RETRO HOT PICKS! On Sale This Week — in 1972!

Scott and Dan — with special guest Fred Van Lente — hit up the comics racks from 48 years ago!

This week, RETRO HOT PICKS takes you back to the early days of the Bronze Age, and we’ve got special guest Fred Van Lente — comics writer/historian/bon vivant — along for the ride.

Now, last time in RETRO HOT PICKS, it was books that went on sale the week of July 8, 1979. (Click here to check it out.) This time, it’s the week of July 15, 1972. (Keep in mind that comics came out on multiple days back then — as has become the case now. So these are technically the comics that went on sale between July 12 and 18.)

So let’s set the scene: Richard Nixon was president — but the Watergate break-in was about a month earlier. Nobody really understood the full ramifications yet but it was the beginning of the end. Big movies at the box office were Clint Eastwood and Robert Duvall’s Joe Kidd and the Goldie Hawn flick Butterflies Are Free. But y’know what was also in theaters? Conquest of the Planet of the Apes. It was the summer rerun season but the biggest show on TV was All in the Family. Bill Withers’ anthemic Lean on Me was at the top of the Billboard singles chart. Top album? Honky Chateau by Elton John.

Far out.

Fred Van Lente, newly appointed 13th Dimension regular contributor and writer of the upcoming The Comic Book Story of Basketball

The week for these picks I was approximately… five months old? So let’s see what my wee little baby hands would have swiped off the rack at the PX in Fort Lewis (Tacoma, Washington) where I was born and my dad was serving in the Army… (Can I just say I am disturbed by how many of these comics I have actually read?!)

Batman #244, DC. As a child, incongruities on covers drove me crazy. I’d buy this to figure out why Ra’s al Ghul is carrying around an intact Batman costume, while Bats himself just has the cowl and pants. Isn’t this a mystery more appropriate for Detective Comics?

Dan adds: Yeah, one of the greatest single issues ever published and the finale of one of the greatest stories ever published: the original Ra’s al Ghul saga. Denny O’Neil and Neal Adams at their very best. By the way, Adams himself explained the whole pants thing. Click here to check it out.

Scott adds: Ah, the hairy-chested Neal Adams Batman of the 1970s! These early Ra’s al Ghul appearances were so revolutionary.

Devil Kids Starring Hot Stuff #56, Harvey. When I was a kid we’d visit my grandfather at his lakeside cabin in Holland, Michigan, and he had this box full of comics for me and my older cousins, all of whom swiped the Marvels and DCs, leaving behind the Archies and Harveys. Hot Stuff was my favorite, partly because Casper scared me and Richie Rich always seemed like he belonged under a guillotine. As a small child I was clearly a revolutionary Marxist at heart.

Conan the Barbarian #19, Marvel. I had to reread a metric ton of Conan comics when I did my own run at Dark Horse, and like everyone else I fell in love with the Barry Windsor-Smith ones. Love the hot pink (magenta?) on the cover.

Scott Tipton, contributor-at-large, 13th Dimension

Justice League of America #101, DC. I was too young for this at the time, but years later when I’d learned about the JSA I’d go back and find all of these summer crossovers with the League, and this one was a favorite, as it introduced me to the Seven Soldiers of Victory!

Dan adds: JLA/JSA crossover? Yep. I’m there. Plus, a lotta folks consider this three-issue tale to be one of Len Wein’s best stories.

Luke Cage, Hero for Hire #3, Marvel. These early issues of Hero for Hire are some really underrated comics. Although the villains are occasionally somewhat uninspired. I don’t think readers were clamoring for the return of Mace.

X-Men #78, Marvel. This was not a good period for the X-Men, with the series relegated to reprinting old Roy Thomas-written issues from six years earlier. Hard to believe that only a scant five years later this would be the hottest title in comics.

Dan Greenfield, editor, 13th Dimension

Marvel Tales #38, Marvel. Sure it’s a reprint but so what? I love Facsimile Editions and True Believers comics and all that but I’d still love a series that reprinted certain characters’ eras sequentially, like Marvel Tales did with Spider-Man. DC is sort of doing this now with the DC Classics line, but I have no idea how long that will last.

Mystery Comics Digest #7, Gold Key. What the hell is happening on this cover?

MORE

— RETRO HOT PICKS! On Sale The Week of July 8 — in 1979! Click here.

— RETRO HOT PICKS! On Sale The Week of July 1 — in 1985, with RON MARZ! Click here.

Author: Dan Greenfield

Share This Post On

9 Comments

  1. It’s fun to see all the different artists whose superhero heads were used on the JLA cover

    Post a Reply
  2. How cool that Metamorpho got to participate in a JLA/JSA story and in the JLA’s 100th issue.

    Post a Reply
  3. Exciting times! I remember buying Batman 244, JLA 101 and Marvel Tales 38 at the local drugstore (my friends and I could walk up to it in about 30 minutes). It’s in my diary in fact that I kept most of that year at age 14. I was such a Neal Adams fan at that time (since Brave and Bold 79).

    Post a Reply
  4. ha Ha! I still have that Ripley’s Believe it Or Not Mystery Comics Digest with the crows… wish I could tell you what was going on…. but I can’t.

    Post a Reply
      • You were right both times….crows and vultures!

        Post a Reply
  5. Great compilation!

    I was 15 at the time, and went to considerable trouble to sign up for DC’s brand new subscription service at this time. Batman 244 was the FIRST issue I received in the mail. Believe it or not, it came FOLDED in half, flat, and wrapped in 1 layer of brown paper. I was shocked that DC would do this, but still loved the issue — especially the amazing Neal Adams art (despite defacement, especially to the cover, by folding!).

    Post a Reply
  6. Batman #244 (and #245) inspired me to make a fan film in 2018. Truly a great comic, and I’m glad that I met Neal Adams in person as well. And I also remember the time period as well. It was a time of great change for me.

    Post a Reply

Leave a Reply to Ellsworth R Hall Cancel reply

%d bloggers like this: