22 May 2018

Covering India

Oh, the infinite joys of failing technology...

I had planned to break this post up in two or three parts and write a bit about some of the comics, but lost the work in progress to net crash earlier today. So we're just going to do a big cover gallery right now, with almost no comments. But don't worry, we'll come back and look inside some of these later.

Excluding a couple short comedy comics, we've never looked at the comics of India here. Since i've been having those connectivity problems, i indulged in some offline work pulling covers from about 100 Indian comics, some English and some Hindi. About 50 of those are here today, spanning about three decades.

This first cover features Sinbad (and the Roc, of course) -






















































I don't seem to have included any of the reprint comics featuring The Phantom, Flash Gordon, and Mandrake. (Ever wonder why those guys were chosen to be Defenders Of The Earth? Maybe it was because they were all globally popular characters?) Nor any of the old Bruce Lee comics. Another reason to come back and visit with some of these books.

But for now, let's cross our extraneous digits and attempt to post this into the queue...

covers, or so many covers...



21 May 2018

Blue Monday Calendar 2018 Week 21

Okay... I missed Friday and the weekend, but at least i finally noticed that today was Monday.

This week's Gil Elvgren painting is Plenty Sharp (Get The Point) from 1959 -


Old Masters

While i'm dealing with tech issues, here's a little quickie post with some early, likely unfamiliar, work from a couple very familiar names, most often associated with Batman and Superman - Jerry Robinson and Murphy Anderson.

First up, from All New Comics, Jerry's tale of the Fangs Of The Panther -


From Man O' Mars comes Murphy Anderson's Life On Other Worlds short features - these two covering Uranus and Saturn -



pages from All New Comics #11 and Man O' Mars #1 (1945, 1953)

20 May 2018

Antiques Of Opar

Still having major connection issues, so crossing fingers...

Let's do another 100 year leap back to 1918.
Modern fantasy artists study the works of Frank Frazetta and Roy Krenkel. They were both students of J. Allen St. John. In 1918 the serialized Tarzan And The Jewels Of Opar was published in book form, with illustrations from St. John.

Here's the look of fantasy & space opera 100 years ago -



















illustrations by J. Allen St. John for Tarzan & The Jewels Of Opar (1918)

19 May 2018

More Old Joe

The Universe, as you might have already noticed, has a wicked sense of humour. As i've noted before, all too often, we are the punchline. As i try to get some focus back on the blog and outside world, the net connection suddenly starts manifesting strange non-connection issues. (For example, the connection died multiple times while writing this, but i believe i can get it to post later on, before i give up for the day) Hopefully, they won't go supercritical.
Meanwhile...



When we think of Joe Kubert's artwork, it tends to be highly detailed and very individualized inks, almost instantly recognizable, such as this shot of one of his most well known tours of duty -


But, as we saw previously, that wasn't always the case. One of my favorite examples of this divide between his earlier and later works is his Son Of Sinbad -


Were it not for his signature, Kubert would have been pretty far down my list of guesses on the identity of the artist. But, back in 1950 (eight years after the Volton strips from last time) St. John put out a full book of Joe Kubert's Son Of Sinbad tales -


In addition to that first splash above, there were three more tales -




Of course, splash pages are nice teases, but tend to leave one wondering how the stories themselves played out. So, let's go back to those first images and see the debut tale of Son Of Sinbad -


pages by Joe Kubert for Son Of Sinbad #1 (1950)