
I became a fan of MARVEL Comics in the early 1960s (you can read about it here), but it took me until the mid-1960s before I discovered Doctor Strange. The story of a gifted surgeon who loses his ability to operate gripped me. Stephen Strange’s search for an answer to relieve his afflictions take him to Asia and becoming a student of a Sorcerer Supreme, The Ancient One. Strange learns magic exists and that Earth is just one location in a multiverse of dimensions.
At the time I started reading Doctor Strange comics, the artist and prime mover was Steve Ditko who specialized in surreal artwork to capture the weirdness of the various dimensions where Doctor Strange travels to while defending Earth from invasion by powerful entities.
Doctor Strange uses a variety of mystical objects, including the powerful Eye of Agamotto and Cloak of Levitation to help defend our planet. Strange resides in a mansion referred to as the Sanctum Sanctorum, located at 177A Bleecker Street, Greenwich Village, Manhattan, New York City.
While other MARVEL super-heroes use super powers, Doctor Strange has to manipulate the occult forces of magic and sorcery to defeat multidimensional threats. Doctor Strange: A Decade of Dark Magic provides a guided tour into the development of one of MARVEL’s most enigmatic characters. GRADE: A
Table of Contents:
The Ancient Tomes — xi
Prologue: Set Time to Swirling — 1
1. 1963-1964: The Gossamer Thread — 8
2. 1964-1966: A Nameless Land, a Timeless Time — 27
3. 1966-1969: Other Realms, Other Voices — 47
4. 1970-1972: The Flickering Flame — 71
5. 1972-1973: Man Nor Magic — 87
Epilogue One: Over Credits — 111
Epilogue Two: After Credits — 113
Acknowledgements — 121
Illustrations — 123
Bibliography — 126
About the Author — 130









