Superboy Legion
Superboy Legion
Are these comics worth anything or will they be?
Ok, i have a Superboy and the Legion of Superheroes from 1979, Fantastic Four from 1975, Justice League America from 1980, Red Sonja from 1976, Spectacular Spider-Man from 1986, Another Spider-Man from 1978, Fantastic Four from 1980 and a Superman thats pretty thrashed from 1962.....anything? lol
Well, you can buy the Overstreet Comic Book Price Guide, but it's cheaper to try getting a copy from your local library. The '70's issues should have some good prices, even the trashed '62 may be worth something, certainly more than the 15 cent cover price. Get a price guide and remember condition & rarity are key. And yes, my mom threw mine out too. Comic prices are depressed from where they were several years ago. Check the links.
Click The Blue Links Below For Superboy Legion Deals
![]() Vintage Superboy Legion of Super Heroes Superman Family Comic Book Lot US $5.00
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![]() 3 COMICS SUPERMANS GIRLFRIEND 1970 SUPERMANS PAL1968 SUPERBOY 1969 LEGION US $8.99
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![]() ADVENTURE COMICS 363 SUPERBOY LEGION DC 1967 LOOK FN US $3.80
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![]() Adventure 323 Superboy Legion of Super heroes VG 1964 Krypto Jimmy Olsen US $9.65
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![]() 1966 Silver Age DC Adventure Comics feat Superboy and the Legion of Super Heroes US $1.54
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![]() LEGION OF SUPER HEROES 95 Legionnaires LOSH Bronze Age SUPERBOY US $49.95
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![]() toyfare issue 158 superboy and legion of super heroes issue tron transformers US $.99
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![]() THREE ADVENTURE COMICS featuring SUPERBOY and the LEGION OF SUPER HEROES 67 68 US $9.99
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![]() 488 Superboy Legion Of Super Heroes Fatal Five Sept 1976 219 US $8.95
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![]() SUPERBOY AND THE LEGION OF SUPER HEROES 248 DC COMICS US $.25
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![]() SUPERBOY AND THE LEGION OF SUPER HEROES 253 DC COMICS US $.25
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![]() SUPERBOY AND THE LEGION OF SUPER HEROES 218 DC COMICS US $.30
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![]() SUPERBOY STARRING LEGION OF SUPER HEROES 210 DC COMICS US $.99
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![]() SUPERBOY STARRING LEGION OF SUPER HEROES 215 DC COMICS US $.99
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![]() SUPERBOY AND THE LEGION OF SUPER HEROES 280 DC COMICS US $.25
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![]() ADVENTURE COMICS 333 DC Superboy Legion of Super Heroes 1965 US $17.00
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![]() ADVENTURE COMICS 336 DC Superboy Legion of Super Heroes Sept 1965 US $19.00
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![]() ADVENTURE COMICS 331 DC Superboy Legion of Super Heroes 1965 US $16.00
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![]() ADVENTURE COMICS 324 Superboy Legion of Super Outlaws 1964 DC Super Heroes US $14.00
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![]() ADVENTURE COMICS 334 DC Superboy Legion of Super Heroes July 1965 US $19.00
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![]() ADVENTURE COMICS 330 DC Superboy Legion of Super Heroes March 1965 US $19.00
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![]() RARE ADVENTURE COMICS 247 1ST APPEARANCE OF SUPERBOY LEGION OF SUPER HEROS US $305.00
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![]() Superboy 131 66 off guide Legion Statues Cameo Krypto Story US $4.50
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![]() SUPERBOY Vol27 No 209 June 1975 staring the Legion of Super Heroes US $.99
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![]() Superboy and the Legion of Superheroes 246 NM High Grade US $4.99
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The Silver Age of comic books is a term that refers to a period between 1956 and the early 1970s. It's characterized by the resurgence of super-hero comics, a re-interpretation of Golden Age heroes, increasingly outlandish storylines, and the debut of Stan Lee and Marvel Comics as a major force in comic book publishing.
Frederic Wertham's book, Seduction of the Innocent and the Comics Code Authority that came as a response to it in the early 1950s torpedoed EC Comics and set extremely tight limits in what could be included in a comic book. Super-heroes were out of fashion, but westerns, romances and war comics were on the decline as well.
Most scholars agree that the Silver Age begins with Showcase #4 and The Flash. During the Golden Age, The Flash was Jay Garrick, a football star. The new Flash introduced in Showcase #4 was Barry Allen, police forensic scientist. The success of the character led DC Comics Editor Julius Schwartz to spearhead a campaign to revamp many of the Golden Age heroes. A major characteristic of these heroes was that they were often based in science fiction, whereas their predecessors were either based in fantasy, science fantasy or just superb athletes: Green Lantern was a test pilot who became a member of an intergalactic peace-keeping force; Hawkman and Hawkgirl were alien police officers trapped on Earth; The Atom was a college professor who had a fragment of a dwarf star in his hand that gave him the ability to change his size or mass. A new team, the Legion of Super-Heroes travels back in time from the 30st century to recruit Superboy to their team.
DC did so well with their revamps and science fiction heroes, that rival publisher Martin Goodman asked Stanley "Stan Lee" Lieber to create a team of super-heroes to compete. What he and Jack Kirby came up with was The Fantastic Four in 1961.
The creation and style of Marvel Comics begins the slow decline of DC's Silver Age mentality in favor of a more "realistic" tone in Marvel's comics: The Fantastic Four's Thing was a monster, Spider-Man was a science nerd driven by the murder of his uncle and reviled by all of New York City, and the X-Men were misfits who were hated by the very people they were vowed to protect. Nobody got along, and many heroes were just plain unhappy. But their problems were much easier to relate to than what practical joke Superman was going to play on Lois Lane this month.
There is no consensus on when the Silver Age ended and the Bronze Age began, but there were several things that happened in the early 1970s:
- Marvel Comics published Conan the Barbarian #1, portraying a tone and style of violence that hadn't been seen since the creation of the Comics Code Authority.
- Marvel publishes Amazing Spider-Man #96-98, featuring a drug abuse storyline, in direct violation of the Comics Code.
- The Comics Code's regulations are loosened, and DC Comics begins to emulate Marvel's style with more realistic storylines and characterizations, as in Green Lantern #85-86, where Green Arrow's sidekick Speedy (now called Red Arrow) deals with his own drug problem.
- The trend established by Marvel in Fantastic Four #1 for darker, more dramatic storylines and themes is a model that is followed by most comic book companies even today.
R. Wesley Smith has been following comic books and the comic book industry for over twenty-five years. He is a freelance writer and regularly publishes columns at Examiner.com. For all of Wesley's most recent columns about comic books and the comic book industry, check out http://www.examiner.com, keyword: "Wesley Smith."

























