Showing posts with label Centaur. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Centaur. Show all posts

Monday, January 19, 2026

Nazi-Punchers LIBERTY SCOUTS "The Sentinel: Who He Is and How He Came to Be!"

One of the Weirder Patriotic Nazi-Punching Characters of the Golden Age is This Guy...

...created from whole cloth by the Spirit of America herself!







This never-reprinted, pre-Pearl Harbor tale from Centaur's Liberty Scouts #3 (1941), illustrated by George Wilson, was one of many showing Americans were clearly worried about the Axis pulling us into the already-ongoing World War II.
A number of these new patriotic defenders of the USA were typical American citizens either possessed by, or given powers by, mystic entities embodying some aspect of America.
But this being (and Uncle Sam, who apparently was "The American Spirit" in physical form) were created out of thin air, without a human intermediary.
Unlike Uncle Sam, who's had a long existence in comics, from the Golden Age to the present via Quality Comics & DC Comics, The Sentinel made only three appearances before being drawn back into the ether!
Even when other characters from the Centaur Comics line like The Arrow, Man of War, and even The Ferret, were revived by Malibu Comics in the late 1980s, The Sentinel was nowhere to be found!
Note: the George Wilson who illustrated this comic story is not painter George Wilson who did hundreds of cover paintings for Dell and Gold Key comics as well as paperbacks featuring sci-fi/fantasy and super-heroes from the 1950s to the 1980s!
George Homer Wilson started out as a pulp magazine illustrator doing both cover paintings and pen and ink interior illustrations before adding comic books to his already-busy schedule from 1940 thru 1942!

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Friday, July 29, 2022

Shark Week Special! THE SHARK "Sinister Secret of Pirate Island!"

....I'll just add that the adventure Neptune had with pirates was over two centuries earlier, when the old man looked like he was around The Shark's present age!
Now take it from there...
C'mon, you can't tell me you saw the Martian invasion plotline coming!
Remember, this was the beginning of the Golden Age of comics!
A creative working on these magazines could do almost anything, since there weren't any real "rules" or tropes or cliches to adhere to, so combining pirates with mutants with Martians was just another way to fill six to eight pages!
Writer/artist Lew Glanzman threw everything but the kitchen sink into this tale...because he could!
That was one of the kool aspects of those stories, and it's one of the reasons I and many others still love them!
We hope you've enjoyed this look at comics' first aquatic super-hero>
If reader response is good, we can present more time-lost tales of The Shark during next year's #SharkWeek !
It's up to you!

Thursday, July 28, 2022

Shark Week Special! THE SHARK "Father Neptune and the Pirates"

We're going to conclude #SharkWeek with a rarity for Golden Age comic book tales...
...a continued story...and one with a serious plot twist!
Before you go "politically correct" on us, let me assure you that the "native" you saw a page earlier was not, in fact, human!
If you were a comic reader in the 1940s, you'd have to wait an entire month to see the conclusion to this never-reprinted story from Centaur's Amazing-Man Comics #14 (1940)!
But, in 2022, you'll be able to discover the "native's" secret on Friday, only a day later!
Ain't scientific progress wonderful?

Wednesday, July 27, 2022

Shark Week Special! THE SHARK "Planet of the Walking Dead"

The Shark seems to encounter a lot of scientists...mad or otherwise!
The obvious question is, why does he listen to them?
Admittedly, this never-reprinted story by creator/writer/artist Lew Glanzman from Centaur's Amazing-Man Comics #12 (1940) was written for a young audience, but several obvious questions come to mind...
  • Where was this unknown planet which was obviously closer to Earth than Mars?
  • Who were those three guys?
  • Why didn't the unnamed scientist who sent The Shark know about their flight?
Even though we never learn the answers to those questions, we will learn something about Martians in the Centaur Comics universe...on Friday!
But first, we take a detour to a bunch of pirates (along with the return of Father Neptune) on Thursday!

Tuesday, July 26, 2022

Shark Week Special! THE SHARK "Menace of the Mental MadMan at the Middle of the Earth"

The Aquatic Avenger travels (involuntarily) to the center of the Earth...
...to face a scientist from the surface who plans a horrible fate for him, specifically!
When this never-reprinted tale from Centaur's Amazing-Man Comics #10 (1940) was published, the superhero genre was only about a year and a half old.
There were few established tropes or rules so creatives like writer/artist Lew Glanzman were literally "flying by the seat of their pants" as they figured out what would work and what wouldn't!

Monday, July 25, 2022

Shark Week Special! THE SHARK "Father and Son"

In his second, never-reprinted, appearance in Centaur's Amazing-Man Comics #7 (1939)...
...the Aquatic Avenger meets his long-absent father (who may or may not be the actual Roman god of the sea)!
The two of them make a heckuva team, eh?
Father Neptune would appear in most of the stories, sometimes helping and sometimes hindering The Shark's crusade.
Be Here Tomorrow for Another Adventure of
The Shark!

Sunday, July 24, 2022

SHARK WEEK SPECIAL! Before Aquaman! Before Sub-Mariner! There Was THE SHARK!

We interrupt our ongoing weekly Russkie-Smasher feature this week...

...to present a Shark Week special...a reintroduction to the aquatic super-hero who predated both DC's Aquaman and Marvel's Sub-Mariner!
This never-reprinted story from Centaur's Amazing-Man Comics #6 (1939), written and illustrated by Lew Glanzman, appeared within the same month as Prince Namor the Sub-Mariner's debut in Timely's Marvel Comics #1 (1939) and well before Aquaman's premiere in DC's More Fun Comics #73 (1941)!
The son of Neptune (who may or may not be the Roman god), The Shark once lived in an undersea kingdom, but set out to fight all crime committed at sea by anyone; human, sea-dweller, or extraterrestrial alien!
He's called "Shark" because sharks often accompany him...and eat his enemies!
The character is also a skilled scientist, who creates and uses technology far beyond then-current human science! 
  • His super-powers include...
  • The ability to breathe underwater
  • Superhuman strength and near-invulnerability (which he loses on land unless he's in physical contact with a magic knife given him by his father)
  • Mental control of sea life
  • Ability to create creatures out of water which he can direct mentally
With a strip appearing in both Amazing-Man Comics and Stars and Stripes Comics, The Shark lasted until the company (which also published pulp magazines) gave up comics. 
 Be Here Tomorrow for Another Adventure of
The Shark!