all Superman Golden Age Sundays books here.

Category

See More Cartoons & comic strips

Sign up to our newsletter for...

Free Book Giveaways, Recommendations & more

Be the first to write a Review


No one has written a review for 'Superman: The Golden Age Sundays 1943-1946'

Why not be the first to share your opinion?

About Wayne Boring

Wayne Boring was born in Minnesota in 1905 and studied art in his hometown, as well as the Chicago Art Institute. He became one of Joe Shuster's early assistants in the late 1930s and eventually assumed the full drawing duties. His rendition of Superman became the most recognizable version during the 1950s and '60s.

More about Wayne Boring

About Jack Burnley

Wayne Boring was born in Minnesota in 1905 and studied art in his hometown, as well as the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. He became one of Joe Shuster's early assistants in the late 1930s and eventually assumed the full drawing duties. His rendition of Superman became the most recognizable version during the 1950s and '60s.

More about Jack Burnley

Ratings

  • (0 Reviews)
  • (0 Reviews)
  • (0 Reviews)
  • (0 Reviews)
  • (0 Reviews)