The New Reprints: A Voyage of Discovery to the Golden Age of Comic Books
Part 4: The 1960s: The Paperback Era
This project will be presented in twelve parts. Unfortunately, I can’t change the order, so later posts will appear first. Please try to check this out in order! And your comments are important. Please post how you became aware of comics and their history!
- Introduction/Comics in "real" books.
- 1960s: Reprints from the Comic Companies: 80 Page Giants & Marvel Tales!
- 1960s: The Great Comic Book Heroes
- 1960s: The Paperback Era
- 1970s: The Comic Strips AND the Comic Book Strips!
- 1970s: DC from the 1930s and the Origins at Marvel Part I
- 1970s: DC from the 1930s and the Origins at Marvel Part II
- 1980s until Today: Horror We? How's Bayou! The EC Age of Comics
- 1990s until Today: The Archives and Masterworks
- How The West Was Lost
- When Comics Had Influence: Public Service, Education & Promotion
- Journeys End, What We Leave Behind: A Century of Comics
So let us continue our voyage to and from the
1960s and discover the world of comics once almost forgotten. Our expedition is
mostly into the world of reprints that were available OUTSIDE the
newsstands and comic book stores but we will have a few detours on the way.
My interest in the Golden Age was growing and so was my frustration. I was becoming more and more aware of this era, yet unable to visit it.
In the actual comics:
I was finally able to meet many of the characters of the Golden Age when,in the summer of 1963 when the Justice League had its first Crisis. I meet the Atom, Back Canary, Doctor Fate and Hourman. I also got to meet the "other" Green Lantern and Hawkman. A few characters that were identical to their Silver Age (Earth-One) counterparts, Wonder Woman, Batman and the Specter, would have to wait. Of course I was introduced to Jay Garrick not in Flash #123 (“Flash of Two Worlds!” or #137 (“Vengeance of the Immortal Villain”) but in the very first Barry Allen story in Showcase #4! It would take until Showcase #60, in 1966, to meet the Spectre, who appeared the same year in the JLA’s ongoing Crisis.
In 1966 Marvel published Marvel Super-Heroes Annual
#1, with the Torch fighting the Sub-Mariner in a story from Marvel Mystery #8.
Marvel then released giant sized Fantasy Masterpieces #3 which had Captain America
stories from the 1940s. I was learning not just about Golden Age super-heroes
Bucky, the original Human Torch and Toro but about the villains, Vandal Savage,
The Ringmaster and the Fiddler. (I know I am mixing companies.)
From the few Marvel comic reprints and from The
Great Comic Book Heroes, I saw that comics were very different in the 1940s
from their 1960s counterparts. I did
NOT know that the GA comics were being censored and redrawn in
their reprints. (See part 2.) And I was learning that many
modern characters, such as the Sub-Mariner, were very different than their Golden Age versions.
Marvel was teasing us. For example, 1968, with no warning or back story, Marvel Tales gave us the first tale of a character with the marvel name, Marvel Boy! The comic said he was from the 1950s, but did not say which comic, or when.
Marvel was teasing us. For example, 1968, with no warning or back story, Marvel Tales gave us the first tale of a character with the marvel name, Marvel Boy! The comic said he was from the 1950s, but did not say which comic, or when.
At
this time there were no books out explaining or "indexing" these
characters. There was no internet, Wikipedia, or Grand Comic Book
Database. This was also years before comic book stores. Who were these
characters? Why did they fail? Where do you go to find out?
There was a big surprise. Before the Justice League, before the Avengers, there was the All Winners Squad. Really? I didn't know that!! How many issues! How come we don't get another one? And who is the girl?
In 1974, Marvel published the Human Torch comic, without mentioning it featured only reprints. It featured two stories from Strange Tales and one with the original Torch. Unlike earlier reprints, we are no longer informed as to what issue this if from or even what year. I began to wonder: Why was Marvel reprinting so many Timely and Atlas era comics but almost avoiding the Super heroes?
There was a big surprise. Before the Justice League, before the Avengers, there was the All Winners Squad. Really? I didn't know that!! How many issues! How come we don't get another one? And who is the girl?
From Fantasy Masterpieces #10 |
In 1974, Marvel published the Human Torch comic, without mentioning it featured only reprints. It featured two stories from Strange Tales and one with the original Torch. Unlike earlier reprints, we are no longer informed as to what issue this if from or even what year. I began to wonder: Why was Marvel reprinting so many Timely and Atlas era comics but almost avoiding the Super heroes?
When a “know it all” wrote DC to say that he was an
authority on Batman, DC asked him, in the letter’s column, “Did you know Batman
carried a gun?” Well, I didn’t. Maybe
the reprints would show me Batman with a gun!
By the way, if you are wondering why a gun for Batman was important, let me fill you in. First, of course, Batman
had no super powers. Well, this was actually a lie, he did. He was
able to jump off five story buildings and not get hurt, he was able to
climb those buildings in ten seconds, and, if shot he healed quickly.
In the 1960s Batman was always the target
of a killer or stuck in some sort of death trap or being thrown of a
cliff. You'd think he'd want to stop these guys once and for all! You
see the Comics Code stopped the good guys from carrying guns but they
didn't stop the bad guys.
Meanwhile, back at the bookstore:
Since the 1920s, comics have always found a way into bookstores. In the 1930s, Little Orphan Annie, Mutt and Jeff and a few others were reprinted in cardboard covered volumes (I guess that's why they were called “Comic Books”) and sold in bookstores. Comic strips were MUCH longer at the turn of the last century than they are today, or even fifty years ago. You can see that in the Mutt and Jeff strips below.
A few humor strips were being republished, including The Wizard of Id. Pogo was popular then and Walt
Kelly, with Pogo, had his own series of paperback books.
While the 1960s would develop into a great showcase (every
pun intended) for comic books there was still a drought of reprints from the Golden
Age. Comic books then were thought
of as being disposable, with no future value. When I visited the DC
offices in the early 1960s they gave some of the art away to visitors,
it was worth so little to them. I took the Kodachrome slides. Who
knew? Paperback reprints of Mad
magazine were published by Ballentine.They featured great material,
in black and white, from the original color comic books of the 1950s.
These books
were released throughout the 1960s, often with different covers. Gosh,
it made
you want to get the complete originals, but there was no way I could.
These books were so popular they are still being reprinted today.
In 1964-1966, Ballantine Books also published five black-and-white
paperbacks of EC stories. Tales of the Incredible and Tomorrow Midnight reprinted science fiction tales. Tales from the Crypt and The
Vault of Horror reprinted EC horror
tales. The Autumn People
reprinted Ray Bradbury’s "There Was an Old Woman" (Ingels); "The
Screaming Woman" (Kamen); "Touch
and Go!" (Craig); "The Small Assassin" (Evans); "The Handler"
(Ingels); "The Lake" (Orlando);"The Coffin" (Davis) and "Let’s
Play 'Poison'" (Davis). I was to get my first hint of the Horror and Crime Ages of Comics.
When Batman arrived on the TV scene, in 1966, several Signet paperbacks were released featuring stories mostly from the 1950s. With the exception of an edited version of his origin story,from Batman's first issue,(which I had read in The Great Comic Book Heroes) the four stories featured in his first paperback, the red one below, were all from the 1950s. There was still no Batman with a gun! The printing was not great, the black and white (no color) panels were often a bit blurred. Signet and DC were owned by the same company.
Of course if Batman went
Signet, could Superman be
far behind? But even the Superman story,that was billed as the “original” story
of how Superman began, was from the 1950s. So DC was giving me a taste of their Golden Age, but not a full course.
Marvel countered with paperbacks from Lancer
Publishing. The stories were all in black and white and a bit hard to
read. However, they were distributed in local bookstores and were, for many people,
their introduction to Marvel. The volumes featured Thor,
Spider-Man, The Hulk, Daredevil and The Fantastic Four, in stories from the
early 1960s. There was nothing from Marvel’s Golden Age past. Sigh!
Years later, Marvel put out color paperbacks.
Marvel soon featured new paperback novels
featuring the Marvel Characters. The Bantam Captain
America was a great book, giving Cap a back-story that he never had
in the comics. It was written by famous editor and writer Ted White. The Avengers
story by Otto Binder was very light and not much fun.
Archie Comics was getting onto
the bandwagon. With stories by Jerry Siegel, the co-creator of Superman, they copied Marvel
and released their own super-heroes. Notice the words Superman and Marvel on the cover.
Whatever happened to the comic book?
The decade, for me, seems to end where it began, with a
stray book about comics in the bookstore, in the “HUMOR” section. In 1967, next the paperbacks of Peanuts and
Pogo, was the trade paperback of George Perry’s The Penguin
Book Of Comics.
It asked the question, “Whatever
happened to the comic book?”
As
with the books mentioned in the introduction, this
British book concentrated mostly on comic strip art, but with a unique
twist: the British comic strips were included. The book was in black and
white. (The
second edition, published four years
later, had a few color sections.) The book was mostly illustrations of
old comic strips, printed
well for the time, but not great. It did have a
30 page section on the comic books containing six pages of text, the
rest illustrations. And what does it do in its six pages of
text? It quickly went over old material: Superman, Batman
and, again, Frederick
Wertham. (I made the point earlier that with so much space spent on
Wertham, I wanted to read the comics he questioned.) It then discusses
Stan Lee and the Marvel Age for about a page and a half.
And with the exception of one page of the Spirit and one on Captain America,
there is nothing from the Golden Age, they were all current
Marvel tales with no mention of current DC comics. Mr. Perry borrows a
lot from
Esquire and The Great Comic Book heroes and does not have much new to
say.
The
climate has greatly improved since the early fifties. Comics are blamed for
crime no more or less than other media. Indeed, television is usually the
whipping-boy today.
In the last few years, with the
growth of Pop Art and other influences, there has been a great comic-book
revival. In the vanguard of the new interest is the Marvel Comics group. It
publishes the adventures of many superheroes, including Captain America, the
Human Torch, the Amazing Spider Man, the Mighty Thor, the Incredible Hulk, and
the Thing. The amazing creative genius behind this grotesque gallery is Stan
Lee (real name Stanley Lieber), a dynamo of creative energy in his early
forties, who works in a small yellow-painted office overlooking Madison Avenue.
It has an unclosed door and a queue of cartoonists, writers, inkers, and
letterers waiting to see him.
After many mundane years of hard
slogging the time came recently when Marvel Comics became part of the campus
life of America. A college student quoted in Esquire said: ' We think of
Marvel Comics as the twentieth-century mythology and [Stan Lee] as this
generation's Homer.' Deluged with requests, the hard-working Mr Lee delights in
addressing university audiences. He spends only two or three minutes at these
sessions with a prepared talk; the rest is question and answer.
He sees the superhero fantasies as
fulfilling the same function that myths, legends, tales of romance and fairy
stories did for earlier generations. Most of the heroes are flawed in some way.
The Amazing Spider Man, in his other identity, is an insecure, guilt-ridden
teenager who has no luck with the girls. The Mighty Thor is a crippled doctor
whose nurse despises him but is in love with the Thor side of him, unaware of
his dual character. Marvel heroes have problems. Says Stan Lee: I like
Shakespeare more than anything. Everything there is on such a grand scale — so
heroic. I guess I'm corny at heart.' He dislikes most of the rival companies'
products, particularly Superman and Wonder Woman which he finds dull.
One of the few comic-book series
which Stan Lee does admire, because, as he says, it has style, is Will Eisner's
creation, the Spirit, who was brought out of retirement by Harvey Comics in
1966. Unlike many of the other comic heroes who have to slip behind corners
unobserved and climb frantically into their tights, cloaks and masks before
they can become operational, the Spirit wears an ordinary suit and wide-brimmed
hat, with the merest concession to a mask outlining his eyes. Fortunately, he
does not constantly have to change back to something else — his former self is
thought to be dead. In fact, the Spirit is very much alive but in a state of
suspended animation, which is why he lives in a graveyard. The line is hard and
decisive, with lots of shadows, strange angles, and elegantly intricate
headings.
Humour is one of the ingredients
used by Eisner in a very idiosyncratic manner. As Jules Feiffer has noted, many
of the stories have a Jewish shape to them, being up-dated fables or cautionary
tales; the spirit of the Spirit is basically Jewish. Perhaps this comic-book
hero is nothing more than the Wandering Jew in a modern or futuristic guise.
The
early forties provided the strip with its really great days. The revived Spirit
has a narrower hat-brim and a better fitting suit, but the Eisner style is
still there and unmistakable, if frequently imitated. Jules Feiffer says:
'Alone among comic book men, Eisner was a cartoonist other cartoonists swiped
from.'
There was no follow-up to the Great Comic Book Heroes,
no
competing company putting out a similar book. There was no special
sections in the bookstores. The end of the 1960s will leave us with
a greater knowledge of the Golden Age but with few resources to follow
up on
it. And we will still check the humor section, looking for a book on
comic books. And we still smiled when we
see a new Peanuts book!
.
This two page paperback spread is
from “Good Grief, Charlie
Brown” (1963), a smaller paperback. We saw this strip on the introduction page. The darker page color is from the
aging and yellowing of the paper in these 50 year old books.
Now, a series of volumes entitled The Complete Peanuts are being released. The Unseen Peanuts,
a Comic Book Day giveaway by Fantagraphics, explained several of the probable
reasons why many Peanuts
strips were not reprinted. One reason is that several strips had color
references that did not make sense in a black and white reprint.
Peanuts
really had its start in a comic series called “Li'l
Folk”. In 2006, these comic strips were published in a volume entitled “Charles M. Schulz: Li'l Beginnings”.
Peanuts
2000: All good things must happen for a last time.
Charlie
Schulz, how can we ever forget you?