Fantagraphics steps up once more and creates an archive of forgotten works in Lost Marvels No. 1: Tower of Shadows. Collecting nine issues in the Marvel series of 1969, see early post-comic code authority horror comics, long printed horror comics, by some of the most famous names of classic comics.
Fantagraphics/Marvel
Comic Code abolished the horror sentiment of American comic books and effectively went bankrupt EC comics. But by the end of the 1960s, as authorities restrictions began to ease, Marvel Comics became famous for trying to plunge into science and science fiction workarounds like Morbius, Living Vampire, and human-like human-supported space-rock transformations.
Fantagraphics/Marvel
Tower of Shadows was a more direct return to the horrors of past comics. Anthology books like classic EC books, the series even began with a horrifying, comic-like underground keeper-like narrator. Digger wasn’t stuck, but the midseries stories are featured by the creators, but they are firmly stuck with the “Gotcha” style storytelling, which has made various stories famous by EC’s ancestors.
What makes Tower of Shadows special is not the stylistic similarities to classics, but the extent to which it is an incredibly stacked creative roster. From the famous tombs of the Dracula team, Marv Wolfman and Gene Colan, to early career Barry Windsor Smith, there are people who have borne the groundbreaking classic Marvel talent that makes the shorts featured here. This volume may be considered to be most interested in maintaining these rare outings through talent rather than the content of the story itself.
Fantagraphics/Marvel
The story isn’t too big from a snowbee story perspective, but horror anthology comics are rare. Looking at the incredible EC archive volumes of Dark Horse, we offer a wealth of stories created by stunning artisans. We celebrate those books for their place in the basic sky of the medium. They were pulp stories intended for disposal, but they were too beautiful to discard.
These stories present “Stanley is the Verite of the Evil Film.” Open a chain of credits. It’s exciting to consider that these comics have arrived near the beginning of the Marvel era. It’s not 10 years since the arrival of the Fantastic Four. The second wave of Marvel creators – Young Hipploy Thomas and Company – presents the story alongside longtime industry greats such as John Busima and Don Heck. These are almost newly created comics by a young, new, imprinted powerhouse.
Furthermore, this was a surprise constrained by distribution restrictions. They only allowed so many titles each month. Tower of Shadows had to compete on bigger, more recognizable superhero fares (where fans were eating). No matter the talent star lineup, it’s no surprise that it only lasted nine issues. Neither Spider-Man appeared on the Tower of Shadows page. Marvel’s growing myths got nothing from Lee and Buschema’s mad science story “A Time To Die,” or from Thomas and Windsor Smith’s “I Devoured Hollywood!”.
Fantagraphics/Marvel
As the series progressed, it began to resemble an old Marvel anthology that was a surprising story: the fare of giant monsters like “Titano! The monsters of that time forgotten!!!” on the cover of issue 7. The same story can be rested with “Orrgo the Unceaceable!” From Strange Story #90. The inner story of that issue feels fresh and unique, but the sword and magic story is the highlight – yet the book seems to lose its core identity.
Overall, The Lost Marvels: Tower of Shadows is a fitting addition to Fantagraphics’ growing archive collection library, peering into forgotten times. This is an exciting start to the series, with at least two more installments planned, and it certainly remains as faithful to the original. By avoiding the modern gimmick of recrossing or cleaning up pages, the volume feels more clear and more authentic artifacts of the era. It’s beautiful, even if the stories inside don’t always sing.
“Lost Marvel No. 1: Tower of Shadows” is full of forgotten works by Marvel greats
Lost Marvel No. 1: Tower of Shadows
Beautifully reprinted and stacked with the talent of old-fashioned Marvel, Lost Marvel is another beautiful entry in fantasy graphics that will grow the library of archive collections.
Recreate printed pages with affection or recreate them without recording again.
Incredible classic talent.
Beautiful work.
A good story.
Lightly incomplete due to Lovecraftian legal troubles.
