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・ Stanley Adams (singer)
・ Stanley Adams (whistleblower)
・ Stanley Afeaki
・ Stanley Afedzie
・ Stanley Airport
・ Stanley Albert Joseph
・ Stanley Albert Watson
・ Stanley Alexander de Smith
・ Stanley Alexander Weigel
・ Stanley Allan
・ Stanley Allen
・ Stanley Allen Bastian
・ Stanley Allotey
・ Stanley Amor
・ Stanley Amos
Stanley and His Monster
・ Stanley and Livingstone
・ Stanley and Stanley Common
・ Stanley Anderson
・ Stanley Anderson (artist)
・ Stanley Anderson (disambiguation)
・ Stanley Andrews
・ Stanley Andrews (journalist)
・ Stanley Appel
・ Stanley Argyle
・ Stanley Armour Dunham
・ Stanley Arms, Eccles
・ Stanley Army Airfield
・ Stanley Arnold
・ Stanley Arnoux


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Stanley and His Monster : ウィキペディア英語版
Stanley and His Monster

Stanley and His Monster〔Title spelling as per (Grand Comics Database: ''Stanley and His Monster'' )〕 was an American comic-book humor feature and later series from DC Comics, about a boy who has a monster as his companion instead of a dog. Created by writer Arnold Drake and artist Winslow Mortimer as a backup feature the funny-animal comic ''The Fox and the Crow'' #95 (Jan. 1966), it went to its own 1960s title and a 1990s revival limited series.
==Publication history==
The backup feature "Stanley and His Monster" appeared in DC Comics' funny-animal comic ''The Fox and the Crow'' #95–108, upon which the series became ''Stanley and His Monster'' from #109–112 (May–Nov. 1968), the final issue.
The characters' next major appearance was in a 1993 four-issue miniseries, ''Stanley and His Monster'' vol. 2, by writer-artist Phil Foglio, who had previously done their origin in ''Secret Origins'' #48 (April 1990). This humorous adventure series, revealing the monster as a demon from Hell who had turned good and was cast out by Lucifer, incorporated and parodied elements of DC Comics' mature-reader Vertigo imprint in a lighthearted, general-audience fashion. Among the characters who appeared are Remiel, Duma, The Phantom Stranger, and the John Constantine-like Ambrose Bierce.
The titular characters returned in 2001 as supporting players in the ''Green Arrow'' series, written by filmmaker Kevin Smith, but in a much darker tone than any previous appearance, and with Stanley by now a young teenager. They next appeared in the 2005–2006 miniseries ''Infinite Crisis'', where, in issue #6, they are part of a gathering of supernatural characters attempting to summon the mystical spirit of vengeance, the Spectre, for aid.
The characters next appeared from April to July 2011 in "Batman/Superman: Sorcerer Kings" as members of a mostly magical Justice League in a dystopian future. Stanley appeared as a young adult.

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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