The Adventures of Tintin, Volume 6

The Adventures of Tintin, Volume 6

By Hergé, translated by Leslie Lonsdale-Cooper & Michael Turner (Egmont UK)
ISBN 13: 978-1-4052-2899-2

With World War II over and his reputation restored, Hergé entered the most successful period of his artistic career. He had mastered his storytelling craft, possessed a dedicated audience eager for his every effort and was finally able to say exactly what he wanted in his work, free from fear or censure. But although these freedoms seemed to guarantee a new beginning the life of the creator was far from trouble-free.

In 1949 he returned to Land of Black Gold which had been abandoned when the Nazis invaded Belgium. He then suffered a nervous breakdown and could not work for four months. It is a tribute to his skills that the finished tale reveals none of his personal problems, but is an almost seamless and riveting yarn of political and criminal gangsterism, exotic, hilarious and breathtakingly exciting.

The story concerns a plot to destabilise the World by sabotaging oil. All fuel is somehow made more flammable, causing engines to explode when refuelled. Tintin traces the sabotage to the freighter ‘Speedol Star’, which he joins as Radio Officer. The Detectives Thomson and Thompson are also aboard, but are much less discreet, and soon all three are the targets of a numbers of attacks and assaults. When the ship reaches the Arabian port of Khemikhal they are all framed as drug smugglers and arrested.

But Tintin is abducted by rebel tribesmen who believe he is a gunrunner and the now vindicated Detectives go in search of their friend in the desert. After many hardships the intrepid boy and Snowy discover the villainous spy Doctor Müller (last seen in The Black Island: Adventures of Tintin Volume 3 – ISBN 13: 978-1-4052-2897-8) is trying to ingratiate himself with the Oil-rich Emir. Mohammed Ben Kalish Ezab is wise and tolerant but cursed with a wilful and spoiled son, Abdullah, who is kidnapped when he rejects the doctor’s offers. Tintin befriends the Ruler and goes undercover to find the Prince.

Tracking down Müller Tintin attempts to rescue the boy (whose practical jokes have made him a most unpopular captive) only to be trapped in a brutal fire-fight in the catacombs beneath the spy’s villa. From nowhere Captain Haddock effects a rescue and the plot is revealed and thwarted.

Action-packed and visually delightful, this breezy mystery-thriller is full of humour and chases, with only the last-minute arrival of the dipsomaniac sea captain to slightly jar the proceedings. Presumably the original pages were recycled as much as possible with the popular Haddock inserted at a new breakpoint. He first appeared after the original Land of Black Gold was abandoned, in The Crab with the Golden Claws (see Adventures of Tintin Volume 4 ISBN 13: 978-1-4052-2897-8) and would increasingly steal the spotlight from his juvenile partner – never more so than in the next two adventures, also included in this collected edition.

On a personal note: I first read Destination Moon in 1964, in a huge hardcover album edition (as they all were in the 1960s) and was blown completely away. I’m happy to say that except for the smaller pages – and there’s never a substitute for “Big-ness” – this taut thriller and its magnificent, mind-boggling sequel are still in a class of their own in the annals of science fiction comic strips.

This tale begins with the boy reporter and Captain Haddock returning to Marlinspike Hall only to discover that Professor Calculus has disappeared. When an enigmatic telegram arrives the pair are off again to Syldavia (see King Ottokar’s Sceptre also in Adventures of Tintin Volume 3) and a rendezvous with the missing scientist.

Although suspicious, Tintin soon finds that the secrecy is for sound reasons. In Syldavia Calculus and an international team of boffins are completing a grand project to put a man on the Moon! In a turbulent race against time and amidst huge security the scheme nears completion, but Tintin and Haddock’s arrival coincides with a desperate increase in espionage activity. An enemy nation is determined to steal the secrets of Calculus’s atomic motor at all costs, and it takes all Tintin’s ingenuity to keep ahead of the villains.

As the incidents increase in intensity and frequency if becomes clear that their may be a traitor in the project itself, but at last the moment arrives and Tintin, Haddock, Calculus, Dr. Wolf – and Snowy – blast off for the Moon!

Cold, clinical and superbly underplayed, Destination Moon is completely unlike the flash-and-dazzle razzamatazz of British and American tales from that period – or since. It is as if the burgeoning Cold War mentality (this tale was first serialised in 1950) has infected even Tintin’s bright clean world. Once again the pressure of work and Hergé’s troubled private life resulted in a breakdown and a hiatus in the strip – but this time some of that darkness transferred to the material – although it only seems to have added to the overall effect of claustrophobia and paranoia. Even the comedy set-pieces are more manic and explosive: This is possibly the most mature of all Tintin’s exploits.

If Destination Moon was an exercise in tension and suspense, Explorers on the Moon is sheer bravura spectacle. En route to Luna the explorers discover that Thomson and Thompson have accidentally stowed away, and along with Captain Haddock’s illicit whisky and the effects of freefall, provide brilliant comedy routines to balance the eerie isolation and dramatic dangers of the journey. And lurking in the shadows there is still the very real threat of a murderous traitor to be dealt with…

Studio Hergé was formed in 1950 to produce the adventures of Tintin as well other features and Bob De Moor became an invaluable and permanent addition to the production team, filling in backgrounds and most notably rendering the unforgettable Lunar landscapes that once seen can never be forgotten. This so-modern yarn is a high point in the series, blending heroism and drama with genuine moments of irresistible emotion and side-splitting comedy. The absolute best of the bunch in my humble opinion, and still one of the most realistic space comics ever produced. If you only ever read one Hergé book it simply must be this volume of the Adventures of Tintin.

Land of Black Gold: artwork © 1950, 1977 Editions Casterman, Paris & Tournai.
Text © 1972 Egmont UK Limited. All Rights Reserved.
Destination Moon: artwork © 1959, 1981 Editions Casterman, Paris & Tournai.
Text © 1959 Egmont UK Limited. All Rights Reserved.
Explorers on the Moon: artwork © 1954, 1982 Editions Casterman, Paris & Tournai. Text © 1959 Egmont UK Limited. All Rights Reserved.

Boy Princess, Volume 8

Boy Princess, Volume 8

By Seyoung Kim (Net comics)
ISBN 13: 978-1-60009-037-0

Boy Princess is a strange beast to Western Eyes. An online bestseller in its native Korea, this Manhwa Shonen-Ai (that’s a love story for girls depicting affection between boys, and created by Koreans not Japanese) pot-boiler is as much fairy-tale romance as Ruritanian adventure or political thriller, all told in the manner and style of a daytime soap-opera, with swords and sorcery thrown in to keep it all moving.

When the Princess of Erin elopes two days before her arranged wedding to the gorgeous Prince Jed the entire kingdom is in crisis. Her desperate family embark on a truly mad scheme and convince her young brother to dress in her clothes and marry the Prince in her stead. And it works. Moreover when Jed discovers the substitution he doesn’t mind: In fact he falls in love with the beautiful boy he calls Nichole.

Jed has bigger problems. His dysfunctional family make the Borgias look like the Waltons and the power struggle between himself and his brother Derek threatens to destroy the Kingdom. In this penultimate volume Derek has drugged Nichole and forced Jed to admit to treason charges if he wishes to save his bride. Moreover their father admits that he has been plotting against his sons, since he has a new heir to mould to his will and they are both now irrelevant. Can civil war be far away?

This volume includes a contemporary – and much more explicit – tale of the lead characters in a romantic mood; so think twice if you’re easily startled, but the main tale is amazingly engaging and well handled despite the odd subject matter, and the romance is as moving as the intrigue and action are gripping. This is a great read and well worth your attention.

© 2007 Seyoung Kim. © 2007 DGN Production Inc.

Jonah Hex: Origins

Jonah Hex: Origins

By Jimmy Palmiotti, Justin Gray, Jordi Bernet, and others (DC Comics)
ISBN13: 978-1-84576-629-0

Jonah Hex is probably the most memorable western comic character ever created. He’s certainly the darkest and most grippingly realised, as is the brutal and uncompromising world he inhabits. A ruthless demon with gun or knife, he hunts men for the price on their heads in the years following the American civil war, and the scars inside him are more shocking even than the ghastly ruin of his face.

This collection (reprinting issues #13-18 of the most recent monthly series) retells his origin and offers fascinating insights not only in the gripping lead tale ‘Retribution’, illustrated by the utterly superb Jordi Bernet, but also in the haunting and nihilistically evocative ‘The Ballad of Tallulah Black’ (with beguiling, painterly art by Phil Noto), and the blackly comic ‘I Walk Alone’, drawn with unsuspected subtlety by Val Semeiks.

Jonah Hex was always billed as a “Western for people who didn’t like Westerns” and cliché aside, this is still true. One of the best strips currently coming out of America, this is a perfect book for any adult beginning or returning to comics.

© 2007 DC Comics. All Rights Reserved.

Father Kissmass and Mother Claws

Father Kissmass and Mother Claws

By Bel Mooney & Gerald Scarfe (Hamish Hamilton Ltd.)
ISBN13: 978-0241116951

If you’re a grown-up, Christmas is traditionally a time for tales of monsters and horrors so I’ve dredged up this wonderful graphic chiller from a time when ghastly beasts stalked through Britain, sowing discomfort and dread where e’er they trod.

In this cold, dark country the brittle, demonic and so very cruel Mother Claws broods and frets. It’s time once again to put something in the stockings of the Nation’s inhabitants, but she doesn’t want to. She would rather cut things from their stockings – and so she does, with her corpulent, greedy Father Kissmass egging her on.

So carried away are they that her herd of Tamedeer, even Tebbie and Hestle, rebel. On Christmas Eve they ignore her whips and pull her sleigh to a hovel with a star above it. A homeless couple, with a special newborn baby reach out to her needing just a little help…

Father Kissmass And Mother Claws was produced at the height of the Thatcher regime and uses dark, strident imagery from the brilliant Gerald Scarfe to concoct a savage sidebar to the nativity story for devastating satirical effect. This biting allegory of Thatcher’s Britain is infested with her cabinet’s “Big Beasts” tellingly depicted as cowed pack animals by Scarfe’s flick-knife art, whilst Bel Mooney’s prose is as comforting as a velveteen cosh. This is the best of what graphic satire can do. It’s just a pity today’s leaders don’t warrant the same loving attentions…

Text © 1985 Bel Mooney. Illustrations © 1985 Gerald Scarfe. All Rights Reserved.

Calvin and Hobbes Lazy Sunday Book

Calvin and Hobbes Lazy Sunday Book

By Bill Watterson (Andrews McMeel)
ISBN13: 978-0-83621-852-7

Calvin is the child in us all; Hobbes is the Tiger of our Aspirations; no, wait… Calvin is this little boy, an only child with a big imagination and a stuffed Tiger that is his common sense and moral sounding board… No; Calvin is a little Boy and Hobbes talks only to him. That’s all you need or want.

A best selling strip and critical hit for ten years, Calvin and Hobbes came and went like a comet and we’re poorer for its passing. It redefined the “Eyes of Wonder” which children all possess, and made all us adults laugh, and often cry too. We all wanted a childhood like that kid’s, bullies and obnoxious little girls and all. At least we could visit…

This slim tome collects some of the earliest full-colour Sunday pages from the strip, and includes a new 10 page adventure painted in staggeringly lovely watercolours. Imaginative, dazzling, unforgettably captivating, these are some of the best of Watterson’s work. You should have them in your house.

Calvin and Hobbes is also now available as a complete boxed set – and not before time – so there’s no reason for you not to make this brilliant example of our art form a permanent part of your life. And you’ll thank me for it, too…

© 1989 Universal Press Syndicate. All Rights Reserved.

Superadventure Annual 1962-63

Superadventure Annual 1962-63

By various (Atlas Publishing & Distribution)
No ISBN

This is a volume of great personal significance to me. My parents were both immigrants to Britain in the aftermath of World War II and I was born at the end of the 1950s. My father was artistic himself and somehow came up with the idea of using comics as a means of teaching me – and I suspect, himself – to read English.

On Christmas Day 1962, this was among the pile of hardback volumes that emerged from the blizzard of wrapping paper my pudgy fingers scattered through our living room. I’ve deduced since what other books I got that day, but this is one I can actually recall reading, both on Dad’s lap and later, over and again in front of the fireplace.

I don’t know what captured my interest. There was no colour, unlike Eagle, Swift, Dandy or Beano. There were no text pages like Lion, no photo features. There were just lots of sleekly drawn, fantastic characters, and they “spoke” like the people on the telly.

I know now that this book featured adventures of Superman’s Pal, Jimmy Olsen (‘The Lady-Killer From Metropolis’, ‘The Most Amazing Camera in the World’, ‘Olsen’s Super-Supper’ and ‘Jimmy Olsen’s Wedding’ all drawn by Curt Swan), as well as the amazing ‘Secret of the Sunken Satellite!’ and ‘The Super-Gorilla’s Secret Identity’ starring the Flash and captivatingly illustrated by Carmine Infantino and Joe Giella.

There were five Aquaman thrillers all drawn by Ramona Fradon (‘Aquaman and his Sea Police!’, ‘The Animal Master’, ‘The Adventures of Aquaboy!’, ‘The Menace of Aqualad!’ and ‘Aquaman Joins the Navy!’), two Tommy Tomorrow sci-fi yarns (‘The Menace of the Metal Monster’ and ‘The Gambling Asteroid’ both illustrated by Jim Mooney) and ‘How Krypto Made History,’ a Superboy story drawn by George Papp. The book also had a number of gag pages by Henry Boltinoff.

What a tribute to the abilities of those early creators that these tales were so well-constructed that even a tubby toddler could be beguiled and bemused and become the grizzled, raddled addict of today. This is a book that will always say “Merry Christmas” to me.

© 1962, 1963 National Periodical Publications, Inc., New York.

Pow! Annual

<i>Pow!</i> Annual

By various (Odhams Books)
SBN: 60039607X

This quirky item is one of my fondest childhood memories and quite inspirational in directing my career path, and as well as being still a surprisingly qualitative read I can now see it as a bizarre and desperate little experiment. By the end of the 1960s DC Thomson had finally overtaken the monolithic comics publishing giant that had been created by Alfred Harmsworth at the beginning of the twentieth century. By absorbing rivals such as Eagle‘s Hulton Press, Fleetway/Odhams/IPC had stayed at the forefront of sales and by latching onto every fad they had kept their material contemporary, if not fresh, but the writing was on the wall.

The comedy strip was on the rise and action anthologies were finding it hard to keep readers attention. By 1970 when this annual was released the trend generated by the success of the Batman TV show was dying, so why release a book of all-new superhero strips in a title very much associated with comedy features and cheap Marvel Comics reprints? A last ditch attempt to revive the genre? Perhaps a cheap means of using up inventory?

I don’t know and I don’t care. What they produced was a wonderful capsule of fanboy delight, stuffed with thrills, colourful characters and a distinctly cool, underplayed stylishness, devoid of the brash histrionics of American comic books.

Within these pages lurked ‘Magno, Man of Magnetism’, ‘Aquavenger’, ‘Mr. Tomorrow: Criminal of the Future’, The Hunter and the Hunted’, ‘Electro’ (no relation to the Marvel villain – other than the high-voltage shtick), The fascinating ‘Esper Commandos’, ‘Marksman’, ‘The Phantom’ (again no relation to the US crime-fighter), the monstrous ‘Norstad of the Deep’ and the crusading ‘Time Rider’, purportedly all created by Alan Hebden and illustrated in alternating full colour (painted) and half-colour (black and magenta) sections by IPC’s European stable of artists. I’m not sure, but I think there’s some Massimo Belardinelli, Carlos Cruz and lots from that prolific bunch at the Giolitti studio.

These are all great little adventures, beautifully illustrated and singularly British in tone, even though most of the characters are American – or aliens (and no, that’s not necessarily the same thing) that easily withstand a critical rereading today, but the most important thing was the inspiring joy of these one-off wannabes. They certainly prompted me to fill sketchbook after sketchbook and determined that I would neither be a “brain surgeon or a bloke wot goes down sewers in gumboots”. This great little tome gave me that critical push towards the fame and fortune I now enjoy!

© 1970 The Hamlyn Publishing Group Limited.

The Beano Book 1971

The Beano Book 1971

By various (DC Thomson & Co., Ltd.)
No ISBN

For many British fans Christmas means The Beano Book (although Scots worldwide have a pretty fair claim that the season belongs to them with collections of The Broons and Oor Wullie making every December 25th magical) and I’ve chosen this particular edition as another epitome of my personal holiday memories. As usual my knowledge of the creators involved is woefully inadequate but I’m going to hazard a few guesses in the hope that someone with better knowledge will correct me when I err.

In this little cracker are a number of David Sutherland’s Biffo the Bear strips as well as his Bash Street Kids and even a smashing action-adventure of boy super-hero Billy the Cat (I wonder if the editors distributed strips to artists in alphabetical order?). There are whirlwind tales of “fastest boy on Earth” Billy Whizz drawn by Malcolm Judge. Paddy Brennan worked as a dramatic artist for decades on General Jumbo (the heroic boy who radio-controlled an army of robot toys) and the Q-Bikes, a team of young adventurers with technologically advanced push-bikes. In this volume they trade in two wheels for four, and become the Q-Karts for an Australian adventure, whilst the aforementioned General captures a team of safecrackers in his home town.

These annuals were traditionally produced in the wonderful “half-colour” that many British publishers used to keep costs down. This was done by printing sections of the books with only two plates, such as blue/Cyan and red/Magenta: The versatility and palette range this provided was astounding. Even now this technique screams “Holidays” to me and my contemporaries.

Some of the Dennis the Menace strips are possibly drawn by original creator Davy Law, but are most likely the work of his style-chameleon replacement David Sutherland. They all feature his charismatic new co-star ‘Gnasher’, too. The woefully un-PC but astoundingly funny Little Plum strips are by Ronald Spencer, I think, as are The Nibblers; an anarchic gang – and weren’t they all in The Beano? – of mice.

The 3 Bears segments are by Bob McGrath whilst Lord Snooty (one of the longest running strips in the comic’s history – a record only recently overtaken by Dennis) is the work of Robert Nixon, as is the Roger the Dodger Family Album section. There are short romps with Pups Parade (or the Bash Street Pups – the unlovely pets of those unlovely kids) by Gordon Bell and exemplar of Girl Power Minnie the Minx gets her own 16 page mini-book in this annual – and who could stop her? – courtesy of the wonderful Jim Petrie, but I’ll admit to being totally stumped by Swinging Jungle Jim a frantic boy-Tarzan strip that has sunk without trace since those faraway times.

Topped off with activity and gag-pages, this is a tremendously fun book, and even in the absence of the legendary creators such as Dudley Watkins, Leo Baxendale and Ken Reid and with a small but noticeable decline in the mayhem and anarchy quotas, there’s still so much merriment on offer I can’t believe this book is thirty seven years old. If ever anything needed to be issued as commemorative collections it’s DC Thomson annuals…

Divorcing the sheer quality of this brilliant book from nostalgia is a healthy exercise, but I’m perfectly happy to simply wallow – even today – in the magical emotions this ‘almost-colourful’ annual still stirs. It’s a good solid laugh-and-thrill-packed read, from a magical time (I was in my final year of primary school and a beloved, spoiled and precocious little snot with not a care in the world) and turning those stiffened two-colour pages is always an unmatchable Christmas experience.

© 1970 DC Thomson & Co., Ltd.

The Art of Humorous Illustration

The Art of Humorous Illustration

By Nick Meglin (Watson-Guptill)
ISBN: 0-8230-0269-1

Another terrific book in dire need of re-releasing is this bright and breezy tome that lists and lavishly illustrates the work of a dozen of the world’s greatest exponents of funny drawing.

Author Meglin calls on his many years experience to outline not only the history and careers of his eclectic selection of creators but also includes commentary, exposition on the subject matter, individual’s techniques, approach-to-work and business practices of each comedy mastermind featured. It’s also great to see that the scope is not limited to strips, gag-panels and comic-books but also includes work from magazine and book illustration, covers, greetings cards, cartoon animation, advertising art and television graphics. Meglin also dips his toe into dangerous and controversial waters as he attempts to explain what is funny and why – and he should know, since he’s toiled at Mad Magazine for over fifty years, many of them as Senior Editor.

So if you think you’re funny or have ambitions to earn a living at it, or simply want some great laughs from the likes of Sergio Aragones, Paul Coker, Jack Davis, Mort Drucker, Gerry Gersten, Johnny Hart, Al Jaffee, Bob Jones, Donald Reilly, Norman Rockwell, Arnold Roth and Maurice Sendak this is a volume well worth hunting down.

© 1973, 1980 Watson-Guptill Publications. All Rights Reserved.