DC Comics · My Greatest Adventure #19 · February 1958 · 10¢ · 32 pages
Grade: G/VG 3.0
Cover and interior credits for this specific issue are unconfirmed; specific creator attributions have been omitted rather than approximated.
By issue #19, My Greatest Adventure was two years into its run as one of DC's flagship sci-fi/adventure anthologies — the format that kept DC's non-superhero line healthy through the late '50s. The series wouldn't become Doom Patrol until #80, but these early issues are the foundation. Collectors chasing the full run need every one of them.
Condition G/VG 3.0 — A solid space-filler. Well-read but sturdy enough to survive. Bright enough to look good in a bag..
We use what the scientists are calling artificial intelligence to research and write our descriptions — it gives us more time to add books to our website and provide you with a wider array of inventory. We think Klaatu would approve. Details are verified but the robot does slip up. We're not infallible. Every book is graded by a human collector who has actually held it. If anything ever looks off, reach on out at robopictocomics@gmail.com.
DC Comics · My Greatest Adventure #19 · February 1958 · 10¢ · 32 pages
Grade: G/VG 3.0
Cover and interior credits for this specific issue are unconfirmed; specific creator attributions have been omitted rather than approximated.
By issue #19, My Greatest Adventure was two years into its run as one of DC's flagship sci-fi/adventure anthologies — the format that kept DC's non-superhero line healthy through the late '50s. The series wouldn't become Doom Patrol until #80, but these early issues are the foundation. Collectors chasing the full run need every one of them.
Condition G/VG 3.0 — A solid space-filler. Well-read but sturdy enough to survive. Bright enough to look good in a bag..
We use what the scientists are calling artificial intelligence to research and write our descriptions — it gives us more time to add books to our website and provide you with a wider array of inventory. We think Klaatu would approve. Details are verified but the robot does slip up. We're not infallible. Every book is graded by a human collector who has actually held it. If anything ever looks off, reach on out at robopictocomics@gmail.com.