From February 1987: the first issue of SENTINEL, a science fiction title published by Brit outfit HARRIER COMICS, owned and run by Martin Lock.
The conceit for this four-issue British indie title was that it presented news stories from the future. It was one of the standouts from a publisher who often seemed to prioritise quantity and good intentions over actual quality.
Born of the black & white boom, Harrier launched with CONQUEROR, a STAR TREK wannabe with origins in Lock's days as a fanzine creator, editor and publisher. I've blogged about that in STARLOGGED a long time ago. A host of ongoing series and one-shots followed over the next few years. Some boasted early work by creators who would go on to become well-regarded industry pros. Others were a load of old tosh that almost certainly harmed the credability of the whole line.
The collapse in demand for b&w titles (once it became clear that the dreck far outweighed the quality... and the chances of getting rich over the next TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES wwas basically zilch) sealed the fate of Harrier and Lock bowed out by the end of the decade.
Back issues sometimes pop up in the 50p boxes and I always make a point of grabbing any that I see.
Showing posts with label CONQUEROR. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CONQUEROR. Show all posts
Wednesday, 9 August 2017
Tuesday, 10 December 2013
1986: REDFOX (Harrier Comics)
REDFOX, Pint-puller turned Barbarian, was one of the brightest (and best-selling) stars in the short-lived HARRIER COMICS firmament (although I much preferred CONQUEROR, the Star Trek wannabe, which I've covered in previous posts), notching-up ten issues from Martin Lock's mid-eighties up-start and a further ten from Valkyrie Press.
There were also two Trade Paperback collections from Harrier which I've not seen for many years, suggesting a low print run and some degree of scarcity.
The early issues of the Harrier run repeated the Conqueror trick of reworking material that had already had an outing in fanzines (in this case, the self-published - by creator 'Fox' - Redfox 'zine) before embarking on freshly-minted strips.
There were also two Trade Paperback collections from Harrier which I've not seen for many years, suggesting a low print run and some degree of scarcity.
The early issues of the Harrier run repeated the Conqueror trick of reworking material that had already had an outing in fanzines (in this case, the self-published - by creator 'Fox' - Redfox 'zine) before embarking on freshly-minted strips.
Thursday, 18 April 2013
1984: CONQUEROR (Harrier Comics)
H.M.S CONQUEROR was the UK's (now long-forgotten it seems) contribution to the international space race... and international publishing.
Created by Martin Lock and Dave Harwood, this pretty blatant Trek-alike started life in the pages of the British fanzines that Lock edited and published. In 1984, with the direct-sales business beginning to boom (and embracing black & white comics from indie publishers), Lock took his publishing ventures to the next stage and launched Harrier Comics (the company name both a punning nod to the British tradition of naming comics after members of the animal kingdom and also - presumably - a nod to the much-discussed role Harrier Jump Jets had played in the 1982 Falklands war). Conqueror, and specifically the Special Preview Edition, was the first of what would (briefly) become a booming little business.
I first encountered Conqueror in the pages of (the revived) THE MIGHTY WORLD OF MARVEL. The monthly incarnation, post DAREDEVILS merger, regularly featured a 'new talent showcase' (an opportunity to fill several pages for free) and a fanzine review column (something of a revelation to me at the time... and something that started a lifelong interest in amateur press). Conqueror snuck into both and the review of the Preview Edition convinced me to get my dad to mail off a cheque for Harrier's inaugural effort. That's my copy below which explains why it's a bit battered.
A regular bi-monthly book quickly followed, bolstered by some nice (albeit poorly coloured - compare these with his contemporary work on the Eagle Comics 2000AD reprints and elsewhere) Brian Bolland covers.
I must admit that, not yet being a regular comic book store patron (and, besides, I had very limited financial resources), I didn't revisit the alt. Trek universe until the dramatic cover of issue 8 caught my eye in Colchester's Ace Comics. I snaffled-up issue 9 as well when it appeared... just in time for the book to be axed. The strip continued, albeit hacked into smaller chunks (ala Marvel UK) in the pages of Harrier's anthology SWIFTSURE.
Obviously Ace weren't shifting that many copies as the entire run eventually made it into their 10p back issue boxes (ahhh... that happy time when half-decent comics could be 10p!) and I grabbed 'em.
The series gets off to a slow start, and the Star Trek parallels were unfortunately a little too blatant, but really ramps up towards the end of the run.
Harrier boasted Alan Moore as "editorial consultant".
Around the time issue 9 hit the stores, Harrier also published the weightier CONQUEROR UNIVERSE one-shot which collected several strips that had originally seen print in the 'zines.
A second one-shot, CONQUEROR SPECIAL, surfaced in early 1987 and - once again - featured a mix of short stories.
Harrier itself were remarkably prolific, churning out numerous black & white comics (notably REDFOX and Lew Stringer's brilliant BRICK MAN special) until being caught in the 1989 black & white bust. There's a few stand-outs in the run (I'm rather partial to SENTINEL) but - not to put too fine a point on it - there was an awful lot of dross too. Copies of many Harrier books, including Conqueror, still surface in the cheapo boxes at dealers.
The Chronology, reproduced below, explains how the various disparate strips fit together.
Created by Martin Lock and Dave Harwood, this pretty blatant Trek-alike started life in the pages of the British fanzines that Lock edited and published. In 1984, with the direct-sales business beginning to boom (and embracing black & white comics from indie publishers), Lock took his publishing ventures to the next stage and launched Harrier Comics (the company name both a punning nod to the British tradition of naming comics after members of the animal kingdom and also - presumably - a nod to the much-discussed role Harrier Jump Jets had played in the 1982 Falklands war). Conqueror, and specifically the Special Preview Edition, was the first of what would (briefly) become a booming little business.
I first encountered Conqueror in the pages of (the revived) THE MIGHTY WORLD OF MARVEL. The monthly incarnation, post DAREDEVILS merger, regularly featured a 'new talent showcase' (an opportunity to fill several pages for free) and a fanzine review column (something of a revelation to me at the time... and something that started a lifelong interest in amateur press). Conqueror snuck into both and the review of the Preview Edition convinced me to get my dad to mail off a cheque for Harrier's inaugural effort. That's my copy below which explains why it's a bit battered.
A regular bi-monthly book quickly followed, bolstered by some nice (albeit poorly coloured - compare these with his contemporary work on the Eagle Comics 2000AD reprints and elsewhere) Brian Bolland covers.
I must admit that, not yet being a regular comic book store patron (and, besides, I had very limited financial resources), I didn't revisit the alt. Trek universe until the dramatic cover of issue 8 caught my eye in Colchester's Ace Comics. I snaffled-up issue 9 as well when it appeared... just in time for the book to be axed. The strip continued, albeit hacked into smaller chunks (ala Marvel UK) in the pages of Harrier's anthology SWIFTSURE.
Obviously Ace weren't shifting that many copies as the entire run eventually made it into their 10p back issue boxes (ahhh... that happy time when half-decent comics could be 10p!) and I grabbed 'em.
The series gets off to a slow start, and the Star Trek parallels were unfortunately a little too blatant, but really ramps up towards the end of the run.
Harrier boasted Alan Moore as "editorial consultant".
Around the time issue 9 hit the stores, Harrier also published the weightier CONQUEROR UNIVERSE one-shot which collected several strips that had originally seen print in the 'zines.
A second one-shot, CONQUEROR SPECIAL, surfaced in early 1987 and - once again - featured a mix of short stories.
Harrier itself were remarkably prolific, churning out numerous black & white comics (notably REDFOX and Lew Stringer's brilliant BRICK MAN special) until being caught in the 1989 black & white bust. There's a few stand-outs in the run (I'm rather partial to SENTINEL) but - not to put too fine a point on it - there was an awful lot of dross too. Copies of many Harrier books, including Conqueror, still surface in the cheapo boxes at dealers.
The Chronology, reproduced below, explains how the various disparate strips fit together.
PREVIEW SPECIAL
1984
ISSUE 1
August 1984
ISSUE 2
October 1984
ISSUE 3
December 1984
ISSUE 4
February 1985
ISSUE 5
April 1985
ISSUE 6
June 1985
ISSUE 7
August 1985
ISSUE 8
October 1985
ISSUE 9
December 1985
CONQUEROR UNIVERSE ISSUE 1
December 1985
CONQUEROR UNIVERSE CHRONOLOGY
CONQUEROR SPECIAL
February 1987
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