Glanzman is best known for his Charlton Comics series Hercules, about the mythological Greek demigod; his autobiographical war stories about his service aboard the U.S.S.'"[7]), he began a peripatetic career doing manual labor in cabinet shops, lumber mills, and boat yards.[7] During this time, he lived in Rockaway, Queens, and in the Long Island towns of Valley Stream and Massapequa Park.[7] In 1958, Glanzman began working with Pat Masulli, the executive editor of Charlton Comics, a low-paying publishing company.[9] Although some sources credit him for co-creating the Charlton hardboiled detective character Sarge Steel, he stated in a 2009 interview that "The only thing I created was the "U.S.S.[18] By late 1979, with most of DC's war titles either canceled or converted to character series with established teams, Glanzman remained solely on G.I.He would return to ink penciler Tim Truman on the Western miniseries Jonah Hex: Two Gun Mojo (Sept.–Dec.Glanzman also contributed a handful of war stories to Marvel Comics from 1986–1989, in the black-and-white adventure magazine Savage Tales, the Marine Corps series Semper Fi, an issue of The 'Nam, and most notably A Sailor's Story / Marvel Graphic Novel #30 (March 1987), a 60-page true account, which he both wrote and drew, of his time on the U.S.S.[9] In 2003, Glanzman began working on webcomics, writing and drawing the 19th-century nautical adventure Apple Jack, and reteaming with his "Willy Schultz" writer, Will Franz, on the Roman centurion series The Eagle.
A Sailor's Story
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Marvel Graphic Novel
#30 (March 1987). Cover art by Glanzman