Spider: Crime Unlimited

Regular price €25.99
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In stock with our UK publisher. 14-28 days
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A45=Donne Avenell
A45=Jerry Siegel
action
adventure
Age Group_Uncategorized
Age Group_Uncategorized
art
automatic-update
Category1=Fiction
Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=FXS
Category=WHC
Category=XAB
Category=XAK
comic
COP=United Kingdom
crime
Crime Unlimited
Delivery_Delivery within 10-20 working days
Donne Avenell
eq_bestseller
eq_fiction
eq_graphic-novels-manga
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
Jerry Siegel
john mccrea
Language_English
Lion
noir
PA=Available
Picture Library
police
Price_€20 to €50
PS=Active
Reg Bunn
rob williams
softlaunch
superhero
supervillain
Syndicate of Crime
Ted Cowan
The Spider
thriller

Product details

  • ISBN 9781786184658
  • Dimensions: 177 x 245mm
  • Publication Date: 03 Feb 2022
  • Publisher: Rebellion Publishing Ltd.
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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The Spider is the uncrowned king of the New York underworld, so elusive to the police that he even manages to taunt the Police Commissioner at his retirement party. But Professor Aldo Cummings, a famous but ill-tempered scientist, determined to stop the schemes of the Spider once and for all, invents a ray-machine which will eliminate the evil from a person's personality. But a tragic miscalculation will turn Professor Cummings into the Professor of Power, and he will seek a more direct confrontation with the Spider.

The first collection of the Spider stories originally published as part of the Picture Library series. These long-lost and fast-paced pulp adventure stories have never been reprinted before, written by Jerry Siegel (Superman) and Donne Avenell (Adam Eterno).
Jerry Siegel was born on October 17, 1914, in Cleveland, Ohio, the youngest of six children born to Lithuanian, Jewish immigrants. While attending Glenville High School he befriended Joe Shuster, as the two bonded over a shared interest in science fiction and movies.

Unable to pay for college, Siegel had various day jobs while he also started to submit and sell comic scripts to National Allied Publications. Together with Shuster, he had developed a character called Superman, which they had intended on selling as a syndicated newspaper strip. However, after a few unsuccessful years, they finally sold the character to comic-book publisher, Detective Comics Inc. for $130.00.

The comic became a huge success with Jerry Siegel on board as writer and Shuster on art duties. After military service during World War II, Siegel returned to DC Comics for a brief spell, but left in 1947 following a much publicised rights battle with the publisher over Superboy. He would return to DC Comics later in his career. Throughout his career, he co-created a number of key characters for DC, including Doctor Occult, The Spectre, Star-Spangled Kid and many members of the Legion of Super-Heroes.

Beyond DC, Siegel would team up one more time with Shuster to create the comic Funnyman, published by Magazine Enterprises. As well as scripting some Strange Tales scripts for Marvel and The Fly, The Mighty Crusaders and The Web for Archie Comics, he reached out to the Lion publishers, having received some copies of the comic and was so taken by The Spider, took over scripting duties from Ted Cowan.

Donne Avenell’s career in comics started before the outbreak of World War II when he was an assistant editor with Amalgamated Press working on Radio Fun. After serving in the navy, he returned to the company, now as an editor on an architecture magazine, while also writing radio dramas and romance stories.

In the 1950’s Avenell was a prolific writer on War Picture Library and then Lion, penning such classic strips as The Spider, The Phantom Viking, Adam Eterno and Dr. Mesmer’s Revenge. By the 1970’s he was working on a number of projects including co-writing Powerman (the Nigerian superhero comic illustrated by Dave Gibbons

and Brian Bolland) and The Sun newspaper strip Axa. In the same decade, Avenell also found work in the television industry, where he wrote scripts for popular spy programme The Saint. Later he would work with artist John Burns on both an official comic book adaption of Prince Charles and Lady Diana’s wedding, and a newspaper

strip called Eartha which ran in the News of the World.