Direct from Commando H.Q. in Dundee....
Commando Issues 4991 - 4994 - On
Sale 9th February 2017
Commando – 4991 – Achtung, We
Surrender
In 1940, small time crook Ned Turpin claimed to be the descendant of
the infamous highwayman, Dick Turpin. He, with his partner in crime, Bert
Bloomer, had no intention of involving himself in the war… or at least until he
was caught robbing notorious East London gangsters, the Bailey brothers.
Shipped off to France to avoid the Baileys and time behind bars, Ned
and Bert found themselves on the front line in a war they wanted no part of.
The advancing Germans had heard many cries on the battlefields but now they
would hear the screams of… Achtung, we surrender!
Story: George Low
Art: Keith Page
Cover: Keith Page
Commando – 4992 – Legion of the
Lost
The Foreign Legion breeds tough men. Sergeant Steve Millar was tough –
he needed to be.
He was stranded in the desert with a fortune of gold. He knew he would
be attacked by Germans, Italians and marauding Arabs. And for company he had
four legionnaires – killers all, with the smell of gold in their nostrils.
Story: Mepham
Art: Segrelles
Cover: Segrelles
Introduction -
Mepham’s tale of the legendary Foreign Legion challenges the intense
Espirit de Corps traditionally established by the Legion’s units. With enemy
forces surrounding our heroes as they cross treacherous desert conditions, it
is essential that they work as a team. Their journey goes to plan until the
Legionnaire’s Code of Honour is disrupted by an irrefutable force: gold.
Mepham brilliantly explores the soldiers’ fight for survival, and the
unfortunate consequences of greed in this thrilling tale. Illustrated
wonderfully by the talented Segrelles, Legion of the Lost is an epic adventure
through the desert to find where man’s wealth really lays.
The Commando Team.
Legion of the Lost, originally
Commando No. 311 (February 1968)
Commando - 4993 – Barbed
Wire Battlers
Seaman Andy Walker had been a loner all his life. From his beginnings
at the orphanage to his posting in the Royal Navy, Andy struggled to be
accepted…
But Andy’s isolation worsened when he was captured and put in a
Japanese prisoner of war camp. Once his jailers learnt he could speak their
language, he was singled out and, from his fellow prisoners’ perspective, given
special treatment.
It would take everything Andy had to prove he was no traitor, no
Japanese pet… to prove that he was one of them. That he was a Barbed Wire
Battler!
Story: George Low
Art: Rezzonico and Morahin
Cover: Janek Matysiak
Commando - 4994 – Ground Strike!
The Bristol Beaufighter packed an awesome punch with its arsenal of
machine guns and cannons. Turned against an enemy, it was a lethal weapon of
war.
But one Beaufighter pilot, Andy Shaw, knew to his cost that it could be
just as deadly against a friendly target hit by mistake…
Story: Alan Hemus
Art: Terry Patrick
Cover: Ian Kennedy
Introduction -
Alan Hemus does it again in this outstanding Commando outing! Hemus’
storytelling is at the top of its game with his two heroes, Andy and Harry,
caught in a web of uncertainty.
They shoot down a launch, convinced it’s an enemy E-Boat, but their
superiors believe they have actually sunk one of their own rescue launches.
Their moral dilemma looms over them until the climax. The tension Hemus draws
out in the plot is matched by the scratch lines of Terry Patrick’s interior
art. This all topped off with another amazing Ian Kennedy cover!
The Commando Team.
Ground Strike!, originally
Commando No. 2518 (November 1991)
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