Người đăng: vanmai yeu em on Thứ Hai, 4 tháng 8, 2008



Number 354


The Comic Book Goodguy


I showed you the lead story from Alan Hanley's Comic Book #6 in January. This is the rest of the issue, published in in 1974 by Hanley, who died at a young age in 1980. In that January posting you can read comments on Hanley by a couple of his knowledgeable friends.

For an "amateur," Hanley had a spontaneous cartooning style with facile inking. I'm sorry he didn't live to develop his artistry into alternative comic book projects like we saw in the 1980s. He had a blend of comic art styles, including his favorites like Walt Kelly and C. C. Beck, but even with his various influences it mostly came out as Hanley. His writing was funny with social and political consciousness. His projects were more fan-oriented than the underground scene at the time, which often used adults-only themes to illustrate their points, but his barbs were just as sharp.

Alan J. Hanley's Captain Marvel-styled character was called "Goodguy," and from everything I've read by his friends, that described him, too.

The illustration at the top is the back cover of Comic Book #6.
























Hanley's hand-lettered editorial from the inside front and inside back covers explains the history of Comic Book and his purposes for publishing.


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#049.Indrajal Comics 19 (Hindi)

Người đăng: vanmai yeu em on Chủ Nhật, 3 tháng 8, 2008

Few Hindi Indrajal Covers contributed by Ajay:

19(1965), 24 (1966), 41 (1967), 45 (1967)

48 (1967), 61 (1968), 95 (1969), 101(1970)

106(1970), 121(1970), 126(1971), 134(1971)

138(1971), 163(1972), 170 (1972) & 231(1975)

This a hindi comics which was without cover. That is why english cover added. English Version you already have.

It's an Anurag's contributions. Many many thanks to him for rare Indrajal comics.


23-1966-Vetal(Phantom)-Jadugarni Ki Maya


Password: bookscomics.blogspot.com
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Người đăng: vanmai yeu em

Number 353


Typhoon Tyler


You don't see this type of adventure story often from Ogden Whitney. It's from a short-lived ACG title, Operation Peril. This episode is from #11, July 1952. Normally I'm not into stories about seafarers, but I like Whitney, and I love the names Typhoon and Hammerhead.

I also like that the Hollywood-styled South Sea Island gal fights off a rape-minded sailor, calling him, "You grinning vermin!" That'd soften my belaying pin, matey. Arrrrrrr.

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Friday Trivia Quiz #3: Marvel Credits

Người đăng: vanmai yeu em on Thứ Sáu, 1 tháng 8, 2008

1. Name the pair of letterers for Marvel who were frequently the butt of Stan Lee's jokes in the credits section.

2. Name these Marvel creators by their commonly used adjectival sobriquets: Jazzy, King, Rascally, Smilin', Dazzling.

3. What sesquipedelian term did Stan frequently use instead of "Inked"?

4. What non-creator frequently turned up in Marvel's credits for something unusual?
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Người đăng: vanmai yeu em



Number 352



C'mon, get Happy!



Dan Barry was a hotshot, a slick, illustrative artist who started his career in the 1940s drawing comic books. He graduated to syndicated comic strips, and signed the Flash Gordon strip for years. Mr. Door Tree in his Golden Age Comic Book Stories blog posted this fine example of Barry's unseen work, done for artist/inker George Roussos' sketchbook. It was probably from around the time he was doing crime comics stories for Charles Biro. This story about "Happy" Maione is from Crime Does Not Pay #65.

There really was a gangland killer named Harry "Happy" Maione. As usual with these types of comics facts are askew and characters merged or changed altogether, but a kernal of the truth is in there. It's a violent and grim story, the kind that gave old Doc Wertham and his fellow comic book critics conniption fits.














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