Edmond Moore Hamilton was born on October 21, 1904, and passed away on February 1, 1977. An American science fiction writer who built his reputation primarily in pulp magazines during the mid-twentieth century, Hamilton is perhaps best remembered in that arena for authoring the majority of the Captain Future stories, a long-running series of interplanetary adventures.
Adventure Comics #307 (1963)
His comics work, however, represents a substantial and often underappreciated dimension of his career. Over a span of several decades — with credits appearing in the catalog as late as 2019 through reprints — Hamilton contributed as a writer to more than 300 issues across DC Comics' core superhero line. His most frequent assignments centered on Superman and the interconnected titles that defined the publisher's golden and silver age output: *Superman*, *Action Comics*, *World's Finest Comics*, *Adventure Comics*, *Detective Comics*, and *Batman*. That concentration of credits places him among the more prolific craftsmen working on DC's flagship characters during their formative decades, shaping storylines and concepts that writers would revisit for generations.
Adventure Comics #327 (1964)
Hamilton brought to comics the same enthusiasm for cosmic scope and imaginative extrapolation that distinguished his prose fiction, helping establish the expansive, universe-building sensibility that would become central to superhero storytelling.