Recent threads about the older annuals prompted me to sing the praises of the very first one. I would have received this on Christmas morning 1978, and repeated readings were probably responsible for my decision to place a regular order and actually start collecting the progs, rather than buying the odd one and throwing them away afterwards. Never has so much thrillpower been crammed between two hard covers! (Even though said covers sported a rather naff generic sci fi pic to which someone has added the letters DD to make it look like Dan Dare, even though NOTHING ELSE IN THE PICTURE bears any relation to the story.)

I was considering posting a complete story-by-story review until I realised I'm totally crap at identifying uncredited artists and would just expose my ignorance throughout, and some stories don't need much comment. So I'll confine myself to a brief rundown of the contents and several random thoughts and opinions.
So just what did a crisp pound note buy you in late '77? I'll tell you what: Two new Dredds (more later); a rather silly Dan Dare (Star Trek rip-off) with some very nice art; brand new episodes of Invasion, M.A.C.H. 1, Shako and Harlem Heroes (the dead subtle
Nazi story); an episode of Flesh about buffalo hunting in the Wild West (seriously!); six, count 'em, SIX Future Shock type stories between 3 and 10 pages long; all rounded off with several text articles, mainly about the space programme, and a couple of pages of puzzles and cartoons.
So what are the things I love about the 1978 annual?
:arrow: The alien in Dan Dare that looks just like Peter Gabriel in very early Genesis.
:arrow: Even the cartoons are space-related, as is the generic 'boys comic' content with a SF twist - there's an article about stamp-collecting, but it's about SPACE stamps, see!
:arrow: Judge Dredd predicts 9/11:

I'd love to find out who drew all these strips - they range form the fabulous (Dan Dare, Dream Machine) to the goddawful (The Symbiote), but only Kev O'Neil manages to sneak in a signature in some very nice art on Hunted.
In the following years the annuals were full of older crapper filler reprints. I could (and still can't) understand why it was so hard to write one book full of new material a year featuring regular characters. They did get batter in the mid 80s, before going all Ooh-la-la when they became "yearbooks"
Enough warbling. Comments? Which do you guys reckon is the best of all the annuals? And I'm going to attempt the cover for the comp so I hope nobody else is (haven't started yet, so pipe up if you have!)
