Saturday, April 11, 2026

Solar Reflections - Doctor In Red!


With the second volume of Doctor Solar Man of the Atom we are getting a full-fledged superhero, a bright and shiny man in red who saves the day when it's needed. The adventures though in this volume also explore the unique nature of Doctor Solar, putting him through a wide range of transformations, not for Solar are the machinations of sundry super-villains but rather it is often Solar battling against the peculiar side effects of his own awesome power.

Frank Bolle

All the stories here were drawn by Frank Bolle, an artist with a flair for the real but lacking the oomph often associated with superheroes. The writing on this series transitioned in the tenth issue with the ubiquitous Paul S. Newman giving way to Dick Wood.

In these stories Doctor Solar is pitted against Nuro time and again who fights most often by proxy and very often using machines. The first of these is a device which challenges the reality people see, but Solar is able to fend off these threats and save Blue Valley. Then it's a computerized robot named Transvac which is able to absorb energy including the energy which comprises Solar himself, but that energy is possessed of a min which uses strategy to escape. Then for a couple of issues Solar has to contend with an overabundance of energy which swells him to gigantic proportions. It is through the steady and reliable help of his best girl Gail he often found his way to return to some semblance of humanity, whether in scale or temporally.

For Gold Key, a company that clearly didn't get the whole superhero zeitgeist, Doctor Solar Man of the Atom is an anomaly. Other superheroes from the company were either parodies of the form (Frankenstein, Dracula, The Owl) or firmly rooted in science fiction like Solar (Magnus, Robot Fighter). It's Solar's magnificently resplendent red costume which has made him an iconic hero worthy of revival over the decades. Sure the nature of the hero, a many torn asunder by the power of the atom and reshaped into something akin to a god is fascinating, but without that costume it's all for naught.

Here are the covers in this collection, all by the great George Wilson.








More Doctor Solar next week. 



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Friday, April 10, 2026

Ditko Cover Classics - Captain Atom #79!


Captain Atom #79 is by writer Joe Gill and artists Steve Ditko and Rocke Mastroserio. This is the final issue written by Captain Atom's co-creator Joe Gill. 


In the spirit of the times, our hero gets his first official super-villain in the chromatic Doctor Spectro, the Master of Moods. You can read it at this link


More Captain Atom to come. 


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Thursday, April 9, 2026

Ditko Cover Classics - Captain Atom #78!


Captain Atom #78 is remarkable as Cap gets his own title for the first time when Strange Suspense Stories changes its name with its seventy-eighth issue. It's a new full-length adventure by Joe Gill and Steve Ditko with their classic creation now in 1965. Rocke Mastroserio joins Ditko on the art. Since Mastroserio was the only artist other than Ditko to draw the good Captain, it's a great choice. 


You can read the comic book at this link


More Captain Atom tomorrow. 


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Wednesday, April 8, 2026

Ditko Cover Classics - Strange Suspense Stories #77!


Charlton Comics wrapped up the reprints of Steve Ditko's Captain Atom stories in Strange Suspense Stories #77.  The stories in this issue are "The Silver Lady from Venus", "An Ageless Weapon", "The Boy and the Stars", and "The Space Prowlers". You can read the comic book at this link

Here are the covers of Space Adventures from which the stories were taken. 





The reprints are over. New Captain Atom adventures start tomorrow. 




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Tuesday, April 7, 2026

Ditko Cover Classics - Strange Suspense Stories #76!


Strange Suspense Stories #76 featured more vintage Captain Atom stories. The stories in this issue are "The Wreck of the X-44", "The Little Wanderer", "Test Pilot's Nightmare", and "A Victory for Venus". You can read the comic book at this link

Below are the covers for the issues from the stories are taken. 





More Captain Atom next time. 



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Monday, April 6, 2026

Ditko Cover Classics - Strange Suspense Stories #75!


Captain Atom made a comeback in Strange Suspense Stories #79. You can read it at this link. There are three Captain Atom stories in this one -- "Introducing Captain Atom", "The Second Man in Space", and "Captain Atom on Planet X". The cover was derived from the Captain's debut cover. Charlton was getting back into superheroes with Blue Beetle and Son of Vulcan. When Steve Ditko came back to them after his famous stay at Marvel it seemed a good time to revive another superhero. Below are the covers of the comics from which the material was pulled. 




More Captain Atom tomorrow. 




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Sunday, April 5, 2026

Atomic Reactions - Introducing Captain Atom!


Captain Atom was created in 1959 by Joe Gill and Steve Ditko with possible input by editor Pat Masulli. That debut story in Space Adventures #33  is a stunner really, compact and full of high-tech drama as an Air Force officer Captain Adam is locked into an armed rocket headed for Earth's orbit. The warhead explodes killing the officer, but then he returns to life, weirdly charged with radioactive might which allows him to fly and which makes him indestructible. He quickly dons a distinctive metal suit (at first colored blue than later gold) to save his colleagues from radiation poisoning. Re-named Captain Atom by President Eisenhower himself, he immediately serves his nation by fending off a rogue missile which poses a threat to the nation.


After this debut, Captain Atom balances between sci-fi and fantasy, offering stories with a hint of Cold War edge and at the same time flights of fancy about young boys riding space birds in their dreams. He battles alien threats, staving off an invasion or two and himself traveling to Venus to confront some very lovely space ladies. Captain Atom's powers fluctuate somewhat as the series progresses, with his top speed between 22, 000 miles per hour and the speed of light. He has complete control over his atomic structure and can pass through steel walls. His most visually arresting power is how he ignites part of his mass to generate thrust.

Two men in addition to President Eisenhower know Atom's secrets. Sgt. Gunner Goslin and General Eining. These two are important cast members in the earliest stories, but fade out of the stories as they roll along. Captain Atom reports to the President throughout the initial run, first Eisenhower, then a non-descript fill-in fellow and finally Kennedy.


Steve Ditko is the artist on most of the stories, but Rocke Mastroserio does pinch-hit on several. There is a distinct drop-off in quality when others than Gill and Ditko do the work, the series loses its distinctiveness, becoming a rather bland superhero outing. The series offered up a single Captain Atom story per issue, then two and finally three before it was cancelled after nine issues of Space Adventures.

But that was not the end.

Here are the covers for Space Adventures featuring Captain Atom. To read each individual issue in its entirety just check out the links beneath each juicy cover.


Read this issue here


Read this issue here


Read this issue here


Read this issue here


Read this issue here


Read this issue here


Read this issue here


Read this issue here.


 Read this issue here

More Captain Atom all this week. 


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