Commando issues on sale 2 January 2014
Commando No 4667 – Nobody Loves A Genius!
Private Hubert Wellington was a real nice chap — keen, well-meaning, anxious to please. There was only one thing wrong — anything he got involved in was doomed to disaster!
And what was his job? He was an explosives expert! Yes, every man in Hubert’s platoon gritted his teeth and waited for the world to end with a big, big bang…
Introduction
When Stuart Duncan e-mailed his request to see this one again, I had my doubts. Its Ian Kennedy cover was a cracker but the story looked just a little bit comical to be a good Commando. But he wasn’t alone in asking for it so I decided to read it again. What a surprise! Despite the cover and the apparently bumbling hero, this is one hard-hitting Commando, beautifully realised in great detail by Pat Wright. Without giving the game away, with a change of uniforms and locations, this could be a contemporary story.
It could be the work of a genius.
Calum Laird, Commando Editor
PS Remember we are always open to suggestions when it comes to titles you would like to see again.
Story: R A “Monty” Montague
Art: Patrick Wright
Cover: Ian Kennedy
Originally Commando No 824 (March 1974), re-issued as No 2084 (May 1987)
Commando No 4668 – The Lost Squadron
“Slim” Sothern, fighter pilot, floated in the Channel in his Mae West and cursed his rotten luck. Sure, an ambulance rescue seaplane was circling above, but it was German, and Slim feared that for him the war was over, and only the deadly dullness of prison camp lay ahead.
How wrong can you be?
He was taken prisoner all right but inside a week such strange and mysterious things had happened to Slim Sothern that he, and other RAF pilots like him, had been turned into a “Squadron of the lost,” and were flying Messerschmitts for the Germans against the British.
Introduction
I reckon Peter Ford is an unsung hero of the early years of Commando. His crisp, accurate lines — especially, but not only, when dealing with aircraft — is up there with the best of comic illustrators. He was one of the few Commando artists to write stories as well, but here those duties are done by Boutland who manages to weave fighters, bombers, Resistance fighters and nasty Nazis together in a fantastic high-octane cocktail.
Striking though it is, Ken Barr’s cover only hints at the treasures within.
Calum Laird, Commando Editor
Story: Boutland
Art: Peter Ford
Cover: Ken Barr
Originally Commando No 134 (Sept 1964), re-issued as No 695 (November 1972)
Commando No 4669 – Life-Line To Tobruk
Tobruk was under siege. Enemy troops lay around the port on three sides. No supplies could get through by any land route. Everything had to be brought in by sea.
It was a dangerous business for the landing craft that were used as supply vessels. Slow and cumbersome, they were under constant attack by German ships and aircraft. But Lieutenant Jack Jarrat and his crew took on all comers, even the German army. It seemed that nothing could stop them!
Introduction
Here’s a chance to taste a slice of classic Commando, as requested by Commando readers. Bill Fear’s script leads us from sea to land and back again, twisting and turning as he weaves a tense story around the brave men fighting in North Africa and the equally brave men aboard slow-moving, lightly defended landing craft supplying them. Carmona’s detailed artwork brings action and characters vividly to life. Wrap that in a classic Ian Kennedy cover and we’re on to a winner.
I remember buying this one as a boy and after all these years it didn’t disappoint. Little wonder this it was requested by a number of readers, including Johnny Westbridge from New Zealand.
Iain McLaughlin, Sub-Editor
PS We are always open to suggestions for titles you would like to see again.
Story: Bill Fear
Art: Carmona
Cover: Ian Kennedy
Originally Commando No 1408 (April 1980), re-issued as No 2620 (December 1992)
Commando No 4670 – Survival!
A handful of shivering, crestfallen British soldiers, cut off in German-occupied Norway. Their mission…to destroy a Nazi airfield menacing the vital convoys to Russia. But before they could even think of tackling their target, they had a more difficult and far more urgent problem — simply to keep alive in the cruel cold above the Arctic Circle!
Introduction
Happy New Year!
Let’s kick off 2014 by telling you about some non-stop thrills, and spills – but enough about last month’s Commando Office Christmas party, what about this book..?
Survival! is perfect reading for a chilly January evening – with its relentless Arctic adventure, tough heroes, ski-bound villains and, erm…igloo-building…this defies the odds to become a real winter-warmer from the archives.
So, put your feet up, pour yourself a nice, hot cuppa and enjoy.
Scott Montgomery, Deputy Editor
Story: Mclean
Art: Ibanez
Cover: Ian Kennedy
Originally Commando No 921 (March 1975), re-issued as Commando No 2243 (January 1989)
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