Recently I finally managed to get my hands on a rare book I've been looking for for some time,
The Greatest Outworlder Stories Ever Told. It's a shame that too few readers today appreciate the Outworlder's long and fascinating history.
Debuting in 1940, the Outworlder was one of the first wave of superheroes following the astonishing success of Superman. In those days the superhero genre and the comics medium itself were only just beginning. Artists and writers brought a bizarre, feverish intensity to the material. The rules had not been set down. Before long the war would come along and give superheroes an easy source of stories and an unified purpose, but until then there were a wide variety of possible stories and approaches. The recent Fantagraphics collection Supermen! gives a good snapshot of the superhero genre at this point.
Still, the war in Europe cast a shadow on the early incarnation of the Outworlder, just as it did on other superhero comics. Many comics took a pacifist, isolationist stance. Several early Superman stories had villains who sought to draw the US into World War II, but comics also took on the Nazis as warmongers--oviously influenced by the fact that many of their creators were New York Jews. Fear of impending war also gave stories such as Daredevil's battles with the Claw their apocalyptic intensity. All these elements were reflected in the creation of the Outworlder.
The Outworlder was created by Herman Berkowitz, a writer-artist who used the pseudonym Harold Starr, and first appeared in Ka-Pow Comics #1. (The same comic also introduced Mr. Jackpot and War-Cry, two other long-running heroes who served as fellow members of the Agents of W.I.E.R.D.) His unscrupulous editor, Edward Norman, instructed him to create a character who was as much like Superman and Captain Marvel as possible. The Outworlder does indeed bear a marked conceptual resemblance to both heroes, but he also had an essence uniquely his own.
Unfortunately I have no scanner and this book is pretty rare, so I'll have to recap the story. It starts out with a large panel showing the Golden Age Outworlder against a backdrop of a star field, full of ringed planets and whooshing comets. "This is the Outworlder--champion of justice! Modern day Hercules! Implacable foe of all that is evil! But who is he and how did he come to our world?"
The tale begins with a typical zoomy retro-futurescape full of streamlined buildings, flying cars etc, and a series of panels showing their achievements. "The planet Anak--the greatest civilization in all the myriad galaxies! Here the evils that plague countless worlds--war and death--have been all but conquered! Here the world is at last at peace under an unified government. But the world is not stagnant--mighty artists and philosophers search relentlessly for truth and beauty!" (Here the story shows two robed, bearded men talking beside some sort of huge swirly thing that is supposed to be Future Art or something of the kind.) "And here live the greatest warriors in all the galaxy, formed to defend their planet from any invaders, trained all their lives for war yet hoping never to see it--the Galactic Peace Brigade!" But all is not well, naturally. Astronomers have seen a bizarre object through a streamlined future-telescope, a hideous and devastated planet with craters in the shape of a skull. "It is Ashtoreth--planet of the evil dead!"
A hideous swarm of "deadly space-fiends" of Ashtoreth come down to deliver an ultimatum to the "Prime Visionary" of Anak, a bearded old man. Guarding him is "Aram Zarnath, the greatest Space Marshall of the Peace Brigade!!!" He has long silver hair wearing a garish blue and red outfit with an eagle symbol. A gigantic batlike creature delivers an ultimatum: "Your world possesses some of the greatest warriors of all the universes! The King of Endless Night cannot allow such a threat to his power to exist! But we have come to make you an offer--if you serve us and help us conquer the galaxy, we will let you live!" His answer is definite--"Never! We would rather die than bow down before a warmonger!" The space fiend answers "Then so be it!" and the planet Ashtoreth spits out fire from its "mouth." "Soon the whole world is consumed by an enormous conflagration!" We see women and children running through the streets before the giant fire.
In the end only one man is left--Aram Zarnath. A skeletal figure in robes and bearing a scythe comes down the desolate landscape of the world to him and beckons. "I don't care what the space fiends send after me, I won't let them stop me!" Then teh figure grips him on the arm "I am no mere space fiend--I AM DEATH!" that last part being written in bones in a panel focusing on his skeletal face. "Aram Zarnath, your time has come! You are dead, along with all your world."
"No!" says Zarnath. "This must be avenged!" He then punches the figure in the face, in a long panel down the side of the page that shows him from the back and the creature with feet up in front of him. Raising his fist to the stars, he stares defiantly at Death and says, "I SWEAR BY ALL THE STARS THAT I WILL NOT REST UNTIL THE SPACE FIEND ARMY HAS BEEN DESTROYED FOREVER!!!!"
"Even I cannot contradict such an oath!" says Death. "You will wander the universe forever until your oath has been fulfilled! But it must be as a ghost--and you will have no power to affect the world directly!"
"Then so be it!" says Zarnath Aram. "And so the ghost of the Space-Marshall travels the infinite galaxies for millions of years upon end, following Ashtoreth in its course... until he reaches a small blue world called EARTH!"
The story then shifts to "All-American high school athlete Mikey Degner," just coming home from a basketball game in an unnamed city . He sees some juvenile delinquents picking on a scrawny kid with glasses and intervenes: "Why don't you pick on someone your own size, buddy?" He then punches out the delinquent and he falls outside the panel, one of the earliest uses of this device. Then to his surprise he sees the ghost of Aram Zarnath appear. "Why--he looks exactly like me! Except he's older and he's wearing some kind of Buck Rogers getup!"
"How--how can you see me! Of course!" says Zarnath. "I should have known! In the infinite universe all things are possible! You are my exact twin--we vibrate on the same atomic frequency, and that's how you can see me!"
"This is crazy! I should stop reading those scientifiction mags before I go loco!"
"There's no time to argue! The planet of the evil dead is coming to conquer this world as it has so many others! We must join together and become one to fight it!"
"And so," says the captions, "the two join hands--and a strange figure appears!" That strange figure is wearing a streamlined black, silver and gold costume with an art deco ray gun. "I--I'm no longer Zarnath or Mikey! I've become something else--something alien to both--an Outworlder!"
Meanwhile, a space ship lands in New York as people look on incredulously and a purple-robed being flanked by horned skeletons steps out, "enveloped in a weird mist." "I am the Emissary of the King of All Darkness!" it says. "You must surrender control of your planet to him or it will be destroyed forever!" Outworlder instantly reacts to this--"My cosmo-senses tell me that a space fiend has landed on Earth! I must stop it!" He then flies "with the speed of an express train" into New York and lands in front of the spaceship. "I've got something for you, you space-rat--my fists!" He then punches out the creature, which whooshes toward the reader. Enraged, it raises its finger--"I summon all the monsters of space to destroy you!" A horde of fanged vultures appear He picks up one of the skeletons and uses it to bludgeon the strange creature. Its robe falls off, revealing a hideous zombie-like creature. He battles the creature in a prolonged fistfight before deciding that "This has gone on long enough!" and whipping out his ray-gun. "No evil thing can survive the light of the Astro-Rays!" The panel then focuses on the hideous creature's scream at the moment of death. The Outworlder raises his gun and cries out "THUS DIE ALL TYRANTS AND WARMONGERS!!!"
In the end he flies off and uses the "astro-modulator" in his belt to separate back into Zarnath and MIkey. "Gosh!" says Mikey. "That sure was a humdinger and a half! But something tells me this battle isn't over yet!" As he walks off into the distance a cloud shaped like a skull looms in the air behind him. "You don't know how right you are, Mikey!" says the final caption. "Make sure to pick up next issue for the Outworlder's never-ending battle against tyranny and evil!!!" And indeed the battle with the King of All Darkness did go on for some ten issues until the series settled down to the usual Golden Age business of battling Nazis and "Japs."
[Anyone who wants to draw on any of this for whatever reason should feel free to do so.]