Description
This publication is part of the Golden Age Preservation Project. Please visit the Project's home for a complete list of classic Golden Age comics preserved through this project at: http://ronglick.com
Amazing-Man (John Aman) is a fictional, American comic book superhero whose adventures were published by Centaur Publications during the 1930s to 1940s in the Golden Age of Comic Books. Historians credit his creation to Bill Everett together with Centaur art director Lloyd Jacquet. The character influenced the creation and origin of Charlton Comics' 1960s superhero Peter Cannon, Thunderbolt, as well as Marvel Comics Iron Fist character in the 1970s. As was common practice during the period, Amazing-Man Comics did not have an issue #1. In fact, the series began with issue #5.
This issue includes the exploits of Amazing-Man, Ranch Dude, the Magician From Mars, the Iron Skull, Minimidget the Super-Midget, Chuck Hardy, Mighty Man, and the Shark.
By using modern Kindle conversion technology, the editor seeks to make these original masterpieces available to a much broader audience. Publication is from collected scans of public domain material. The editor has not scanned any of these books - he simply collected scans made by others and converted them to Kindle format. In each instance, he has used the best scan he can find, but occasionally the scans are less than perfect. The price of each comic is set as the minimum per sale value allowable by Amazon for these publications.
Tag This Book
This Book Has Been Tagged
Our Recommendation
Notify Me When The Price...
Log In to track this book on eReaderIQ.
Track These Authors
Log In to track Bill Everett on eReaderIQ.
Log In to track Carl Burgos on eReaderIQ.
Log In to track Frank Thomas on eReaderIQ.
Log In to track Giunta Mirando on eReaderIQ.
Log In to track Joe Simon on eReaderIQ.
Log In to track Joseph A. Kaliff on eReaderIQ.
Log In to track Lane Browne on eReaderIQ.
Log In to track Lew Glanz on eReaderIQ.
Log In to track Martin Filchock on eReaderIQ.
Log In to track Ron Glick on eReaderIQ.