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Mystery in Space : ウィキペディア英語版
Mystery in Space

''Mystery in Space'' is the name of two science fiction American comic book series published by DC Comics and a standalone Vertigo anthology released in 2012. The first series ran for 110 issues from 1951 to 1966, with a further 7 issues continuing the numbering during a 1980s revival of the title. An 8-issue limited series began in 2006.
Together with ''Strange Adventures'', ''Mystery In Space'' was one of DC Comics' major science fiction anthology series. It won a number of awards, including the 1962 Alley Award for "Best Book-Length Story" and the 1963 Alley Award for "Comic Displaying Best Interior Color Work". The title featured short science fiction stories and a number of continuing series, most written by many of the best-known comics and science fiction writers of the day, including John Broome, Gardner Fox, Jack Schiff, Otto Binder, and Edmond Hamilton. The artwork featured a considerable number of the 1950s and 1960s finest comics artists such as Carmine Infantino, Murphy Anderson, Gil Kane, Alex Toth, Bernard Sachs, Frank Frazetta and Virgil Finlay.
==Original series ==

Directly appealing to public taste for science fiction in the early 1950s, ''Mystery In Space'' was launched by DC Comics with adverts in most of their titles published in early 1951 - proclaiming "The Universe Is The Limit In Every Issue Of Mystery In Space" and "The Magazine That Unlocks The Secrets Of The Future" around a copy of the first cover. The title of the series had been suggested by Whitney Ellsworth to editor Julius Schwartz. Offering "Amazing trips into the unknown", "Astounding adventures on uncharted worlds", and "Astonishing experiments of super-science" the title was modelled on the success of ''Strange Adventures'' which began publication the previous year. Like that title, ''Mystery In Space'' was an anthology comic featuring a combination of short science fiction stories, science-fiction based heroes and super-heroes, and single page articles on subjects associated with space and space technology. It is probably best known for publishing the classic Adam Strange series (issues #53-100, #102),〔Irvine "1950s" in Dolan, p. 67: "The series' signature character was without doubt the space hero Adam Strange. After moving to ''Mystery in Space'' from ''Showcase'' at issue #53 (August 1959), Strange would come to dominate the title appearing in forty-eight straight issues before skipping one and taking his final bow in issue #102 (September 1965)."〕 but also featured a number of other characters in series of varying length:
* Knights of the Galaxy (issues #1-8)
* Interplanetary Insurance, Inc (issues #16-25)
* Space Cabbie (issues #21, #24, #26-47)
* Star Rovers (issues #66, #69, #74, #77, #80, #83, #86)
* Hawkman (issues #87-90)
* Space Ranger (issues #92-99, #101, #103)
* Jan Vern, Interplanetary Agent (issue #100, #102)
* Ultra the Multi-Alien (issues #103-110).
''Mystery In Space'' #1 featured "9 Worlds To Conquer", the first 10-page tale of the Knights of the Galaxy by Robert Kanigher (under the name Anthony Dion) with art by Carmine Infantino, together with three eight or ten-page non-series science fiction stories by Gardner Fox and John Broome, the first of a series of single page information pieces "Stars and their legends" and a two-page text article "What do you know about comets?"; establishing a format that would last for some years.
"Space Taxi" in ''Mystery In Space'' #21 (August/September 1954) introduced the first long-term series to the title - Space Cabbie (also known as Space Cabby), whose stories involved taking people from planet to planet in a battered space taxi he called "the jalopy" and the scrapes he got into as a result; written by Otto Binder with art by Howard Sherman. There was no indication the story was the first of a series, yet Space Cabby returned just three issues later in "Hitchhiker In Space" (''Mystery In Space'' #24, February/March 1955), and then had an unbroken 22-issue run until "The Riddle of the Rival Space Cabbies!" (''Mystery In Space'' #47, October 1958). The next few issues featured only short stories, and it was almost a year before another continuing series graced the pages of ''Mystery In Space''. A story by Gardner Fox and Carmine Infantino, "Menace of the Robot Raiders!" (''Mystery In Space'' #53, October 1959) featured one of the most enduring and fondly remembered space heroes of the next ten years, Adam Strange, in a 10-page tale which led to the best known period for the ''Mystery In Space'' title. Adam Strange had begun in a three-issue run in ''Showcase'' #17 (November–December 1958), and although DC considered that those issues had not sold sufficiently to warrant granting him his own title, his return a year later in ''Mystery In Space''#53 was to last an impressive 42 appearances over the next seven years. The Adam Strange space opera tales were crafted by Gardner Fox in the best Flash Gordon tradition, with the hero caught between two planets and a love a galaxy away, giant menacing robots, dust devils, perils on two worlds, and distinctive art by Carmine Infantino and Murphy Anderson who drew almost all issues until #92 (June 1964). A number of these stories are considered among the finest of the 1960s, including the full-issue tale "The Planet That Came to a Standstill!" (''Mystery In Space'' #75, May 1962), which won comic fandoms Alley Award for the "Best Book-Length Story" of 1962, and was fairly unusual for the time inasmuch as it featured a cross-over with other major DC characters, the Justice League of America. The following year ''Mystery In Space'' gained a further Alley Award, for "Comic Displaying Best Interior Color Work" - a result of the stylistic Infantino/Anderson Adam Strange pages.
By issue #71 (November 1961) the number of stories in each issue of ''Mystery In Space'' had dwindled to two as the Adam Strange stories increased in size. As well as single stories, a number of other characters filled the title behind Adam Strange. Star Rovers featured in seven issues between 1961–64, written by Gardner Fox and drawn by artist Sid Greene. The Hawkman issues (''Mystery in Space'' #87 - #90, November 1963 - March 1964) followed two three-issue tryouts of the character in ''The Brave and the Bold'' #34-36 and #42-44 which had not sold enough copies to launch the character in his own comic but DC decided to give the character a further tryout. For this short series, editor Julius Schwartz replaced Joe Kubert with Murphy Anderson as artist, and utilised an unusual format for the day - the Adam Strange story "The Super-Brain of Adam Strange" in issue #87 led straight into the Hawkman story "The Amazing Thefts of the I.Q. Gang" in the same issue both written by Gardner Fox. In addition, for the first time since he had appeared in the title, Adam Strange was replaced as cover star and Hawkman took the honors. Although the characters returned to solo stories in the following two issues, "Planets in Peril" (''Mystery In Space'' #90, March 1964) was an epic cross-world book-length team-up between Hawkman and Adam Strange. The cover to #90, with an iconic Adam Strange soaring between Earth and his adopted home, Rann, is often cited as one of the classic science fiction covers of the early 1960s, and this issue was also to have significant impact on DC story continuity in later years as the story first established the links between Rann and Hawkman's world, Thanagar. The war between the two planets has been the defining subject of many of both Hawkman's and Adam Strange's stories and mini-series in the 1990s and 2000s as well as a theme running right across many DC titles.
His ''Mystery In Space'' series was successful enough to finally launch Hawkman into his own title in 1964, but Adam Strange was not to be so fortunate - after a final 2-part story by Fox/Infantino/Anderson, "The Puzzle of the Perilous Prisons!" (''Mystery In Space'' 91, May 1964) Jack Schiff replaced Julius Schwartz as editor and the series changed significantly. Schiff introduced Space Ranger, a long-running character from ''Tales of the Unexpected'' another DC anthology title he edited, while Adam Strange was given a new writer, Dave Wood, and artist, Lee Elias as Carmine Infantino had moved with Schwartz to his new titles. Space Ranger would slowly edge Adam Strange out - taking the cover of four of the next ten issues and sharing two more with Adam Strange (neither appeared on the cover to #100 (June 1965)), co-featuring in the story "The Riddle of Two Solar Systems" (''Mystery In Space'' #94, September 1964) and sharing a storyline in the separate stories "The Wizard of the Cosmos" and "The Return of Yarrok of Zulkan" (''Mystery In Space'' #98, March 1965). For issue #100, Adam Strange was reduced to an 8-page story, and, having not appeared at all in #101 (August 1965), his last appearance was in the 16-page "The Robot World of Ancient Rann" (''Mystery In Space'' #102, September 1965). Space Ranger ended the following issue with "The Billion-Dollar Time Capsule" (''Mystery In Space'' #103, November 1965), and the title was not to regain its earlier form again. From issue #103 (November 1965) ''Mystery In Space'' featured a new character - Ultra the Multi-Alien - but the series was cancelled because of poor sales only a year later with issue #110 (September 1966). The annual circulation statement in issue #110 showed average sales of 182,376 copies - considerably more than most high-selling comics today, although not even in the Top 50 sales at that time and significantly less than 1960's declared sales total of 248,000.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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