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List Price: $16.99Amazon.com's Price: $11.55 You Save: $5.44 (32%)as of 11/21/2009 18:45 EST details
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Binding: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 741.5973
EAN: 9780785118282
Edition: 2nd
ISBN: 0785118284
Label: Marvel Comics
Manufacturer: Marvel Comics
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 544
Publication Date: June 08, 2005
Publisher: Marvel Comics
Studio: Marvel Comics
Editorial Review:
Product Description: These early classic Stan Lee/Jack Kirby adventures of Marvel's First Family - The Invisible Girl, the Human Torch, the Thing, and Mr. Fantastic - defined the Marvel Age of Comics! Collects Fantastic Four #1-20 and Annual #1.
Average Rating: 
Rating: -
I bought this for a class. I loved it though, I think it is a very good read. I believe the movie is coming out soon, so make sure you read this beforehand so you know what they changed due to time contraints!
Rating: -
Marvel made histroy in the late 1950's and early 1960's. Not just comics history, but pop-culture history. How many people across the world today have heard of Iron Man, The Fantastic Four, Spiderman, The X-Men, Hulk, and even Daredevil? Granted, in today's world that is due to the magic of movies. But Hollywod owes a huge debit to Stan Lee & Jack Kirby, the incredibly talented duo who make the first 20+ issues of FF in this collection so impossible to put down. FF was one of Stan Lee's fvorite projects; ... Read More
Rating: -
I honestly don't get the appeal of these books. Why bother making (or reading) black & white reprints of classic four-color comics...? I mean, yeah, the stories are still great and the original comics are hard to find, but a huge part of what made these comics great was the eye-popping artwork, including the bright primary colors: reading them in dull B&W is just plain wrong. Sure, the printing costs are lower, so you can get more pages for your money, but it's more pages of boring, not more pages of fun. ... Read More
Rating: -
It's easy to see why the Fantastic Four became so popular and why Marvel took off as a company in the 1960's. Stan Lee hit on a formula that seems cliched today, but was new and fresh back then. This foursome exhibit typical family tendancies and meet some truly original villains as they struggle to find their way in a brave new world!
Rating: -
I really liked this volume (and subsequent numbers 2-5 for that matter). It brought me back to a more simpler time in my life when all I worried about was how the Fantastic Four was going to beat Dr. Doom again, and not today when I worry about the rent or who is going to be the next President.
GOOD STUFF! I would somewhat disagree with those reviewers who commented about how the paper is not as good (it isn't) or the fact that it is published in black and white and not color. As DC has done ... Read More
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