Default

‘The Amazing Spider-Man’ issue #1 comic book sells for over $1.3M

[ad_1]

This comic book’s price tag made collectors’ spidey senses tingle.  

A near-perfect copy of “The Amazing Spider-Man #1” sold for over $1.3 million at auction, breaking the record for the highest price the issue has ever fetched on the block

The unrestored copy of the Marvel hero’s self-titled series debut was purchased for a staggering bid of $1,380,000 through Dallas-based Heritage Auctions on Thursday.

The record-breaking sale was part of a larger comic auction that included a 7.0-grade “Fine/Very Fine” copy of “Superman #1,” which sold for $2.3 million.

Industry experts said the Spidey comic’s 9.8 “Near Mint/Mint Condition” grade by the Certified Guaranty Company, the comics industry standard, easily justifies the seven-figure price tag.

Only one other copy is known in existence to have the same grade, and none have received a higher-rated appraisal, according to CGC.  

“For a buyer in today’s market, to obtain a copy of this issue in a 9.8 could be a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity,” CGC President Matt Nelson told The Post, adding that a 9.6-graded copy of the same issue went for just over $520,000 last year. 


Spidey’s eponymous series debut, which sold for just 12 cents in 1963, retells Parker’s origin story and how he gained his superpowers.
The comic is graded at 9.8 — the highest ever recorded for Spidey’s eponymous series debut — and sold for just 12 cents in 1963. Heritage Auctions

“This Spider-Man #1 represents literally the launching of his own title that has lasted for decades, so historically, this is a very important book in the Spider-Man universe.”

“The Amazing Spider-Man #1,” by artist Steve Ditko and writer Stan Lee, hit the newsstands seven months after the world first met nerdy high schooler Peter Parker — who fights crime as the friendly neighborhood Spider-Man after being bit by a radioactive arachnid — in “Amazing Fantasy #15.”  

Spidey’s eponymous series debut, which sold for just 12 cents in 1963, retells Parker’s origin story — how he gained his superpowers and how a burglar murdered his Uncle Ben while he was out web-slinging. 

The issue also introduces readers to villains including the Chameleon, who he confronts during a crossover yarn with Marvel’s Fantastic Four, and Daily Bugle publisher J. Jonah Jameson. 

The copy of “The Amazing Spider-Man” No. 1 is deemed to be a “curator pedigree” book, meaning it was part of a coveted personal collection of well-preserved comics that were rumored to have previously belonged to a museum curator, according to Heritage Auctions Vice President Barry Sandoval. 

[ad_2]

Source link