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https://comicsarchives.org/index.htm
Welcome to the Comics Archives! The purpose of this site is to provide a source of information on Golden Age and Silver Age comics and the characters therein. This archive includes a variety of reference works designed to enlighten and inform. This page is your gateway. It is hoped that these works will aid you, the collector, in completing
https://screenrant.com/comics-history-golden-silver-bronze-age-explained/
The Golden Age of Comics Explained. The Golden Age of comics is pretty much the only one that can be tied to a fixed point in time - the publication of Action Comics #1 in April 1938. The first issue had a print run of 200,000 copies, and sold for just 10 cents; it's now considered the most valuable comic in the world, with copies selling at
https://comicbookplus.com/
Welcome to Comic Book Plus, a massive site where every day is party day! We are the original, and still the best site to read and download Golden Age comic books. We also hold a large and growing selection of Silver Age comic books, Comic Strips, Pulp Fiction, Old Time Radio (OTR), Fanzines, a lively and active Forum plus lots more
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b5qAQPqYuTE
This history of the golden age (1938-1955) and silver age (1956-1969) reveals insights about the most desirable and expensive comic books in the hobby. From
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Golden_Age_of_Comic_Books
The Golden Age of Comic Books describes an era in the history of American comic books from 1938 to 1956. During this time, modern comic books were first published and rapidly increased in popularity. The superhero archetype was created and many well-known characters were introduced, including Superman, Batman, Robin, Captain Marvel, Captain
https://www.gamesradar.com/golden-age-silver-age-comic-books/
The Golden Age technically lasted through the mid-'50s, but the mid to late '40s saw a huge downturn in superhero comics thanks to public hysteria over the content of superhero stories, drummed up
https://www.openculture.com/2014/03/download-over-22000-golden-silver-age-comic-books-from-the-comic-book-plus-archive.html
Download 15,000+ Free Golden Age Comics from the Digital Comic Museum. Free Comic Books Turn Kids Onto Physics: Start with the Adventures of Nikola Tesla. Read Martin Luther King and The Montgomery Story: The Influential 1957 Civil Rights Comic Book. The Pulp Fiction Archive: The Cheap, Thrilling Stories
https://www.superworldcomics.com/blog/comic-books/what-defines-the-golden-age-from-the-silver-age-of-comic-books/
The Golden Age of Comic Books is an epoch that saw a surge in the American comic book industry generally lasting from the late 1930s until the late 1940s or early 1950s. This period is noted for the birth of "modern" comic books, mostly defined by the innovation of the archetypical superhero. The creation of Superman in 1938, by writer
https://www.dalerobertscomics.com/
Welcome to DRC! Stan Lee & Dale Roberts. Dale Roberts Comics buys and sells comic books from the 1930s - current. We maintain a wide selection of Golden Age, Silver Age, and Bronze Age comics and collectibles. We specialize in high grade Silver & Bronze age, raw & CGC/CBCS graded, but also carry a broad inventory of Golden Age & Atomic Age comics.
https://13thdimension.com/a-salute-to-bernard-baily-golden-and-silver-age-comics-pioneer/
In that same month, Baily's "The Buccaneer" debuted in More Fun Comics #42 (June 1938). In More Fun Comics #51 (Jan. 1940), the story of "The Buccaneer" came to an end and the last panel announced a major new character starting in the next issue (#52, Feb. 1940), "The Spectre," which Baily co-created with Jerry Siegel.A month later, "The Hour-Man," a Fitch and Baily co
https://thenerdhoard.com/what-are-the-comic-book-ages/
The short answer is that comics are generally categorized into four major ages: The Golden Age (beginning in the late 1930s), the Silver Age (beginning in the mid-1950s), the Bronze Age (beginning in the early 1970s) and the Modern Age (starting in the mid-1980s). Each age is generally considered to have moved the medium forward in a
https://www.parkersrc.com/comics.aspx
Parkers Records and Comics features an extensive inventory of Golden Age, Silver Age, Bronze Age, and collectible comic books that include classic comic book publishers like Dell Comics, Marvel Comics, DC Comics, Archie Comics, Charleton, Gold Key and many others. All of collectible comic books are graded and our inventory is updated regularly.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silver_Age_of_Comic_Books
The Silver Age of Comic Books was a period of artistic advancement and widespread commercial success in mainstream American comic books, predominantly those featuring the superhero archetype. Following the Golden Age of Comic Books, the Silver Age is considered to cover the period from 1956 to 1970, and was succeeded by the Bronze Age.
https://comicbookhistorians.com/the-influence-of-pulp-fiction-on-the-golden-and-silver-age-of-comic-books/
This episode focuses as an introduction to some pulp magazine precursors to some of the golden and silver age comic book characters we know today. Literary ancestors or antecedents can go back thousands of years, but for the sake of this video we are going start at 1886, with a penny dreadful of an older british bogeyman legend of Spring Heeled
https://www.hoopladigital.com/collection/3085
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https://scifi.stackexchange.com/questions/162303/gold-silver-and-bronze-ages-for-dc-comics
@VBartilucci - No argument here. The changes in the early- to mid-80s (Crisis, mini-series, Marvel and DC starting to publish direct-market-only books (Moon Knight, Ka-Zar, Micronauts; and the DC "hardbacks" New Teen Titans, Legion, and Outsiders)) seem more important that the changes around 1970, involving movement by creators, and a new generation of creators coming in.
https://www.superworldcomics.com/blog/comic-books/ted-explains-the-difference-between-golden-age-and-silver-age/
Superworld Comics 456 Main St. , Suite F Holden, MA 01520 Phone (508) 829-2259 ted@superworldcomics.com. Hours: M-F 10am-6pm EST
https://marvelguides.com/marvel-golden-age-reading-order
Golden Age Guides: Part 1: Timely Heroes. Part 2: Super Soldiers. Part 3: Post-War Powers . The Golden Age of Marvel reading order will guide you through the origins of Captain America, Bucky Barnes, Namor the Sub-Mariner, the original Human Torch and other World War II-era heroes!
https://www.cbr.com/dc-comics-golden-age-better-silver-age-characters/
8 Lois Lane. Silver Age Lois Lane stories were basically just her pining for Superman, fighting against Lana Lang for Superman's affections. The Silver Age was terrible for women in comics and Lois was a victim of it. Golden Age Lois Lane is the character that everyone thinks of when they think of the ideal Lois Lane.
https://gocollect.com/blog/golden-reprints-golden-records-marvel-silver-age-comics/
The topic of this blog post is Golden Records reprint editions of key Marvel Silver Age books. A reader recently wrote asking my opinion on these books (shout out to Mike for the email).
https://comicbookhistorians.com/when-does-one-villain-have-two-first-appearances-the-golden-and-silver-age-debuts-of-the-riddler-by-anthony-m-caro/
"Tweaks," however, are not complete re-imaginings, and the initial Golden and Silver Age tales established who and what the character is. The First Riddles of the Golden Age. The Riddler debuted in Detective Comics #140 (October 1948) in an outstanding Golden Age morality tale, titled, appropriately, "The Riddler." Writer Bill Finger
https://www.reddit.com/r/DCcomics/comments/4x5y62/what_are_the_best_golden_age_omnibusescollected/
The Chronicles tpbs were a nice attempt in the mid 2000s to get chronological gold & silver age reprints going. I know the Batman one made it to around volume 13/the early 1950s, and there were more than a few Superman, Wonder Woman, Flash & Green Lantern ones as well.
https://www.cbr.com/how-dc-superman-made-golden-age-silver-bronze-modern/
DC Energized Comics For The Silver Age. The Silver Age of comics began with something like a reboot for DC Comics, as the company quietly phased out some of its Golden Age heroes and phased in younger heroes in their place. This began in 1956 with the creation of Barry Allen as the new Flash, and Hal Jordan soon took on the role as the new