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story identification - Old comic book, war with the moon, Pan-ku Chinese first man


Back in the 1960s, I once read an old, second hand, comic book about relations between the Earth and the Moon. In some television messages from the Moon, the hero saw a beautiful Moon woman, while other messages from the moon involved a yellow-skinned man with antlers on his head named Pan-ku.


Pan-ku was correctly identified in the comic with a mythical Chinese first man or creation god. As a result some Chinese people turned to his side.


As the Moon began to attack the Earth, the hero traveled to the Moon in a rocket ship hoping to meet the beautiful Moon woman and - oh yes - maybe get around to saving the Earth from the devastating lunar attacks.



Answer




This appears to be Rocket to the Moon, an adaptation of Maza of the Moon by Otis Adelbert Kline. I haven't read the comic version, but the plot you describe is an exact match to the novel. The Emperor of the Moon being named P'an-ku has got to be distinctive.


The novel was published in 1929 (magazine)/1930 (book). Wikipedia (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maza_of_the_Moon#Comic_adaptation) says the comic adaptation was published in 1951, so it would have been old already in the 1960s.


The antlers are probably a comic-specific embellishment. In the book version, the TV image of P'an-ku shows him with



a tall pointed helmet of gleaming yellow metal, built up in tiers like a pagoda and ending in a sharp spike. His body was encased in scale-like armor of the same yellow metal



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