by The Metropolis Kid
This week we take a little time out to shed a little light on DC's publishing history with regards to the rise of their 80 Page reprint books in the early 1960s, and to look at what Legion material was contained within those books. If this post interests you, you may also enjoy the Digest Sized Legion of Super-Heroes post.
By 1960, DC had been running on full steam with characters like Superman and Batman for over 20 years, and Marvel hadn’t even entered the Silver Age with their properties Fantastic Four (1961) or Spider-Man (1962) yet. Meanwhile DC, on the heels of their Silver Age Superhero resurgence courtesy of the 1956 makeover of the Flash, had ramped up their Silver Age superhero output. The Superhero genre had taken a sharp decline in the late '40s, giving rise to the popularity of the Western, Crime, and Horror comic genres that flourished in the Atomic Age from 1947-1956. This time period is oft debated, and I think it, like most comic eras, are more dependent on individual characters than the industry or company as a whole, but that’s a discussion for another time.
This week we take a little time out to shed a little light on DC's publishing history with regards to the rise of their 80 Page reprint books in the early 1960s, and to look at what Legion material was contained within those books. If this post interests you, you may also enjoy the Digest Sized Legion of Super-Heroes post.
By 1960, DC had been running on full steam with characters like Superman and Batman for over 20 years, and Marvel hadn’t even entered the Silver Age with their properties Fantastic Four (1961) or Spider-Man (1962) yet. Meanwhile DC, on the heels of their Silver Age Superhero resurgence courtesy of the 1956 makeover of the Flash, had ramped up their Silver Age superhero output. The Superhero genre had taken a sharp decline in the late '40s, giving rise to the popularity of the Western, Crime, and Horror comic genres that flourished in the Atomic Age from 1947-1956. This time period is oft debated, and I think it, like most comic eras, are more dependent on individual characters than the industry or company as a whole, but that’s a discussion for another time.


80 Page Giant ran for 15 issues, featuring all reprinted material, and each cover caring the issue number in the G## format. The self-titled series ended with G15 Superman and Batman, before it underwent another transformation. The G## would continue on the cover, but now the 80 Page Giants would be special giant-sized reprint issues that ran through popular ongoing titles. For example G16 was Justice League #39, an 80 Page Giant that reprinted early exploits of the Justice League, including their first appearance in the pages of Brave and the Bold #28. This numbering scheme lasted until 1971, eventually dropping the "80 Page Giant" heading from the cover, as the page count dwindled from 80 pages to 64, and ended with G89 which was Justice League of America #93.
This 80 Page format included the front and back cover in the
page count, and had very limited advertisements. Most of the ads were in the
form of ¼ page house ads below the final panel of the story, or were written as
full one page comic stories, so even if it was an ad, you were still getting
some comic reading, and I'll admit even today I'm still a sucker for that advertising gimmick.
Since trade paperbacks didn’t exist in the 1960s, this was
really the only way that you could get your hands on past Superman and Batman
stories. These stories were easy for DC to collect, as 99% of stories at this
time were one and done 12-20 page stories. So readers would get 6 or 7 stories
for the small price of a quarter. It’s hard to imagine a time when you couldn’t
just order a trade of those early Silver Age Superman stories, and this format
offered newer readers a chance to read some of the classics from DC’s more recent publishing history. Now at the time the thought process was that readership rolled over every 5-7 years, meaning reprinting 5 year old material probably found a whole new audience. Of course there was much more to offer in DC's rich 20-30 year back catalog of publishing history, and thanks to DC staffer and historian E. Nelson Bridwell, that would be realized in the form of DC's next line-wide venture into giant-sized reprint comics, the 100 Page Super-Spectaculars. But that series history will have to wait to be explored at a another time.

*Superman Annual #4 Features the 2-page feature “The
Origin and Powers of the Legion of Super-Heroes”
*Superman Annual #6 Reprints "The Legion of Super-Heroes" from Adventure Comics #247 (first
place it was reprinted)
*Superman Annual #8 Reprints "Prisoner of the Super-Heroes" from Adventure Comics #267
*80 Page Giant G-11 Reprints Superboy #86
*Action Comics #334 (G-20) Reprints “The Three Super-Heroes”
from Action Comics #267

*Superman #193 (G-31) Reprints “The Death of Superman” from
Superman #149
*Action Comics #347 (G-33) Reprints “Supergirl’s Super
Boy-Friends” from Action Comics #290 + has text features “Supergirl’s Legion
Adventures” & “More About Supergirl’s Super-Friends”
*Action Comics #360 (G-45) Reprints “The World’s Greatest
Heroine” from Action Comics #285

*Action Comics #373 (G-57) Reprints “Supergirl’s Greatest
Challenge” from Action Comics #287
*Superman #222 (G-66) Reprints “Superman’s Lost Brother”
from Superman #80. This is a pseudo-Mon-El appearance. This character of
Superman’s lost brother was a trial run and an adult pre-cursor to the
character that would become Mon-El and first appear in Superboy #89 eight & a half years
later.
*Adventure Comics #390 (G-69) Reprints “When Supergirl
Played Cupid” from Adventure Comics #390.
*Adventure Comics #403 (G-81) Reprints “The Stolen
Super-Powers” from Adventure Comics #304, “The Secret of the Mystery
Legionnaire” from Adventure Comics #305, “The Return of Lightning Lad” from
Adventure Comics #308, and “The Super-Sacrifice of the Legionnaires” from
Adventure Comics #312.
I still have all of these with the exception of the Jimmy Olson book .
ReplyDeleteI can remember walking down to the News Depot and buying them and walking back to my Grandparents house and reading them .
A GREAT MEMORY !