Scott Edelman
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Who was that masked woman? Why, it’s Marie Severin!

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  comics, Hulk, Irene Vartanoff, Marie Severin, Marvel Comics    Posted date:  October 17, 2017  |  No comment


Irene and I accomplished many things during our extended weekend trip to New Jersey and New York—she while attending the New Jersey Romance Writers conference, me while recording three new episodes of my Eating the Fantastic podcast—but the most important thing we did was to spend Sunday hanging out with our dear friend Marie Severin.

And as usual when visiting Marvel’s Mirthful One, there was much kibitzing involved.

Did you recognize Marie? No?

Then about about now? (more…)

Mirthful Marie Severin gets her hands on the Hulk

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  Hulk, Marie Severin, Marvel Comics    Posted date:  October 19, 2015  |  1 Comment


I accompanied my wife this weekend to New Jersey so she could attend the annual NJ Romance Writers convention, and while she was occupied there, I dashed into Manhattan and Brooklyn for adventures about which more will be revealed later. But we joined together yesterday for what to me is always the highlight of any trip to the New York City area—a visit with our comics friend Marie Severin, my favorite among all the people I met in comics. (Well … except for my wife.)

ScottEdelmanMarieSeverinIreneVartanoff2015

While typing these words, it occurred to me that I’ve known Marie for most of my life, even longer than I’ve known Irene, with the weekend of the 1972 EC Fan Addict convention being the latest possible date we would have met. And I’ve loved her from the start. If you knew her, too, you’d know … how could anyone not? (more…)

A comic book triptych (including another visit with Marie Severin)

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  comics, Dick Dillin, Hulk, Irene Vartanoff, Joe Shuster, Marie Severin    Posted date:  October 28, 2014  |  No comment


Last weekend, I accompanied Irene to the New Jersey Romance Writers conference, but I didn’t hang around there with her. All of my fun occurred outside of New Jersey. And serendipitously, each of the three days of my trip delivered a comics-related delight.

On Friday, I headed to the Comics at Columbia exhibit, which was held in the Butler Rare Book & Manuscript Library. Highlights for me included a George Herriman Archy and Mehitabel illustration, a nostalgia-inducing photo of Chris Claremont taken around the time I would have met him in the ’70s, Jerry Robinson’s sketch of Dick Grayson and Bruce Wayne made during class in 1940 when he was supposed to have been taking notes, and this 1970 letter in which Joe Shuster thought he and Jerry Siegel were “very close” to settling the Superman lawsuit.

JoeShusterLetter

That last one made me a little sad.

The Columbia University exhibit will continue through January 23, 2015 and is well worth your time. It’s one of the better comics exhibits I’ve seen.

Saturday, I visited the Society of Illustrators to catch an exhibit on Dick Dillin, who was the primary Justice League of America artist of my youth. (more…)

It seemed like a good idea at the time

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  comics, Hulk, Len Wein, Marv Wolfman, Marvel Comics    Posted date:  June 19, 2014  |  No comment


Over at eBay, someone just picked up a bound volume of Incredible Hulk 167-182 which had my name embossed on the cover in gold. (The cognoscenti among you will recognize that run as including the origin of Wolverine.) And he wondered … what’s up with that?

I’ve only been asked about this sort of thing once before, by someone who wanted to know whether receiving bound volumes of comics was a perk regularly given to Marvel Bullpenners in the ’70s. (As if!)

ScottEdelmanBoundHulk167182

So why does this artifact exist? The short answer is … it seemed like a good idea at the time. (more…)

So did I write that 1977 Incredible Hulk coloring book or not?

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  Hulk, John Romita, Marvel Comics, my writing, Stan Lee    Posted date:  December 8, 2013  |  5 Comments


Way back in the ’70s, Marvel’s Sol Brodsky commissioned me to write an Incredible Hulk coloring book. I wrote the script, turned it in, got paid for it … and then never heard a thing about it ever again.

Not until last week, when I spotted a cover from 1977 over at The Marvel Age of Comics Tumblr which had me wondering … is that the same coloring book I wrote? I couldn’t be sure, but luckily, within a few hours, Paul Di Filippo alerted me to an eBay auction, and I jumped, exercising the Buy Now option so there’d be no chance I’d lose out.

IncredibleHulkColoringBook

Well, now that I’ve had a chance to read the thing—all 230 words of it—I’m going to say that this is the coloring book I wrote all those years ago. And I’ll keep saying that until someone comes along to contradict me. (more…)

Well, that was fast

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  Hulk, Marvel Comics, my writing    Posted date:  November 26, 2013  |  No comment


Early this morning, I bemoaned the fact I’d never seen a copy of the Incredible Hulk coloring book I’d written for Marvel Comics way back in the ’70s, and wasn’t even sure it had ever been published. Before noon, Paul Di Filippo pointed out that a copy was up for auction on eBay.

And in a few days, that copy will be in my hands.

Is it the same one I wrote a third of a century ago? As I peruse the scans the seller had posted in the listing, I think so. But my memories of the script are vague, and with each page containing only a few words, there’s no way I can recognize my style.

HulkColoringBookInterior1 (more…)

I go to the circus with the Incredible Hulk

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  comics, Hulk, Marvel Comics, my writing, Way back in the    Posted date:  November 26, 2013  |  No comment


Way back in the ’70s, around the same time I wrote those Mighty Marvel Superheroes Fun Books and The Captain Midnight Action Book for Sports, Fitness and Nutrition, Sol Brodsky commissioned me to write an Incredible Hulk coloring book.

I wrote it, got paid for it … and then never heard anything about it again. I never knew whether the project had been published or abandoned. I always wondered what happened, though, because I’m a completist of my own work, and so I’d occasionally search online for any mention of the thing. I never had any success, though, and hadn’t thought about the book for years.

IncredibleHulkColoringBook

But then a few days ago, The Marvel Age of Comics linked to a cover over at The Vintage Toy Archive, and the mystery was over. My script for an Incredible Hulk coloring book had gotten published.

At, least … I think it was my script that got used for that 1977 coloring book. I no longer own a copy of the script, and have only vague memories of the plot. Did I write about the Hulk visiting the circus? I think I did, and seem to recall a circus, but I can’t be quite sure. It would make sense, considering the character’s history with the Ringmaster. But it could be only a false memory at this point.

No way to fully solve the mystery until I get my hands on the book itself, or find a site where someone has uploaded all the interior pages. Either of those should spark a few memories. At least I hope they would.

But considering it’s taken 33 years before I came across even this small crumb of proof, I’m not holding my breath. If you’ve got a copy and can help me out, though, let me know, OK?

And the incredible Hulk is meant to sound like … Huh? Are you sure?

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  comics, Hulk, Marvel Comics, Stan Lee    Posted date:  February 18, 2012  |  No comment


As I said in my previous post, I’m confident that there’s simply no way you’ll be able to guess the celebrity voice meant to run through your head once Bruce Banner Hulks out.

OK, this is your last chance to take a crack at it. Got your candidate in mind?

Then click away to read the character description I found stuffed in a file cabinet in the Marvel Bullpen back in the mid-’70s.

Well?

Admit it—you didn’t even come close.

Next up—Spider-Man, accompanied by a supporting cast of characters that’ll explain why I believe all of these pages were written in the ’60s.

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