Celebrate Captain America's First 80 Years With New Hardcover Book! EXCLUSIVE

Celebrate Captain America's First 80 Years With New Hardcover Book! EXCLUSIVE

Marvel's Captain America: The First 80 Years is set to hit shelves next month, and we're celebrating with several CBM-exclusive pages and an excerpt from this new hardcover book! Check it out...

By NateBest - Jun 29, 2021 02:06 PM EST
Filed Under: Captain America

Titan Comics' upcoming Marvel's Captain America: The First 80 Years is now available for pre-order from Amazon.com and Forbidden Planet ahead of its release on July 13th! The new 192 page hardcover book covers the milestones in the creation of the comic book adventures of the Super Soldier, including covers, comic art, and behind-the-scenes facts and information about the authors and artists who have brought the legend of Captain America to life.

To celebrate, Titan Comics was kind enough to provide us with several interior pages from the upcoming book. We also have an excerpt from the book focusing on Cap and the Golden Age! Between the pages and excerpt, readers get some great insight as to the depth and breadth of information that will be avaialable to fans in the Marvel's Captain America: The First 80 Years when it lands next month.

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Marvel's Captain America: The First 80 Years EXCLUSIVE Excerpt


CAP AND THE GOLDEN AGE

Cap was not Timely’s first Super Hero, since the Human Torch and the Sub-Mariner got their start in Marvel Comics #1, but he certainly remained the most famous. Lee and Kirby used him a few months earlier in Strange Tales #114 (cover date November 1963), for The Human Torch Meets…Captain America. A story in which the modern Human Torch—Johnny Storm, a member of the Fantastic Four—meets a man who claims to be Captain America from the 1940s and ’50s. However, he turns out to be an impostor.

It all could have finished there, but it didn’t. Captain America may have had a little help from readers who expressed their delight in the return of a classic character, and it wouldn’t be long before the real Cap—the guy who smashed Hitler in the face—burst onto the scene again. How could this be, though? What had happened to him after the war? Didn’t he go around beating up common criminals, and then the Communists? And just how was he supposed to have survived in the ice all that time?

The Avengers #4 contains a brief account of what happened, which a year later would be expanded in Tales of Suspense #63 (cover date March 1965), the comic book that features new stories starring the Sentinel of Liberty.

The Origin of Captain America is an epic 12-page adventure. Lee and Kirby, along with inker Frank Giacoia (who went under the name of Frankie Ray because he didn’t want the other publishers he worked for to know he was doing work for Marvel), worked to develop the original story by Simon and Kirby. The “King of Comics” himself, proud of the artwork’s extraordinary kinetic effect, would one day say, “I’ll have a sort of choreographed action. I’ll choreograph the thing out like a ballet. In other words, if Captain America hits a man and he falls to the floor, and some guy is coming up behind Cap, he’ll already know what he’s going to do with this guy. It all becomes one big dance; it becomes a ballet, acted out on the paper.”

This story suddenly plunges readers back into the 1940s. The free world is threatened by Nazism. A desperate decision is made: to test the Super Serum created by Dr. Erskine (as Reinstein would now be called) on a young man so weak and frail that he’s almost an embarrassment, despite being chosen for his bravery, intelligence and determination. The story treats readers to the murder of Dr. Erskine and the amazing transformation of Steve Rogers, who drinks the serum and seconds later turns into a man with muscles of steel. Unfortunately, he’ll be the sole Super Soldier fighting for the United States as the doctor only left a few notes behind.

Rogers enlists in the army as a cover for his missions. He now lives the double life of a Super Hero. When donning his mask, he becomes Hitler’s invincible enemy number one. In uniform, Steve plays the role of the clumsy, awkward soldier in order to ward off any possible suspicion as to his secret identity. But someone is onto his ruse. One day he is found out by a young recruit, private James Buchanan Barnes, better known as Bucky, who becomes his sidekick until the end. The fateful day arrives as the war is drawing to a close. In action in Europe against the Axis, the heroes fight to keep one of their planes, loaded with explosives, from taking off. Steve and Bucky jump off a speeding motorcycle and grab on to the aircraft. But it’s a trap set by Baron Zemo. His plan is to blow up our two heroes while in flight. Steve loses his grip and winds up plummeting into the icy waters of the North Sea, but not before seeing Bucky killed in the explosion. Wracked with remorse for not having been able to save him, and only urging him in vain to jump, Steve nearly lets himself drown.

But he doesn’t die. His body, bolstered by the Super Soldier Serum, maintains all vital functions in a state of suspended animation while he is frozen. No other man could ever survive for twenty years in the ice. His regret over Bucky’s death will accompany him for the rest of his life. Or nearly—because Bucky’s story was not quite over. In a truly unforgettable modern run, Cap’s old sidekick returns—with a disturbing new identity.


What are your thoughts on the new Marvel's Captain America: The First 80 Years book? Will you be pre-ordering, or picking up a copy on July 13th? You can pre-order now from Amazon.com and Forbidden Planet!

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Feralwookiee
Feralwookiee - 6/29/2021, 2:39 PM
Looks pretty cool. And it's nice to see a young Stan. Hopefully, Joe Simon is given his due here too.
Manmarvel
Manmarvel - 6/29/2021, 2:54 PM
@Feralwookiee - this reminds me, whatever happened to the push for a Stan Lee bio pic? Better yet would be a Golden Age of Comics bio pic Stan, Joe, ect showing the good and the bad.
Feralwookiee
Feralwookiee - 6/29/2021, 3:05 PM
@Manmarvel - I'd see love to see that. I know a lot of people trash Stan for taking "too much credit" for a lot of his and Kirby/Ditko's creations, but I don't seem him as a "bad" guy.

He was a pitch-man, and a good one at that. And while he might have sometimes oversold his contributions, there's no denying that many of these characters wouldn't exist without his influence.
Manmarvel
Manmarvel - 6/29/2021, 6:00 PM
@Feralwookiee - "Stan Lee" was not only an alias it was a character. Some of the things I have directly seen him ripped on for he was clearly pandering to his audience, always selling the show that was Stan Lee and always doing Marvel a favor in the process. Was he perfect, no, but he was always Stan the f'n man Lee!!
Feralwookiee
Feralwookiee - 6/29/2021, 6:06 PM
@Manmarvel - Totally agree with you there! 👍
Mugens
Mugens - 6/29/2021, 2:59 PM
Titan Comics puts out some nice books. Their "Marvel Comics: The First 80 Years" which was released late last year is in the same vein as this Cap book.
Reeds2Much
Reeds2Much - 6/29/2021, 3:00 PM
Eighty years, and my favorite reference drawn from that for the movies is during First Avenger when Steve has just been heckled off the stage and he's drawing that picture of himself as a performing monkey.

I get that being live action means you're competing against a clock and you'll never get eighty years of detail in six hours of movies, and don't get me wrong they nailed "Steve the Soldier/Leader" thing, but I kind of wish the movies did more with the "Steve the Artist" angle as well.
Origame
Origame - 6/29/2021, 3:49 PM
@Reeds2Much - never thought of that. Maybe adding to the tragedy of his moral compass that deep down he wants to be an artist but keeps sidelining that to keep preparing to save the world.
dancingmonkey08
dancingmonkey08 - 6/29/2021, 4:10 PM
@Reeds2Much - Well theres a little bit more from the deleted scene from the Avengers, plus more Stan!
bkmeijer2
bkmeijer2 - 6/29/2021, 3:33 PM
That looks pretty cool. Especially the early history sounds interesting, considering how little I actually know about it.

What I do know is though, is that I wanna see the Invaders on screen too.
bobevanz
bobevanz - 6/29/2021, 3:46 PM
Thanks for bringing back the "hours ago" for each article. I'm crazy so I appreciate it haha. Also this looks like an amazing book!
GeneralZod
GeneralZod - 6/29/2021, 4:43 PM
I have never seen that photo of Stan holding a rolled up (ouch) copy of FF 46 (so the photo was taken in late 1965 or early 1966).

I think a TV series (Mad Men-style) based on the Marvel bullpen of the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s (from the Lee era to the Thomas era to the Shooter era) would be so cool to watch.
marvel72
marvel72 - 6/29/2021, 6:16 PM
Now this is how you celebrate 80 years of Captain America,not those recent nonsense comics from Marvel.
Tpo81
Tpo81 - 6/29/2021, 11:27 PM
Looks like cap is still wearing his COVID mask
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