Finished reading tonight, Superman Archives Volume 3 (1991). Reprinting Superman #9-12 (March-April 1941 to September-October 1941).
Four Superman stories per bi-monthly issue, Superman gave buyers the most Superman for their $0.10. (But they could also read one twelve-page Superman story every month in Action Comics, and another quarterly in the newly launched World’s Finest Comics.)
With an introduction by the great golden age artist Superman Jack Burnley (1911-2006).
The stories, while very repetitive in style, are still fun. Superman faces crooks, evil scientists (including his one reoccurring foe at this point, Luthor), and foreign parties out to sabotage the United States (even though these issues actually came out from January to July 1941, still ahead of the Japanese attack at Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, which brought the United States officially into World War II).
The stories in this volume were officially credited to Superman creators Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster at the time. And this third volume of Superman Archives came out still very early in the DC Archives run, before they started adding more in depth creator credits (or even a table of contents page).
According to the Grand Comics Database, the art in these stories was actually the work of artists in the Joe Shuster art shop: Paul Cassidy, Leo Nowak, Wayne Boring, and John Sikela, and original front covers by Fred Ray.
The stories in this volume are also available in the newer collected editions Superman: The Golden Age Omnibus Volume 2 (2016), and Superman: The Golden Age (trade paperbacks) Volume 3 (2017) and Volume 4 (2018).
Reading these in the DC Archives, as I am (regularly buying them from the start in 1989), you will also want to have Superman: The Action Comics Archives Volume 2 (1998) and Volume 3 (2001), and Superman: The World’s Finest Comics Archives Volume 1 (2004) to jump back and forth between. (Plus, optionally, as I am, the Superman newspaper strips that were coming out simultaneously with these issues, reprinted in Superman: The Dailies Vol. 3: 1941-1942 (Kitchen Sink Press, 1999) and Superman: The Sunday Classics 1939-1943 (1999).)
Jumping back and forth between these various Superman volumes (plus spaced out by my other reading), it looks like I’m only going to finish this Superman Archives Volume 3 and Superman: The Action Comics Archives Volume 2 (which I finished back in March), and Superman: The Dailies [Vol. 2] 1940-1941 in 2023.
As for the others, I’m only 27% into Superman: The Action Comics Archives Volume 3, 31% into Superman: The World’s Finest Comics Archives Volume 1, 48% into Superman: The Dailies [Vol. 3] 1941-1942, and 45% into Superman: The Sunday Classics 1939-1943.
— David Young