“Martin Luther King and the Montgomery Story” is a 67-year-old colorful comic book still making an impact across the globe today. At cross-cultural gatherings in Bethlehem, West Bank, groups of ...
The 1950s was a time of transition for DC Comics. The comic book industry needed to evolve to remain relevant and to adjust to the rising restrictions on how much violence and other adult themes could ...
In every Look Back, we examine a comic book issue from 10/25/50/75 years ago (plus a wild card every month with a fifth week in it). This time around, with a bit of a delay, we head to June 1950 for ...
A detail from Johnny Craig's infamous cover to "Crime SuspenStories" No. 22 from EC Comics. Credit: Comic Book cover For avid followers of comic book history, 1954 was the most epochal, unsettling, ...
If you were to own a near-mint edition of this comic book, you'd be looking at a sizable payout for the copy through auction ...
(RNS) — ‘You have done a marvelous job of grasping the underlying truth and philosophy of the movement,’ the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. wrote to the creator of a comic book about civil rights. (RNS) ...
(RNS) — At cross-cultural gatherings in Bethlehem, West Bank, groups of children and adults turn to a 67-year-old, colorful comic book with the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.’s image on its cover, his ...