THE WORLD'S MIGHTEST 16th CENTURY PURITANICAL ADVENTURER! From the genius mind of Robert E. Howard, creator of CONAN THE BARBARIAN comes another sword-and-sorcery legend, Solomon Kane. Set in the 16th Century, Kane is a Puritan avenger roaming the known world on a quest to combat the forces of darkness in all its forms.
Set in the late 16th-17th Century, Solomon Kane oft described as a living weapon of God, is described as a tall, thin, dour one-man war-machine traveling the world spreading the good word and delivering vengeance and wrath upon the evil and corrupt, from devil-worshiping devotees, to pirates, cannibals, demons, werewolves and vampires. This collection spans 15 years and collects over 600 pages of jaw-busting action.
Solomon Kane first appeared in the legendary magazine
Weird Tales back in 1928, and was described by his creator, the legendary Robert E. Howard as "A man born out of time, a strange blending of Puritan and Cavalier, with a touch of the ancient philosopher and a touch of the pagan. A knight errant in the sombre clothes of a fanatic. A hunger in his soul drove him on and on, an urge to right all wrongs, protect all weaker things, avenge all crimes against right and justice."
Now Kane's complete, classic original comic strip adventures are collected in one jaw-dropping Omnibus volume! Featuring adaptations of Robert E. Howard's formative tales and new chapters by such scribes as Roy Thomas, Ralph Macchio, Don Glut and Doug Moench. With artwork by David T. Wenzel, Howard Chaykin, Al Williamson and Colin MacNeil and featuring legendary artists Neal Adams, Mike Mignola, Mike Zeck and John Ridgway.
From the sinister forests of 16th Century England battling witch-covens, across central Europe fighting vampires, and to the plains of Africa raining vengeance upon cannibals and demons alike.
Collecting: MARVEL PREMIERE (1972) 33-34; THE SWORD OF SOLOMON KANE (1985) 1-6; MATERIAL FROM CONAN SAGA (1987) 50, DRACULA LIVES! (1973) 3, KULL AND THE BARBARIANS (1975) 2-3, MARVEL PREVIEW (1975) 19, MONSTERS UNLEASHED (1973) 1, and SAVAGE SWORD OF CONAN (1974) 13-14, 18-20, 22, 25, 26, 33-34, 37, 39, 41, 53-54, 62, 83, 162, 169, 171, 219, 220
About the AuthorRoy ThomasRoy joined Marvel as a writer and editor under Stan Lee, scripting key runs of nearly every Marvel title:
The Amazing Spider-Man,
The Avengers,
Daredevil,
Doctor Strange,
The Sub-Mariner,
Thor,
The X-Men and more. He wrote the first ten years of Marvel's
Conan the Barbarian and
Savage Sword of Conan; and launched the
Defenders,
Iron Fist, The Invaders and
Warlock. At DC, he developed
All-Star Squadron,
Infinity Inc. and related titles, proving instrumental in reviving the Golden Age
Justice Society of America. He co-scripted the sword-and-sorcery films
Fire and Ice and
Conan the Destroyer. Throughout it all, Thomas has edited the award-winning magazine
Alter Ego, contributing heartily to the research and history of the medium.
Donald F. Glut A writer, motion picture film director, and screenwriter. He is best known for writing the novelization of the second
Star Wars film,
The Empire Strikes Back (1980). As a comics writer he worked for
Marvel, DC, Gold Key Comics, Charlton Comics, Archie Comics and
Warren Comics and has written for
Captain America, Ghost Rider, Invaders, Kull the Destroyer, Thor, X-Men, Creepy, Eerie and
Vampirella. Ralph MacchioBest known as an American comic book editor and writer and was executive editor at Marvel Comics. His comic writing credits include:
Thor, The Sword of Solomon Kane, Marvel Fanfare, X-Men Adventures and
Transformers. For Marvel Comic he edited
Master of Kung Fu, The Saga of Crystar, Dazzler, Rom, Daredevil, Captain America, Avengers, Fantastic Four, Marvel Ultimates and
Micronauts. Doug MoenchA prolific comic book writer and editor and has worked for
Marvel, DC Comics, Dark Horse Comics and
Eclipse. He has written for
Batman, Catwoman, Green Arrow, Green Lantern, JLA, Mister Miracle, The Spectre, Teen Titans, Fantastic Four, Godzilla, The Incredible Hulk, Kull the Conqueror, Moon Knight, Master of Kung Fu. He was the creator of
Moon Knight, Deathlok, Black Mask, Harvey Bullock, and the critically acclaimed
Six from Sirius. David T. Wenzel David is best known as an illustrator and children's book artist and his work as a fantasy artist, and his graphic novel adaptation of J.R.R. Tolkien's
The Hobbit. Throughout the 1970 and 1980s, David worked for Marvel Comics on titles such as
Avengers, Savage Sword of Conan and
Solomon Kane. David has also written and drawn
Aliens: Stalker for Dark Horse Comics.
Howard Chaykin Chaykin has worked, not only, for every major comic book publisher in the US, but for television too. He's comic book credits include
Killraven, Red Sonja, Nick Fury, Conan the Barbarian, Star Wars, Spider-Man, Hulk, James Bond, Wolverine, Captain America, Blade, Iron Fist, Punisher X-Men, Iron Man, Tarzan, Batman, The Shadow and
Suicide Squad to name but a handful. He also drew the graphic novel adaptation of Alfred Bester's
The Star My Destination, and drew two Michael Moorcock written original graphic novels -
The Swords of Heaven and T
he Flowers of Hell. In 1983 he created and launched
American Flagg. He also created
Dominic Fortune, Scorpion and
Cody Starbuck. For TV he wrote for
The Flash and
Mutant X.
Al Williamson
One of the true greats of the comic book industry. A prolific comic book artist, inker and illustrator who specialised in adventure, Science Fiction, Western and fantasy. Training at the Cartoonist and Illustrators School under the tutelage of legendary
Tarzan artist, Burne Hogarth, Al's first published comic strip work appeared in 1948's
Famous Funnies#166. He would go on to work on such legendary publications as
Weird Science, Weird Fantasy, Weird Science-Fantasy. He worked, as an inker, with all the greats including Jack Kirby, Bray Morrow, Reed Crandall, John Severin, Wally Wood. And would go on to draw the
Rip Kirby and
Flash Gordon,
Secret Agent X-9, Secret Agent Corrigan and
Star Wars newspaper strips. He would go on to win 20 major awards including two Eisner Awards and was inducted into the Eisner Hall of Fame in 2000.