The Superman Family #207 Look Homeward, Argonian! / The Turnabout Powers! / Too Good to be True! / The Expose Expose! / Death and Taxes or Jimmy Olsen's Very Bad Day!
Cover Date: June, 1980
Cover by Ross Andru and Dick Giordano."Look Homeward, Argonian!" (Supergirl) plot by Jack C. Harris, script by Roy Thomas, penciled by Win Mortimer, inked by Vince Colletta, colored by John Drake and lettered by John Costanza."The Turnabout Powers!" A "Mr ...
Issue Description
Cover by Ross Andru and Dick Giordano."Look Homeward, Argonian!" (Supergirl) plot by Jack C. Harris, script by Roy Thomas, penciled by Win Mortimer, inked by Vince Colletta, colored by John Drake and lettered by John Costanza."The Turnabout Powers!" A "Mr. & Mrs. Superman" story written by E. Nelson Bridwell, penciled by Kurt Schaffenberger, inked by Joe Giella, colored by Adrienne Roy and lettered by Shelly Leferman."Too Good to be True!" A "Private Life of Clark Kent" story written by Bob Rozakis, penciled by George Tuska, inked by Dan Adkins, colored by Bob Rozakis and lettered by Milt Snapinn."The Expose Expose!" (Lois Lane) written by Gerry Conway, penciled by Bob Oksner, inked by Vince Colletta, colored by John Drake and lettered by Todd Klein."Death and Taxes or Jimmy Olsen's Very Bad Day!" (Jimmy Olsen) written by Gerry Conway, penciled by Jose Delbo, inked by Steve Mitchell, colored by John Drake and lettered by John Costanza."Hembeck" written, penciled and inked by Fred Hembeck."DC Profile #71 Joe Giella" text piece by Mike W. Barr."Daily Planet" Volume 81 Issue 2 for the month of February 1981 edited by Bob Rozakis, production by Jodi Saviuk and lettered by Typeset. A double feature with Superman and the Secret Origins of various superheroes in The Best of DC #12 and DC Special Blue Ribbon Digest #9. Plus, "Ask the Answer Man".Notes:
Last bi-monthly issue.Lois Lane is from Earth-2.Homage to Paul Levitz with the business sign "Levitz Clothes" on page 4 panel 1 of the story "Death and Taxes or Jimmy Olsen's Very Bad Day!".A mind-controlling alien, a blabber-mouth Green Arrow, a murder charge... it's just another working week for The Superman Family!
The Superman Family
- Publisher
- DC Comics
Volume Description
The Superman Family was a DC Comics comic book series which ran from 1974 to 1982 featuring primarily stories starring the supporting characters in the Superman comics. The term is often used to refer to the extended cast of characters (especially super-powered ones) of comics books associated with Superman.
The title was an amalgamation of the titles Superman's Girl Friend, Lois Lane and Superman's Pal Jimmy Olsen and the first series of Supergirl, therefore immediately becoming DC's flagship title with the highest sales for the remainder. The first issue, #164, took its numbering from the Jimmy Olsen title, which had reached issue #163 and thus had the most issues published (the Lois Lane series ended at issue #137, while the newly-launched Supergirl volume 1 series had only made it to #10). The three leads rotated new stories in each issue with reprints as a backup feature for other the characters (Issues #164-181). The Superman Family started as a 100-page format from issues #164-169. The quantity of pages dropped to 64-pages with issue #170 and dropped to 48-pages with issue #178. In 1976 (#182), The Superman Family became the first DC Comics to feature the 80-page Dollar Comics format. The new 80-page format featured all new stories for all the characters. Later the page quantity dropped to 64-pages starting with issue #191 and finally to 48-pages starting with issue #205. The series briefly featured a "no ads" and a wraparound cover format from issues #191-196. The series was published on a bi-monthly schedule until 1981, when the series was published on a monthly schedule starting with issue #207.
Other featured series in addition to:
* Lois Lane (166,169,172,175,178,181-222)
* Supergirl (165,168,171,174,177,180,182-222)
* Jimmy Olsen (164,167,170,173,176,179,182-222)
* "Superboy" (182,191-198) — The adventures of the Earth-One Superman as a teenage super-hero. This series continued from Adventure Comics #458 and led to the feature leaving the title for its own in 1980, The New Adventures of Superboy.
* "The Private Life of Clark Kent" (195-197, 199-215) — The adventures of Clark Kent in which he used his powers and skills without becoming Superman. This feature had moved over from Superman after #328.
* "Mr. and Mrs. Superman" (195-196, 198-222) — The adventures of the Earth-Two Superman and his wife, Lois. This feature had moved from Superman after #329. #200 of this series also had a story that dealt with a married Lois and Clark, but as part of an issue-long Imaginary Story set on Earth-1 at the turn of the millennium.
* "Krypto" (182-192) — The adventures of Superman's dog.
* " Nightwing and Flamebird" (182-194) — The adventures of the second Nightwing and Flamebird team of heroes (Van-Zee and Ak-Var) in the Bottled City of Kandor.
* "The Misadventures of Superbaby" (216) — A one-shot story featuring Superbaby.
DC published several other "Family" titles concurrent with The Superman Family: Batman Family (1975-78), Super-Team Family (1975-1978) and Tarzan Family (1975-76). As a rule, DC's "Family" titles contained mostly reprints, and featured a higher page count (and higher price) than DC's normal books. (In 2004, Marvel Comics paid homage to DC's "Family" titles with Spider-Man Family.)
In 1982, with issue #222, The Superman Family series was cancelled to make room for the Daring New Adventures of Supergirl, which briefly featured a Lois Lane back-up series. The Doom Patrol appeared alongside Supergirl in issues of both series.
Please first Sign In before leaving a review.