A Dime a Space-Dozen: Hunting Down Gold Key’s Star Trek #1
Here’s how I found one of the most elusive Star Trek comics during the early days of my collecting habits.
Rich Handley Author and Editor
Here’s how I found one of the most elusive Star Trek comics during the early days of my collecting habits.
I contributed to a new book from Modiphius for its licensed Star Trek Adventures line. The book is titled Shackleton Expanse Campaign Guide, and its lead writers are Derek Tyler Attico, Kelli Fitzpatrick, Jim Johnson, Scott Pearson and Dayton Ward.
It’s time to revisit the various formats in which Gold Key’s 61 issues have been presented in the United States and abroad.
This week, I revisit Gold Key’s final batch of Star Trek (issues #54–61), including what may be the company’s best sequel.
This week column revisits Gold Key Star Trek issues #42–53.
As the first publisher to produce Trek comics, Gold Key presented a unique version of the franchise. This week, we’ll revisit issues #30-41.
This column continues to examine how licensed Star Trek comics serve as prequels, sequels, or tie-ins to the films and episodes. Our focus this week is on Gold Key issues #17–28.
This week, we’ll examine Gold Key’s Star Trek #9–16, by Len Wein, with a continued emphasis on how licensed stories serve as prequels, sequels, or tie-ins to television episodes and theatrical films.
This week’s column revisits issues #1–8 of the Star Trek franchise’s very first comic book line, published from 1967 to 1979 by Western Publishing’s Gold Key Comics imprint.