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I really didn't expect to enjoy these early FF issues as much I did! I loved them! In fact, I had no idea what a visionary brilliant writer Stan Lee was or what he accomplished in the sixties, before I was even born! Nay, I only read the eighties stuff, but I always wanted to read back from the beginning.
Well, these omnibus editions give you the best way of catching up on the classic runs you missed out on. And I am seriously impressed with Stan the man, I had no idea how good this stuff was. Brilliant in fact, and far better than a lot of stuff that followed, and yet, even as good as these beginning foundation issues were, there was still all the great stuff coming 20 plus years later.
I highly recommend if you want to get full runs you missed. Binding is great on this volume so far, though I have had problems with some other marvel omnibus books like Tomb of Dracula and Secret Wars II.
Of course FF omnibus vol 2 is where it really gets good.
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If you're looking for the first 31 issues of Fantastic Four and you don't have a fortune to spend...this book is a great option. Very nicely put together. Be warned...it is a BIG book.
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What can I say about this book that hasn't been said...nothing much really just that this is a must have book for any ones collection as it contains the first comics in order of the Fantastic Four series and showcases some of the early villans that have been known throughout the years in the Fantastic Four world...
I recommend not only this but all the Marvel Omnibus series as Marvel has done a great job in publishing a book where you get a whole lot of content in on book as apposed to buy multiple books for the same thing....
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In the fall of 1961, Jacob Kurtzberg of New York City's Hell's Kitchen York teamed with fellow Manhattanite Stanley Lieberman to put some pizzazz in Martin Goodman's monster comic book line, and came up with a quartet of off-beat heroes who would launch the Marvel Age of Comics. Today it's hard to say who is more famous, the creators or their creations.
Better known as Jack Kirby and Stan Lee, these two men largely were the House of Ideas, and nowhere did they demonstrate it better than in the pages of The Fantastic Four. Collected here are the first thirty seminal issues and the first summer annual, complete with pinups and letters columns and even in-house ads and special features, but all on much better paper and with more vibrant colors than the original stories.
Whether you're an aging Baby-Boomer whose mother threw out the dog-eared copies you used to keep under your bed, or a neophyte who never heard of Dr. Doom until the first Fantastic Four movie, this is a wonderful book that will remind (or show) you why The Fantastic Four deserved the title of "The World's Greatest Comic Magazine."
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I think these are the finest comic books ever produced but I took off one star for the format. It's just too big and unwieldy when trying to read. You can only read it comfortably by setting it down on a table. The Marvel Masterworks format is much better. They only need to add the letters pages and the few little special features (There are only about 5 pages of unused artwork at the back of the book) and the Omnibus becomes unnecessary.
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