In this image released by Comic Connect Corp., a the June
1938 cover of "Action Comics" that first featured Superman,
is shown.
A rare copy of the first comic book featuring Superman
sold Monday for $1 million ($NZ1.4m), smashing the previous
record price for a comic book.
A 1938 edition of Action Comics No. 1, widely considered the
Holy Grail of comic books, was sold from a private seller to
a private buyer, neither of whom released their names. The
issue features Superman lifting a car on its cover and
originally cost 10 cents.
The transaction was conducted by the auction site
ComicConnect.com. Stephen Fishler, co-owner of the site and
its sister dealership, Metropolis Collectibles, orchestrated
the sale.
Fishler said it transpired minutes after the issue was put on
sale at around 10:30 a.m. Eastern time. He said that the
seller was a "well known individual" in New York with a
pedigree collection, and that the buyer was a known customer
who previously bought an Action Comics No. 1 of lesser grade.
"It's considered by most people as the most important book,"
said John Dolmayan, a comic book enthusiast and dealer best
known as the drummer for System of a Down. "It kind of
ushered in the age of the superheroes."
Dolmayan, who owns Torpedo Comics, last year paid $317,000
($NZ452,000) for an Action Comics No. 1 issue for a client.
Others have sold for more than $400,000 ($NZ571,000), he
said, but this copy fetched a much higher price because it's
in better condition. It's rated an "8.0 grade," or "very
fine."
Dolmayan said he didn't buy this copy but he wishes he could
have.
"The fact that this book is completely un-restored and still
has an 8.0 grade, it's kind of like a diamond or a precious
stone. It's very rare," he said.
There are only about 100 copies of Action Comics No. 1
believed to be in existence, and only a handful have been
rated so highly. It's rarer still for those copies to be made
available for sale.
"The opportunity to buy an un-restored, high-grade Action One
comes along once every two decades," Fishler said. "It's
certainly a milestone."
The sticker shock was astounding to Fishler, nevertheless.
"It is still a little stunning to see 'a comic book' and '$1
million' in the same sentence," Fishler said. "There's only
one time a collectible hits the $1 million threshold."
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