![binder binder](https://www.burslfllc.com/wp-content/uploads/facebook-shop-brown.jpg)
At Gold Key Comics, Binder co-created Mighty Samson and other characters. For MLJ Comics (subsequently known as Archie Comics), he wrote stories starring Steel Sterling, the Shield, the Hangman, and the Black Hood. įor Quality Comics, Binder co-created Kid Eternity, and wrote Blackhawk, Doll Man, Uncle Sam and Black Condor stories. For Timely Comics, the 1940s company that would evolve into Marvel Comics, he created Captain Wonder, the Young Allies, Tommy Tyme and the patriotically themed superheroine Miss America, and wrote for stories starring Captain America, the Human Torch, the Sub-Mariner, the Destroyer, the Whizzer, and the All-Winners Squad. Other comics work īinder left Fawcett when the company shut down its comic book division in 1953, but found no shortage of work. Binder and Beck unsuccessfully attempted to launch a newspaper comic strip featuring Mr. Mind, as well as two of Doctor Sivana's four children: the evil teens Thaddeus Sivana Jr. Beck such characters as Mary Marvel, Uncle Dudley, Mr. During his time at Fawcett, Binder co-created with Swayze and C. His text stories in Captain Marvel Adventures, under the "Eando" pseudonym, starred Lieutenant Jon Jarl of the Space Patrol.
![binder binder](https://www.weidinger.eu/img/600/744/resize/w/a/warmbier-5800.846-119-5800.jpg)
He wrote for numerous other Fawcett features, as well as many two-page text fillers that were required in comics in order to be eligible for magazine postal rates. His first Captain Marvel comic-book story was "Captain Marvel Saves the King" in Captain Marvel Adventures #9 (April 1942).
#Binder serial#
His first Captain Marvel writing was the "Dime Action Book" novel Return of the Scorpion, featuring the villain from the 1941 Republic serial The Adventures of Captain Marvel. out of 1,743, over half the entire Marvel Family saga", per comic-book writer-editor E.
![binder binder](https://digitalcontent.api.tesco.com/v2/media/ghs/3957d817-2dc1-463f-be1a-50e2197dc980/snapshotimagehandler_1181238450.jpeg)
īinder spent from 1941 to 1953 with Fawcett, writing "986 stories. and Mary Marvel, the latter of whom he co-created with Marc Swayze. He soon wrote for the spin-off features starring Captain Marvel, Jr. After a year, editor Ed Herron had Binder tackle Fawcett's most prominent character, the superhero Captain Marvel. The following year, magazine publisher Fawcett Publications began its Fawcett Comics line, and Binder started writing the exploits of such characters as Captain Venture, Golden Arrow, Bulletman and El Carim.
#Binder series#
Concurrent with his agent work, Binder was writing for Mort Weisinger, editor of Thrilling Wonder Stories, and Ray Palmer, editor of Amazing, for the latter of whom he created the Adam Link series Fawcett Comics and Captain Marvel īinder entered comics in 1939 on the heels of his artist brother, Jack, who moved to New York to work at the studio of Harry "A" Chesler, one of that era's "packagers" who provided outsourced content for publishers entering the new medium of comic books. At the time of Otto's move to New York City, Earl Binder dissolved the writing partnership, and all new material produced under the name of Eando Binder from January 1936 on, was solely the work of Otto Binder. Howard, although insufficient business during this Great Depression era forced Kline to close his company after a year and a half. In late December 1935, Otto Binder began working for Otis Adelbert Kline as a literary agent in charge of Kline's New York City office most prominently marketing the stories of Robert E. Not earning enough as a writer, Binder and his brother worked at many jobs. The two began writing in partnership and sold their first story, "The First Martian" to Amazing Stories in 1930 it saw publication in 1932 under the pen name " Eando Binder" ("E" and "O" Binder). They settled in Chicago in 1922, during a period rich with science fiction, which enthralled Binder and his brother Earl. Biography Early life and career īorn in Bessemer, Michigan, Otto Binder was the youngest of six children born into a German- Lutheran family that had emigrated from Austria a year earlier.