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This is a list of active and upcoming Marvel Comics printed comic books (as opposed to digital comics, trade paperbacks, hardcover books, etc.). The list is updated as of January 29, 2025. The list is updated as of January 29, 2025.
Menace was a 1953 to 1954 American crime/horror anthology comic book series published by Atlas Comics, the 1950s precursor of Marvel Comics.It is best known for the first appearance of the supernatural Marvel character the Zombie, in a standalone story that became the basis for the 1970s black-and-white comics magazine Tales of the Zombie.
M.D. (comics) Mad (magazine) Mad Kids; Marvel Classics Comics; Marvel Mystery Comics; Marvel Tales (comics) Master Comics; Men of War (comics) Menace (Atlas Comics) Mickey Mouse (comic book) Mickey Mouse Adventures; Military Comics; More Fun Comics; Motion Picture Funnies Weekly; The Mysterious Traveler; Mystery in Space
Marvel Comics is an American comic book company dating to 1961. This is a list of the publications it has released in its history under the "Marvel Comics" imprint. The list does not include collected editions; trade paperbacks; digital comics; free, promotional giveaways; sketchbooks; poster books or magazines, nor does it include series published by other Marvel imprints such as Epic, Icon ...
continues from Marvel Mystery Comics vol. 1 subsequent issues published by Atlas Comics: Men's Adventures #4–10 Aug 1950 – Oct 1951 continues from True Adventures subsequent issues published by Atlas Comics: Mighty Mouse: vol. 1 #1–4 Fall 1946 – Summer 1947 subsequent issues published by St. John Publications vol. 2 published by Marvel ...
The cover title continued in 1980 with the February and April releases of Dennis the Menace Big Bonus Series #10 & 11, after which the character moved to Marvel Comics. In 1972, the Dennis the Menace Bonus Magazine Series #103 "Short Stuff Special" featured Dennis visiting Children's Fairyland in Oakland, California.
With the new millennium, Marvel Comics emerged from bankruptcy and again began diversifying its offerings. X-Force #116 X-Force #119 (October 2001) was the first Marvel Comics title since The Amazing Spider-Man #96–98 in 1971 to not have the Comics Code Authority (CCA) approval seal, due to the violence depicted in the issue. The CCA, which ...
Thomas, Marvel Comics' editor-in-chief at that point in the 1970s, recalled in 2009: I'd been working with [artist] Dick Giordano adapting Bram Stoker 's Dracula [in the black-and-white horror-comics magazine Vampire Tales , published by Marvel parent company Magazine Management ], so I wanted to start with the Shelley Frankenstein [novel ...