Kang the Conqueror has established himself over the decades as the number one Avengers villain. I know folks want to elevate Ultron, and that one is a close call. I know some like Thanos, but I don't even consider that a conversation. The one guy who has relentlessly returned from spiraling twists and turns of time itself to battle the Assemblers time and again is Kang, the futuristic dictator armed to the teeth with technology stolen from across the ages. The collection
The Avengers: Kang - Time and Time Again puts together some of my absolute favorite Kang tales.
Kang debuted in the eighth issue of
The Avengers (not included in this collection).
This pose by Jack Kirby and Chic Stone from that debut absolutely captures what I find so fascinating about Kang. He is so completely confident and so completely casual in his approach to the Avengers, as if they were truly beneath his notice. Clearly as the saga continued (and frankly became increasingly confusing) he became more and more focused on them, but in the beginning he just wanted to take over the world.
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Jack Kirby and Vince Colletta |
Kang returns in an infamous issue of
Thor, this time bringing along his ever-expanding puppet, The Growing Man. The first battle with the Asgardian is an epic.
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Sal Buscema and Sam Grainger |
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Sal Buscema and Sam Grainger |
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Sal Buscema and Sam Grainger |
Then Roy Thomas has the Growing Man return alongside Kang to kickoff what remains my personal favorite Kang story, the classic trilogy which introduced both the Squadron Supreme and The Invaders, a portentous series of stories indeed. Sal Buscema was still in his early phase here and inked by Sam Grainger, he rarely looked better.
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Herb Trimpe |
Roy pens another Kang one-shot, a fabulous bit of adventure fantasy which pits the time-traveling baddie against the Hulk and a nigh-forgotten Marvel hero, the Phantom Eagle.
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John Buscema and Tom Palmer |
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John Buscema and Tom Palmer |
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John Buscema and Tom Palmer |
The collection closes out with a really smart trilogy by Roger Stern, John Buscema, and Tom Palmer which puts some really vivid spins on Kang lore. The Growing Man is on hand again as Kang battle the Avengers for sure, but mostly this time seems to war against himself most of all.
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