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THE CLOCK STRIKES BLACK & WHITE EDITION: A COMPREHENSIVE CHARACTER COLLECTION RETRO COMIC REPRINTS #380 RETRO COMIC REPRINTS #380
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THE CLOCK STRIKES BLACK & WHITE EDITION: A COMPREHENSIVE CHARACTER COLLECTION RETRO COMIC REPRINTS #380 RETRO COMIC REPRINTS #380 in Franklin, TN
Current price: $31.99

Barnes and Noble
THE CLOCK STRIKES BLACK & WHITE EDITION: A COMPREHENSIVE CHARACTER COLLECTION RETRO COMIC REPRINTS #380 RETRO COMIC REPRINTS #380 in Franklin, TN
Current price: $31.99
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Size: OS
THE CLOCK is acknowledged as the first masked hero of comic books (1936). His secret identity is Brian
O'Brien, a wealthy man of means. He fought against gangsters and dope dealers, murderers and thieves. He started in Funny Pages #6, and enjoyed runs in Feature Funnies (later Feature Comics) and
Crack Comics. He was an outlaw of sorts, a Robin Hood who sometimes kept the money from a case to aid the poor, with his justifications written out in a letter to the police; he also often let the crooks and the police know exactly when he, THE CLOCK, would strike. Resourceful and inventive, his stories were always something different from the mainstream.
The stories in this collection were harvested from Centaur Publications FUNNY PAGES #6-11, FUNNY
PICTURE STORIES #1 &2 and DETECTIVE PICTURE STORIES #2 & 5. Centaur publications sold the rights of the Clock to Quality Comics in 1940. The Clock's adventures were then continued in Quality's FEATURE
FUNNIES (which had a name change to FEATURE COMICS ) from issues #3 to 31 and then ultimately in
CRACK COMICS from issue #1 to 35 which are also included in this collection . The Clock survived two companies and five titles before his time in the Golden Age of comics ran out.
We use the best scans readily available but because these stories come from a multitude of old issues and different sources, the quality of the images is not consistent.
O'Brien, a wealthy man of means. He fought against gangsters and dope dealers, murderers and thieves. He started in Funny Pages #6, and enjoyed runs in Feature Funnies (later Feature Comics) and
Crack Comics. He was an outlaw of sorts, a Robin Hood who sometimes kept the money from a case to aid the poor, with his justifications written out in a letter to the police; he also often let the crooks and the police know exactly when he, THE CLOCK, would strike. Resourceful and inventive, his stories were always something different from the mainstream.
The stories in this collection were harvested from Centaur Publications FUNNY PAGES #6-11, FUNNY
PICTURE STORIES #1 &2 and DETECTIVE PICTURE STORIES #2 & 5. Centaur publications sold the rights of the Clock to Quality Comics in 1940. The Clock's adventures were then continued in Quality's FEATURE
FUNNIES (which had a name change to FEATURE COMICS ) from issues #3 to 31 and then ultimately in
CRACK COMICS from issue #1 to 35 which are also included in this collection . The Clock survived two companies and five titles before his time in the Golden Age of comics ran out.
We use the best scans readily available but because these stories come from a multitude of old issues and different sources, the quality of the images is not consistent.
THE CLOCK is acknowledged as the first masked hero of comic books (1936). His secret identity is Brian
O'Brien, a wealthy man of means. He fought against gangsters and dope dealers, murderers and thieves. He started in Funny Pages #6, and enjoyed runs in Feature Funnies (later Feature Comics) and
Crack Comics. He was an outlaw of sorts, a Robin Hood who sometimes kept the money from a case to aid the poor, with his justifications written out in a letter to the police; he also often let the crooks and the police know exactly when he, THE CLOCK, would strike. Resourceful and inventive, his stories were always something different from the mainstream.
The stories in this collection were harvested from Centaur Publications FUNNY PAGES #6-11, FUNNY
PICTURE STORIES #1 &2 and DETECTIVE PICTURE STORIES #2 & 5. Centaur publications sold the rights of the Clock to Quality Comics in 1940. The Clock's adventures were then continued in Quality's FEATURE
FUNNIES (which had a name change to FEATURE COMICS ) from issues #3 to 31 and then ultimately in
CRACK COMICS from issue #1 to 35 which are also included in this collection . The Clock survived two companies and five titles before his time in the Golden Age of comics ran out.
We use the best scans readily available but because these stories come from a multitude of old issues and different sources, the quality of the images is not consistent.
O'Brien, a wealthy man of means. He fought against gangsters and dope dealers, murderers and thieves. He started in Funny Pages #6, and enjoyed runs in Feature Funnies (later Feature Comics) and
Crack Comics. He was an outlaw of sorts, a Robin Hood who sometimes kept the money from a case to aid the poor, with his justifications written out in a letter to the police; he also often let the crooks and the police know exactly when he, THE CLOCK, would strike. Resourceful and inventive, his stories were always something different from the mainstream.
The stories in this collection were harvested from Centaur Publications FUNNY PAGES #6-11, FUNNY
PICTURE STORIES #1 &2 and DETECTIVE PICTURE STORIES #2 & 5. Centaur publications sold the rights of the Clock to Quality Comics in 1940. The Clock's adventures were then continued in Quality's FEATURE
FUNNIES (which had a name change to FEATURE COMICS ) from issues #3 to 31 and then ultimately in
CRACK COMICS from issue #1 to 35 which are also included in this collection . The Clock survived two companies and five titles before his time in the Golden Age of comics ran out.
We use the best scans readily available but because these stories come from a multitude of old issues and different sources, the quality of the images is not consistent.

















