vol. 1ongoing series vol. 2one-shot vol. 3 ongoing series vol. 4limited series vol. 5 ongoing series vol. 6 limited series vol. 7 ongoing series vol. 8 ongoing series
vol. 1 August 1968 – September 1970 vol. 2 June 1982 vol. 3 July 1987 – November 1998 vol. 4 December 1988 – January 1989 vol. 5 September 2003 – December 2004 vol. 6 April 2011 – August 2011 vol. 7 May 2014 – December 2015 vol. 8 January 2016 – October 2017
The first series,The Silver Surfer, was published beginning in 1968[1] and was written byStan Lee with art byJohn Buscema (#1–17)[2][3] andJack Kirby (#18). Villains introduced in the series includeMephisto in issue #3 (Dec. 1968).[4]Spider-Man guest-starred in issue #14 (March 1970).[5] Encounters with Thor, Loki, andThe Human Torch are also some of the notable things that take place within this volume. The series ended after 18 issues, running from August, 1968 to September, 1970.
The Silver Surfer : The Ultimate Cosmic Experience by Stan Lee, Jack Kirby, andJoe Sinnott was published in September 1978 as part of theMarvel Fireside Books series and is considered to be one of the first true "graphic novels."[6]
In 1982 Marvel published aSilver Surferone-shot by Stan Lee,John Byrne, andTom Palmer.[7] The one-shot finds the Surfer being temporarily freed from Galactus's punishment, and attempts to rescue his missing love,Shalla-Bal. Although it is a one-shot, it serves a second volume within the title.
The third volume series ran from 1987 to 1999 for 146 regular issues, as well as an issue number "−1", and nineannuals, making it the longest-running volume ofSilver Surfer. This volume is sometimes referred to as the secondSilver Surfer volume, but, according to indicia found inside the comics, the 1982 one-shot was designated "Volume 2" and Marvel therefore designated the second series, beginning in 1987, as "Volume 3."[8]
The fourth series was a 1988 two-issue out-of-continuitymini-series from Stan Lee andMoebius through Marvel'sEpic Comics imprint, later collected under the titleSilver Surfer: Parable.[9][10]
The fifth series started in 2004 and was written byDan Chariton and Stacy Weiss, lasting 14 issues.[11] Consisting of theCommunion andRevelation story arcs, the fifth volume ran from September, 2003 to December, 2004.
The sixth series was a five-part miniseries published in 2011, written byGreg Pak with art byStephen Segovia.[12] Given a brief run, the sixth volume started in April, and concluded in August in the year of 2011.
Stan Lee wrote all 18 issues ofThe Silver Surfer, beginning in 1968. He later wrote many of the character's subsequent appearances, including the first Silver Surfer graphic novel in 1978 (published by Simon & Schuster).
Bring on the Bad Guys: Origins of the Marvel Comics Villains includesSilver Surfer #3, 253 pages, softcover, October 1976, Simon & Schuster,ISBN978-0671223557
Marvel's Greatest Superhero Battles includesSilver Surfer vol. 1 #4, 253 pages, softcover, November 1978, Simon & Schuster,ISBN978-0671243913
Volume 1: When Calls Galactus collectsFantastic Four vol. 1 #48–50, #55, #57–60, #72, #74–77; material fromTales to Astonish #92–93,Fantastic Four vol. 1 #56, #61,Fantastic Four Annual #5, 320 pages, softcover, December 2014,ISBN978-0785190028
Volume 5: The Return of Thanos collectsSilver Surfer vol. 3 #24-38,Silver Surfer: The Enslavers, 480 pages, softcover, December 2022,ISBN978-1302948290
Silver Surfer vol. 1: New Dawn collectsSilver Surfer vol. 7 #1–5 and material fromAll-New Marvel Now! Point One, 128 pages, softcover, November 2014,ISBN978-0785188780
Silver Surfer vol. 3: Last Days collectsSilver Surfer vol. 7 #11–15, 120 pages, softcover, November 2015,ISBN978-0785197379
Silver Surfer vol. 4: Citizen of Earth collectsSilver Surfer vol. 8 #1-6, 144 pages, softcover, October 2016,ISBN978-0785199694
Silver Surfer vol. 5: A Power Greater Than Cosmic collectsSilver Surfer vol. 8 #7-14, 176 pages, softcover, December 2017,ISBN978-0785199700
Silver Surfer By Slott & Allred Omnibus collectsSilver Surfer vol. 7 #1-15,Silver Surfer vol. 8 #1-14 and material fromAll-New Marvel Now! Point One, 688 pages, hardcover, December 2018,ISBN978-1302913595
Defenders: The Best Defense includesSilver Surfer: The Best Defense one-shot, 168 pages, softcover, March 2019,ISBN978-1302916145
Fantastic Four: Prodigal Sun includesSilver Surfer: Prodigal Sun one-shot, 112 pages, softcover, November 2019,ISBN978-1302919801
Silver Surfer: Black Treasury Edition collectsSilver Surfer: Black #1-5, 120 pages, softcover, December 2019,ISBN978-1302917432
Silver Surfer: Black collectsSilver Surfer: Black #1-5, 120 pages, softcover, October 2020,ISBN978-1302927844
^DeFalco, Tom; Gilbert, Laura, ed. (2008). "1960s".Marvel Chronicle A Year by Year History. London, United Kingdom:Dorling Kindersley. p. 131.ISBN978-0756641238.When Stan Lee was told to expand the Marvel line, he immediately gave the Surfer his own title...Since Jack Kirby had more than enough assignments, Lee assigned John Buscema the task of illustrating the new book.{{cite book}}:|first2= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
^Daniels, Les (1991).Marvel: Five Fabulous Decades of the World's Greatest Comics. New York, New York:Harry N. Abrams. p. 139.ISBN9780810938212.Beautifully drawn by John Buscema, this comic book represented an attempt to upgrade the medium with a serious character of whom Lee had grown very fond.
^DeFalco "1960s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 133: "Created by editor Stan Lee and artist John Buscema, Mephisto hated the Surfer the moment he became aware of him."
^Manning, Matthew K.; Gilbert, Laura, ed. (2012). "1970s".Spider-Man Chronicle Celebrating 50 Years of Web-Slinging. London, United Kingdom:Dorling Kindersley. p. 53.ISBN978-0756692360.The Silver Surfer paid a visit to New York City in this Stan Lee/John Buscema tale. Like most first encounters in the Marvel Universe, the Surfer's introduction to the web-head didn't go too smoothly.{{cite book}}:|first2= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
^Sanderson, Peter "1970s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 187: "[In 1978], Simon & Schuster's Fireside Books published a paperback book titledThe Silver Surfer by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby...This book was later recognized as Marvel's first true graphic novel."
^Daniels p. 225: "Stan Lee, who continues to write stories featuring the idealistic Silver Surfer, collaborated with the renowned French artist 'Moebius' (Jean Giraud) on this 1988 graphic novel."