Margins
Colección Marvel Limited book cover 1
Colección Marvel Limited book cover 2
Colección Marvel Limited book cover 3
Colección Marvel Limited
Series · 11 books · 1975-2018

Books in series

Kazar, Señor de la Tierra Salvaje book cover
#3

Kazar, Señor de la Tierra Salvaje

2015

Incluye Astonishing Tales #1-16 (1970-1973), Marvel Super-Heroes #19 (1969) y Savage Tales #1 (1971) Tomo 312 páginas. Incluye una introducción de 4 páginas escrita por Roy Thomas en 2012. "Más allá del frío antártico, en la profundidad de una selva oculta, mora Ka-Zar, señor de la Tierra Salvaje. Este lugar, poblado por dinosaurios, bárbaros y tigres dientes de sable, fue olvidado por el tiempo, pero ahora se verá amenazado por peligros tanto externos como internos. Este volumen recoge el origen y las primeras aventuras en solitario de Ka-Zar, una obra maestra a cargo de algunos de los más importantes nombres de La Casa de las Ideas." Astonishing Tales 1-16 ( 1970-73 ) Marvel Superhéroes 19 ( 1969 ) Savage Tales 1 ( 1971 )
Marvel Limited Edition book cover
#4

Marvel Limited Edition

Supervillanos Unidos

2015

Las líneas entre héroes y villanos pueden ser muy finas, pero nunca lo fueron tanto como en la gran saga que aquí tienes completa. Ha estallado una guerra que arrasa con todo a su paso, desde las almenas del castillo del Doctor Muerte en Latveria hasta las profundidades de Atlantis, y tal vez ni siquiera Los 4 Fantásticos, Los Vengadores o Los Campeones puedan hacer nada por detenerla.
Marvel Limited edition book cover
#5

Marvel Limited edition

Deathlok. ¡El Demoledor!

2017

Con Astonishing Tales 25-28, 30-36, Marvel Team-Up 46, Marvel Spotlight 33, Marvel Two-In-One 26 y 27 y Captain America 286-289 Con la etapa clásica completa de uno de los personajes más singulares de los años setenta. A medio camino entre alegoría sobre la guerra y distopia futurista, Deathlok es la gran creación de Rich Buckler, un colosal proyecto para el que cuenta con la ayuda de Bill Mantlo y Doug Moench. Descubre esta alucinante saga, completa, a color y tamaño original por primera vez en España. Por Rich Buckler, Bill Mantlo, Doug Moench, J. M. DeMatteis, Mike Zeck y otros
Marvel Limited Edition. Vampire Tales book cover
#6

Marvel Limited Edition. Vampire Tales

2018

A mediados de los años setenta, los vampiros irrumpieron con fuerza en las publicaciones de Marvel, en especial en sus magazines en blanco y negro. Este volumen recoge las once entregas de la mítica serie Vampire Tales, que contaba con algunos de los mayores talentos del cómic internacional en su mejor momento creativo.
Howard el pato book cover
#8

Howard el pato

Metamorfosis

2017

MARVEL LIMITED EDITION. HOWARD EL PATO: METAMORFOSIS Con Howard The Duck 15-33 y Marvel Team-Up 96 Segundo y último volumen de la recopilación de las aventuras clásicas de Howard El Pato, con la etapa desarrollada por el genio del cómic Steve Gerber. Una mirada lúcida, alienígena y animal de la América de los setenta. Edición limitada y numerada de 1.500 ejemplares. Por Steve Gerber, Val Mayerik, Frank Brunner, John Buscema y otros
MARVEL LIMITED EDITION. EL CASTIGADOR book cover
#17

MARVEL LIMITED EDITION. EL CASTIGADOR

2017

MARVEL LIMITED EDITION. EL CASTIGADOR Con Marvel Preview 2 y Marvel Super-Action 1 Después de su creación en una aventura de Spiderman, El Castigador saltó al terreno de los magazines, destinado a un público más adulto, para vivir las aventuras en solitario que no podían contarse en los cómics convencionales. Este tomo contiene las dos únicas historias que llegaron a publicarse entonces, junto a las historias de Dominic Fortune que le acompañaran en su momento. Por Gerry Conway, Tony DeZúñiga, Len Wein, Archie Goodwin y Howard Chaykin
Essential Monster of Frankenstein, Vol. 1 book cover
#23

Essential Monster of Frankenstein, Vol. 1

1975

In the same vein as ESSENTIAL TOMB OF DRACULA, Marvel unleashes the never-before-reprinted '70s horror title MONSTER OF FRANKENSTEIN! From his birth in a retelling of Mary Shelley's classic tale, follow the Monster as he faces Dracula and the Werewolf by Night during his search for revenge upon the last descendant of his creator, Victor Frankenstein! Collecting MONSTER OF FRANKENSTEIN #1-5, FRANKENSTEIN'S MONSTER #6-18, GIANT-SIZE WEREWOLF #2, and stories from MONSTERS UNLEASHED #2 and #4-10.
Marvel Limited Edition book cover
#24

Marvel Limited Edition

Mujeres Marvel

2018

Una recopilación de las mejores historias aparecidas en los magazines en blanco y negro de la Marvel de los setenta, con mujeres como protagonistas. Las Hijas del Dragón, Satana, La Viuda Negra, Lady Daemon, Fénix, Elektra… ¡todas están aquí! Con The Deadly Hands Of Kung Fu 32 y 33, Marvel Preview 7 y Bizarre Adventures 25 y 28
Marvel Masterworks book cover
#25

Marvel Masterworks

The Invincible Iron Man, Vol. 1

1992

Collects Tales of Supsense #39-50. Inventor, businessman, playboy... SUPER HERO! Gravely injured in combat, billionaire genius Tony Stark saved his own life by designing a life-sustaining shell - the high-tech protective covering that transformed him into the invincible Iron Man! Now, the world believes him to be Tony Stark's personal bodyguard. In this dual role, he faces both boardroom intrigue and super-powered menaces. A modern-day knight in shining armor, he fights injustice wherever it rears its ugly head!
Howard el pato book cover
#28

Howard el pato

Atrapado en un mundo que no es el suyo

2016

Con Adventure Into Fear 19, Man-Thing 1, Giant-Size Man-Thing 4 y 5 y Howard The Duck 1-14, Annual 1, Marvel Treasury Edition 12 y FOOM 15 USA Primero de dos volúmenes. Descubre las aventuras de Howard El Pato desde su primera aparición, en la etapa desarrollada por el genio del cómic Steve Gerber. Una mirada lúcida, alienígena y animal de la América de los setenta. Edición limitada y numerada de 1.500 ejemplares.
El Tigre Blanco book cover
#49

El Tigre Blanco

2018

¡Descubre la leyenda del Tigre Blanco, en un tomo con su trayectoria clásica! Héctor Ayala ha descubierto los amuletos de los Hijos del Tigre y ahora él se dispone a continuar con la tradición de estos luchadores, pero su camino no va a ser fácil. Con The Deadly Hands of Kung Fu 20-24, 26, 27, 29-32, Peter Parker, The Spectacular Spider-Man 9, 10 y 49-52

Authors

Archie Goodwin
Archie Goodwin
Author · 52 books
Archie Goodwin was an American comic book writer, editor, and artist. He worked on a number of comic strips in addition to comic books, and is best known for his Warren and Marvel Comics work. For Warren he was chief writer and editor of landmark horror anthology titles Creepy and Eerie, and for Marvel he set up the creator-owned Epic Comics as well as adapting Star Wars into both comics and newspaper strips. He is regularly cited as the "best-loved comic book editor, ever."
Len Wein
Author · 170 books

Len Wein was an American comic book writer and editor best known for co-creating DC Comics' Swamp Thing and Marvel Comics' Wolverine, and for helping revive the Marvel superhero team the X-Men (including the co-creation of Nightcrawler, Storm, and Colossus). Additionally, he was the editor for writer Alan Moore and illustrator Dave Gibbons' influential DC miniseries Watchmen. Wein was inducted into the Will Eisner Comic Book Hall of Fame in 2008.

Keith Giffen
Keith Giffen
Author · 140 books

Keith Ian Giffen was an American comic book illustrator and writer. He is possibly best-known for his long runs illustrating, and later writing the Legion of Super-Heroes title in the 1980s and 1990s. He also created the alien mercenary character Lobo (with Roger Slifer), and the irreverent "want-to-be" hero, Ambush Bug. Giffen is known for having an unorthodox writing style, often using characters in ways not seen before. His dialogue is usually characterized by a biting wit that is seen as much less zany than dialogue provided by longtime collaborators DeMatteis and Robert Loren Fleming. That approach has brought him both criticism and admiration, as perhaps best illustrated by the mixed (although commercially successful) response to his work in DC Comics' Justice League International (1987-1992). He also plotted and was breakdown artist for an Aquaman limited series and one-shot special in 1989 with writer Robert Loren Fleming and artist Curt Swan for DC Comics. Giffen's first published work was "The Sword and The Star", a black-and-white series featured in Marvel Preview, with writer Bill Mantlo. He has worked on titles (owned by several different companies) including Woodgod, All Star Comics, Doctor Fate, Drax the Destroyer, Heckler, Nick Fury's Howling Commandos, Reign of the Zodiac, Suicide Squad, Trencher (to be re-released in a collected edition by Boom! Studios)., T.H.U.N.D.E.R. Agents, and Vext. He was also responsible for the English adaptation of the Battle Royale and Ikki Tousen manga, as well as creating "I Luv Halloween" for Tokyopop. He also worked for Dark Horse from 1994-95 on their Comics Greatest World/Dark Horse Heroes line, as the writer of two short lived series, Division 13 and co-author, with Lovern Kindzierski, of Agents of Law. For Valiant Comics, Giffen wrote XO-Manowar, Magnus, Robot Fighter, Punx and the final issue of Solar, Man of the Atom. He took a break from the comic industry for several years, working on storyboards for television and film, including shows such as The Real Ghostbusters and Ed, Edd 'n' Eddy. He is also the lead writer for Marvel Comics' Annihilation event, having written the one-shot prologue, the lead-in stories in Thanos and Drax, the Silver Surfer as well as the main six issues mini-series. He also wrote the Star-Lord mini-series for the follow-up story Annihilation: Conquest. He currently writes Doom Patrol for DC, and is also completing an abandoned Grant Morrison plot in The Authority: the Lost Year for Wildstorm.

George Pérez
George Pérez
Author · 39 books
George Pérez (June 9, 1954 – May 6, 2022) was an American comic books artist and writer, known for his work on various titles, including Avengers, Teen Titans and Wonder Woman.
Ralph Macchio
Ralph Macchio
Author · 32 books

For the Karate Kid actor, click here: Ralph Macchio Ralph Macchio is an American comic book editor and writer, who has held many positions at Marvel Comics, including executive editor. Macchio is commonly associated with Daredevil, the Spider-Man line of comics and the popular Ultimate Marvel line. In Macchio's words, he "made probably the longest run on Daredevil of anyone." Macchio is not related to the actor Ralph Macchio, but is nicknamed "Karate Kid" after that actor's famous role.

Steve Gerber
Steve Gerber
Author · 63 books

Steve Gerber graduated from the University of Missouri with a degree in communications and took a job in advertising. To keep himself sane, he wrote bizarre short stories such as "Elves Against Hitler," "Conversion in a Terminal Subway," and "...And the Birds Hummed Dirges!" He noticed acquaintance Roy Thomas working at Marvel, and Thomas sent him Marvel's standard writing test, dialoguing Daredevil art. He was soon made a regular on Daredevil and Sub-Mariner, and the newly created Man-Thing, the latter of which pegged him as having a strong personal style—intellectual, introspective, and literary. In one issue, he introduced an anthropomorphic duck into a horror fantasy, because he wanted something weird and incongruous, and Thomas made the character, named for Gerber's childhood friend Howard, fall to his apparent death in the following issue. Fans were outraged, and the character was revived in a new and deeply personal series. Gerber said in interview that the joke of Howard the Duck is that "there is no joke." The series was existential and dealt with the necessities of life, such as finding employment to pay the rent. Such unusual fare for comicbooks also informed his writing on The Defenders. Other works included Morbius, the Lving Vampire, The Son of Satan, Tales of the Zombie, The Living Mummy, Marvel Two-in-One, Guardians of the Galaxy, Shanna the She-Devil, and Crazy Magazine for Marvel, and Mister Miracle, Metal Men, The Phantom Zone , and The Immortal Doctor Fate for DC. Gerber eventually lost a lawsuit for control of Howard the Duck when he was defending artist Gene Colan's claim of delayed paychecks for the series, which was less important to him personally because he had a staff job and Colan did not. He left comics for animation in the early 1980s, working mainly with Ruby-Spears, creating Thundarr the Barbarian with Alex Toth and Jack Kirby and episodes of The Puppy's Further Adventures, and Marvel Productions, where he was story editor on multiple Marvel series including Dungeons & Dragons, G.I. Joe, and The Transformers. He continued to dabble in comics, mainly for Eclipse, including the graphic novel Stewart the Rat, the two-part horror story "Role Model: Caring, Sharing, and Helping Others," and the seven-issue Destroyer Duck with Jack Kirby, which began as a fundraiser for Gerber's lawsuit. In the early 1990s, he returned to Marvel with Foolkiller, a ten-issue limited series featuring a new version of a villain he had used in The Man-Thing and Omega the Unknown, who communicated with a previous version of the character through internet bulletin boards. An early internet adopter himself, he wrote two chapters of BBSs for Dummies with Beth Woods Slick, with whom he also wrote the Star Trek: The Next Generation episode, "Contagion." During this period, he also wrote The Sensational She-Hulk and Cloak and Dagger for Marvel, Cybernary and WildC.A.T.s for Image, and Sludge and Exiles for the writer-driven Malibu Ultraverse, and Nevada for DC's mature readers Vertigo line. In 2002, he returned to the Howard the Duck character for Marvel's mature readers MAX line, and for DC created Hard Time with Mary Skrenes, with whom he had co-created the cult hit Omega the Unknown for Marvel. Their ending for Omega the Unknown remains a secret that Skrenes plans to take to the grave if Marvel refuses to publish it. Suffering from idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis ("idiopathic" meaning of unknown origin despite having been a heavy smoker much of his life), he was on a waiting list for a double lung transplant. His final work was the Doctor Fate story arc, "More Pain Comics," for DC Comics'

Roy Thomas
Roy Thomas
Author · 332 books

Roy Thomas was the FIRST Editor-in-Chief at Marvel—After Stan Lee stepped down from the position. Roy is a longtime comic book writer and editor. Thomas has written comics for Archie, Charlton, DC, Heroic Publishing, Marvel, and Topps over the years. Thomas currently edits the fanzine Alter Ego for Twomorrow's Publishing. He was Editor for Marvel comics from 1972-1974. He wrote for several titles at Marvel, such as Avengers, Thor, Invaders, Fantastic Four, X-Men, and notably Conan the Barbarian. Thomas is also known for his championing of Golden Age comic-book heroes—particularly the 1940s superhero team the Justice Society of America—and for lengthy writing stints on Marvel's X-Men and Avengers, and DC Comics' All-Star Squadron, among other titles. Also a legendary creator. Creations include Wolverine, Carol Danvers, Ghost Rider, Vision, Iron Fist, Luke Cage, Valkyrie, Morbius, Doc Samson, and Ultron. Roy has also worked for Archie, Charlton, and DC among others over the years.

Stan Lee
Stan Lee
Author · 463 books

Stan Lee (born Stanley Martin Lieber) was an American writer, editor, creator of comic book superheroes, and the former president and chairman of Marvel Comics. With several artist co-creators, most notably Jack Kirby and Steve Ditko, he co-created Spider-Man, the Fantastic Four, Thor as a superhero, the X-Men, Iron Man, the Hulk, Daredevil, the Silver Surfer, Dr. Strange, Ant-Man and the Wasp, Scarlet Witch, The Inhumans, and many other characters, introducing complex, naturalistic characters and a thoroughly shared universe into superhero comic books. He subsequently led the expansion of Marvel Comics from a small division of a publishing house to a large multimedia corporation.

Rich Buckler
Rich Buckler
Author · 8 books
Richard Buckler was an American comics illustrator.
Marshall Rogers
Marshall Rogers
Author · 5 books

Marshall Rogers studied architectural drawing, and his work was characterized by the depiction of characters with relatively human proportions rather than exaggerated musculature, and by detailed rendering of buildings and structures. Some of his first comic-book work appeared in the black-and-white magazine The Deadly Hands of Kung Fu, where he worked with writer Chris Claremont on a story featuring the "Iron Fist" supporting characters Misty Knight and Colleen Wing as the Daughters of the Dragon. He eschewed the grey wash that was used in other black-and-white comics stories in favour of applying screentone. With writer Steve Englehart, Rogers penciled an acclaimed run on the character Batman in Detective Comics #471-476 (Aug. 1977 - April 1978), providing one of the definitive interpretations that influenced the 1989 movie Batman and be adapted for the 1990s animated series. He also penciled the origin story of the Golden Age Batman in Secret Origins #6 (Sept. 1986) with writer Roy Thomas and inker Terry Austin. The two also did a sequel miniseries, Batman: Dark Detective, and had worked together on other series, such as The Silver Surfer. Also striking was Rogers' short run on DC's revived "Mister Miracle" series. Englehart and Rogers' first Batman run was collected in the trade paperbacks Batman: Strange Apparitions and the second run, Batman: Dark Detective. He did independent work at Eclipse Comics and others. This included the first Coyote series with Englehart, and his own Capt. Quick and the Foozle. Portrait by: Marshall Rogers

Michael Golden
Michael Golden
Author · 3 books

Librarian note: There is more than one author in the GoodReads database with this name Michael Golden is an American comic book artist and writer best known for his late-1970s work on Marvel Comics' The Micronauts, as well as his co-creation of the characters Rogue and Bucky O'Hare.

Jesús Blasco
Jesús Blasco
Author · 1 books

Jesús Blasco Monterde began his career in 1935 in the Spanish version of the magazine Mickey. In the 1950s, working for several Spanish publications, he created the character Cuto. In the 1960s, working for the agency L'International, he created the Steel Claw, with story by Tom Tully, for the British magazine Valiant. In the 1970s he publishes several episodes of Paul Foran and 'Los Guerilleros' in Spirou, before working with Claude Moliterni in the adaptation of the Bible in comics, for the Dargaud publishing house. In 1987 he starts working with Sergio Bonelli, in Italy, in the series Tex Willer and Capitan Trueno, with the writer Victor Mora. Jésus Blasco's very productive and influential career ended with his death on October 21, 1995.

John Romita Jr.
John Romita Jr.
Author · 15 books

John Salvatore Romita, Jr. is an American comic book artist best known for his extensive work for Marvel Comics from the 1970s to the 2000s. He is often referred to as JRJR (the abbreviation of John Romita, Jr.) He is the son of comic book artist John Romita Sr.

Steve Englehart
Steve Englehart
Author · 198 books

See also John Harkness. Steve Englehart went to Wesleyan University in Middletown, Connecticut. After a stint in the Army, he moved to New York and began to write for Marvel Comics. That led to long runs on Captain America, The Hulk, The Avengers, Dr. Strange, and a dozen other titles. Midway through that period he moved to California (where he remains), and met and married his wife Terry. He was finally hired away from Marvel by DC Comics, to be their lead writer and revamp their core characters (Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, Flash, and Green Lantern). He did, but he also wrote a solo Batman series (immediately dubbed the "definitive" version) that later became Warner Brothers' first Batman film (the good one). After that he left comics for a time, traveled in Europe for a year, wrote a novel (The Point Man™), and came back to design video games for Atari (E.T., Garfield). But he still liked comics, so he created Coyote™, which within its first year was rated one of America's ten best series. Other projects he owned (Scorpio Rose™, The Djinn™) were mixed with company series (Green Lantern [with Joe Staton], Silver Surfer, Fantastic Four). Meanwhile, he continued his game design for Activision, Electronic Arts, Sega, and Brøderbund. And once he and Terry had their two sons, Alex and Eric, he naturally told them stories. Rustle's Christmas Adventure was first devised for them. He went on to add a run of mid-grade books to his bibliography, including the DNAgers™ adventure series, and Countdown to Flight, a biography of the Wright brothers selected by NASA as the basis for their school curriculum on the invention of the airplane. In 1992 Steve was asked to co-create a comics pantheon called the Ultraverse. One of his contributions, The Night Man, became not only a successful comics series, but also a television show. That led to more Hollywood work, including animated series such as Street Fighter, GI Joe, and Team Atlantis for Disney.

Tony DeZúñiga
Tony DeZúñiga
Author · 1 books
Tony DeZúñiga (born 1941) is a Filipino comic-book artist best known for his work for DC Comics, where he co-created the characters Jonah Hex and Black Orchid.
Herb Trimpe
Herb Trimpe
Author · 6 books
Herbert William Trimpe was an American comics artist and occasional writer, best known as the seminal 1970s artist on The Incredible Hulk and as the first artist to draw for publication the character Wolverine, who later became a breakout star of the X-Men.
Doug Moench
Doug Moench
Author · 144 books

Doug Moench, is an American comic book writer notable for his Batman work and as the creator of Black Mask, Moon Knight and Deathlok. Moench has worked for DC Comics, Marvel Comics, Dark Horse Comics and many other smaller companies; he has written hundreds of issues of many different comics, and created dozens of characters, such as Moon Knight. In 1973, Moench became the de facto lead writer for the Marvel black-and-white magazine imprint Curtis Magazines. He contributed to the entire runs of Planet of the Apes, Rampaging Hulk (continuing on the title when it changed its name to The Hulk!) and Doc Savage, while also serving as a regular scribe for virtually every other Curtis title during the course of the imprint's existence. Moench is perhaps best known for his work on Batman, whose title he wrote from 1983–1986 and then again from 1992–1998. (He also wrote the companion title Detective Comics from 1983–1986.) Moench is a frequent and longtime collaborator with comics artist Paul Gulacy. The pair are probably best known for their work on Shang-Chi: Master of Kung Fu, which they worked on together from 1974–1977. They also co-created Six from Sirius, Slash Maraud, and S.C.I. Spy, and have worked together on comics projects featuring Batman, Conan the Barbarian and James Bond. Moench has frequently been paired with the artist and inker team of Kelley Jones and John Beatty on several Elseworlds Graphic Novels and a long run of the monthly Batman comic.

Chris Claremont
Chris Claremont
Author · 244 books

Chris Claremont is a writer of American comic books, best known for his 16-year (1975-1991) stint on Uncanny X-Men, during which the series became one of the comic book industry's most successful properties. Claremont has written many stories for other publishers including the Star Trek Debt of Honor graphic novel, his creator-owned Sovereign Seven for DC Comics and Aliens vs Predator for Dark Horse Comics. He also wrote a few issues of the series WildC.A.T.s (volume 1, issues #10-13) at Image Comics, which introduced his creator-owned character, Huntsman. Outside of comics, Claremont co-wrote the Chronicles of the Shadow War trilogy, Shadow Moon (1995), Shadow Dawn (1996), and Shadow Star (1999), with George Lucas. This trilogy continues the story of Elora Danan from the movie Willow. In the 1980s, he also wrote a science fiction trilogy about female starship pilot Nicole Shea, consisting of First Flight (1987), Grounded! (1991), and Sundowner (1994). Claremont was also a contributor to the Wild Cards anthology series.

548 Market St PMB 65688, San Francisco California 94104-5401 USA
© 2025 Paratext Inc. All rights reserved