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26 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Room to Grow
As a child, I liked my superheroes to have a scientific bent, so the stories about physics grad student Ray (The Atom) Palmer adventuring not only on earth but also in time and other dimensional worlds appealed to me. Plus, kids can identify somewhat with a hero that the adult world towered over.
Comics from the '60s were all about gimmicks, and the Atom's was...
Published on April 25, 2002 by Chris Jarocha-Ernst

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8 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Good but not great Silver Age Atom stories.
Fox wrote these stories around the same period of time he was writing for JUSTICE LEAGUE and HAWKMAN. But the Atom story ideas are never as creative or bizarre as those in JUSTICE LEAGUE, and the characters aren't as likeable as Hawkman and Hawkgirl. The Gil Kane / Murphy Anderson artwork is pretty impressive, however; and it's reproduced here well via the DC Archives...
Published on April 5, 2002 by miles@riverside


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26 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Room to Grow, April 25, 2002
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This review is from: The Atom Archives, Vol. 1 (DC Archive Editions) (Hardcover)
As a child, I liked my superheroes to have a scientific bent, so the stories about physics grad student Ray (The Atom) Palmer adventuring not only on earth but also in time and other dimensional worlds appealed to me. Plus, kids can identify somewhat with a hero that the adult world towered over.
Comics from the '60s were all about gimmicks, and the Atom's was that he could shrink, varying from submicroscopic size to about a foot tall. That let stories develop from notions of putting the Atom in peril not only from normal-sized adults but also from various small objects, from the pointed hands of a watch to a Venus fly-trap to a draining sink (all represented here), which would then be drawn enticingly on the comic's cover.
Author Gardner Fox and artist Gil Kane had already gained some measure of fame for their work on Green Lantern, but they had yet to find their footing on The Atom. The Atom was never one of DC's most popular heroes, but I liked him, and this collection shows the two creators moving from the hero's origin to the establishment of recurring themes which would lead to The Atom's brief peak of popularity.
The collection includes the introduction of two villains who became favorites with DC Comics readers: Chronos the Time Thief (who used clock gimmicks) and Jason Woodrue the Plant-Master (not only a master gardener but also an exile from a dimension where dryads ruled). It also includes the first "Time Pool" stories, in which the Atom would use a wormhole in time (too small for normal humans) to make discoveries in the past. (Oddly, Chronos was never used in a Time Pool story, which would seem a natural combination.)
    This book reprints Atom stories from SHOWCASE #s 34-36 and THE ATOM #s 1-5, 1961-1963.
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20 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Mite for All Seasons, October 3, 2001
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This review is from: The Atom Archives, Vol. 1 (DC Archive Editions) (Hardcover)
The Atom was probably the most versatile superhero of the Silver Age of DC Comics. In this collection of stories from 1961, scientist Ray Palmer discovers the secret of controlling his size and weight and becomes the Atom. Rather than exploit his invention for prestige or commercial gain, he chooses to secretly aid lawyer Jean Loring, his fiancee, with her most difficult cases, in the hope that she will agree to marry him after achieving professional success on her own. His subsequent adventures run the gamut from science fiction to espionage to historic time-travel to light fantasy to criminal investigation. Far from invincible like Superman or Green Lantern, the six-inch Atom, embellished by the artwork of Gil Kane and Murphy Anderson at their best, promised and delivered the most fun and excitment (and, admittedly, at times, silliness) of just about all 1960s superhero comic books.
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars My favorite of the comic book heros of the silver age, June 2, 2005
This review is from: The Atom Archives, Vol. 1 (DC Archive Editions) (Hardcover)
The silver age Atom (there was a slightly different "Atom" of golden age comics) was a fantastic comic. Perhaps the strongest thing about it was the art of Gil Kane.

Kane's renderings are true works of art, some times surreal some times psychedelic, that are time capsule of our fears at the height of the cold war. In a word Kane's work in "The Atom" gives a strong feeling of the apocalyptic.

It was a science based comic book which I found very appealing when I discovered it as a child. For a comic book some of themes, characters and dialogue are actually fairly sophisticated.

This volume reproduces pages of the first and probably best issues of the comic.
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4.0 out of 5 stars atomic gil kane art lives on., May 27, 2010
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This review is from: The Atom Archives, Vol. 1 (DC Archive Editions) (Hardcover)
Gardner Fox was a great writer who wrote a ton of comics from the golden age to the silver age and lots of books as well. With this character he is as usual very literate and he often focuses on the current science of the day. These aren't his best stories; but they are entertaining. These stories often feature non-custumed villians , but they do have the origin of Kronos in here though. Interestingly he has pattern baldness! now that's a first perhaps as far as super=-villians go. (he's not completely bald). These type of stories are not slambuster type of superhero stuff but they are well thought out and fun to read.this is not as good as what Fox had done in the Justice League; but it's not that bad. Todays readers are too much bombarded with supervillians to realize that you can also have stories that have nothing to do with them and still be entertained. These are cold war era early sixties stories and the late Great Gil Kane does his usual great art stylings and he even gets the excellent murphy anderson to ink him! This archive is remastered like d.c. used to do before they went insane and started scanning old comics and putting that out as a expensive archives . So you get your moneys worth with this one.
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8 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Good but not great Silver Age Atom stories., April 5, 2002
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miles@riverside (Indio, CA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Atom Archives, Vol. 1 (DC Archive Editions) (Hardcover)
Fox wrote these stories around the same period of time he was writing for JUSTICE LEAGUE and HAWKMAN. But the Atom story ideas are never as creative or bizarre as those in JUSTICE LEAGUE, and the characters aren't as likeable as Hawkman and Hawkgirl. The Gil Kane / Murphy Anderson artwork is pretty impressive, however; and it's reproduced here well via the DC Archives "remastering" process.
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0 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Atom Archives-Vol 1, June 19, 2008
This review is from: The Atom Archives, Vol. 1 (DC Archive Editions) (Hardcover)
Great product. Brings me back to my youth and original comic book collection. Too bad prices are not a bit lower.
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7 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Atom shrinks with age: Great Artwork, Poor Writing, April 15, 2002
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JWA (Abbotsford, British Columbia Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Atom Archives, Vol. 1 (DC Archive Editions) (Hardcover)
I remember the Atom when he first came out, and I read a couple of these issues as a kid. I bought this volume on the strength of the art, which is excellent in my view, and relying on my enjoyment as a kid of these stories. There remains a lot of dynamism and solidity to the penciling in these stories, but not much else. Unfortunately the writing (and I am usually a fan of Gardner Fox)is lousy, and the plot twists, few as they are, lack believability. In retrospect, I wish I had not invested--it's not a volume I'll be looking at again any time soon.
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1 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars the atom archives , vol 1 - shipping problem, November 5, 2006
This review is from: The Atom Archives, Vol. 1 (DC Archive Editions) (Hardcover)
I received this colectible product with book covers -both top right end corners (1/4 inch) crushed, which affected a slight bend of 20 - 30 pages inside the book. I was dissapointed. Considering this book costs more than $30, I had contemplated returning this product but since it will cost me around $3 to ship I decided against it.
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The Atom Archives, Vol. 1 (DC Archive Editions)
The Atom Archives, Vol. 1 (DC Archive Editions) by Julie Schwartz (Hardcover - July 1, 2001)
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