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Back then, I published Witch Hunter as Dark Spire Publishing and distributed the Witch Hunter ashcan editon at the '90s incarnation of the New York Comic Con.
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He eventually found his way into a series of comic strips in a great comic book magazine called Comic Culture.
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Witch Hunter started out as a few black-and-white comic book pages in 1976. In fact, I was so young when I started making comics that the only other thing I did well was make, but that's a different kind of article. I starting making comics before I could read or write, stapling together issues of a character inspired by my hero then and now, Captain Marvel (Mar-Vell, make no mistake, although I love Carol) who I called The Blue Marvel (I should've trademarked him before Marvel did 38 years later. Anyone creating comics, or thinking about it (or thinking about doing anything) needs to see big things as already here for them to come. Since then, it's seen the addition of three comic book titles, a book line, and, most importantly, seven people (and counting) who only see big things when they look to our future, which is why we're still here. It also came to be a big inspiration to me whenever it would come into my head during the development of my comic book character, Witch Hunter, and the development of the company that was initially founded as just a publishing vehicle for him, Monarch Comics. That's just in the lyrics.) written by Bruce Springsteen for the album, The River, in 1979, that didn't come to be on the album but did come in at #28 on the Billboard chart when Dave Edmunds covered it in 1982. That's the title to a song (minus the Mama.
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