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Underground Spirit No. 1 by Will Eisner (1973)
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UNDERGROUND
SPIRIT No. 1 (1973)
After
�retiring� The
Spirit as a syndicated
newspaper
insert (1940-52), creator Will Eisner briefly reprised his character in 1966
for Harvey Comics (2 issues),
then the masked crime fighter returned to hibernation until Eisner, in
1971,
became intrigued by the underground comix scene. Publisher Denis
Kitchen persuaded him to
revive The Spirit in a new series
featuring new covers and some new material along with classic reprints.
The
planned series was aborted after just two issues when considerably
larger
publisher James Warren
temporarily lured Eisner away with a magazine deal and newsstand
distribution.
These two
issues (though not part of the formal title) are known as �Underground
Spirits,� partly because
Kitchen
published solely underground comic books at the time, and also because
Eisner�s
new contributions were much more risqué than anything in earlier
incarnations.
On the back of the wraparound cover of this debut issue a topless
female
impersonator hides heroin in a hollow breast. On the front Carrion admits being �queer� for his buzzard
Julia, while P�Gell
and Sand Saref discuss
�making it� with our hero. There�s even an R. Crumb-drawn ad on
the inside back cover.
Four
new vignettes inside
feature: Ebony being
grilled by a
�70s-era black activist; a Nixon-era superhero confronts a new type of
criminal; a fan girl interviews The Spirit; and a National Law &
Order
Committee, in a grisly panel, murders a group of criminals �working
within the
system� with protest signs. Introduction is by French comics historian Maurice
Horn.
The �Underground� Spirit #1 was published in January 1973 by
Kitchen Sink
Press. This is the second of two printings. Condition is excellent, as
scanned.
$20
|
<< Previous Product
Next Product >>
Underground Spirit No. 1 by Will Eisner (1973)
UNDERGROUND
SPIRIT No. 1 (1973)
After
�retiring� The
Spirit as a syndicated
newspaper
insert (1940-52), creator Will Eisner briefly reprised his character in 1966
for Harvey Comics (2 issues),
then the masked crime fighter returned to hibernation until Eisner, in
1971,
became intrigued by the underground comix scene. Publisher Denis
Kitchen persuaded him to
revive The Spirit in a new series
featuring new covers and some new material along with classic reprints.
The
planned series was aborted after just two issues when considerably
larger
publisher James Warren
temporarily lured Eisner away with a magazine deal and newsstand
distribution.
These two
issues (though not part of the formal title) are known as �Underground
Spirits,� partly because
Kitchen
published solely underground comic books at the time, and also because
Eisner�s
new contributions were much more risqué than anything in earlier
incarnations.
On the back of the wraparound cover of this debut issue a topless
female
impersonator hides heroin in a hollow breast. On the front Carrion admits being �queer� for his buzzard
Julia, while P�Gell
and Sand Saref discuss
�making it� with our hero. There�s even an R. Crumb-drawn ad on
the inside back cover.
Four
new vignettes inside
feature: Ebony being
grilled by a
�70s-era black activist; a Nixon-era superhero confronts a new type of
criminal; a fan girl interviews The Spirit; and a National Law &
Order
Committee, in a grisly panel, murders a group of criminals �working
within the
system� with protest signs. Introduction is by French comics historian Maurice
Horn.
The �Underground� Spirit #1 was published in January 1973 by
Kitchen Sink
Press. This is the second of two printings. Condition is excellent, as
scanned.
$20
|
$20.00
|