Fawcett Publications · Mary Marvel #8 · December 1946 · $0.10 · 52 pages · Bi-Monthly
Grade: VG 4.0
Edited by Ralph Daigh.
Cover artist uncredited.
This Christmas-themed issue presents the typical mix of Mary Marvel adventures and supporting features characteristic of the mid-1940s Fawcett line. The cover depicts Mary Marvel flying above a snow-covered village complete with church and buildings, decorated with holly and festive ribbon elements.
Like other Fawcett superhero titles of the period, the issue would have included the lead Mary Marvel story along with backup features and text stories to meet postal regulations for magazine rates.
Mary Marvel was one of the most popular members of the Marvel Family during Fawcett's Golden Age heyday, with this December 1946 issue representing the character at the height of her commercial success.
Condition VG 4.0 with moderate wear consistent with grade, complete interior, structurally sound, and unrestored.
All grades are assigned by a human collector. We do not use AI to grade comics — not now, not ever.
Fawcett Publications · Mary Marvel #8 · December 1946 · $0.10 · 52 pages · Bi-Monthly
Grade: VG 4.0
Edited by Ralph Daigh.
Cover artist uncredited.
This Christmas-themed issue presents the typical mix of Mary Marvel adventures and supporting features characteristic of the mid-1940s Fawcett line. The cover depicts Mary Marvel flying above a snow-covered village complete with church and buildings, decorated with holly and festive ribbon elements.
Like other Fawcett superhero titles of the period, the issue would have included the lead Mary Marvel story along with backup features and text stories to meet postal regulations for magazine rates.
Mary Marvel was one of the most popular members of the Marvel Family during Fawcett's Golden Age heyday, with this December 1946 issue representing the character at the height of her commercial success.
Condition VG 4.0 with moderate wear consistent with grade, complete interior, structurally sound, and unrestored.
All grades are assigned by a human collector. We do not use AI to grade comics — not now, not ever.