Thursday, June 18, 2026
Short Story Genre Survey, Part 5
Wednesday, June 17, 2026
Yet Another Imperial Super Weapon!
After the release of The Empire Strikes Back, Marvel's Star Wars comic was in an interesting place. The writers would have no idea how the cliffhanger of Han being captured and frozen would play out. They had no idea what position either the Rebels or the Empire would be in when the next movie eventually came out. So the comic had to come up with good stories that didn't upset the overall continuity too much. Sadly, they had to also avoid using Han Solo.
It's notable that they still succeeded in telling some good Star Wars stories. In Star Wars #51 (September 1981), writer David Michelinie and artist Walt Simonson give us the first half of a pretty nifty two-parter.
An X-Wing with a dead pilot reaches its base ship. The pilot had been on a spy mission and set the X-Wing's course before he died, knowing the information canister he had was vitally needed by the Rebellion.
What's in that canister? It's a minor irony of the comic that we find out the Empire isn't building a second Death Star (though we learn in the next movie that they were), but are taking the Death Star's planet-destroying laser and strapping engines and defensive systems to it. Same idea, but more compact and defensible. The new weapon is called the Tarkin. Though why you would name it after the ol' Grand Moff after the Death Star was destroyed on his watch is an open question.
If I might digress for a moment, the expanded Star Wars universe really did overdo the notion of the Empire continually building superweapons. The idea is revisited in a number of novels. If the sequel trilogy produced in the 2010s really existed (and we all know now that these films were a collective nightmare that DON'T REALLY EXIST), then we'd have to add the sun-destroying whatever-it-was from The Force Awakens to the list. But many of these stories were individually good, such as the one we are reviewing here.
It also gives Simonson a chance to draw a fantastic full-page panel image of the Tarkin. Simonson was the perfect artist for Star Wars. Or, for that matter, just about any science fiction comic. His imagination and artistry brings SF worlds to vivid life.
Monday, June 15, 2026
Cover Cavalcade
JUNE IS AVENGERS vs JLA MONTH!!!
From February 1974. The JLA cover is by Nick Cardy; the Avengers by Jim Starlin.
Friday, June 12, 2026
Friday's Favorite OTR
Suspense: "A Week Ago Wednesday" 11/29/45
A woman comes home to discover she's lost a week of her life--and according to the newspaper, she's been murdered by her husband.
Click HERE to listen or download.
Thursday, June 11, 2026
Short Story Genre Survey, Part 4
Wednesday, June 10, 2026
Man-Wolf Goes to Space, Part 4
Marvel Premiere #46 (February 1979) brings Man-Wolf's epic Space Opera adventure to a close. The script is still by David Kraft. For this final issue, George Perez does the breakdowns and Ricardo Villamonte does the finished art.
We left off last time with Man-Wolf and one companion (Gorjoon) seeking to rescue their companions from the palace of Tyrk, the ruthless dictator.
The trouble is that Tyrk's palace floats in the air well above them.
But the moonstone is still increasing Man-Wolf's strength. Using this strength means that a rope tied to a spear will give them a way to climb up.
There's some great dialogue between Man-Wolf and the scared but still determined Gorjoon during the sequence, adding a little bit of humor to the otherwise tense situation. But when they reach the palace, things get tense once again. His companions who were captured in the previous issue are chained and about to be tortured. Man-Wolf violently objects to this and soon, after freeing some other prisoners as well, he's leading the good guys in a charge towards Tyrk's throne room.
But the charge is stopped dead when they reach the throne room. Over the last few issues of this story, there's been a sub-plot set back on Earth in which someone has kidnapped John's girlfriend Kristine Saunders. Now we find out that it was Tyrk who did that kidnapping.
Man-Wolf has a choice. Surrender or watch the woman he loves die. (Tyrk, of course, is planning on killing her no matter what.)
Man-Wolf opts to take a third option--allowing himself to access the full god-powers of the stone. Soon, stuff starts exploding.
It turns out, though, that only the bad guys blew up. Kristine is safe and the dimension is free from its evil ruler.
There's one more scare before the story ends. Kristine goes through a portal back to Earth. But before Man-Wolf can follow, a not-quite-dead Tyrk destroys the portal. At first, it seems John Jameson is getting the tragic ending that all werewolf characters seemed destined to get. But John is able to use the last of his god powers to force himself through the dimensional barrier to Earth.
Hey, a werewolf gets a happy ending!
Kraft and the artists bring this epic to a satisfying conclusion. Villamonte does justice to Perez's breakdowns, bringing the well-written story to vivid life. And the happy ending fits. Not every werewolf story has to end tragically. This time, the happy ending is earned.
What'll we look at next week? Well, with Disney doing such a good job of destroying Star Wars in modern day, it might be nice to look back at a time when Star Wars was still fun.
Monday, June 8, 2026
Cover Cavalcade
JUNE IS AVENGERS vs JLA MONTH!!!
From February 1973: The JLA cover is by Nick Cardy and the Avengers by Rich Buckler.
Friday, June 5, 2026
Friday's Favorite OTR
Escape: "Seven Hours to Freedom" 11/3/50
A commercial fishing boat is hijacked by escaping convicts. The two-man crew is given a choice: Die now, or take the convicts to Mexico and die later.
Click HERE to listen or download.
Monday, June 1, 2026
Friday, May 29, 2026
Friday's Favorite OTR
Screen Guild Theater: "Destry Rides Again" 2/2/41
Henry Fonda takes the role as the soft-spoken deputy tasked with cleaning up a lawless town.
Click HERE to download or listen.


























