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Doc Savage Magazine #4: Review

Apr 1976
Doug Moench, Tony De Zuniga

Story Name:

Ghost-Pirates from the Beyond!

Review & Comments

Rating:
3 stars

Doc Savage Magazine #4 Review by (February 15, 2010)
Additional credits: Marie Severin penciled the first eight pages of the story. a) Page reduction in all of Marvel’s B&W titles left room for nothing beside the main story and letters column; b) Doc Savage makes a rare appearance in formal wear; c) Doc again demonstrates his knowledge of art, but also shows his mastery of savate; d) oddly, Doc carries a gun in this story; e) first Marvel mention of the Crime College and the first B&W mention of the Flea-Run and Doc’s nerve press; f) the reference to John Sunlight marks the first allusion to a canonical adventure; g) Johnny says “I’ll be superamalgamated!” twice, perhaps to reestablish his trademark; h) Ham’s sword-cane is portrayed as both having to be drawn from a sheath and as having a small retractable blade (the latter is the norm for this series); i) “Habeas” is spelled correctly twice, as “Habeus” once; j) anachronism: in February 1936, a character refers to Orson Welles’ “War of the Worlds” broadcast, two-and-a-half years before it took place (writer Moench claims this was intentional). Additional comments: a) Issue also includes “Mail of Bronze,” a letters column; b) the cover by Ken Barr is stunningly unattractive, showing Doc Savage, face obscured by shadows, looking like he has grizzled hair and a stubbly beard, with apple cheeks and an oddly glowing metallic shirt; c) because of space limitations, the inside front cover is occupied by the table of contents.




 

Synopsis / Summary / Plot

Doc Savage Magazine #4 Synopsis by Peter Silvestro
Casablanca: Police Inspector Chalot and Prefect Verdoux are slain by assassins in the former’s office, to stop their search for a mysterious location. In New York, criminologist Charles Villiers urgently tries to contact Doc Savage but is murdered by what witnesses call a glowing ghost. Doc and his men rush to the scene and find a secret message from Villiers, in case of his death, directing Doc to high society party at the home of Darryl LaVey. While speaking to Doc about the late criminologist, architect M. Hulot is poisoned, his dying words directing Doc to Casablanca. Assassins storm the building to kill Doc and his men but are repulsed after a fight. Doc is about to unmask the villains’ leader, LaVey, when the host seizes Trina Valley, a guest, as hostage and flees. In Casablanca, Doc meets with the new police chief, who reveals that Villiers had been appointed the new prefect. Examining some burned files, Doc finds reference to a “Blue Parrot” and “Rashid” just as his sub is approached by a ghostly Moroccan pirate ship. Doc boards the craft, fights its all-too-human crew and captures LaVey but the ghostly leader escapes. At the Blue Parrot tavern, the aides meet Rashid, who relates the story of a fabulous treasure that he alone has the map to, and the sinister Demon Reaver and his men who covet it. Doc Savage leads an expedition into the desert to a lonely minaret where the Demon Reaver is loading up the treasure, ostensibly to help free the natives from French rule, but really for himself. Doc overpowers the villain, who is unmasked as Hulot, whose death in New York was faked, and frees Trina, with the treasure going to the proper authorities.


Tony De Zuniga
Tony De Zuniga
Ken Barr (Cover Penciler)


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