03 March 2019

Inkie, The Self-Drawn Character

It might be somewhat difficult to grasp in an age of profound corporate and personal narcissism, but once upon a time someone tried to pretend he wasn't the creator. (And it wasn't a politician talking about a disaster or anything like that.)

A couple weeks back we started to look at Inkie, an odd little comic character that interacted with his artists. When the strip started out, the concept was slightly more off the wall - Inkie wrote and drew his own adventures. In fact, he even named himself -


As mentioned several times previously, i enjoy seeing creators inserted into the comics. The editor of Crack Comics at this time was John Beardsley. How much of his own boss went into Al Stahl's editor in the strip...? Hard to say. How self-deprecating was Beardsley? Stahl is portraying himself as talentless and essentially useless, so Beardsley may have gone along with it and allowed himself to be the model for the character. He only worked in comics for a few years at the dawn of the '40s, primarily at Quality Comics, and very little is known about him these days. Certainly not enough known by me to make any sort of educated guess.

Were the other artists based on folks at Quality at the time? Was the janitor based on a real person? How did he feel about that portrayal? Was having everyone completely ignore his presence - turn the page, move along - a social commentary? So many questions for my rambling mind.

We'd best move along to the next issue before i get bogged down in mental morass -


So - Eat That! Ant Man and Atom. You guys might ride arrows and T-spheres, but Inkie rides (and guides) bullets!

As noted in the final caption of the tale above, in the third tale Inkie and Al join forces -



page art by Al Stahl (and Inkie) for Crack Comics #s 28-30 (1943)

02 March 2019

Saturday Solutions - Q-Quiz

Here are the answers to yesterday's quiz, coming to us via Q*bert's Quazy Questions:











pages from Q*bert's Quazy Questions (1983)

01 March 2019

Friday Fun & Games Q-Quiz



Nope, we're not talking James Bond's Q, nor the nigh omnipotent being from the Q Continuum. We're talking my mother's favorite video game back in those days when she was still here to play games - Q*bert!


 Yep. Let's get a little silly today. That might help the way things have been running lately, eh? And so we have a series of riddles from our favorite video varmint. (Sorry, Sonic)










Answers tomorrow - Really! (Pages already prepped and it's going straight into the Queue right after this is prepped)

28 February 2019

Worldbeater & Unggh?

A brief divergence whilst the brain reboots...

Do ya know Worldbeater and Unngh (and later in the run, JoBlo, the Martian who learned to speak English by listening to radio commercials)? I'll forego giving you the set-up just now - it's laid out in most every splash page below.

Originally written and drawn by Fred Morgan, the fifth tale was drawn by Maurice del Bourgo, and then August Froehlich took over art chores on the strip. (Fred Morgan continued writing while also drawing other strips like Air Male and Flying Fist & Bingo. (Don't ya love those names?))

Usually when i'm doing one of the features, i only use the splash panels. But we're going to go with full pages today, simply because the bottom after the splash often recaps the weirdness ongoing in the series-













Some Odd is more odd than others, y'know?

page art by Fred Morgan, Maurice del Bourgo, and August Froehlich from Prize Comics #s 38-48, Headline Comics # 15 (1944)