Doctor Strange #9 (August, 1975)

When we last left Doctor Strange back in January, he and his lover/apprentice Clea were trapped in the Dark Dimension, facing down the demonic minions of the Dread Dormammu — a group led by Dormammu’s chief disciple, Orini, whom both Doc and we readers had just learned was Clea’s own father.

That startling revelation had come on the closing page of Doctor Strange #7; for that reason, despite the fact that the title up there says this post is about issue #9, we’re going to be starting things off instead with a look at #8, whose cover by Gil Kane and Tom Palmer is shown at right.  If you’re a regular reader, you already know this drill by heart… so, let’s get started:  Read More

Giant-Size Avengers #4 (Jun., 1975)

Back in August, 1974, after laying the necessary narrative groundwork for many months, Avengers writer Steve Englehart had inaugurated his “Celestial Madonna” story arc with a pair of issues that came out within a couple of weeks of each other: Avengers #129 and Giant-Size Avengers #2.  Half a year later, in February, 1975, the saga would reach its conclusion in a parallel fashion, with the final chapters appearing in that month’s issues of both the regular monthly Avengers title and its giant-sized quarterly companion.  Read More

Doctor Strange #7 (April, 1975)

Fifty years ago this month, this issue of Doctor Strange (second series) continued the storyline begun one issue earlier by the book’s ongoing regular writer Steve Englehart and “new” (actually returning, from the Doc’s first series) regular artist Gene Colan — a storyline that on first glance seemed to center on our hero’s old foe Umar the Unrelenting, but which by the end of its first episode had pulled back the curtain on an even older (as well as rather more famous) enemy of Doc’s: the Dread Dormammu.  Read More

Doctor Strange #6 (February, 1975)

As we discussed in this space two months ago, the fifth issue of the second volume of Doctor Strange marked the end of the very successful collaboration of Steve Englehart (co-plotter and scripter) and Frank Brunner (co-plotter and artist) on the feature… more or less.  That “more or less” refers to the fact that Brunner had one last contribution to make to the series before turning his full focus to the upcoming (and eagerly awaited) “Howard the Duck” strip — i.e., the lovely cover shown above, which the artist pencilled, inked, and colored, making for a memorable final bow.

Once we readers of November, 1975 turned past the cover to the opening splash page, however, it was clear that artistic change had indeed come to Doctor Strange — even if it wasn’t entirely a matter of “out with the old, in with the new…”  Read More