Showing posts with label Tales to Astonish. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tales to Astonish. Show all posts

Tales to Astonish #42 (Ant-Man), "The Voice of Doom!"

TALES TO ASTONISH #42; April 1963; published by Vista Publications Inc.; (yeah, it's a Marvel comic, but the "Marvel Comics Group" name and cover symbol wouldn't show up on ASTONISH until the next issue); Stan Lee, editor; cover-featuring Ant-Man versus "The Man With the Voice of Doom!"  On the cover by Jack Kirby, Ant-Man steps backwards off the edge of a pier, at the command of a burly fellow with a beard and top hat; "Ant-Man, you cannot help yourself! Do as I command!  Plunge to your doom-- NOW!"  Some civilian bystanders are dashing up in support of the bad guy, and Ant-Man himself mutters despairingly; ""Too late to save myself!! I MUST obey his orders... although it means the end of Ant-Man!"


Review by Bill Henley.  As a diehard fan of Henry Pym aka Ant-Man, Giant-Man, Goliath, Yellowjacket etc.etc.etc., I own most of the original issues of his ASTONISH run.  But recently I picked up a cheap copy of Marvel's ESSENTIAL ANT-MAN collection, which contains in convenient form, albeit black & white, the entire Ant-Man and Giant-Man series.  Upon leafing through the book, I took a notion to review this story, and pulled out the actual comic so I can include the backup stories.

"He called it 'The Voice of Truth', but to ANT-MAN!,  it turned out to be 'the VOICE of DOOM!"  Per the credits, the story is plotted by Stan Lee, scripted by Larry Lieber, drawn by Don Heck (who had taken over the Ant-Man art assignment from Jack Kirby-- something which I don't imagine enhanced the feature's popularity).  At this point, Ant-Man is still a solo act.  The Wasp would make her debut two issues later, in ASTONISH #44.  The splash page is a prelude to the cover scene, with the wielder of the Voice of Doom commanding a despondent-looking, helmet-less Ant-Man to "go to the edge of the pier, fall in the water, and drown--DROWN!" The ordinary citizens on the scene are complaining, "It's about time that horrid little villain was punished!", and, "He's a sinister menace!  We'll all be safer with him gone!"  They're not talking about the Man with the Voice of Doom, but about Ant-Man!

Who is this man?  On the next page we are introduced to him as Jason Cragg, a fellow which appears to be a "harmless oddball" but is in reality "THE MOST DANGEROUS MORTAL ON EARTH!"  Dressed in an old-fashioned suit and top hat, and sporting a bushy beard and mustache, he mounts a soap box in the midst of a city street in order to make a speech.  The bystanders laugh and wonder what he's selling-- "It's a cinch it's not RAZOR BLADES!"  But the laughter stopps when Jason Cragg begins his oration; "Listen to me!  Hear my words!  I, Jason Cragg, speak truth!  TRUTH!"  And his audience is placed in a credulous trance; "Never have I heard such a SINCERE voice!  He's on the level!  I KNOW he is!"  But one man in the vicinity is not swayed.  He is Ant-Man!  "My helmet must in some way filter out the hypnotic element in his voice!"  But then, Cragg's pitch to the crowd takes an unexpected turn.  ""HEED ME!  The Ant-Man is a sinister villain who must be driven from our city!"  From the crowd, "I HEAR! I BELIEVE!  Jason Cragg speaks the truth!  The Ant-Man is a menace to our city!"  Ant-Man (who lacks the experience his fellow arthropod Spider-Man will soon gain, of facing public scorn) is horrified but baffled as to how this man can turn the masses against him "without logic or evidence".

The scene shifts to a few weeks earlier, and we are introduced to Jason Cragg as an aspiring radio announcer "who just didn't have what it takes!"  His commercial pitches for "Peppo Dog Food, the food for discriminating dogs," go over like a "wet sponge," and he is on the verge of being fired when an accident at a "nearby stomic experimental laboratory" (could it be the same one that had a spider crawling around a little while earlier?)  occurs.  The reactor has a brief radioactive overload, but the scientists think they have damped it down in time.  Unknown to them, however, "by a million-to-one accident, a tiny stream of electrified particle-ionized atoms did escape, and were picked up by Jason Cragg's microphone, where they were amplified, and..." Jason Cragg becomes... The Amazing Microphone-Man!  Well, not exactly, but he does have a "strange feeling" and then start giving his radio pitch in a new and "unnatural" tone.  And now his pitch for Peppo Dog Food is so convincing that customers flock from their homes to buy the stuff.  One customer declares, "We don't even have a DOG, but we can eat it OURSELVES!"  

The makers of Peppo are delighted with their 300% rise in sales, and they offer Jason Cragg a raise in pay, but instead, he quits!  "But you can't quit!  We NEED you!"  "Of COURSE you do!  But I don't need YOU!  As a matter of fact, with my fabulous new vocal power, I need never work again!"  He begins wandering around, using the power of his voice to persuade people to give him whatever he wants, from subway rides to steak dinners.  He grows a bushy beard and adopts an archaic outfit befitting "the flamboyant appearance of an orator".  But one day on the street, he is upstaged by someoe who is even more flamboyant in appearance than he (though harder to spot).  The Ant-Man makes an apperance to capture a couple of crooks, with the help of his swarms of obedient ants.  The cops on the scene and the civilian bystanders are all impressed; "You did a terrific job!   Thanks, Ant-Man!"  "The way he commands those ants thru his cybernetic helmet-- it's terrific!"  (I noticed in rereading these stories in the ESSENTIAL book that the early Ant-Man stories make quite a big deal of what a highly admired public hero Ant-Man is.  I have to surmise that this was Stan and Larry's attempt to convince the reader that this tiny-sized hero, with a rather goofy modus operandi, was nonetheless a big-time hero whose adventures were worth following.  As I've noted in reviews of Archie's THE FLY, that comic also tried to depict the Fly as the idol of millions despite his origins as the avatar of an annoying nuisance.)

Upon observing how Ant-Man is "respected by the police" (and) "loved by the people," Jason Cragg seems to get an attack of hubris, or perhaps jealousy.  "If I can defeat HIM, then I can defeat ANYONE!  I must test my mettle against Ant-Man!"  (Well, no, Jason, you don't must.  If you had more sense, you'd go on your way and stay out of Ant-Man's way.  If you get tired of cadging stuff from random people, you could "persuade" an aging billionaire to bequeath you his wealth, thereby insuring that you would be set for life even if your voice power goes away.  You could go into politics.  You could do lots of things besides taking on a costumed superhero just to prove you can.  But like so many other comic-book villains, Jason Cragg has a rackless urge to fight the hero rather than finding safer ways to parlay his power into wealth and fame.)

And so,, Cragg begins using his radioactive larynx to badmouth Ant-Man.  "He pretends to be your friend, but he secretly despises you, as he does ALL who are normal-sized!  He catches criminals only to DECEIVE you... to keep you from suspecting that HE HIMSELF is the worst of all criminals!"  As Ant-Man is receiving a service award in a police station, Cragg barges in and shouts, "What mockery-- to honor a base villain!  Instead, the Ant-Man should be ARRESTED!"  And under the irresistible influence of Cragg's voice, the cops indeed call for Ant-Man's arrest, despite the lack of any criminal evidence against him.  Our hero is forced to use a rubber band to fling himself out of a window to where his loyal ants have converged to grant him a soft landing.  (Good thing THEY aren't affected by Cragg's voice.  Do ants even have hearing, anyway?)  Ant-Man hitches a ride on a kid's roller skate and attempts to escape into the city crowds, planning to reach his lab and resume his full-sized identity as Henry Pym, who can look for an antidote to Cragg's "awesome power".    But Cragg sets not only the police, but vigilante mobs of citizens, on Ant-Man's trail!  Some of the hunters complain that it's like looking for a needle in a haystack, but, as Ant-Man attempts to escape through a park where tall grass hides his tiny form, Cragg comes up with a new plan.  He orders his minions to equip themselves with hand-held magnets, capable of attracting and scooping up his metal cybernetic helmet!  Ant-Man's only chance is to remove and discard the helmet, even though he will be left without his ability to contact the ants.

And he has another new vulnerability as well.  After the searchers find the tiny helmet, Cragg realizes, "Without (his helmet), he's vulnerable to something far stronger than magnetism-- MY VOICE!"  "Ant-Man, wherever you are hiding, heed my words!  I Jason Cragg, command you to reveal yourself!  Come out of hiding!  You cannot resist my enchanted voice!  I am your master!"  And though our hero tries to shut out the sound, he is unable to do so,   Ant-Man comes into sight and declares, "Here I am!  I can resist no longer!"  Jason Cragg is determined not only to defeat and humiliate the Ant-Man but to destroy him as well.  And so he orders Ant-Man to walk to a nearby pier, dive into the river and drown, making no attempt to swim or save himself!  In a procession to the pier, Ant-Man and a gloating Cragg are accompanied by citizens who are also delighted with our hero's fate; "He pretended to be our friend, but he was a loathsome little criminal!  And he'd still be deceiving us now if not for Jason Cragg!"  (This is really another variation on the old business of the comic-book villain placing the hero in an "inescapable" trap rather than just killing him while he has the chance.  If Cragg wanted Ant-Man dead, he could easily step on him or pick him up and squish him with his fingers.  Is Cragg too squeamish to do that?  Does he fear that an overt act of murder might revolt the crowd enough to counteract the effect of his voice?) 

And so, Ant-Man reaches the end of the pier and leaps off; ""So powerful is Jason's spell, that it overcomes even the Ant-Man's basic instinct to survive!"  Fortunately, the hostile, entranced crowd of humans have not been the only witnesses to Ant-Man's march to doom!  As he sinks in the water, he is gripped by "a powerful pair of mandibles" and a stream of ants, loyal to him even without the cybernetic impulses from his helmet, carry him to safety!  An enraged Cragg spots the ants screams for his voice-slaves to catch and destroy the Ant-Man, but the ants succeed in carrying their leader safely into hiding before the mob can reach them.  As the effect of Cragg's voice on Ant-Man wears off, he "wends his way through sewers and underground tunnels" until he reaches the secret entrance to Henry Pym's lab. 

Cragg is still determined to find and destroy the Ant-Man, who he figures is being hidden by "someone who has not yet heard my all-powerful voice!"  And so, Cragg makes arrangements to be heard on a city-wide TV hookup so that the entire city will become his slaves!  But this fits right in to the plan being developed by Henry Pym!  (In  a thought balloon, our hero reflects that "none suspects that the colorless scientist, Henry Pym, is also the fugitive Ant-Man!"  An interesting on-panel admission that Pym was a distinctly "colorless" character compared to the lively personalities of the other emerging Marvel stars.  Soon, Stan Lee would try to remedy this by introducing the Wasp and making the sobersided Henry Pym a foil for her bubbly, seemingly airheaded persona.)  Ant-Man reaches the TV studio first and makes certain preparation for Cragg's anti-Ant-Man speech!  As Cragg prepares to make his speech, Ant-Man (now protected from Cragg's voice by his helmet) warns Cragg that his ants have put in place a pistol that is aimed directly at him!  Cragg will be shot unless he recants his denunciation of the Ant-Man!  Cragg sneers that "whatever I say now, I can contradict LATER ON!"  but he complies and tells the crowd, "Listen, my friends!  I have made a serious error!  I MISJUDGED the Ant-Man!  He's an honest, law-abiding citizen, worthy of your respect and admiration!" 

As "the voice of truth" persuades the hostile hordes to rejoin the Ant-Man fan club, our hero confesses to Cragg that the gun aimed at him is unloaded!  Enraged at having been tricked, Cragg starts to deliver an even more vitriolic speech against the insect crusader, but finds that his voice is halting and has lost its hypnotic quality!  Why?  "Before you got here, I covered that microphone with MICROBES... microbes that cause LARYNGITIS!"  Ant-Man timed it so that Cragg would have just enough time to undo his spell before losing his voice and his power.  Unwilling to give up, Cragg croaks and gasps, "The Ant-Man is EVIL!  He must be destroyed!  Believe the voice of truth!"  But the only response he gets from the crowd is, "What are you, some kind of NUT, or something?  You can't make speeches inciting people to violence here!"  "Run the bum out of town!"  And that is just what happens.  As Jason Cragg stumbles away, he regretfully reflects "The Ant-Man has defeated me!  Even when I REGAIN my voice, the chances are a million-to-one against it ever again having the same hypnotic quality!"  And watching him go, the Ant-Man reflects in turn, "He had a great power!  He might have done so much GOOD with it!"  (Really?  Frankly, Pym, the idea of a man having the power to override the free will of others sounds creepy and dangerous to me, even if he's trying to do good with it.  Maybe even ESPECIALLY if he's trying to do good with it, depending of what his idea of "the good" is.)  "But instead, he made the wrong choice!  And now, his power, his Voice of Doom, is stilled forever!"  (Apparently it was.  I don't recall Jason Cragg ever making a return appearance.  Though a while later, DAREDEVIL #4 introduced a villain called Killgrave the Purple Man who had similar mind-controlling abilities.) 

At this point, ASTONISH featured two short non-series fantasy stories to back up the main superhero feature.  The first of these in this issue is, "The Eyes of the Mummy!", plotted by Stan Lee,  scripted by Larry Lieber and drawn (pencils and inks) by Joe Sinnott, some time before Sinnott became a Marvel mainstay inking FANTASTIC FOUR and other titles.  This is the story of one Harry Craig, a man who, unknown to his doting mother and loyal girlfriend, is a crook!  And his latest target for robbery is a valuable jeweled amulet hanging on the neck of the mummy of Egyptian Pharaoh Tut-Am-Tut, on display in the Natural History Museum.  Harry, along with other onlookers, wonders why such a valuable object is on display without any guards or special precautions against theft.  A museum guide explains; "The gem has been taken many times... but it doesn't matter, for it's always been RETURNED!"   Harry's thought; "Yeah? Well, I"m sure not gonna return it!  When I cop something, it's for KEEPS!"  He concludes that the other thieves "couldn't get rid of such a hot item," but he has his "connections" and is sure of finding a "fence" who will buy even a famous gem from him!  And so, that very night, he sneaks into the museum and grabs the gem without diffficulty.

At least not until afterwards, when every person he sees on the street wears the grim, staring face of the Egyptian mummy!  Even his girlfriend and his mother have the dreaded face of Tut-Am-Tut!   Harry concludes that the gem carries a curse and that he must get rid of it.  But even after he tosses the jewel in a trash can, he still sees the mummy everywhere.  His only hope is to return the stolen gem to its owner, the mummy Pharaoh, and this is what he does--  after which the people around him are back to normal.  He vows not only to leave the mummy's gem alone but to go straight from now on.  But does the mummy really carry a supernatural curse?  No, says the museum guide to a new crowd of onlookers; but ""When anyone takes the amulet, they come within the range of the mummy's eyes... and Tut-Am-Tut was the greatest HYPNOTIST of ancient Egypt!"

The issue of ASTONISH closes out with one of the atmospheric little fantasies written by Stan Lee and drawn by Steve Ditko which had been the stock in trade of the short-lived AMAZING ADULT FANTASY.  This one is, "I Am Not Human!"  The splash page shows an otherwise normal looking man tearing apart his clothing to reveal a metallic, robotic chestplate!  ""What really is a human being?  I HAD to learn the answer!  And I did learn part of the answer... the HARD way!"  This is the story of Robot E-1... E for "Experimental".  "I have been masquerading as a human being... but my masquerade is ended!  The game is over!  And now, before I pay the price, let me tell you the whole story, while I still can!"  It seems that E-1 is the recent creation of an unnamed scientist who has built him to be able to do almost everything that a human can do-- "speak, move, and THINK!"  But nonetheless, the scientist warns, "You are NOT human!  You are only a robot!"  But E-1 wonders, since he is shaped like a human and can do the things humans do, ""Why should I not BE a human?"  And so one night, while his creator is sleeping, E-1 devises for himself a humanoid rubber mask, dons clothing, and goes forth to live the life of a human being!

Having already learned that human beings need jobs to survive, E-1 obtains one, though his employers are reluctant to employ a stranger without references.  He does his best on the job, working without rest as his robot nature allows, but this causes suspicion and hostility among his co-workers, who think he is trying to win a promotion and "make everyone think you're better than the REST of us!"   E-1 quits the job and discovers more disillusioning aspects to human life, as he wanders among men and women.  He watches them bicker with each other and treat each other badly, and hears news reports about "crime, war, poverty and disease"!  He is increasingly baffled by the species he seeks to join.  "They occupy this beautiful, rich, fertile planet, with birds and flowers and other wonderful living things!  And they have the greatest of all gifts-- the gift of LIFE!  But they do so little WITH that gift!  So little that is worth while1  They worry, and struggle, and try to out-do each other!  What is WRONG with the human race?"

Disgusted, E-1 tears off his humanoid mask.  "Whatever is wrong with them... I no longer want to be part of that madness!"  Without his human disguise, he is soon spotted by the scientist who created him and escorted back to servitude in the lab.  "You should have known that NO robot can ever be the equal of a human being!"  "Has the thought never occurred to you, my friend... that perhaps no robot would ever WANT to be!"

Tales To Astonish #23: "The Voice From Nowhere!"

Tales To Astonish #23
"The Voice From Nowhere!"
September, 1961

Story: Unknown
Art: Steve Ditko

He had heard the voice from nowhere asking to be saved, but he had to
hurry or else it would die.

In a future time, a rocketship suddenly experiences motor trouble, and
begins to lose its power.  Unable to make it to Earth, the pilot takes a
chance on an emergency landing, and make repairs.  The closest world is
several light years away, but with luck, he soon spots a deserted
asteroid.  After landing, the pilot finds that there is a breathable
atmosphere, and grabs his repair kit.  With luck, he should be gone
before nighttime.  The pilot has found the trouble, a leak in a rocket
tube, and begins the simple repair job.  It is then that he hears the
voice from nowhere... "HELP ME, HUMAN!"

The pilot isn't sure what he's just heard, but the sound is heard once
more.  "HELP ME, HUMAN!"  The cry for help has come to him here in deep
space.  "WHY DO YOU NOT ANSWER?"  Not knowing who to answer, he begins to
search the asteroid, and finds it to be completely deserted.  After
covering every foot and finding no one hanging over the edge, the pilot
is sure of it.  "HELP!  PLEASE..."  He hears the voice from nowhere
again, and wonders if he's -- going mad?

When the pilot asks to see the troubled soul, he hears "I AM RIGHT HERE!"
When he asks where is "here", this is what the voice from nowhere would
like to know.  He is lost... hungry... cold.  When the pilot asks if he's
invisible, the voice insists that he is indeed visible, and can be seen.
Having heard enough, he heads for his ship, but stops when he hears the
voice asking him not to be left alone.  When asked where he is from, the
voice says that it's from the Fourth Galaxy.  The pilot knows where the
Fourth Galaxy is located, and points towards its direction.  "YOU HAVE
SAVED ME, HUMAN!" 

"NOW, I CAN RETURN HOME!"  With his ship repaired, the pilot can also
return to his home.  Even at the controls of his ship, he can still hear
the spine-chilling voice.  He wonders if it was a dream, or if the
atmosphere had affected him.  The pilot suddenly realizes what it must
have been...  There had been something alive out there with him, and he
had seen it -- he had.  The pilot had believed it to be only an asteroid.
"FAREWELL, HUMAN!"  Who can say what form of life may exist in a dark
corner of the universe?

This story was reprinted in Monsters On The Prowl &14 (December, 1971).

On the splash page, the pink exhaust from the rocketship passes through
the purple pants of the green-shirted pilot, with the startled human
paying attention to the voice from nowhere.

The pink rocket exhaust looks like an mystical force rather than a
mechanical one.

The pilot resembles an adult Peter Parker, who is fairly adept in the art
of rocket repair.

The floating asteroid resembles a combination of rock with the properties
of melting wax at the edges.

The final panel on the second and third page of the story focuses on the
upper portion of the startled pilot's face.

In pointing the way towards the Fourth Galaxy, the startled human makes
reference to Vegas... not to be confused with Las Vegas.

Even in the future, where men can pilot ships between galaxies, there are
still sights which can excite and chill the blood.

Steve Chung
"The Review From Nowhere!"

Tales To Astonish #25: "The Gypsy's Revenge!"

Tales To Astonish #25
"The Gypsy's Revenge!"
November, 1961

Story: Unknown
Art: Don Heck

There are those who are crime-victims... and there are others who are
criminals.  As the storekeeper keeps his hands up, Monk Morgan tells him
to take it easy next time, and not work so hard for the money.  By the
age of thirty, Morgan had been in and out of jail several times.  His
latest stint was over, but the authorities knew that they'd be seeing him
again.  Not in the mood for lectures, Monk wants his own clothes back,
and leave.  Now back on the outside, he travels to Europe, and spends the
time thinking up new angles to try out.  During his walk, Monk overhears
two boys arguing about whether or not the old gypsy has a lot of jewels
at his home.  After asking the two kids where the old gypsy lives, Monk
Morgan heads towards the forest.

Since he's an old man, the gypsy shouldn't be too difficult to rob.  By
the looks of the place, Morgan doesn't expect to find much of anything
inside.  After a thorough search, he finds the jewels inside a chest.
Knowing that they must be worth a fortune, Monk Morgan is convinced that
he's struck it rich.  The old gypsy appears and discovers the intruder
within his own home.  The jewels are his most valuable possessions, and
when Morgan insists on taking them, the gypsy vows to place a curse upon
him.  As he laughs at the old man's threat, the gypsy insists that he
does possess the power to do such a thing.

Monk Morgan grabs the old man by the front of his shirt, and delivers a
hard slap to his jaw.  As he carries the chest of jewels beneath one arm,
Monk takes one last look at the fallen gypsy, and heads for the airport.
On the flight back, he plans to cash in the jewels, and live the easy
life from now on.  After arriving back in the states, he heads for a
carnival, and decides to have his fortune told.  Monk Morgan would like
to know what the future holds for him, and the fortune teller bids him to
take a seat.  The crystal ball shows that the future look dark for him.

He has seen Monk Morgan committing a crime... he has stolen some
jewels... and he must pay for his misdeed.  There must be something wrong
with the fortune reading.  How could a carnival fortune teller know so
much about what he's done?  The evil man must pay for his many crimes,
and Monk Morgan's name is uttered by the fortune teller himself.  When he
tries to leave the tent, he sees that the outside world has disappeared.
There is nothing out there now.  Nothing at all.  If he should leave the
tent now, he would fall to his death, and now he must stay... and meet
his destiny.  Monk Morgan sees the old gypsy getting closer, and knows
that somehow... the old man will be able to harm him.

This story was reprinted in Monsters On The Prowl #14 (December, 1971).

On the splash page, the gypsy's revenge engulfs Monk Morgan within its
foggy embrace.

Monk Morgan looks like a chain-smoking Jimmy Olsen, whose hair color
changes from red to blond.

After trading in his Jimbo ensemble for a stint in prison, Morgan now
wears a tuxedo and bowtie on the outside world.

The unnamed European village has its children wearing clothing in the
style of Hans Christian Anderson.

Although the old gypsy's home is located near the forest, Monk Morgan
doesn't need a trail of bread crumbs to find it.

The old man may have a glass jaw, but his crystal-gazing is on the ball.

The jewel thief finds himself in a most unfriendly neighborhood, with the
fortune teller as one tough landlord.

Steve Chung
"The Gypsy's Review!"

Tales To Astonish #32: "The Girl In The Black Hood!"

Tales To Astonish #32
"The Girl In The Black Hood!"
June, 1962

Script: Larry Lieber
Art: Don Heck

The photographer was famous and wealthy.  She also kept a secret and was
known as "The Girl In The Black Hood!"

The time is the Roaring Twenties, with the photographs all that remain of
the girl named May Dusa.  Her photos were in display in a museum, with
one particular shot winning her first prize.  Those who have come to see
the exhibit can sense the fine, sensitive nature of her work.  The male
visitors wonder why the photographer never lets her face be seen, and
they also wonder if the eccentric's face matches her flawless figure.
Among those at the gathering is one with robbery on his mind, and he can
see that the photographer must be rich.  A caper with no risk is the type
he prefers.  The criminal makes an appointment to have his picture taken,
and the sitting is set for 3 P.M next Tuesday.

"Mr. Jones" is eager to grab the money and see what her face looks like.
The door is open, the room is empty, and he is able to search for a
hidden safe.  "Jones" finds it behind a picture frame, eyes the safe, and
knows that he could unlock it with his eyes shut.  The photographer's
voice calls out to him, and "Mr. Jones" is ready to for his appointment.

She is ready to take his portrait, but the client is not ready to have
his picture taken.  He has come to rob her, and leave no witnesses.
"Jones" orders her to come out from behind the camera, but the girl
photographer refuses.  He can take the money, she won't call the police,
but she won't remove the black hood.  Now he is really curious to see
what she looks like, and by the count of three, his gun will go off.
One...Two... Three...  "Mr. Jones" is about to get his wish.

If he has come to see her face, then he shall.  "Jones" gasps only once,
after taking a good long look at her.  All is now silent in the studio
belonging to May Dusa.  If his lips were still able to move, "Mr. Jones"
might be able to say her name a bit faster... Medusa!

This story was reprinted in Giant-Size Dracula #2 (September, 1974).

I do enjoy the splash pages for these short stories, with the girl about
to remove the black hood, and the gun pointed at her.

One of the visitors at the exhibition resembles the late Joseph Stalin.

If this story had been a live-action episode, I would have cast J.D.
Cannon ("McCloud") as "Mr. Jones."

For the part of May Dusa, I would have picked Leslie Parrish ("The
Manchurian Candidate") to play her.

The would-be robber should have resisted the temptation to watch this
particular birdie.

Even with the nest of snakes on her head, May Dusa is as pretty as a
picture.

Steve Chung
"The Review In The Black Hood!"

Tales To Astonish #15: "I Am The Invisible!"

Tales To Astonish #15
"I Am The Invisible!"
January, 1961

Script: STAN LEE (?)
Art: STEVE DITKO

Yes, he, and he alone, was... The Invisible!!  But there's more to his
story than meets the eye...

Professor Karlos Konak seeks the secret of invisibility, and with it, he
hopes to become rule of the entire world.  After suffering another
failure in his laboratory, an assistant mentions that only Zuka, the
witch, can render herself invisible.  Reminding the villager that he was
hired to clean test tubes, Konak reluctantly listens as the man tells his
story.  Zuka had been driven out by the villagers and now resides on
Black Thunder Mountain.  The professor remembers the strange stories
about Zuka, and wants the villager to take him to her.  The assistant is
in fear of the witch's magic, but his fear of Karlos Konak is even
greater.  Time passes, with the professor arriving at the foot of Black
Thunder Mountain, and the frightened villager taking his hurried leave.

Entering the hovel, Konak sees an elderly woman working by candlelight.
Zuka knows the secret of invisibility, but it is not for the likes of
him.  Having come far for the discovery, the professor is not about to
leave, and threatens to level Zuka's humble abode with fire.  Even so,
she insists that no one would want to suffer such a dreadful fate.  The
witch shows Konak the two lenses which when spaced properly, they will
cause an ray of invisibility.  By reversing the lens, the subject regains
visibility.  Despite Zuka's warnings, Professor Karlos Konak takes the
lenses, and dreams of the day when he will become king.

Back at his laboratory, the professor has created a crude projector.  The
ray is tested on a caged cat, which vanishes, but is still heard even
though it is unseen.  Everything which comes in contact with the ray
becomes invisible.  When the lenses are reversed, the objects reappear
accordingly.  The moment has come for Karlos Konak to step into the ray,
and scoff  at Zuka's warning.

The professor is now almost completely invisible.  Another moment, and...
Karlos Konak discovers his fateful mistake.  He hadn't expected anything
like this, and admits to being a blind fool.  How will he be able to
regain visibility once more?  How will he be able to reverse the special
lenses?  Konak hadn't realized one thing.  The one thing that Zuka had
tried to tell him --  While he is invisible to the eyes of others -- so
are they invisible to him.

This story was reprinted in Chamber Of Darkness #8 (December, 1970).

On the splash page, Zuka  gestures, and Karlos Konak sees that his legs
have begun to vanish into thin air.

Invisibility is one of the powers realized by the Fantastic Four.

Alliterative names are popular in the Marvel Universe, such as Bruce
Banner and Peter Parker.  Interestingly, it is Stan Lee who favors
alliterative names, while his brother, Larry Lieber chooses
non-alliterative names.

Where science has failed him, Karlos Konak goes off in search of magic.

The witch is far from malevolent and actually tries to warn the professor
about the danger of the lenses.

Devoted to magic, Zuka knows all too well about human nature.

Doctor Strange is the Master of the Mystic Arts.

A classic Ditko panel is realized when we see Karl Konak walking down the
mountain, and laughing as three raindrops fall onto the brim of his hat.

As a child would use cardboard and two mirrors to construct a periscope,
so does the professor use some wood, and the special lenses to create his
projector.

When exposed to the invisibility ray, the world of Professor Karl Konak
becomes an endless sea of white.

He is now the undisputed king of all he surveys.

Steve Chung
"I Am The Review!"

Tales To Astonish #51: "Somewhere Waits A Wobbow!"

Tales To Astonish #51
"Somewhere Waits A Wobbow!"
January, 1964

Story Plot: Stan Lee
Script And Art: Larry Lieber
Inking: G. Bell
Lettering: Artie Simek

When the Wasp is not battling super-villains alongside Giant-Man, she is
spending much of her time visiting veterans' hospitals and orphanages,
entertaining people with imaginary stories filled with fantasy as only
she can tell them. Today, the veterans learn that "Somewhere Waits A
Wobbow!" In the year 2000, Rack Morgan is a mercenary space pilot, and
for money he would do anything... and anyone. In order to deliver his
cargo early, Morgan must take an illegal shortcut through another
company's space lane. As he thinks about the big bonus, Rack sees that
there's an X-32 saucer ahead.

By veering quickly, the two spaceships narrowly avoid their collision
course. The crew of the X-32 recognize Rack Morgan's ship and know how
the mercenary doesn't care about the rules, just as long as he gets the
advantage. When Sam gets the Blake order, Morgan offers a toast to his
success. When the other pilot drinks, his head becomes dizzy, and the
knockout drops in his drink take hold. Now, while Sam sleeps, Rack is
able to head to the spaceport, and fly the Blake cargo himself.

Sooner or later, an evil person's deeds catches up with them, and so it
is with Rack Morgan. During his intergalactic trip, he spots the planet
Draconius. Those of Earth are forbidden to land their ships there
because it is inhabited by deadly creatures called Wobbows. His ship has
come upon a meteor shower, with the mercenary pilot swerving out of its
way. In doing so, Morgan gets a closer look at Draconius, and sees a
rocky terrain. He also sees chunks of gold laying out in the open.
Mindful of the Wobbows, Rack decides to explore the surrounding area, and
see if there's any danger present before he lands the ship.

No sign of life for miles on the planet. Morgan bets that the Wobbows
are something that the brass on Earth made up to keep folks from landing
on Draconius. Just think of it, thousands of Earthlings arriving to
steal the gold, flooding the market, and lowering its value on Earth. If
he were to land, he could take enough to be a rich man, and none would
ever suspect its origin. Rack Morgan defies space regulations by landing
on Draconius, and heads for the large chunks of gold. Any of them would
be worth millions of dollars back on Earth. Each chunk is heavy, but the
mercenary space pilot isn't complaining. Just one of them will be enough
to keep him in the lap of luxury for the rest of his life. Morgan's
spaceship lifts off from Draconius. He has disobeyed the rules and now
he's rich! Rich!! Rack Morgan's joy is short-lived when he hears a
strange sound, and turns around to find it coming from the gold he took
aboard.

The chunk of gold is changing shape and coming to life. Now he knows.
The Wobbows exist, but in disguise, and act as attractive bait to lure
their enemies. To a greedy, selfish mercenary like Rack Morgan, nothing
is more tempting than gold. And that was the last anyone ever heard of
the Earthling. Having finished her story, the Wasp must now change, and
takes one of her reducing capsules. As she flies away, one veteran asks
the other what he thought of her story. The other sheepishly admits that
with a doll like that in front of him, who can listen?!!

This story was reprinted in The Essential Astonishing Ant Man Vol. 1.

Woe is Rack Morgan when he tries to pick up his weight in gold.

When you drink to your own success, be careful that your cup doesn't
runneth over with knockout drops.

A Wobbow is a hairy, horned creature with pointed ears and sharp teeth.

Steve Chung
"Somewhere Waits A Review!"

Tales To Astonish #9: "No Way Out"

Tales To Astonish #9
"No Way Out"
May, 1960

Story: Unknown
Art: Steve Ditko

Man has traveled far, but no further. Why? What is the secret beyond
their reach? Why is there... "No Way Out"

The 21st Century, a time of space travel, where man has settled on nearby
planets, and the stars are yet beyond his reach. Another ship heads out
for the stars, but it may meet the same fate as the others, and fail to
break through the invisible barrier. Seated at the controls, the nervous
scientist thinks back, and remembers the events of a year ago. The star
ship was built to travel beyond their galaxy, out to the stars, and
towards the end of the universe. The ship was built to travel forever.
Man is now free to go wherever he chooses, unlike the fish in their bowl.
Since the initial flight would never end, a robot was selected to pilot
the star ship. The station was set to observe the robot's movements and
the starship's progress. The ship was beyond Pluto when it happened. It
slowed down, then stopped. All controls were in perfect working order,
and the station observers couldn't fathom why this happened.

The controls were not at fault. It was as if an invisible barrier kept
the starship from advancing any further. Once it returned to Earth,
another approach was tried. Other starships were sent, with some stopped
in their tracks, and others going up in flames when they struck the
unseen barrier. No more ships were sent. Mankind sought to learn the
secrets of the stars, but were defeated. Why?? Gigantic computers were
fed information from the earlier flights. The electronic brain sifted
through the data to come up with an answer. To the scientists' surprise,
there was absolutely nothing wrong with outer space. No reason for the
ships to be stopped in their tracks. But there was something out there,
stopping the starships, and could only be guessed at. A gathering of the
world's top scientists failed to crack the barrier. Instruments fail to
detect or measure it. Unless they discover what it is, man will have
reached a dead end. One scientist is determined to reach the end of the
universe. Another starship with a human being at the controls will be
sent. The scientist will personally pilot the starship. If there is a
barrier, he will destroy it... or it will destroy him.

Now at the controls of the last starship, Doctor Harris prepares to go
past the edge of outer space. The other scientists are monitoring his
progress when he reaches the barrier. The starship has stopped, despite
the atomic engines going at full blast. Special lenses and filters are
unable to see the barrier. No reaction detected on the instruments. It
is without mass and is just space. The scientist dons a space suit and
leaves the ship. He heads for the barrier. Harris is right up against
the barrier, but there's nothing there. The hydrogen drill can cut
through anything, but five bits have been worn out without denting the
barrier itself.

Back on the starship, the scientist uses a nuclear bomb on the barrier.
Forces greater than a thousand H-Bombs have been used, but the barrier
still stands. Harris has failed. Mankind will never break through the
barrier. Now on Earth, Doctor Harris has lost his confidence and
determination. He asks his wife why can't they go past that particular
point in outer space. It encircles them completely, as if some unseen
higher power were deliberately closing them off. Enclosed like -- like
-- Dr. and Mrs. Harris stare at the bowl. The fish are kept in there
for their own protection. What of mankind itself? With their weapons,
their wars, their foolhardiness, what if mankind is also being protected?
But -- by whom?

This story was reprinted in Where Monsters Dwell #34 (March, 1975).

A misattribution claims that the story first appeared in Astonishing
Tales #9.

On the splash page, Doctor Harris is seen battering the unseen barrier
with his bare fists.

The robot used to pilot the ship resembles the Living Brain from an early
issue of The Amazing Spider-Man.

The giant computer takes up an entire room and looks like it was designed
for either crossword puzzles or Keno.

The starship's exhaust resembles the magical effects used by Doctor
Strange in Strange Tales.

The Harris' have learned the hard way that the bowl game is over for
mankind.

Steve Chung
"No Review Out"

Tales to Astonish #44, "The Creature From Kosmos!"

TALES TO ASTONISH #44; June 1963; Marvel Comics; featuring the astonishing
Ant-Man and a new ally in battle against "The Creature From Kosmos!", a story
edited and plotted by Stan Lee, scripted by "H.E. Huntley" (a pseudonym, I
believe, for former Atlas Comics staffer Ernie Hart); pencilled by Jack Kirby and
inked by Don Heck. (And reviewed, here, by Bill Henley.)

On the cover by Kirby and Heck, Ant-Man is pulled from the grasp of a green,
globby monster by a figure then unfamiliar to readers, a young woman in a
costume similar to Ant-Man's but with the addition of insect wings sprouting from
her back. A blurb enclosed within an arrow pointing to her invites us, "Meet
the flying WASP, Ant-Man's gorgeous new partner-in-peril! " Just so we know
for sure who all the players are, another blurb announces, "ANT-MAN and the
THE WASP battle "' THE CREATURE FROM KOSMOS!!" (Yes, the letterer put in two
"the"s) And yet another blurb promises, "A Double-Length Ant-Man Super-Epic!"
(Hmmm... previous Ant-Man epics ran between 10 and 13 pages. This one has
18 pages. So, technically speaking, this is false advertising-- the story
would have to be at least 20 pages to be "double-length".)

The Ant-Man strip had been running not quite a year at this point (not
counting the one-shot sci-fi tale in ASTONISH #27 that introduced the non-costumed
Henry Pym). Stan Lee apparently thought the series was lagging in reader
interest (I had figured it was probably lagging in actual sales, but checking
circulation figures cited in the "Standard Catalog of Comic Books", I find that
ASTONISH at this time was at 189,300 copies an issue, right on par with the other
"ex-monster" superhero books, JOURNEY INTO MYSTERY, STRANGE TALES and TALES
OF SUSPENSE). Anyway, Stan pulled out the stops to give the insect crusader a
relaunch of sorts. He brought back Jack Kirby for an issue (Kirby had begun
the Ant-Man series and then handed it off after a few issues to Don Heck). He
put in a big green alien monster, just in case anyone was missing the kind of
creatures that were headlined in ASTONISH before Ant-Man came along. He added
some fillips to Ant-Man's origin and gave the previously rather dull and
sobersided Henry Pym a dose of character development and Marvel-style superhero
angst. And, most significantly, he gave Ant-Man something no other Marvel hero
of the period had, a costumed sidekick. (I was gong to say no other hero had
a sidekick, period, but then I remembered the Hulk and Rick Jones...) This
sidekick would not be a young boy liable to raise doubts among the evil-minded
about the hero's masculinity, however....

On the splash page, both Ant-Man and the Wasp (or should it be "the the
Wasp"?) are fleeing the grasp of the Creature from Kosmos, Wasp under her own
wing-power and Ant-Man astride a pair of his loyal ant steeds. A verbose opening
blurb promises us, in part, "You will learn here, for the first time, the
reason that Henry Pym BECAME the Ant-Man, the past that gnaws like a cancer at the
soul of this man, giving him no rest, driving him to the strangest adventures
any man has ever known! You will see him find a companion to aid in his
solitary fight against injustice, tyranny and crime, the companion who will become
known as...THE WASP!"

As this momentous tale begins, the Ant-Man returns to his lab following an
unspecified mission. Dismissing the "huge soldier ant" he has been riding, the
tiny hero releases his "growth gas" and resumes his normal size and his
identity as "the sceintist Henry Pym, a man driven to restlessness by bitter
memories!" Weary from his labors and suffering apparently a fit of depression, Pym
sinks into an armchair and muses, "I must always be alone! It is my fate!"
But his memories go back to a time when he was not alone, when he had a bride,
a beautiful woman of East European extraction named Maria Trovaya. The
newlywed Pyms had decided-- against Henry's better judgment-- to spend their
honeymoon in Hungary, a country then (in the real world as well as the Marvel
Universe) under dictatorial Communist rule. Henry worried that Maria might be
recognized as a refugee from Communism. But Maria wanted to revisit the scenes of
her childhood, and she was confident that the Communist authorities would not
make the connection between political prisoner Maria Trovaya and American
visitor Mrs. Henry Pym. Maria was at ease enough to make a mild joke with her
husband, who admitted he was glad to be with her rather than slaving away in his
science lab at home; "Ha! You are becoming a lazy husband! My father always
used to say 'Go to the ants, thou dullard!"' But you are not an industrious
ant, are you, my love?" Unfortunately, Maria was harboring a false sense of
security, and her bubble was popped when a secret-police thug pulled her into a
car while another trench-coated goon pistol-whipped Henry and leaves him
unconscious on the street. An hour later, Henry was at the American embassy,
waiting for officials to obtain word of his wife. Alas, when the word came it was
not good; Maria Pym nee Trovaya has been found dead, with a note warning
"this is what happens to those who attempt to escape from the Iron Curtain". To
compound the tragedy, it was learned that Red agents in America had murdered
Maria's father, a fellow refugee, by blowing up his science lab.

An enraged Henry Pym shrugged off promises of action by the American
government, vowing personal revenage; "I'll find the ones who did this! I'll make
them pay! I swear it!" But he lacked the power to make his vow good, and the
only result was that "The young scientist went berserk, and within a few days
landed in jail on the verge of a mental and physical breakdown!" He was releas
ed from the Hungarian jail by Ameican pressure, and sent home, but he found
no peace there, haunted by a chance saying of his lost wife; "I remember what
she said; "Go to the ants, thou sluggard!' [A Biblical proverb, I believe,
though I don't know chapter and verse.] Yes, she was right! I sit here doing
nothing while criminals prowl, injustice is rampant, tyranny tramples the
underdog!" And it was under this compulsion to imitate the lowly but industrious
ant and to do something to change the world, that Henry Pym invented his
shrinking and growth gases and adopted the costumed identity of the Ant-Man.

(This is clearly an early example of a retcon, since the original Henry Pym
story from ASTONISH #27 includes no suggestion that he has a mission of
vengeance or any motivation for his shrinking experiments besides a wish to impress
his fellow scientists with his genius. Moreover, in that story Pym's initial
reaction to a harrowing experience within an ant hill is to destroy his serums
and swear off wild adventures, not to turn his invention into a weapon against
evil and tyranny.

However, much later, after Henry Pym no longer had his own series and was a
supporting character in AVENGERS and elsewhere, later writers depicted him as a
man with a tendency toward mental instability and wild mood swings. Some
fans complained this was a case of latter-day "deconstuction" of a once noble and
stalwart hero. Here, however, we see the idea of Henry Pym as mentally and
emotionally unstable was planted within a year of his series' start. Even the
inconsistency between the first "Man in the Ant-Hill" story and this one could
be explained as Pym's bipolar or manic-depressive tendences playing
themselves out-- in depressive phase he gives up shrinking, when he returns to manic
phase he recreates the serum and becomes the costumed Ant-Man.)

Anyway, now Henry Pym begins obsessing with the idea that as a lone crusader
he is still not doing enough, that he needs a partner not only to watch his
back but to"carry on if some day I meet defeat and death!" He begins working
with cells of another type of insect, the wasp, to find a way to grant special
abilities to a potential partner. But who will that partner be? "Who could I
ever trust to know the secrets of the Ant-Man...know my TRUE IDENTITY?"
Seemingly not either of the pair of visitors who interrupt his work one day. Dr.
Vernon Van Dyne is a gray-haired fellow scientist, not the man of action
type. And tagging along is his daughter Janet. Henry Pym notes she has a
resemblance to his lost Maria "but she's much younger! Not much more than a CHILD!"
For her part, Janet Van Dyne thinks, "He's quite handsome! But scientists
are such bores! I prefer the ADVENTUROUS type, not those dull, intellectual
bookworms!" In any case, Dr. Van Dyne's errand is not to make a match for his
daughter, but to enlist the aid of eminent scientist Henry Pym in his own pet
project-- "a gamma-ray beam to pierce space and detect signals from other
planets!" However, Pym shows scant interest in the project, for it is outside of
his scientific specialty-- "My field is molecular cell transition and cell
specialization!" (This is a rare example of a comic-book writer showing awareness
that scientists have specialties and that being an expert in one scientific
field doesn't make one an expert in all. More commonly, a comic-book
"scientist"-- such as Reed Richards over at the Baxter Building-- is assumed to be a
polymath genius at everything from physics to chemistry to biology to astronomy.)

While Henry Pym returns to his experiments and his monitoring insect
communications for signs of trouble requiring the Ant-Man's aid, Dr. Van Dyne
continues with his own lone experimenting. And one day he finds success, but it is a
pyrrhic victory indeed. Traveling bodily across space by means of the
gamma-ray beam (which perhaps operates on similar principles to the Zeta-Beam or
Professor Erdel's robot brain teleportation beam, over at the DC universe) a
"vast, shapeless, viscous" life-form arrives in Dr. Van Dyne's lab. Like DC's
J'onn J'onzz, the visitor from the far planet Kosmos is green and amorphous of
shape. (Though Hulk fans may have wondered; did he start out green, or did the
"gamma-ray beam" turn him that color?) Unlike J'onn, this alien is no
friendly visitor. The Creature introduces himself with perverted pride as "The
greatest criminal Kosmos has ever seen!" He just missed managing to conquer his
homeworld and enslave its inhabitants. But now, Van Dyne's beam offers him a
second chance to conquer a world-- ours! One necessary precaution is to
destroy the teleportation beam, and the mind that created it, lest other Kosmosians
pursue their world's archcriminal. And so, the Creature hypnotically forces
Dr. Van Dyne to meet its baleful gaze. And some time later, when young Janet
checks in on her father at his lab, she encounters an "awful mist" which parts
to reveal a still more horrifying sight. Frantic for help, Janet takes it
into her head to call scientist Henry Pym rather than the police or medics. Pym
is initially skeptical; "These bored society playgirls are all alike! But
it's pretty gruesome for her to get her kicks by making up a horror story about
her father!" Considering some of the things Pym has already seen in his short
career as Ant-Man, he is hardly the one to discount bizarre "horror stories";
and a signal from his ant network makes clear that Janet's horrific tale is
no mere ploy for attention. He resolves to come to Janet's aid, not as Henry
Pym, but as Ant-Man. But when the mini-hero arrives at the Van Dyne lab,
nothing can help the elder Van Dyne, for he lies dead on his lab floor. And his
ray machine is wrecked; "but what kind of thing could twist and smash heavy
metal that way?" Janet Van Dyne is bowed by grief, made worse by the
realization that "I never showed [my father] how much I loved him! I thought it wasn't
sophisticated! Now I'll never have the chance! But there's one thing I can
do... AVENGE him!" And now Henry Pym sees in the distraught young woman a
kindred spirit; "The bored, flighty shell she wore is gone! She has determination,
strength of character! I wonder if SHE....?" Ant-Man directs Janet to put
in a call to Lee Kearns, Ant-Man's contact with the FBI, and then visit Henry
Pym at his lab. Leaving the Van Dyne lab, Ant-Man is puzzled to find his usual
swarm of attending ants gone. When he finds them, they explain that they are
afraid of the alien creature that visited that place-- even though it is
seemingly akin to the ants themselves, since the mist the alien left behind
contains traces of formic acid, a substance secreted by ants.

Back at his own lab, Henry Pym greets Janet Van Dyne, wearing a robe over
his Ant-Man costume. After satisfying himself that Janet's newfound thirst for
vengeance and justice matches his own, he reveals his secret identity to her.
"I put my LIFE in your hands! I tell you because I need a PARTNER... and I
have CHOSEN her! I am-- THE ANT-MAN!" If she is willing, Henry Pym will use
his experiments with wasp cells to give her abilities complementing his own,
and "I can make you a human wasp! ANT-MAN AND THE WASP!" "I say, YES!
Show me how and I will stand beside you always-- to avenge my father's death!
I swear it!" And so, Henry Pym proceeds to implant microscopic wasp cells in
Janet's body. cells that will give her abilities complementing his own.

Meanwhile, panic erupts as the Creature from Kosmos flows from under the
street to reveal its existence. Receiving alarms both from the ant world and the
FBI, Ant-Man directs Janet to don the Wasp costume he has made for her, and
for the first time she experiences the "weird" feeling of shrinking to the size
of an insect under the influence of Henry Pym's shrinking gas. And when she
does so, the wasp cells in her body develop into wings to bear her aloft and
antennae to put her in touch with the insect world. As his tiny catapult hurls
Ant-Man across the city, towards the George Washington Bridge which the Creatur
e is threatening to demolish, the Wasp keeps pace with him under her own
wing-power, and she declares the experience "exhilarating!" And then she reveals
another feeling; "Ant-Man, I think you're WONDERFUL! I want you to know...in
case this creatures kills us, as it did my father, I-I'm falling in love with
you!" But as they approach the chaotic scene of the Creature's attack,
Ant-Man rejects this romantic overture; "No! You mustn't say that! You're only a
child! I chose you as my partner because I thought you had a reason, as I have,
to fight for mankind! I never want to love again! I-- couldn't bear it if I
had to lose a loved one-- twice!" In the privacy of her thoughts, the Wasp
takes this rebuff as a challenge rather than a rejection; "So I'm only a
CHILD, am I! Well, Mister Ant-Man...we shall SEE!" And so, the Ant-Man faces the
murderous Creature From Kosmos with the aid of the Wasp-- but not that of his
faithful horde of ants, for they warn that "something about it prevents us
from approaching it!" Nor are the Army soldiers sent to attack the creature much
help; their modern weapons are of no use, and they risk being hypnotized and
destroyed by it if they even look into its eyes. Without further aid, Ant-Man
warns the Wasp, "we have hardly a chance!" Taking caution for timidity, the
angry Wasp leaps into battle against the creature on her own, only to be
caught in its deadly gaze and nearly drawn to her doom. Pulling the wayward Wasp
to safety just in time, Ant-Man rebukes her but also reassures her; "Don't you
try anything like that again! I didn't say I was quitting! I've just got to
find a WAY to fight that thing! And I think I've FOUND it now!" Back at his
lab, Ant-Man muses on the discovery the ants made earlier, that the Creature
is composed mainly of formic acid. And formic acid, used by "certain species
of ants to sting and kill enemies," has an antidote! Concocting that antidote,
Ant-Man directs the Wasp in filling 12-gauge shotgun shells with it. The
shotgun and box of shells are too big for the tiny Ant-Man and Wasp to carry to
the scene of the Creature's attack, so they recruit a swarm of ants to carry
them. (This seems like a situation where it might make sense for our heroes to
stay in normal size....) Climbing to the roof of a building and then ordering
the ants away to safety, Ant-Man prepares to attack the Creature while the
Wasp wonders how they can even pull the shotgun trigger in their tiny size.
Ant-Man explains, "You will find, as I have, that even though you are reduced in
size, you still retain much of the strength of a full-grown human!" Once,
twice, the antidote-filled shotgun shells are fired at the Creature...and though
it momentarily continues to advance, the Creature begins "falling
apart...wavering,..." and then vanishes from sight altogether. After a brief moment of
elation over his victory, Ant-Man assumes a stoic mask and chides his new
partner; "From now on you must not disply such emotion! It-- it isn't PROPER!" But
later at his lab Henry Pym, the Ant-Man, lets drop a hint of his true
feelings when he talks to FBI contact Lee Kearns on the phone and Kearns urges him to
form a more regular relationship with the agency; "Look, you can't keep on
doing it alone!" Looking with a smile at the Wasp, Pym replies, "I'm NOT going
it alone, Kearns...not anymore.... not ever again!" And the Wasp thinks, "No,
my darling! I will ALWAYS be beside you! And some day I will MAKE you
realize that you love me as I love you! But until that day comes, it will be as
you want it...just partners... the Ant-Man and the Wasp fighting side by side!"

And so it was, for the rest of the Ant-Man series (which in a few issues
became the Giant-Man series) and beyond. This story with its overtones of "I Led
Three Lives" anti-Communist paranoia and romantic tragedy only partly reflects
the later stories of Henry Pym and the Wasp, though. The Wasp quickly grew
back her "flighty shell", and though she remained clever and resolute
underneath, she put on something of an act of being airheaded, bubbly, and prone to see
superheroing mainly as an excuse to flirt with other heroes and even some of
the villains. In contrast with the soap-opera tones of many other Marvel
tales, the Ant-Man/Giant-Man series took on almost a romantic screwball comedy
vibe, with sobersided and ultra-serious Henry Pym serving as a foil for the
Wasp's antics. And yet, for all her outward flakiness, the Wasp fulfilled her
promise as a lifelong crusader against evil-- even after her partner's increasing
mental instablity broke them up as a couple and sidelined Henry Pym as a
hero. The Wasp became a charter member of the Avengers along with Ant-Man-- she
even coined the new group's name-- and she would continue to serve with the
group off and on up to the present, with and without Henry Pym, even taking a
term or two as leader.

The "double-length" Ant-Man adventure squeezed out one of the two non-series
fantasy stories that usually appeared in the back pages of ASTONISH at this
time, but there was still room for "Hunted!", an atmospheric twist-ending tale
by Stan Lee and Steve Ditko. On the splash page, a single man stands facing an
angry mob approaching him, while the shadows of still more pursuers appear at
his back. "The year is 2000-- the place is New York, capital of Earth!"
(Funny, I missed seeing in the news about how the Big Apple was named the global
capital that year.) The "Daily Telenews" features a warning about a handsome
and seemingly harmless man who nonetheless is a public menace, for he has
"contacted-- THE PLAGUE!" A little child spots the fugitive, sending him on a
desperate chase down into the bowels of the city and through a
"pneumatic-pressure air vent" to another part of the city. But to no avail, for the alarm is
out everywhere and there is no place the hunted man can go where he will not be
recognized and pursued. His only hope is to reach the city spaceport and
flee Earth altogether on a starship. But even this hope fails, for once again
he is spotted by authorities and "all the starships will be grounded until I'm
caught!" Backed into a corner, the fugitive threatens to unleash "the plague"
he carries against his pursuers. But police officers proclaim, "We are
willing to sacrifice our lives to rid you of the plague!" Closing in on him, the
police lay hands on him and remove from his person the object which has set the
whole city, the whole world, in fear of "plague". "You took it from me-- the
thing I spent my life trying to obtain!" "It is too dangerous for any man
to possess! But now we will return it to where it belongs!" What is it? A
simple pistol-- a gun! "We will return this last remainin weapon on Earth to
the museum from where you stole it! For, with that deadly thing in the hand of
a man, who knows how soon the dread plague of WAR might have spread throughout
the world!" (Many ironies to be found here in this simplistic little
morality play. The real-life city of New York is indeed known for its stringent gun
control laws, but, seven years after the supposed date of this story, there
remain millions of guns in the city. The idea of eliminating all guns except
for a single museum piece is a virtual absurdity, for it would be almost as
reasonable to expect human beings to forget and "uninvent" the wheel as to lose
the ability to build a gun. Nor, even if guns did somehow disappear, could we
expect all war and violence to disappear with them-- war and violence were
known ages before guns, and without guns, humans could be expected to find many
other means to commit violence. And considering that advocacy of banning guns
is generally regarded these days as a liberal/left-wing political cause, it's
ironic that this tale should have come from the pen of Steve Ditko, in later
years known as one of the most politically right-wing of comics creators.)


Tales To Astonish #27: "The Man In The Anthill!"

Tales To Astonish #27
"The Man In The Anthill!"
January, 1962

Plot: Stan Lee
Script: Larry Lieber
Art: Jack Kirby
Inks: Dick Ayers
Letters: John Duffy

Dreams can begin in different ways. Those of Henry Pym are confirmed
with a cry of success. He has succeeded in reducing a chair to doll
size. Once he applies a few drops of his growth potion to the chair, it
regains its former size. The scientist has realized his own success.
During its return to full size, Pym recalls the science convention from
months ago. The others would not recognize his theories as valid, and
suggest that he be more realistic in his work. Henry Pym was determined
to work on experiments which appealed to his imagination. When asked
what experiments those would be, Pym smiles, and vows to reveal it when
it was completed.

Months were spent alone in the laboratory, where the serums were
perfected, and the ability to change an object's size became a reality.
Items could be reduced in size and be shipped at a lower cost. Armies
could travel in one airplane. With the success of his serums on the
chair, Henry Pym is ready to test them on a living subject -- himself. A
few drops of the reducing potion, and the scientist can see himself
becoming smaller and smaller in size. The serums work better than
expected, too fast for comfort.

In his panic, Pym rushes through the open doorway, and onto his doorstep.
With the antidote left on the window ledge, he may never be able to
reach it. His small, weak cries are heard by the ants in a nearby
anthill. The insects crawl over the ground, and surround Henry Pym. The
only place for him to hide is in the ant hill. After entering one of the
tunnels, he hopes to find a way out of this nightmarish situation.
Before he can get far, the scientist falls down an open shaft, and lands
in a sticky substance.

The honey Pym is thrashing around is stored by the ants for food. The
more he struggles, the tighter its hold on him. An ant has seen his
plight and crawls towards him. The insect tries to pull the scientist
out of the honey. Now freed, Pym is surprised to see that the ant isn't
harming him. With the other ants closing in, Henry Pym spots a match
stick, and hurls a pebble towards its sulfuric head.

The match-head ignites and the fire keeps the ants at bay. After
fashioning a makeshift lasso, the scientist climbs upwards, and finds
another ant waiting for him. The insect attacks with all of its
strength. The human's sole advantage is his brain and its knowledge of
judo. He finds a path leading out of the ant hill. Minutes later, the
scientist is out, and sees the enlarging serum on the window ledge. With
the ants almost upon him, Pym doesn't have it in him to run any more.

Just as all seems lost, the ant who saved him earlier returns to the
scene. Pointing to the window ledge, the human hopes that the insect
will understand his need. The ant begins the act of crawling up the side
of the wall, with Henry Pym perched on its back. He enters the tube
containing the serum. SPLASH! He begins to grow. Getting bigger and
bigger until he regains his normal size once more. His first act is to
destroy the growth serums by pouring them down the drain. The scientist
knows that they are too dangerous for anyone to use. At the next monthly
meeting of the Science Fellowship, Pym tells the others that his
experiments have failed. He agrees that his fellow scientists were
correct when they said he was wasting his time. From now on, he would be
following more sensible projects. The story of the man in the anthill
has ended. The scientist would never step upon an ant hill, knowing that
there was an insect to whom he owed his life, and he would follow in
their footsteps as the Ant-Man.

This story was reprinted in The Essential Astonishing Ant-Man Vol. 1
(2002).

On the cover of Tales To Astonish #27, Henry Pym screams for someone to
save him before the insects succeed in dragging him into the ant hill.

On the splash page, the scientist strives to evade his pursuers through
their tunnels.

The experiments of Hank Pym are successful when a chair is reduced in
size by his growth serums.

The experiments of Ray Palmer are a failure when a chair is reduced in
size, and subsequently explodes.

Both men are determined to prove themselves as scientists. One to his
peers, and the other to the woman he plans to marry.

Although not a match for the horde of ants, Hank Pym did receive some
help in the form of a match stick.

Tube or not tube. That was the question for the scientist.

Steve Chung
"The Man In The Review!"

Tales To Astonish #35: "Return Of The Ant-Man"

Tales To Astonish #35
"Return Of The Ant-Man"
September, 1962

Plot: Stan Lee
Script: Larry Lieber
Pencils: Jack Kirby
Inks: Dick Ayers
Letters: John Duffy

In a previous review of Tales To Astonish, we met Henry Pym, the
scientist who discovered a reducing serum and an enlarging serum. Pym
tested the reducing serum upon himself. It worked so fast on him that he
could feel himself shrinking in size.

The serum reduced Henry Pym to insect size and took him within an
anthill. Pym managed to escape the ants and reached the enlarging serum.
Once restored to his proper size, the scientist destroyed the serums,
and felt that they were too dangerous. Weeks pass, and Henry Pym comes
to a momentous decision. Feeling that his discovery should not fade away
into nothingness, Pym resolves to create the serums once more. On this
occasion, the scientist hides them, and keeps them secret. Perhaps the
world will be ready for them, but until then, he will keep his secret.
After being in an anthill, Henry Pym became interested in ants. The
insects are able to lift objects fifty times heavier than themselves. In
each ant colony, there are only a few females, but there are thousands of
workers. Females are called queens, while the workers are smaller than
the queens and are wingless. Ants have sense organs and a nervous
system. They can detect things by sight, smell, and touch. It is
unknown how the ants communicate among themselves.

The more Pym researched, the more he became convinced that the ants
communicate through their antennae. If he could learn what electronic
wave length they use, he could learn more about them. Months later, the
scientist devises a helmet to tune in on the ants' wave length, and
communicate with them. He's also designed a protective costume to shield
him from accidental ant-stings and bites. That day, the government gives
Henry Pym a top secret assignment and four lab assistants to work with
him on the project. A gas to make people immune to radioactivity is what
the young scientist is expected to produce. It is quite a task, but the
government knows that they can count on Pym. Weeks pass, with a foreign
nation interested on the progress of the anti-radiation formula. They
contact their agents in the west at once. Once contact is made, the
orders are given, and the agents dispose of the guards. Once the warning
alarm is disconnected, the armed men take the lab assistants prisoner.
When confronted, Henry Pym refuses to hand over the anti-radiation
formula. Each of his assistants has worked on a part of the formula, and
only he knows all of it. The agents prepare to search the lab and find
the information themselves. When they are done, they will blow up the
lab, and make it look like an accident.

A guard has been posted in front of his door. Pym cannot escape through
the window, either. He is trapped in his lab. There is a way to stop
the enemy agents. If he fails, the Commies will take the anti-radiation
gas, and put themselves ahead in the Cold War. A rubber band and some
thread will enable the Ant-Man to be on his way. Placing an ash tray on
the floor and stretching the rubber band, the scientist tries out another
formula of his own. The serum to turn a man into the size of an insect.

Now at ant-size, the Ant-Man steps into the ashtray, and triggers the
rubber band. He is sent flying onto the windowsill, and slip through the
crack. Down the thread he goes. His next destination is the nearby ant
hill.

The Ant-Man is not ready for the ants to see him yet. He feels
vibrations against his helmet. TWOINNNGG The ants do give off
electronic impulses when they communicate. The ants turn towards him, no
doubt attracted by their sense of smell, and seek out the alien presence.

The helmet is switched on and electronic impulses are sent. The
cybernetic helmet was built for communication between Ant-Man and insect.
The components include: antenna, the shell houses miniaturized
electronic equipment, the transmitter to send impulse from wearer on the
ants' frequency, the decoder to turn incoming and outgoing signals for
clear meaning, and a receiver, which is open to the vibrations for the
ants' antennae. The helmet is on at full power. His wavelength is
stronger than theirs. The ants are fearful of him. The largest of the
worker ants is attacking. In ant colonies, the large worker ants do the
fighting, food gathering, and exploring. The smaller workers carry,
forage, build, and take care of the young. The powerful worker strikes,
but is surprised when Henry Pym is able to lift him into the air, and
hurl him away. The reducing serum may have diminished him in size, but
he still retains the strength of a grown man.

The worker returns to put a bite on him. Fast as he is, the Ant-Man is
caught by the enraged ant. The colorful costume made from a closely
woven steel mesh protects him from the razor sharp mandibles. The
costume is also composed of unstable molecules which stretch and contract
as Pym does. A judo blow stops the worker in its tracks. The Ant-Man
ponders how to get the other ants to follow him back to the laboratory,
then turns on his electronic impulses again. By concentrating hard, his
thoughts are transmitted to the ant army. They come crawling from their
various chambers. Outside of the ant hill, the Ant-Man meets up with a
beetle. Using his strength, he digs a hole in a matter of seconds.

Luring the beetle near the hole, the sunlight gets into the insect's
eyes, and the Ant-Man ducks at just the right moment. The hole is filled
up, and by the time the beetle digs his way out, the Ant-Man will be
gone. The scientist mounts one of the large worker ants. They climb up
the wall, with the rest following after them. Seeing that his assistants
are still bound, he listens as the enemy agents announce that they almost
have all of the anti-radiation gas notes, and how they will blow up the
lab. Crawling through the crack once more, the Ant-Man prepares to untie
his assistants.

Tom cannot hear the tiny voice of Henry Pym calling out to him. He
starts to untie Tom, who feels a small insect crawling on his hand.
Shaken off, the Ant-Man falls, and turns on his transmitter for help from
the ants. They gather together and form a living net to break his fall.
Now, the Ant-Man tries again to untie his assistants, with help from the
ants. This time, he succeeds.

Although they are free, the hapless lab assistants can't attack the armed
spies. Pym communicates with the ants once more. Minutes later, a swarm
of ants crawl over to one of the enemy agents. At the electronic signal
from the Ant-Man, they bite and sting their human foe. YIIEEEE

A swarm of honey ants are signalled to plug up the barrel of a gun with
honey. The gun is now jammed and will not fire. Another shriek and
another agent is under attack. The ants do their work, with the unarmed
Reds no match for the liberated laboratory assistants. The Ant-Man
returns to his office before they come for him.

A worker ant carries him down to the floor. The Ant-Man uses his
strength to push a test tube over, and dips into the enlarging serum.
Now at normal size, Henry Pym rejoins the others. Without their weapons,
the Commies were no match for the four lab assistants. Security has been
notified for some soldiers to come over. All has turned out right.
There could have been big trouble, not only for them, but for the entire
free world. The danger is over and his secret is safe. The scientist
wonders if he'll become the Ant-Man again.

This story was reprinted in Essential Ant-Man Vol. 1.

On the cover of the Tales To Astonish #35, the Ant-Man returns, and
commands the ants to stop the armed man.

Seen at Ant-Man perspective, the gunman has got a small head, and a large
torso.

Anti-Radiation pills were used by Gardner Grayle during World War III.

At some point in time, the young scientist must have collaborated with
Reed Richards on the subject of unstable molecules.

Henry Pym really digs the beetle.

Thanks to the honey ants, the enemy agents soon find themselves in a
honey of a jam.

Steve Chung
"Review Of The Ant-Man"