CGC Registry

LionHeart's Fury


Set Type: Nick Fury #1-#18 (1968)
Owner: LionHeart, Inc.
Last Modified: 7/10/2023
Views: 335

Rank: 7
Score: 6160
Leading by: 752
Points to Higher Rank: 545

Set Description:

As a comic collector you really cant pass up the chance to have an important part of Marvel History without having the Nick Fury, Agent of SHIELD collection. For me its the cover art that has always attracted me to this series, which captures the essence of the 1960s in the cover art from Steranko. I had the chance to meet and hear him speak, fascinating man and very much a showman of his time.

Colonel Nicholas Joseph "Nick" Fury created by writer/artist Jack Kirby and writer Stan Lee, Fury first appeared in Sgt. Fury and his Howling Commandos #1 (May 1963), a World War II combat series that portrayed the cigar-chomping Fury as leader of an elite U.S. Army unit.

The modern-day Fury, initially a CIA agent, debuted a few months later in Fantastic Four #21 (Dec. 1963). In Strange Tales #135 (Aug. 1965), the character was transformed into a spy like James Bond and leading agent of the fictional espionage agency S.H.I.E.L.D. The character makes frequent appearances in Marvel books as the former head of S.H.I.E.L.D. and as an intermediary between the U.S. government or the United Nations and various superheroes.
Writer-penciller-colorist Jim Steranko began on the feature in Strange Tales #151 (Dec. 1966), initially over Kirby layouts. He quickly became one of comic books' most acclaimed and influential artists. In some of the creative zeniths of the Silver Age, Steranko established the feature as one of comic books' most groundbreaking and innovative. He introduced or popularized in comic books such art movements of the day aspsychedelia and op art; built on Kirby's longstanding work in photo-montage; and created comic books' first four-page spread. All the while, he spun plots of intense intrigue, barely hidden sensuality, and hi-fi hipness and supplied his own version of Bond girls, pushing what was allowable under the Comics Code at the time.

The 12-page feature ran through Strange Tales #168 (sharing that "split book" with the occult feature "Doctor Strange" each issue), after which it was spun off into its own series, titled Nick Fury, Agent of S.H.I.E.L.D. This ran 15 issues (June 1968 - Nov. 1969), followed by three all-reprint issues beginning a year later (Nov. 1970 - March 1971). Steranko wrote and drew issues #1-3 and #5, and drew the covers of #1-7.

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