"Superman #1" was described as "the pinnacle of comic collecting" and sold for $3 million more than the previous record.
A long forgotten box in a family attic has just rewritten the record books, with a single Superman comic selling for $9.12 ...
A pristine copy of 1939's Superman #1 selling for a record $9.12 million may be good sign for Warner Bros Discovery shareholders.
Superman comics are not overtly religious. Yet faith and morality have been baked into this superhero character who was born Kryptonian, raised Methodist and created by two young Jewish men in 1930s ...
The 1939 comic, found in an attic by three brothers, broke the previous record held by Action Comics No. 1, the issue that introduced the Man of Steel.
OK, fine. Technically he’s an intellectual property—a set of data points slammed together by Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster in the 1930s, sold for $130 to National Allied Publications (later DC ...
Near-mint copy of Superman No. 1, discovered in California attic, sets new world record for comic book sales - Anadolu Ajansı ...
Superman was born Kryptonian, raised Methodist and sketched into existence by two Jewish teens in 1930s Cleveland. Faith and morality are his DNA. There are no overt religious references in Superman ...
Superman needs to ditch his clean-cut image for good, and return to his roots as a ruthless champion of the oppressed.