#102.Indrajal Comics 52

Người đăng: Unknown on Thứ Bảy, 31 tháng 1, 2009

Some people are not only a fan & collector of Indrajal Comics, but know how to keep there priceless gems for years. Simply Great. It’s a photo of Shekhar Chandra’s IJC collection. He has almost all Indrajal comics.

One month ago while we were checking scans, Ajay found that he have IJC #58 (already available at net) without cover. The following cover is photo taken by Shekher’s father (who is 80+) by a digital camera.

Ajay added cover in his old scans, cleaned with shop & send me. I add last 2 more pages form Raj's Hindi scans. Enjoy.

Good news for Hindi IJC lovers, RAJ is back. 30th January, he posted Hindi version of #58. Visit his blog to encourage him.






058-1968-Phantom-The Phantom The Sixth Man
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Col. Worobu's choice:


174-1973-Phantom-Romantic Witch (Complete)



For these comics all thanks & credits go to Ajay.

IJC #58: Very thankful to Raj for 2 more pages; and for cover & nice photo of IJC collection to Shekher & his father.

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#101. Indrajal Comics 51 (Hindi)

Người đăng: Unknown on Thứ Sáu, 30 tháng 1, 2009






048-1967-Phantom-Kiyanga Aur Tuluk


Password: bookscomics.blogspot.com

English version is available online.



It's contributed by Anurag Dixit. All thanks & credits go him.
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Single Issue Review: Batman #93

Người đăng: Unknown


While working on the Dick Sprang tribute post yesterday, I noticed this August 1955 issue and thought it would be fun to review as it has three very different tales that have one marvelous thing in common. They were all drawn by Mr Sprang, making this one of only three all-Sprang issues published by DC in the Silver Age.

Early on, Sprang's style was so different from the other Batman artists (primarily Jerry Robinson) that it was quite common to see an all-Sprang issue followed by an all-Robinson. In fact, Sprang did every story in Batman #s 19, 21, 23, 24, 26, 29, 30, 32, 40 and 46. After that there were only one or two Sprang stories per issue, so this one was a real treat.

What were the other two all-Sprang comics that DC published in the Silver Age? I'll let you folks ponder that for awhile and append my answer in a day or two. Update: The other two "wall-to-wall" Sprang issues published by DC were Superman #123 (a Supergirl tryout issue), and World's Finest #161 (a reprint 80-pager which has the distinction of having the most pages of any comic ever drawn by Sprang).

The issue starts with Journey to the Top of the World. A plane has crashed in the Himalayas. It jettisoned a cylinder carrying microfilm with the names of several major international criminals. Can Batman and Robin retrieve the cylinder before the crooks do?

This story is obviously inspired by the ascent of Mount Everest by Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay two years earlier, and is heavily focused on mountaineering.

After being summoned to FBI headquarters by J. Edgar himself, Batman and Robin become part of a team already intending to ascend K-4, which is described by Robin nervously as "The world's most unclimbable peak! T-the place where the mystery snow creature of legend is supposed to live!"

That this will be a "Whodunnit" is pretty clear when we get this panel:



Plot problem, here. If Batman and Robin were given the assignment, isn't the FBI going to notice that Bruce Wayne and Dick Grayson did the job and make the obvious connection?

The story is filled with little bits of information about mountains and mountain climbing. We learn that a couloire is a steep gully on a mountain, and that a bergschrund is the crevasse at the head of a glacier.

Some of the climbers go off in pursuit of the "snow creature", leaving it to Dick and Bruce to pursue the summit, with a killer after them. Robin saves Batman's life on two occasions:


And in the end they retrieve the cylinder while the villain falls from a cliff and dies (leaving nobody to ask questions about how Batman and Robin were on the mountain).

Comments: An exciting story with a dramatic backdrop. As always, Sprang makes you feel like you are there.

The second story is very much off-beat, as you can pretty quickly gather from the splash:



Heheh. For some reason, Bruce was encountering a whole slew of relatives around this time: Aunt Agatha, Cousin Bruce N. Wayne, Great Uncle Silas Wayne, and in this story, Cousin Jane. Her husband is ill in the tropics and obviously she can't bring Junior so can she leave the baby with him, thanks, bye!

Well, no sooner said than Junior launches into a bawling jag. How can they shut him up? They're out of milk so they go in search of a milkman, but unfortunately he's made his final delivery for the day. And the stores are closed, so:



Batman milking a cow? Alfred suddenly the funny Alfred of the mid-1940s? And a secret identity crisis, all on one page? Wonderful, wonderful stuff!

Batman and Robin manage to defeat some crooks in a helicopter, but:



They manage to calm him down with a top, and in order to keep Alfred from resigning Bruce makes a deal:



Batman winds up the case alone and in the end, the secret identity crisis is averted by Dick's quick thinking:



This one is clearly played for grins and it delivers. As a change of pace from the usual Batman story it gets high marks, and Sprang's artwork is note-perfect. Check out the expressions on the faces of all the characters in that last set of panels.

The final story is The Caveman Batman. An archaeologist working for the Gotham Museum (where Bruce is a trustee), uncovers an ancient painting of cavemen running from a Tyrannosaurus Rex. But T-Rex died out well before the cavemen, so the painting is deemed a hoax and the archaeologist's reputation is ruined. Bruce and Dick decide to go back in time to the caveman era to find out the truth.

After changing into their costumes, they encounter a man dressed in a sabre-tooth tiger outfit, who discloses that he's fighting against the evil caveman Borr. Rog is the prehistoric equivalent of Batman! They give him some pointers:



Rog reveals that Borr has a T-Rex with which he terrorizes the villagers. It turns out that the dinosaur is frozen in a block of ice. In a desperate gamble to free Robin from Borr's clutches, Batman melts the ice with a fire, and the creature comes to life:



Thus proving that the discovered painting was legitimate. As added evidence, Bruce and Dick point the archaeologist to a companion drawing of the T-Rex frozen in the ice. And the story closes with a final mention of the significance of Tiger Man:



Note: This is the earliest appearance of Batman in Earth's chronology.

Overall this issue is terrific with superior art and stories. Although the Silver Age of Batman was not in general his finest hour, this was an exceptional comic.
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A Tribute to Dick Sprang

Người đăng: Unknown on Thứ Năm, 29 tháng 1, 2009

Dick Sprang was a longtime Batman artist, starting in the early 1940s and ending (except for a few special appearances) in the early 1960s. Sprang was the master of perspective, and some of his best work featured overhead oblique views of large areas. Here's a crowd getting a view of the trophies of Batman and Superman from World's Finest #86:


A similar overview of Mechanical City from Batman #114:



In a story from WF #87, Superman has lost his powers, while Batman, Robin and a crook named Eldon Craig have gained them. Look at the camera angles Sprang chooses for the first three panels:

They are carefully selected to show maximum action against an immense backdrop. Note that due to the scale, some of the characters are just blobs of ink. This is a signature of Sprang's work, something that appears in almost every story he drew. The guy could draw the details when required, but he also knew when to step back and show the action.

Check out this amazing little panel from Detective #229:

Is that beautiful or what? And check out this panel from WF #92, as Superman encounters Skyboy:

Another Sprang specialty is to reverse the camera angle from one panel to the next; this gives greater flow to the page as you can see in these two consecutive examples:

Noted for the realism of his historical objects, Sprang drew the lion's share of the Professor Carter Nichols stories in Batman comics.




Update: See also Bill Jourdain's post on the Secrets of the Batcave lithograph. I have the second Sprang litho, entitled Guardians of Gotham, hanging on my wall. They are beautiful pieces, an essential for any Batfan.

Update II: I had to add this sequence, even though it's from the Golden Age:



That last panel is breathtaking.
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Single Issue Review: Rip Hunter #20

Người đăng: Unknown on Thứ Ba, 27 tháng 1, 2009


As I have discussed in the past, time travel was a frequent topic in the Silver Age. Almost all of DC's superheroes had some method or another of going backward or forward in time, whether it was the Flash with his cosmic treadmill or the Atom with his time pool. But Rip Hunter was solely a time traveler; that was his entire schtick.

It should have been enough; time travel is an inherently fascinating concept, and the ability to travel to famed historical events would seem to offer endless possibilities for stories. But DC was in the middle of its gorillas and monsters and dinosaurs phase and thus the actual historical content of most issues was somewhat lacking.

Fortunately this was one of the issues that concerned itself with real-life monsters, in the form of Adolf Hitler and his Third Reich. Rip and his pals, Jeff, Bonnie and Corky are filming action on the Eastern front of World War II when they are shot down (Rip's time machine was able to fly as well). The machine is recognized by the Nazis, and Rip explains:



Now of course that doesn't make a whole lot of sense. Rip appears to be late-20s, early 30s at most, and so unless he was inventing his time machine in grade school it seems unlikely that 20 years earlier (the comic was published in 1964) he was being featured in news magazines during WWII.

At any rate, Rip is brought to meet Hitler:



Rip is assigned the task of bringing Napoleon back from the 1800s so the Nazis can learn his secret escape route from Russia. To ensure he returns, Hitler orders Jeff held as a hostage.

Comments: Excellent premise for a story, putting incredible pressure on Rip. If he succeeds, Hitler manages to get his crack troops out of Russia, meaning they will be available to repel the D-Day invasion later that year. And if he fails, Jeff gets the firing squad.

Part II brings us back to July 14, 1815. Unfortunately, the history starts to go a little off the rails in this section. This was after Napoleon's defeat at Waterloo. The story emphasizes that the Prussians (i.e., Germans) are in command, which is reasonably true, but only as part of a coalition force that included the English. Indeed, there's this comical scene:



Lafayette wasn't a particularly good friend of Napoleon's, and while Napoleon did surrender aboard the Bellerephon the next day, it wasn't as if he was "escaping". What's going on here?

I suspect that the writer and editor decided that explaining to the readers that the Germans and English had been allies against the French back then was too complicated, so they make it appear as if Napoleon was a good guy. After all, his old buddy is Lafayette, a hero of the American Revolution.

The Prussians are closing in, but Rip manages to decoy them while Corky makes last-minute repairs to the time machine. Rip asks one favor of Napoleon before escorting him to the Bellerephon, and thus the historic meeting takes place:



Rip then takes Napoleon to the Eastern Front, where the Germans are desperate to escape. Napoleon shows the secret exit, through a mountain pass, and the Germans take it. But:



The German general sends a radio message to Hitler advising him of Rip's betrayal. Can he get back in time to prevent the Nazi from killing Jeff?



Comments: A very entertaining story overall. I enjoyed the artwork more as I read on, but Bill Ely (credited at GCD) did not do a very good job on the faces. Everybody has that mannequin look as you can see in the panel where Hitler meets Napoleon.

One very oddball feature about the comic is that each chapter ends with a house ad for the very next issue of Rip Hunter. Here they are:




It's an interesting teaser.

An aside: Don Markstein notes that the Rip Hunter "team" was comprised of four people: Smart guy, strong guy, woman, kid, which was the template for another fantastic foursome that debuted two years after Rip Hunter's first appearance.
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Meanwhile....

Người đăng: Unknown on Thứ Hai, 26 tháng 1, 2009

I try to highlight the work of other comics bloggers at least once every other week, because there's plenty of good blogging going on elsewhere.

Ol' Groove has a tribute to legendary artist Neal Adams.

Why is Neal Adams such a catalyst in the origin of the Groovy Age? 'Cause when Adams came on the scene at DC drawing mags like Strange Adventures (Deadman) and Brave and the Bold, comicdom had never seen anything like him.


Amen. Adams' work was transcendent, and enormously influential. Although he's best known for his Batman and Green Lantern/Green Arrow stories, he was also a prolific cover artist for DC especially in the 1967-68 era, when virtually every title featured several of his covers.

It's been awhile since I linked Fred Hembeck, but that's not because I don't love reading his blog. The main problem Fred has is that he has no permalinks to individual blog entries, so if somebody reads this a month from now and clicks on the link, they're not going to find the entry I pointed to. His January 23rd post is on the Marvel Super-Heroes cartoon show from the 1960s.

I watched faithfully on my primitive black and white TV set--and yes, the Captain America episodes were clearly my favorites, possessing as well the one theme song I could, even many after years last seeing the show, still hum (conversely, I recently checked out some Sub-Mariner episodes--more on THAT later--but y'know, I STILL can't recall that tune!...)-- and then, one day they were gone, and I didn't anymore. Watch, that is.


I can't remember the individual theme songs, but I do remember, "You belong! You belong! To the Merry Marvel Marching Society!"

The Fortress Keeper has a serious post on the Final Crisis series that is nearing conclusion, and the apparent death of Batman (as Bruce Wayne) in that series.

Although this blogger once defended Geoff Johns’ use of gore in Infinite Crisis as an effective way to advance the story, the ever-mounting pile of corpses at both DC and Marvel taught us that modern comics were less about redefining super-heroics in a post-Sept. 11 world (as Messers Quesada and Didio often insist) than getting a rise out of an increasingly small and jaded fanbase.

Once pristine characters like Supergirl and Mary Marvel were shamelessly sexualized, C-list heroes like Tigra were beaten down and humiliated to prop up superstar writers’ pet projects and old-school paragons like Captain America were ridiculed for being “out of touch” with the Facebook nation.


Read it all, and also this post which the Fortress Keeper references. If you want to know why I focus on the Silver Age Comics, it's because that's the last era where superheroes were legitimately heroic, where the stories were uplifting, and where the gore and humiliation were kept to a minimum. As for the "death" of Batman, I'll let Bruce have the last word on that:



On a lighter note, Mark Engblom has an entertaining series on the Superpowers that Time (or Superman's writers) Forgot. In one of the Superman TV episodes from the 1950s, the writers gave Superman the ability to vibrate through solid objects (much like the Flash in the Silver Age).
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#100. Indrajal Comics 50 (Miscellaneous) and The Phantom: Annual 1967, Daily Strips & Sunday Strips

Người đăng: Unknown on Chủ Nhật, 25 tháng 1, 2009

Update (3 Oct 2011): Thanks to Emile better size files of S:153, 154, 160, 161, 162, 165, 166 are added! 
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This post is dedicated to all Citizens of world, Lee Falk & his fiction hero, love of millions, "The Phantom".

Today is very special day:

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1. The 60th Republic Day of India, which is:
  • the largest democracy ( with longest written constitution by any sovereign nation),
  • the second-most populous country,
  • second fastest growing economy,
  • the seventh-largest country by geographical area in the world.
  • and ............
(Read more details about India: HERE)
Republic Day Wishes
Our life is full of Colors …

I hope this 26th January will add more colors to your life

Happy Republic Day!

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2. The 100th post of this blog.

My thanks to all known & unknown contributors, bloggers, forums, torrent sites and everyone - who played part in bringing my favorites to us.

My special thanks to:
  • Ajay Misra
  • Ajnaabi
  • Anonymous (IJC)
  • Anonymous (more friends: some I know,some not)
  • Anurag Dixit
  • Bharat Gorey
  • Binay Pandey
  • Chatur Cheeta
  • Dewaram
  • Dr. Krishna Raman
  • Frank
  • Prashant Gupta
  • Raj Vardhan Varma
  • Srikanth
  • Teddyk
  • Vikram Singh
  • Vineeth
My thanks to all active & passive visitors which love encourage me.

I use 3 mediafire folders & 3 esnips folders. Some comics were posted with contributors links, not mine. I started this blog on 18th November 2007, but actively posting since May 2008 (88 posts). I just tried eliminating difficulties of comics’ fans which I faced myself by recollecting at one place. I had some extra time which I gave to this blog rather wasting in clubs & so on.

Generally I avoid publishing such information, but for this occasion revelling some facts - to show your love to this COMICS BLOG.

Screenshot of my 3 mediafire folders





Third folder contains around 50% Comics of my other blog. I feel there is need to pay little attention. Hoping with your help, it will be improved. This year ACK blog will be my priority.
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On this special occation allow me to start with blogging history.

Was the first blogger the irascible Dave Winer? The iconoclastic Jorn Barger? Or was the first blogger really Justin Hall, a Web diarist and online gaming expert whom "The New York Times Magazine" once called the "founding father of personal blogging"? ........

I also always wonder about it. There are many articles available, recommend to read this one (here).
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Indrajal comics based on the true stories (some brave fighters of India)



202-1974-Miscellaneous-The Tank Battle at Sukha Nallah

203-1974-Miscellaneous-Treasure from No Man's Land


206-1974-Miscellaneous-Operation JIG-3

212-1974-Miscellaneous-On The Sands Of Time


219-1974-Miscellaneous-Kunhali Marakkar

223-1975-Miscellaneous-Komagata Maru

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Before we come to next part, few words about :
  • Leon Harrison Gross, well known as Lee Falk (April 28, 1911 - March 13, 1999), was an American writer, best known as the creator of the popular comic strip superheroes "The Phantom" and "Mandrake the Magician". He began his career that resulted in the creation of these two classic fantasy comics as a 19-year-old college student. "Mandrake the Magician" was the first action-adventure strip in which magic was the main theme.
  • The Ghost Who Walks
The Ghost Who Walks has many names. Among them, Guardian of the Eastern Dakk (Also called the Eastern Dark), and The Man Who Cannot Die. Of course, the best known is The Phantom.

The Phantom series began with a daily newspaper strip on February 17, 1936, followed by a color Sunday strip on May 28, 1939; both are still running as of 2009.

Falk continued to script Phantom (and Mandrake) until his death on March 13, 1999. His last daily and Sunday strip stories, "Terror at the Opera" and "The Kidnappers", respectively, were finished by his wife, Elizabeth Falk. After Falk's passing, King Features Syndicate began to cooperate with European comic publisher Egmont, publisher of the Swedish Fantomen magazine, which now went from only publishing Phantom stories in licenced comic books to providing the stories for the newspaper strip as well, by adapting their own Phantom comic book stories into the comic strip format. Fantomen writers Tony De Paul and Claes Reimerthi alternated as writers of the newspaper strip after Falk died, with De Paul handling the daily strips and Reimerthi being responsible for the Sunday strips. As of 2009, De Paul is the regular writer. Some of the stories have been adapted from comic magazine stories originally published in Fantomen.

Indian comics: Indrajal Comics, Diamond Comics, and Rani Comics all published reprints of Lee Falk's daily or Sunday strips. Egmont Imagination India printed the Scandinavian work.

Do you remember?
  • The first ever Phantom story to be carried by a newspaper was "the Singh Brotherhood" in 17th February 1936.
  • The first ever Phantom comic book, was published by the Australian Woman's Mirror on 6th May 1938.
  • The Phantom appears to kill a person (the evil "Smiley" in 'the Diamond Hunters') for the first time 9th April 1937.
  • The shortest daily stories were Adventure in Algiers (20 Jun - 23 Jul 1938) and The Wisdom of Solomon (23 Jan - 25 Feb 1956) which both ran for 5 weeks.
  • The longest daily story was The Phantom Goes To War (2 Feb 1942 - 9 Jan 1943) which ran for 49 weeks.
  • The shortest Sunday story was The Gib's Brothers (6 Mar - 3 Apr 1955) which ran for 5 weeks.
  • The longest Sunday story was Return of the Thuggees (20 May 1990 - 11 Aug 1991) which ran for 65 weeks.
There are many nice sites dedicated to Lee Falk & the Phantom, which provide enhanced information in every aspect - starting from life of writer to detail information about publishers, strips & many more. With my little knowledge, I can’t provide better information so recommend you to visit & read.

Reccomended Sites


The Deep Woods (Words are not enough to explain how good it's.)

Ip comics (Another superb site - detail information about every phantom's Daily & Sunday strips and many more.)

International hero (The Phantom)

Weirdscifi (The Phantom)

Wikipedia

The Phanlantis

The Phantom's World

Dr Hermes Reviews (THE PHANTOM- Reviews of all fifteen novels published from 1972 to 1975, based on Lee Falk's original stories and adapted by Falk himself, Ron Goulart (as Frank S. Shawn), Basil Copper, Bruce Cassidy (as Carson Bingham) and Warren Shanahan.

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  • The Phantom Annuals (1967)
World Distributors (Manchester) Limited (by arrangement with Western Publishing Company, Racine, Wisconsin, U.S.A.) published two hardcover Phantom Annuals – first in 1967 & second in 1968. These were very unique – a good combination of several prose stories, 24 pages comics story, crossword puzzles to animal quizzes. In 1967 Annual the comic book story was Delilah (by Bill Lignante & originally printed as King Comics #23). In India this comics story was printed as Indrajal comics # 056 -1967. The prose stories were mostly 3-4 pages long but none acknowledged an author.
Lucky I have honor to present through this e-library, first unique – Phantom's BOOK & COMICS:

The Phantom Annual (1967)

Note: This annual has 96 pages. It was wrongly considered as 68 pages version by some sites.

Ajay Misra received it from a friend from UK & scanned it for us.


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As we know, Daily & Sunday strips comes as our favorite the Phantom Comics. Sometime comics come with edited strips. Here is the Phantom Daily & Sunday strips (for those who missed these). With the help of these & information available at Ip comics, one can easily compose Frew's Phantom comics. Many Covers of Frew are posted in this blog (post #93).

I'll try to post a Frew's index book in near future.

Some strips are not available. Your help needed.

Abbreviations used in tables
BW – Black & white
C - Colour
N/A – Not available now, but soon I’ll add.

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Phantom Daily Strips
D# Story Title NoteStart Finish
0
For Those Who Come In Late


1The Singh Brotherhood

17 Feb 19367 Nov 1936
2The Sky Band
9 Nov 193610 Apr 1937
3The Diamond Hunters
12 Apr 193718 Sep 1937
4Little Tommy (Toma)
20 Sep 19375 Feb 1938
5The Prisoner of the Himalayas
7 Feb 193818 Jun 1938
6Adventure in Algiers
20 Jun 193823 Jul 1938
7The Shark's Nest
25 Jul 19385 Nov 1938
8Fishers of Pearls
7 Nov 193828 Jan 1939
9The Slave Traders
30 Jan 19396 May 1939
10The Mysterious Girl
8 May 19392 Sep 1939
11The Golden Circle
4 Sep 193920 Jan 1940
12The Seahorse
22 Jan 194027 Jul 1940
13The Game of Alvar
29 Jul 194014 Dec 1940
14Diana Aviatrix Lost
16 Dec 194012 Jul 1941
15The Phantom's Treasure
14 Jul 194131 Jan 1942
16The Phantom Goes to War (The Inexorables)
2 Feb 19429 Jan 1943
17Bent Beak Broder
11 Jan 194322 May 1943
18The Phantom's Engagement
24 May 194324 Jul 1943
19High Seas Hijacker (The Governor and Suzie)
26 Jul 194326 Feb 1944
20The Spy Gang
28 Feb 194420 May 1944
21The Crooner
22 May 194426 Aug 1944
22The Maharajah's Daughter
28 Aug 194424 Mar 1945
23The Blue Gang
26 Mar 194526 May 1945
24Lago the Lake God
28 May 194511 Aug 1945
25The Wild Girl
13 Aug 194510 Nov 1945
26The Mermaids of Melo Straits
12 Nov 194516 Feb 1946
27Princess Valerie
18 Feb 194613 Jul 1946
28Queen Asta of Trondelay
15 Jul 194626 Oct 1946
29Mister Hog
28 Oct 194629 Mar 1947
30Romance and the Vesta Pirates
31 Mar 194729 Nov 1947
31The Devil Road
1 Dec 194722 May 1948
32The Girls (The Lady Luck)
24 May 194830 Oct 1948
33The Masked Marvel
1 Nov 194819 Feb 1949
34Fathers and Sons
21 Feb 194923 Apr 1949
35The Flirtatious Princess
25 Apr 194920 Aug 1949
36The Thuggees
22 Aug 194925 Feb 1950
37The Ape Idol of the Durugu
27 Feb 19506 May 1950
38The Movie Stars
8 May 19509 Sep 1950
39The White Monkey
11 Sep 19502 Dec 1950
40The Gray Gang
4 Dec 195024 Mar 1951
41Whirlpool Channel
26 Mar 195116 Jun 1951
42The Tiger Girl
18 Jun 195115 Sep 1951
43The Governor's Family
17 Sep 19511 Dec 1951
44The Professor
3 Dec 195115 Mar 1952
45The Jungle Patrol
17 Mar 195231 May 1952
46Bobo the Toy Dog
2 Jun 195219 Jul 1952
47The Great Ajax
21 Jul 195211 Oct 1952
48The Toad Men
13 Oct 195228 Feb 1953
49The Lady from Nowhere BW , C

2 Mar 195320 Jun 1953
50The Matchmaker
22 Jun 195310 Oct 1953
51The Super Apes
12 Oct 195330 Jan 1954
52Ragon's Game
1 Feb 19545 Jun 1954
53The Mob
7 Jun 195411 Sep 1954
54The Wrestling Tourney
13 Sep 195418 Dec 1954
55Aboard the SS Gay
20 Dec 195412 Mar 1955
56The Slimming of Prince Tagon
14 Mar 195521 May 1955
57Captain Kidder's Treasure
23 May 195530 Jul 1955
58Dr Axel and the Witchmen
1 Aug 19558 Oct 1955
59Queen Sansamor and the Sixth Man
10 Oct 195521 Jan 1956
60The Wisdom of Solomon
23 Jan 195625 Feb 1956
61U-Town
27 Feb 195619 May 1956
62The Grove of the Sleeping Giant
21 May 19561 Sep 1956
63The Shoplifters
3 Sep 195617 Nov 1956
64The Heavyweight Champion
19 Nov 195612 Jan 1957
65Wambo the Gambler
14 Jan 195730 Mar 1957
66The White Princess
1 Apr 195729 Jun 1957
67The Valley Of No Return
1 Jul 195721 Sep 1957
68The Crown Jewels of Corba
23 Sep 195721 Dec 1957
69The Scorpia
23 Dec 19573 May 1958
70The Carlyle's Good Mark
5 May 195823 Aug 1958
71The Crybaby
25 Aug 19581 Nov 1958
72The Underwater Diamond Thieves
3 Nov 19587 Mar 1959
73The Betrothal
9 Mar 195913 Jun 1959
74The Swamp Rats
15 Jun 19593 Oct 1959
75Oogooru and the Witchmen
5 Oct 195916 Jan 1960
76The Reporter
18 Jan 19602 Apr 1960
77The Monkey Mail (The Diamond Hijackers)
4 Apr 19606 Aug 1960
78The Gurk Twins
8 Aug 196029 Oct 1960
79The 50th Wife
31 Oct 196025 Feb 1961
80The Iron Dragon
27 Feb 196113 May 1961
81The Werewolf
15 May 196119 Aug 1961
82The Slave Market of Mucar
21 Aug 196110 Feb 1962
83The Epidemic
12 Feb 196216 Jun 1962
84The Wharf Rats
18 Jun 196213 Oct 1962
85The Mysterious Ambassador
15 Oct 19621 Jun 1963
86The Mystery of the Island of Dogs
3 Jun 196314 Dec 1963
87The Drummer of Timpenni
16 Dec 196321 Mar 1964
88The Reef
23 Mar 196427 Jun 1964
89The Adventures of Lucy Cary
29 Jun 196412 Dec 1964
90The Bad Ones
14 Dec 196417 Apr 1965
91The Hanta Witch
19 Apr 196531 Jul 1965
92Prince Hali and the White Stallion
2 Aug 19651 Jan 1966
93Bullets' Town
3 Jan 196628 May 1966
94The Killer
30 May 196610 Sep 1966
95The Sea God
12 Sep 196624 Dec 1966
96The Satchel
26 Dec 196618 Mar 1967
97The Crime School
20 Mar 196724 Jun 1967
98Deadman's Point
26 Jun 196730 Sep 1967
99The Rogue Elephant
2 Oct 196720 Jan 1968
100Jungle Olympics (Rex and the Trophy Thieves)
22 Jan 19684 May 1968
101The Frame Up (The President's Son)
6 May 19686 Jul 1968
102The Hydra
8 Jul 196812 Oct 1968
103The Art Thieves
14 Oct 19688 Feb 1969
104The Masked Ball
10 Feb 196922 Mar 1969
105The Jungle Home
24 Mar 196921 Jun 1969
106Rex, The Missing Heir
23 Jun 19694 Oct 1969
107The Gladiator
6 Oct 196917 Jan 1970
108The Missing Daddy (The Runaway Girl)
19 Jan 197018 Apr 1970
109Luaga's Undercover Tour
20 Apr 197025 Jul 1970
110The Mission (Prince Bular of Tulana)
27 Jul 19705 Dec 1970
111The Heir (Yes)
7 Dec 197013 Feb 1971
112The Fence
15 Feb 19718 May 1971
113The Mysterious Passenger (The Tourist Invasion)
10 May 197124 Jul 1971
114The Vultures
26 Jul 19716 Nov 1971
115The Lost City (... of Pheenix)
8 Nov 19718 Jan 1972
116The Witchman
10 Jan 19728 Apr 1972
117The Tanker-Jackers
10 Apr 197215 Jul 1972
118The Keeper of the Peace
17 Jul 197214 Oct 1972
119The Giant of Kaluga
16 Oct 197227 Jan 1973
120Zokko (The Trial of Patrolman Zokko)
29 Jan 19735 May 1973
121The Things (Vampires of Koqania)
7 May 197318 Aug 1973
122Vandal-Looters
20 Aug 197324 Nov 1973
123Laurann (The Pampered Princess)
26 Nov 197330 Mar 1974
124Llongo Luck (The Curse of the Sacred Image)
1 Apr 197424 Aug 1974
125The Normal Life
26 Aug 197428 Dec 1974
126The Cave Lands
30 Dec 197419 Apr 1975
126aDiana in the Deep WoodsN/A14 Apr 197419 Apr 1975
127T
21 Apr 197513 Sep 1975
128Hzzz
15 Sep 197529 Nov 1975
129Star of Bangalla
1 Dec 19756 Mar 1976
130Mystery of Kula-Ku
8 Mar 197631 Jul 1976
131S.S. Blitz (The Crimewave)
2 Aug 197630 Oct 1976
132Return of the Terrorists
1 Nov 197619 Feb 1977
133The Proposal
21 Feb 19772 Apr 1977
134Guardian of the Eastern Dark
4 Apr 197713 Aug 1977
135The Tyrant of Tarakimo
15 Aug 197729 Oct 1977
136The Wedding of the Phantom
31 Oct 19774 Feb 1978
137The Three Bandits
6 Feb 197815 Apr 1978
138Return to Tarakimo
17 Apr 197816 Sep 1978
139Jungle City
18 Sep 197816 Dec 1978
140Baby (The Heirs)
18 Dec 197819 May 1979
141The Chopper Pirates (Jungle Gold)
21 May 19798 Sep 1979
142The Return of General Bababu
10 Sep 197916 Feb 1980
143The Tree House
18 Feb 198019 Jul 1980
144The Poachers
21 Jul 19801 Nov 1980
145Gooroo's Jungle Muggers
3 Nov 19804 Apr 1981
146The Hostages
6 Apr 19814 Jul 1981
147The Phantom's Vacation
6 Jul 198112 Sep 1981
148The Return of Gooroo's Mob
14 Sep 198116 Jan 1982
149Tale of Rex
18 Jan 198211 Sep 1982
150Queen Karola of Kula-Ku
13 Sep 198212 Feb 1983
151Ughland
14 Feb 19832 Jul 1983
152Visit to Baronkhan
4 Jul 198326 Nov 1983
153The Necklace of Solomon
28 Nov 198326 May 1984
154The Kimberly Diamonds
28 May 19848 Sep 1984
155The Embassy Siege
10 Sep 198422 Dec 1984
156The Presidents
24 Dec 19841 Jun 1985
157Drug Busters
3 Jun 19857 Sep 1985
158The Lake Lady
9 Sep 19851 Mar 1986
159Ruler of Baronkhan
3 Mar 19865 Jul 1986
160The Tarashima Terrorists
7 Jul 198611 Apr 1987
161The Snake Goddess
13 Apr 198712 Sep 1987
162Zabadabah
14 Sep 198716 Jan 1988
163The Man-Thing
18 Jan 198821 May 1988
164Great Raptor of Rhua
23 May 19883 Sep 1988
165Chasamba
5 Sep 19884 Feb 1989
166Rex: Prince of Baronkhan
6 Feb 19895 Aug 1989
167Massacre at Walker's Table
7 Aug 198911 Nov 1989
168The Death Threat
13 Nov 198924 Mar 1990
169The Master of Eden
26 Mar 199016 Jun 1990
170Attack of the Witchmen
18 Jun 199013 Oct 1990
171The Valley of the Elephants
15 Oct 19902 Feb 1991
172Zima, The Rogue Elephant
4 Feb 19918 Jun 1991
173The Jungle Patrol v The Drug Cartel
10 Jun 19912 Nov 1991
174King Bongong
4 Nov 19911 Feb 1992
175Prince Rex and Princess Alicia
3 Feb 199225 Apr 1992
176Blackie
27 Apr 199218 Jul 1992
177The Attilan Mystery
20 Jul 19926 Feb 1993
178The Moxley Awards
8 Feb 199319 Jun 1993
179Nukes
21 Jun 199313 Nov 1993
180Dinosaur
15 Nov 199312 Feb 1994
181The Plotters
14 Feb 19944 Jun 1994
182The Phantom Cowboy
6 Jun 199417 Dec 1994
183Buried Treasure
19 Dec 199429 Apr 1995
184The Beasts of Phantom Head Peak
1 May 19952 Sep 1995
185Raiders of the Eastern Dark
4 Sep 19956 Jan 1996
186Mr Big
8 Jan 199618 May 1996
187Drama on Eden
20 May 199630 Nov 1996
188Prince Rex - Kidnapped
2 Dec 199629 Mar 1997
189The Silks of Emira
31 Mar 199726 Jul 1997
190The Shaman
28 Jul 199715 Nov 1997
191Joomkar's Crown
17 Nov 199718 Apr 1998
192The Crater
20 Apr 199826 Sep 1998
193The Dakk Pirates
28 Sep 19989 Jan 1999
194The Albee
11 Jan 199913 Mar 1999
195Terror at the Opera
15 Mar 199910 July 1999
D001-D195 :
Writers: Falk
Artist: Falk/Moore, Moore, Moore/McCoy, McCoy, Barry, Barry/Olesen/Williams, Olesen/Williams, Olesen/Williams/Fredericks

The Post-Falk Era

D# Story Title NoteStart Finish
196The Ghost Wall
12 July 199920 Oct 1999
197The Halloween Kidnappers
21 Oct 199915 Jan 2000
198The Treasure Hunters
17 Jan 20006 May 2000
199The Strange Robber
8 May 20005 Aug 2000
200The Secret City
7 Aug 200011 Nov 2000
201Valley of the Gorillaman
13 Nov 200017 Mar 2001
202Ghost Quest
19 Mar 200121 July 2001
203The Ghost Pirates
23 Jul 200117 Nov 2001
204The Animal Collector
19 Nov 200130 Mar 2002
205The Immortal Man
1 Apr 20023 Aug 2002
206The Crusader's Treasure
5 Aug 200228 Dec 2002
207Jungle Mystery
30 Dec 200226 Apr 2003
208The Hit Men
28 Apr 200330 Aug 2003
209The Connoisseurs
1 Sep 200327 Dec 2003
210The Viper God
29 Dec 20031 May 2004
211The Locust God
3 May 200428 Aug 2004
212Stripes
30 Aug 20041 Jan 2005
213The U-Boat Mystery
3 Jan 200514 May 2005
214The Secret Temple on Eden
16 May 200517 Sep 2005
215The Crime Apprentices
19 Sep 200514 Jan 2006
216The Challenge
16 Jan 200613 May 2006
217The Return of Chatu (The Python of Bangalla)
15 May 20062 Sep 2006
218The Doorman
4 Sep 200630 Dec 2006
219The Jungle Gang
1 Jan 200728 Apr 2007
220Ordeal at Sea
30 Apr 200725 Aug 2007
221Graffiti Phantom
27 Aug 20075 Jan 2008
222The New Recruits
7 Jan 20083 May 2008
223The Mysterious Guardian
5 May 200830 Aug 2008
224Justice for the Python
1 Sep 200827 Dec 2008
225Crocco Island WestBetter Resolution29 Dec 200825 Apr 2009
226The Unknown CommanderBetter Resolution27 Apr 200922 Aug 2009
227Revenge of the PythonBetter Resolution24 Aug 200919 Dec 2009
228The Phantom at SeaBetter Resolution21 Dec 200917 Apr 2010
229Terror Cells in New YorkBetter Resolution19 Apr 201014 Aug 2010
230The Trail to Gravelines Prison
19 Apr 201011 Dec 2010
231Chatu's Fate (700px width)
1000 width (Mac)
1000 width (win)

13 Dec 20107 May 2011
232The College Kid (1000px width)
9 May 201113 Aug 2011


Writers: De Paul, Reimerthi
Artist: Olesen/Williams, Olesen/Williams/Ryan, Ryan

*************************************************
Phantom Sunday Strips
S# Story Title NoteStart Finish
1The League of Lost MenBW28 May 193915 Oct 1939
2The Precious Cargo of Colonel WinnBW22 Oct 193910 Mar 1940
3The Fire GoddessBW17 Mar 194021 Jul 1940
4The BeachcomberBW28 Jul 194029 Dec 1940
5The SaboteursBW5 Jan 194123 Feb 1941
6The Return of the Sky BandBW2 Mar 194122 Feb 1942
7The ImpostorBW1 Mar 194211 Oct 1942
8Castle in the CloudsBW18 Oct 194218 Apr 1943
9The Ismani CannibalsBW25 Apr 19434 Jul 1943
10Hamid the TerribleBW11 Jul 194325 Jun 1944
11The Childhood of the PhantomBW2 Jul 19447 Jan 1945
12The Golden PrincessBW14 Jan 194524 Jun 1945
13The Strange FishermanBW1 Jul 19452 Dec 1945
14Queen Pera the PerfectBW9 Dec 194517 Mar 1946
15King of BeastsBW24 Mar 19464 Aug 1946
16The Scarlet SorceressBW11 Aug 194622 Dec 1946
17The 12 Tasks
29 Dec 194629 Jun 1947
18The Dragon GodBW6 Jul 194716 Nov 1947
19The Marshall Sisters
23 Nov 194716 May 1948
20The Phantom TrophyBW23 May 19485 Sep 1948
21The Haunted CastleBW12 Sep 194813 Feb 1949
22Fathers and SonsBW20 Feb 194924 Apr 1949
23The Flirtatious PrincessBW1 May 194921 Aug 1949
24The ThuggeesBW28 Aug 194919 Feb 1950
25The Ape Idol of the DuruguBW26 Feb 19507 May 1950
26The Mysterious PassengerBW14 May 195016 Jul 1950
27Jungle King
23 Jul 195022 Oct 1950
28The Phantom's RingBW29 Oct 195010 Jun 1951
29The Rope PeopleBW17 Jun 19514 Nov 1951
30Tale of DevilBW11 Nov 195123 Mar 1952
31The 'Copter PiratesBW30 Mar 195213 Jul 1952
32The Female PhantomBW20 Jul 195212 Oct 1952
33Diana and the Bank RobbersBW19 Oct 19521 Feb 1953
34The ChainBW8 Feb 195324 May 1953
35Madcap MiriamBW31 May 195318 Oct 1953
36The Imaginary PlaymateBW25 Oct 195331 Jan 1954
37The BeltBW7 Feb 19546 Jun 1954
38The Master SpyBW13 Jun 195410 Oct 1954
39Alexander's Cup (The Stolen Cup)
BW17 Oct 195427 Feb 1955
40The Gibs BrothersBW6 Mar 19553 Apr 1955
41The Crescent CultBW10 Apr 19557 Aug 1955
42The Horned Star DemonsBW14 Aug 19556 Nov 1955
43A Proper HusbandBW13 Nov 195512 Feb 1956
44The Jungle TourneysBW19 Feb 195620 May 1956
45Pirate DayBW27 May 195619 Aug 1956
46The RattleBW26 Aug 195613 Jan 1957
47Danglor, International Bank ThiefBW20 Jan 19577 Apr 1957
48A Lesson for Prince OrqBW14 Apr 195718 Aug 1957
49The FrameupBW25 Aug 195722 Dec 1957
50The Monster of Green ValleyBW29 Dec 195727 Jul 1958
51The Plant God of the MassauBW3 Aug 195821 Dec 1958
52Conley's Good MarkBW28 Dec 195814 Jun 1959
53The Childhood of the PhantomBW21 Jun 19593 Jan 1960
54The River GangBW10 Jan 196022 May 1960
55The Honeymooners BW, CBW, C29 May 196023 Oct 1960
56The Goggle-Eye PiratesBW30 Oct 196026 Mar 1961
57FluffyBW2 Apr 196113 Aug 1961
58The LimperBW20 Aug 196129 Oct 1961
59Queen Samaris XIIBW5 Nov 196113 May 1962
60Treasure of the Skull CaveBW20 May 196228 Oct 1962
61The Astronaut and the PiratesC4 Nov 196212 May 1963
62Old BaldyBW19 May 196315 Dec 1963
63The Giant Bird of GandorBW22 Dec 196328 Jun 1964
64The Founding of the Jungle Patrol BW, CBW, C5 Jul 196424 Jan 1965
65The Great Web of Spidera
31 Jan 196527 Jun 1965
66Mystery of Wamba Falls Inn
4 Jul 196524 Oct 1965
67The Veiled Lady
31 Oct 19658 May 1966
68Rex King
15 May 196611 Dec 1966
69The Golden Sands of Keela Wee
18 Dec 19662 Apr 1967
70The Lions of Kukhan
9 Apr 19676 Aug 1967
71The Super Jet Pirates
13 Aug 196726 Nov 1967
72Strangers at Keela-Wee
3 Dec 196724 Mar 1968
73The Little Ones
31 Mar 196811 Aug 1968
74The Black Gold Pirates
18 Aug 196829 Dec 1968
75Walker's Table
5 Jan 196920 Apr 1969
76The Hijackers
27 Apr 19693 Aug 1969
77The Missing Link
10 Aug 19697 Dec 1969
78The Golden People
14 Dec 196929 Mar 1970
79The Dolphins
5 Apr 197014 Jun 1970
80The Beach (The Gold Prospectors)
21 Jun 197013 Sep 1970
81Alexander's Diamond Cup
20 Sep 19707 Feb 1971
82The Tale of the Gooley-Gooley Witch
14 Feb 19719 May 1971
83The Trophy Bearer (The Stolen Trophy)
16 May 19711 Aug 1971
84The Wig
8 Aug 197131 Oct 1971
85Tale of the Good Mark
(The Good Mark of the Phantom)

7 Nov 19716 Feb 1972
86The Smugglers
13 Feb 197214 May 1972
87The Massacre
21 May 197227 Aug 1972
88The Bike Gang
3 Sep 19725 Nov 1972
89The Hawk Master
12 Nov 197211 Feb 1973
90The Sky Divers
18 Feb 197327 May 1973
91Rex and the Little People
3 Jun 197316 Sep 1973
92The Golden Wood
23 Sep 197323 Dec 1973
93Phantom Treasure
30 Dec 19739 Jun 1974
94Tale of Joomba
16 Jun 197429 Dec 1974
95Little Girl
5 Jan 197511 May 1975
96The First Phantom
18 May 197510 Aug 1975
97The Golden Beach
17 Aug 197521 Dec 1975
98The Blue Giant
28 Dec 197511 Apr 1976
99Joonkar and the Slavers
18 Apr 197629 Aug 1976
100The Stolen Ring
5 Sep 197619 Dec 1976
101The Swamp Dragon
26 Dec 197617 Apr 1977
102The Hunters
24 Apr 19777 Aug 1977
103The Delta Pirates
14 Aug 197723 Oct 1977
104The Wedding of the Phantom
30 Oct 19775 Feb 1978
105The Three Bandits
12 Feb 197816 Apr 1978
106Hzz and Hrz
(What's Wrong with Hzz?)

16 Apr 197823 Jul 1978
107The Star of Bangalla
30 Jul 19785 Nov 1978
108The Heirs Part1 Part2C12 Nov 197820 May 1979
109Jungle Olympics
27 May 19792 Sep 1979
110The Name BW, CBW, C9 Sep 19799 Dec 1979
111The Vault of Missing Men
16 Dec 19791 Jun 1980
112The Uninvited Visitors
8 Jun 198016 Nov 1980
113Crook's Haven
23 Nov 198024 May 1981
114Crazy Louie's Story
31 May 19818 Nov 1981
115Kit and the Little People
15 Nov 198111 Apr 1982
116The Terrorists
18 Apr 19825 Sep 1982
117The Missing Link Family
12 Sep 198216 Jan 1983
118Mysterious Karapura
23 Jan 198331 Jul 1983
119The Eastern Dark
7 Aug 198329 Jan 1984
120The Golden Beach of Keela-Wee
5 Feb 19846 May 1984
121The Deadliest Animals in the Jungle
13 May 198419 Aug 1984
122Alexander's Diamond Cup
26 Aug 198417 Feb 1985
123The Whispering Grove
24 Feb 19859 Jun 1985
124The Forest Giants
16 Jun 19855 Jan 1986
125Phantom Head Peak
12 Jan 198627 Apr 1986
126Sunken Treasure
4 May 198631 Aug 1986
127The Escaped Convicts
7 Sep 198621 Dec 1986
128Queen Amaza's Mate
28 Dec 198628 Jun 1987
129The Fighting Twins (The Twins' 8th Birthday)
5 Jul 198727 Sep 1987
130The Irrondi and the Great Ones
4 Oct 198710 Apr 1988
131The Bride of Xali
17 Apr 198817 Jul 1988
132Exodus of the Little People
24 Jul 198826 Feb 1989
133Death from the Sky
5 Mar 198923 Jul 1989
134Captain Amazon - Pirate Queen
30 Jul 19897 Jan 1990
135The Eastern Dark at Janorra
14 Jan 199013 May 1990
136Return of the Thuggees
20 May 199011 Aug 1991
137The Fourth Son
18 Aug 199117 May 1992
138Tiger, Tiger
24 May 19926 Dec 1992
139How The Phantom Saved The Earth
13 Dec 199218 Jul 1993
140The Jungle Olympics
25 Jul 199316 Jan 1994
141The Isle Of Death
23 Jan 19943 Jul 1994
142Phantom World
10 Jul 19944 Dec 1994
143Battle of the Jungle Boys
11 Dec 199417 Sep 1995
144Queen Medusa
24 Sep 199526 May 1996
145The Lookout
2 Jun 199624 Nov 1996
146Dig
1 Dec 199624 Aug 1997
147Waterman
31 Aug 199719 Apr 1998
148The Vanished Village
26 Apr 199827 Sep 1998
149The Floradon Mystery
4 Oct 199814 Feb 1999
150The Kidnappers
21 Feb 199915 Aug 1999
S001-S150 :
Writer: Falk
Artist: Moore, Moore/McCoy, McCoy, McCoy/Infantino/Lignante, Lignante, Barry, Barry/Olesen/Doescher, Doescher/Olesen/Fredericks, Olesen/Fredericks.

The Post-Falk Era
S# Story Title NoteStart Finish
151The Wharf Rats
22 Aug 199926 Dec 1999
152The Shipwreckers
2 Jan 200030 Jul 2000
153Woduro's SecretNew Link (03/10/2011)6 Aug 20004 Mar 2001
154The Lion's Head TamarineNew Link (03/10/2011)11 Mar 20017 Oct 2001
155The War Mongers
14 Oct 20017 Apr 2002
156The Briefcase
14 Apr 200229 Sep 2002
157The Snake Goddess's Island
6 Oct 200230 Mar 2003
158Terror in Mawitaan
6 Apr 200328 Sep 2003
159The Sinbad Stone
5 Oct 200328 Mar 2004
160The Viking Fortress MysteryNew Link (03/10/2011)4 Apr 200426 Sep 2004
161The Iron PythonNew Link (03/10/2011)3 Oct 200427 Mar 2005
162The Prince Rex Conspiracy
(Conspiracy to Restore the Old Ways)
New Link (03/10/2011)3 Apr 200525 Sep 2005
163On the Trail of an Assassin
2 Oct 200526 Mar 2006
164Mystery of Fire Head Peak
2 Apr 200624 Sep 2006
165The Forbidden LandsNew Link (03/10/2011)1 Oct 200625 Mar 2007
166The OssuaryNew Link (03/10/2011)1 Apr 200723 Sep 2007
167The Plutonium Pirates
30 Sep 200723 Mar 2008
168The Accursed LandBetter Resolution30 Mar 200821 Sep 2008
169The Jungle LessonBetter Resolution28 Sep 200822 Mar 2009
170The Eternal TriangleBetter Resolution29 Mar 200920 Sep 2009
171The Lost Kingdom of AvariaBetter Resolution27 Sep 200921 Mar 2010
 172The Dirty Half-DozenBetter Resolution28 Mar 201019 Sep 2010
 173The Return of Colonel Weeks26 Sep 201120 Mar 2011
 174The Nomad27 Mar 201118 Sep 2011
S151- S174:

Writers: Falk/ Granberg, Avenell/Reimerthi, Reimerthi, De Paul, Nolan
Artist: Olesen/ Fredericks,Nolan, Ryan
*************************************************
All Indrajal Comics & Phantom Annual are contributed by Ajay Misra.

The original contributors of Strips are unknown. Bharat Gorey helped me to upload first 95 Daily Strips.

All thanks & credits go to Ajay, unknown friends & Bharat.
*************************************************

Update (18th Sep 2011): Thanks to Kit Walker S174 is available.
*************************************************
Update (6th August 2011): Thanks to Kit Walker D232 is available.
*************************************************
Update (29th April 2011): Thanks to Chatur Cheeta, TPH & Emile D231 is added.
*************************************************
Update (19th March 2011): Thanks to TPH S169 is added.
*************************************************
Update (19th Feb 2011): Thanks to TPH S168 to 172  (better quality) are added today.
*************************************************
Update (19th Dec 2010): Thanks to Emile D-230 and D217 to D229 (better quality) are added today.
*************************************************
Update (9th Dec 2010): Thanks to Venkitachalam Subramanian D 225 to 229 and S: 169 to 172 are added today.
*************************************************
Update (9th Dec 2010): All thanks and credits for D126a go to ICC. It's possible many persons have this page  in D126 file.
*************************************************
Update (9th March 2009): Chatur Cheeta has send 9 Daily (211,212,215,216,217,218, 222,223,224) & 5 Sunday strips (163,164, 166,167,168).

MANY MANY THANKS Chatur Cheeta!
*************************************************
Update (9th Feb 2009): Bharat has provided some missing strips: D132, S017, S019, S027 & S107.
Thanks Bharat!
*************************************************
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