I thought the Innovation stories were set in-between episodes of the 1990 series. I seem to recall editorial statements in the letters section of the mag clarifying the chronology of the stories in the books. I bought a few of them during a stressful period of my life when I was teaching at Wesleyan University and the comics were being sold at this little hole-in-the-corner shop near the bus stop. I'm not a fan of the 1990 series but the books were fun to read. Some of the letters were interesting since there were fans from what I think of as the REAL DS (from the Sixties) and there were comparisons between the original lore and the changes made in the 1990 version.
I think it would be a good idea for someone to bring back DS in comic's form today. Look how well Buffy and Angel have done since they're "official canon" continuations have come out. They've make mega-bucks! And while our fan base is significantly less than that of those two shows, DS could probably be successfully marketed as like "The original tale of a vampire with a soul/conscience/thought-process/lust for a beauty/etc" towards that crowd. I think it would be a good money maker for DCP, or whoever the heck would have to liscense it out. And I'm in a comic buying ferver since B&A came back, so now's the time to jump on the train!
I do have some of the original Gold Key comics, but not many. I think I have maybe 4 or 5. I was going to attempt to collect them all, but after I completed my collection of all the Marilyn Ross paperbacks, I decided not to. Because all those paperbacks are doing are sitting in a sealed back that's collecting dust. But, I'm certainly not going to sell the comics that I have! I need to read them, get some use outta them for a change. LOL
the artist evidently believing that Julia was a drag queen afflicted with acromegaly and Quentin was portrayed by Engelbert Humperdinck (the Tasmanian pop singer), well, the less said the better!
You really have to see the panel in which some creature labelled as Cassandra Collins appears. Between that and the artist evidently believing that Julia was a drag queen afflicted with acromegaly and Quentin was portrayed by Engelbert Humperdinck (the Tasmanian pop singer), well, the less said the better! And then, there are the actual scripts for those books--oo la la.