1st edition silver surfer comic book value
Inks by Herb Trimpe. Cover by Herb Trimpe with possible layouts or pencils by Marie Severin. The Silver Surfer renounces his peaceful ways and decides to fight against mankind instead of with them!
And despite their best efforts, the Inhumans cannot convince the cosmic sky-rider otherwise! Unfortunately, the story ends on a cliffhanger as the series was canceled. Note: The surfer's next chronological appearance comes in Webspinners Tales of Spider-Man 4 where the dangling plotline from 29 years earlier is at last addressed. Date This week Last week Past month 2 months 3 months 6 months 1 year 2 years Pre Pre Pre Pre Pre s s s s s s Search Advanced.
Issue 1. Silver Surfer 1st Series 1. Published Aug by Marvel. Add to cart CGC 1. Add to cart CGC 7. Add to cart CGC 6. Auction Item: CGC 5. Add to cart CGC 5. Auction Item: VG 4. Add to cart CBCS 4. Add to cart CGC 4. Auction Item: CGC 3. Auction Item: GD- 1. Add to cart PR 0. Issue 2. Silver Surfer 1st Series 2.
Published Oct by Marvel. Add to cart CGC 8. Add to cart VG- 3. Auction Item: GD 2. Issue 3. Silver Surfer 1st Series 3. Published Dec by Marvel. Add to cart VG 4. Add to cart CBCS 3. Issue 4. Silver Surfer 1st Series 4. Tags: Silver Surfer , Thor. Published Feb by Marvel. Add to cart CGC 3. Auction Item: FR 1. Issue 5. Silver Surfer 1st Series 5. Doomsday Man makes his debut. It's a robot designed to be the ultimate self-defense weapon for America. An errant web shot creates a battle between Silver Surfer and Spider-Man!
Almost all other grades had peaks and valleys in the market, but are now generally priced at the same value as years ago. The best performer was VF- 7. In issue 14 it was Silver Surfer squaring off against Spider-Man. Other grades showed excellent growth if you bought in early and had patience. Overall, this book has seen a steady profit over the long term. From to today, a VF 8. In the same amount of years, FN 6. They are waiting and prepared with a counterweapon custom-made by Tony Stark to stop the Surfer: Z-Gas.
Silver Surfer battles the Inhumans. He's reached his breaking point and now considers humanity his enemy. Jack Kirby makes a cameo as the artist for this issue, story by Stan Lee. Search Guide.
Read More. Looking to sell your comic books? What's Silver Surfer 1 worth in ? Why is this comic book valuable? Price Guide Report GD 2. What's Silver Surfer 2 worth in ? What's Silver Surfer 3 worth in ? It's the first appearance of Mephisto! What's Silver Surfer 4 worth in ? Softcover, pages, full color. Date This week Last week Past month 2 months 3 months 6 months 1 year 2 years Pre Pre Pre Pre Pre s s s s s s Search Advanced. Issue ST. Published Nov by Marvel. This unlikely Bluto to The Surfer's Popeye brought Shalla-Bal to Earth to prove that the Surfer was not faithful to her, so that he could convince her to stop waiting for Norrin, and marry him instead.
Of course, the ship arrives just as the Surfer receives an innocent kiss from a young South American girl he has rescued. Meanwhile, conveniently, the dictator of the South American nation where this is all happening shoots Yarro Gort's ship out of the sky. Shalla-Bal is wounded, perhaps fatally. The Surfer must endure the soap-opera-like heartbreak of sending her back to Zenn-La once more, since only their advanced medicine has any hope of saving her life.
Silver Surfer 18 Final issue in series; Inhumans appearance. Much has been written about the way that the Silver Surfer series was the "beginning of the end" for Kirby and Stan Lee's relationship, ultimately leading to Kirby's defection to DC at the end of The battle itself is, typically for the Surfer, fueled by a misunderstanding, and eventually causes the Surfer to decide that he is finished with the human race.
The Silver Surfer is, quite simply, the coolest super hero there ever was. Well, I suppose it depends on to whom, exactly, you might pose the question, but to anyone who appreciates the glories of Marvel's late Silver Age, there is no comparison.
Make no mistakes: the Surfer doesn't come by his hipster cred simply because he showed up in an "art film", or because he surfs. The Silver Surfer was a fan favorite long before he turned up in the second film of the modern Fantastic Four franchise. He is more than your average super-hero. He may not even truly fit the definition of "super-hero" in the first place, but there is no doubt about the quality of the work in the first series to bear his name.
Nor is there any doubt about the values of those comics. The Surfer appeared in FF several more times over the next two years, and by , was popular enough to merit his own series. In the context of this larger space, Stan Lee's scripts could really stretch out. By this time, he was quite enamored of the Surfer, and worked what many would call his finest if also occasionally most purple scripting over the course of the 18 issues of the comic's run. Art was handled for the first 17 issues by John Buscema, then just beginning to hit his prime, and coming off of fantastic and definitive work in The Avengers over the previous year.
The final issue was penciled by Kirby, in one of his last jobs for Marvel before making the jump to DC. The axe fell, in , for a number of reasons. Sales were low, partially because of the high price and partially because the series was more introspective than the usual super-hero fare.
Either way, Lee and Buscema's work on the original Silver Surfer series stands as some of the most powerful and distinctive in modern comics.
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