Commando No 4567 – Collision Course
So
how did Flight Lieutenant Kerrie Matheson, in his unarmed DH 86 transport, end
up hurtling straight towards an enemy Bloch 220 Auvergne aircraft?
Well, it had all started off as a routine
secondment from his posting at Coastal Command. He became part of a mission to
build a long distance air bridge, ferrying Allied planes from French-held
Africa to Egypt.
Then his routine flying duties took a deadly
turn – with mystery, espionage and murder setting him on a
Collision
Course.
Story: Alan Hebden
Art: Keith Page
Cover: Keith Page
Commando No 4568 – Eighty-Eight!
It’s
not every day you see a German 88mm gun being operated by a group of “Fighting
Kiwis” – New Zealanders from a British and Commonwealth Expeditionary Force battling
in Greece, determined to hold back the German onslaught.
But this was not an everyday story.
Thanks to a bungling SS officer, the Kiwis were
able to help themselves to the enemy artillery’s pride and joy. Having been relentlessly
pounded by the very same guns, they decided to give the Jerries a taste of
their own medicine!
Story:
Alan Hebden
Art:
Jaume Forns
Cover:
Ian Kennedy
Commando
No 4569 – Beach-Head!
Johnny
Malloy was a little guy – five foot zero or thereabouts, but he wore the
coveted Commando flash on his shoulders.
He seemed lazy, good-for-nothing, a coward –
yet every man in his platoon was ready to die for him when it came to the bit.
Who was he then – this odd little Commando?
Just about the most important guy in the British army, that’s all!
Introduction
All the ingredients for a classic Commando
story are here – a dicey but vital mission, a group of soldiers who don’t trust
a comrade…and Gordon Livingstone’s inimitable artwork. I say inimitable with
confidence as many have tried and none has succeeded.
Flipping open the Ken Barr cover in 1963,
you’d be met with a script and art which neatly capture all the fine details of
service life, thanks to a generation that lived through a world war and
National Service. There’s a priceless authenticity about this. And you can have
it for only £1.50. What a bargain!
Calum
Laird, Editor
Beach-Head
originally Commando No 54 (January 1963)
Story:
Parsons
Art:
Gordon Livingstone
Cover:
Ken Barr
Commando
4570 – Arctic Victory
After
a few weeks in a certain squadron of the RAF Regiment, Phil Adamson was
beginning to wonder if this unit really was just for the defence of airfields.
What with unarmed combat instruction, learning about explosives and a mock-raid
on a local flying school, it was more like training for a crack Commando squad.
He didn’t know how right he was!
Introduction
Although
it first appeared in the Spring of 1988, it somehow seems fitting to republish
author David Heptonstall’s icy tale in mid-January, the chill of winter still
in the air.
Artist Terry Patrick’s rendering of Arctic
Scandinavia – especially on pages 26 and 27 – is very effective and, as always,
cover legend Ian Kennedy does Commando proud.
The story seemingly starts as an air yarn
but then changes gear, morphing into a “men-on-a-mission” adventure with a hint
of espionage. It’s a little bit different.
Scott
Montgomery, Deputy Editor
Arctic
Victory, originally Commando No 2177 (April 1988)
Story: David Heptonstall
Art: Terry Patrick
Cover: Ian Kennedy
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