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In 2006, Wizard was revamped with a bigger look and more pages, switching from the "perfect bound" staple-free look to that of a more traditional magazine. In November 2006, Wizard magazine editor-in-chief and co-founder Pat McCallum was fired, after more than a decade with the company. Wizard declined to say why he was removed. [6]
This category is for the cover images of specific graphic novels and comic collections which are categorized as books rather than comics, and use the {{Non-free book cover}} copyright tag. Media in category "Graphic novel and comic collection book cover images"
The Wizard was launched as a weekly British story paper on 22 September 1922, published by D. C. Thomson & Co. It was merged with The Rover in November 1963, becoming Rover and Wizard . The last issue of the original Wizard was number 1,970; Rover and Wizard continued until the Wizard name was dropped in August 1969, and the paper renamed The ...
Please note, such images should be tagged with {{non-free comic}} and have a non-free use rationale explaining the images use in each individual article. In accordance with Wikipedia:Non-free content criteria, non-free images are not permitted to be used on pages outside of articles, and within articles such non-free images should be kept to a minimum.
Wizard (Archie Comics), an Archie Comics character; Wizard (DC Comics), a villain from the Golden Age of Comics and a member of the Injustice Society; Wizard (Marvel Comics), a Fantastic Four villain who has led a number of Frightful Four teams; Wizard, a British comic that featured Wilson the Wonder Athlete and was merged to Rover; Wizard, a ...
M.D. (comics) Mad (magazine) Mad Kids; Marvel Classics Comics; Marvel Mystery Comics; Marvel Tales (comics) Master Comics; Men of War (comics) Menace (Atlas Comics) Mickey Mouse (comic book) Mickey Mouse Adventures; Military Comics; More Fun Comics; Motion Picture Funnies Weekly; The Mysterious Traveler; Mystery in Space
This category contains magazines about comic books and the trade (featuring primary text pieces with illustrations), as opposed to the regularly printed magazines in serial format published for the sequential art medium. For magazines with comics, see Category:Comics magazines
Potential customers would often bend comics to see what was behind them, thus causing stress lines on the cover that can be quite noticeable, and if they pulled out a comic book and then decided against buying it, it often went back into the spinner rack without much care, resulting in tatty corners and edges and even torn covers and pages. [7]