These were posted last month but this set is a higher quality,
Tons of goldenage superheroes in BW reprints.
Genres include scifi,western,jungle girls and more.
megaupload links
#1-8 download
#9,10,12-14 download
rs links here
ZENjoy
anyone have#11?
Due to several circumstances I will not be updating this blog in the forseeable future. Gone forever? not sure....
ss1r.mpg
or mp4
ss1r_512kb.mp4
anyone have or know where to get more from this serial?
enjoy
bonus- Retro Spy Master toy pic
His name was changed to Crime Smasher after World War II ended, and the first issue of Crime Smasher was published in 1948. In 1953, Fawcett ceased publication of all superhero comics, after settling a lawsuit against DC Comics over Captain Marvel being an infringement on the copyright of Superman, agreeing to cease publishing Captain Marvel.
After DC Comics obtained the rights to the Fawcett characters in 1972, Spy Smasher began appearing irregularly in DC Comics, presented as one of the heroes of Earth-S prior to Crisis on Infinite Earths. The character was used prominently in the 1990s series The Power of Shazam!, in which aged Alan Armstrong often recounts his adventures as Spy Smasher. Power of Shazam! #24 was dedicated to Armstrong's recounting of a Cold War-era mission he undertook with an archaeologist named C.C. Batson to Batson's children, Billy (alter-ego of Captain Marvel) and Mary (alter-ego of Mary Marvel).
While Alan was still Spy Smasher in that story, a crossover between Power of Shazam and Starman in 1997 included Jack Knight running over the history of the Fawcett City heroes, and mentioning that he thought Spy Smasher became Crime Smasher after the war but was unsure.
AC Comics has published reprints of some Golden Age Spy Smasher stories that have lapsed into the public domain. The character also made a cameo appearance the inagular issue of Image Comics' Next Issue Project.