Here are my all time faves

as well as some newcomers!


The Brave and the Bold!

This comic brought Batman together with some of DC Comic's greatest (and often its most obscure) heroes, heroines and even villains! Bob Haney and Jim Aparo, among others, took readers on a fast-paced action-packed ride eight times a year. No team-up book has ever duplicated its consistent entertainment!

The Brave and the Bold, Batman, Sgt.Rock ©1997 DC Comics


Batlash!

Written by Sergio Aragones and Denny O'Neill, and illustrated by the unparalleled Nick Cardy, Batlash was a funfilled foray into the genre of the western.

Batlash ©1997 DC Comics


Angel and the Ape!

Bob Oksner and Wally Wood supplied the art for this delightful comedy. Angel O'Day and Sam Simian, her odd-looking partner, made a bumbling detective duo, but always seemed to solve their cases -- go figger!

Angel and the Ape ©1997 DC Comics


Hot Wheels!

Alex Toth's sparse but breath-taking compositions turned a charming animated cartoon series into one of the great works of comic book art. Hot Wheels is considered by many to be the culmination of Toth's decades of illustration and his most representative work.

Hot Wheels ©1997 Mattel, Inc.


The Phantom Stranger!

Len Wein and Jim Aparo brought chilling life to the horrors awaiting the mysterious Phantom Stranger. Aparo's dynamic illustration created a terrifying beauty for the Stranger's supernatural world. No series has ever so successfully combined superheroic excitement with the clever gimmickery of the mystery comic.

Phantom Stranger ©1997 DC Comics


RIMA!

Nestor Redondo brought beauty and truth to comic books with his work in DC's tabloid sized book, THE BIBLE and in the exquisite RIMA the Jungle Girl. At the end of 1995, the comic book industry lost one of its greatest illustrators, but Heaven gained another Saint. God Bless Nestor Redondo!

Rima ©1974 DC Comics



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