Don Blake
A mild-mannered American physician with a lame leg, Donald Blake discovered an enchanted walking stick in a Norwegian cave; striking it on the ground transformed him into the Asgardian god of thunder, Thor — complete with the mystic hammer Mjolnir and command over storms and lightning.
Few characters can claim a debut as seismic as Don Blake's — stepping onto the page in The Avengers #1 in 1963, right at the heart of Marvel's Silver Age explosion, brought to life by the legendary duo of Stan Lee and Jack Kirby. From that thunderous opening, Blake has kept extraordinary company, sharing adventures with the likes of Iron Man, Captain America, and the Hulk — the very bedrock of the Marvel Universe. A proud Avengers affiliate, his presence has stretched across an remarkable 63 years of publishing history, turning up across titles as varied as Nick Fury, Agent of SHIELD and Godzilla, racking up 158 catalog appearances and 15 collector-significant key issues along the way. For any fan serious about Marvel's Silver Age roots and the characters who helped build the House of Ideas from the ground floor, Don Blake is absolutely essential reading.
Real name. Donald "Don" Blake
Powers. As Don Blake: none (a lame human physician). By striking his enchanted walking stick he transformed into the Asgardian Thor, gaining superhuman strength, durability, longevity, and wielding the hammer Mjolnir (flight, weather/lightning control).

Trivia
- Don Blake's origin stands as a textbook retcon case — Marvel transformed him from a straightforward human alter ego into a magical construct engineered to teach Thor humility, then overhauled that very explanation again in later continuity.marvel.fandom.com
- Blake became one of Marvel's earliest and most striking examples of major retroactive continuity revision, with successive writers and editors cycling through contradictory answers to whether he was a real man, a constructed identity, or a separate being preserved in stasis.marvel.fandom.com
- Few comics identities have been treated with such editorial indifference as Blake's — the 'man behind the hammer' was eventually regarded as almost disposable, with comics historians singling out his evolving origin as one of the franchise's strangest and most convoluted continuity fixes.marvel.fandom.com
- Stan Lee has written more of Don Blake's comics than any other writer in our catalog — 29 issues.
Top series











Covers through the years — 1963–2024
★ 1963
★ 1968
1973
★ 1978
★ 1983
★ 1989
1990
2000
2004
2009
2015
2017
2024