Modesty Blaise: Yellowstone Booty


By Peter O’Donnell, Enric Badia Romero & John Burns (Titan Books)
ISBN: 978-1-84576-419-7

Originally a newspaper strip created by Peter O’Donnell and drawn by the brilliant Jim Holdaway, Modesty and her charismatic partner in crime (and latterly crime-busting) Willie Garvin have also starred in 13 prose novels and short story collections, two films, one TV pilot, a radio play and nearly one hundred comic strip adventures between 1963 and the strip’s conclusion in 2002. She has been syndicated world-wide, and Holdaway’s version has been cited as an artistic influence by many major comic artists.

Titan Books’ marvelous series re-presenting the classic British newspaper strip reaches a period of artistic instability with this thirteenth volume as Spanish collaborator Romero left in 1978 to concentrate on his own creation Axa; although if anything the strip actually improved under the all-too-brief tenure of his replacement.

John M. Burns had worked on Junior Express and School Friend but truly began his auspicious rise as part of the inimitable and beloved team of artists who worked on the Gerry Anderson licensed titles TV Century 21 and its sister magazines (he is particularly admired for Space Family Robinson in Lady Penelope). He drew strips for The Daily Sketch, Daily Mirror and Sun with long, acclaimed runs on The Seekers and the saucy “Good Girl” strip Danielle (expect a review of her really soon), before briefly – and controversially – taking over Modesty Blaise.

Since then he has worked on TV-based series for Look-In and Countdown before latterly abandoning pen and ink for painted art and finding a welcome home in the legendary British science fiction comic 2000AD, where he has – and continues to – work on Judge Dredd, Nikolai Dante and his own Bendatti Vendetta. He is also a regular adaptor of significant literary masterpieces, having already completed pictorial versions of Lorna Doone, Wuthering Heights and Jane Eyre.

Although Burns only drew 272 consecutive daily strips, his influence on Modesty was marked and long-lasting. His deft ability with nib and brush are highlighted here with a complimentary feature reprinting 12 of his illustrations from some of those prose novels O’Donnell wrote starring his inimitable creation, and there are also sketches and cover reproductions from Titan Books’ 1980s Modesty collections.

The adventure portion of this book begins with ‘Idaho George’ an extremely engaging comedy thriller which sees Garvin and “the Princess” rescue an old acquaintance. The eponymous George is a marriage-dodging conman who accidentally fools the wrong mark: superstitious and extremely dangerous Anastasia Bone sets her gang of murderous crime specialists on the hapless trickster when he masquerades as a swami who can materialise gold from thin air…

Fast-paced and tremendously satisfying, that caper is just a taster for Romero’s last job ‘The Golden Frog’, a globe-girdling vendetta that brings Modesty back to her roots when Saragam – the martial arts master who taught her to fight – is captured by a revenge-crazed Khmer Rouge warlord with a grudge against her that stretches back to her days as leader of the criminal organisation The Network. Lured back to the “Killing Fields” of Cambodia and unsure who to trust, Modesty and Willie face possibly their greatest threat in this action-packed, fists of fury fight-fest.

John Burns seemed an ideal replacement for Romero, and is still remembered with affection and appreciation by fans, but he only illustrated two-and-a-half stories, beginning with ‘Yellowstone Booty’ which ran from November 1st 1978 to March 30th 1979 (if you’re curious Idaho George and The Golden Frog appeared in the Evening Standard from 23rd January to October 31st 1978).

His innate design sense, sleek, deceptive line and facility with the female form coincided with a much freer use of casual nudity in the feature, and the action scenes were to become graphic poetry in motion. All these advantages can be observed in this clever yarn of gangsters and lost treasure that sees a young couple save Willie from an ingenious murder-plot, incurring a debt that Modesty moves Heaven and Earth to repay…

These timeless tales of crime and punishments are more enthralling now than ever, and provide much-needed relief in a world increasingly bleak and confusing. At least here you always know who to cheer for and who to boo at. More than three decades later it’s quite odd to realise just mere months after the heroine shockingly – and controversially – bared her breasts, naked ladies adorned not just the comics pages but the “news” portions of so many British papers – all without the kingdom falling into flaming anarchy.

Odder still is the realization that heavy-handed censorship still occurs in America and other countries: boobies and botties – no matter how well-drawn – are still racy, shocking and a big deal opposed with all the vehemence one expects from populations when their Governments suspend Habeas Corpus and/or outlaw football.

I trust this will be all the warning you need, should you be of a sensitive disposition, but hope that such sights won’t discourage you from reading these incredible tales of fiction’s greatest adventuress.

© 2008 Associated Newspapers/Solo Syndication.

Modesty Blaise: Death Trap


By Peter O’Donnell & Enric Badia Romero (Titan Books)
ISBN 13: 1-84576-418-0

Modesty Blaise and her devoted deputy Willie Garvin were retired super-criminals who got too rich too young without ever getting too dirty and are now usually complacent and bored out of their brains. When approached by Sir Gerald Tarrant, head of a British spy organization, they jumped at his offer of excitement and a chance to get some real evil sods. From that tenuous beginning in ‘La Machine’ (see Modesty Blaise: the Gabriel Set-Up) the pair began a helter-skelter thrill ride that has pitted them against the World’s vilest villains…

The legendary femme fatale adventurer first appeared in the Evening Standard on May 13th, 1963 and starred in some of the world’s most memorable crime fiction, all in three panels a day. Her creators Peter O’Donnell and Jim Holdaway (who had previously collaborated on Romeo Brown – a light-hearted adventure strip from the 1950’s and itself well overdue for collection) produced story after story until Holdaway’s tragic early death in 1970, whereupon Spanish artist Enric Badia Romero assumed the art reins taking the daredevil duo to even grater heights.

The tales are stylish and engaging spy/crime/thriller fare in the vein of Ian Fleming’s Bond stories (as opposed to the sometimes over-the-top movie exploits). Modesty and Willie are competent and deadly, but all too fallibly human.

Following an intriguing dissertation by fan and historian Lawrence Blackmore on how the strip was censored in America (entitled ‘Preserving Modesty’s Modesty’ ) this twelfth superb black and white volume, collecting strips which originally appeared in the between October 21st 1976 and January 20th 1978, kicks off in high style with the entrancing but ultimately tragic yarn ‘The Vanishing Dollybirds’ wherein the duo are drawn into a web of Arabic white slavery, administered by the frightfully British and thoroughly unpleasant Major Hamilton and his formidable wife Priscilla, not to mention their uniquely fey hitman and murder-artisan, Bubbles.

Combining high-octane drama with sly comedy and all the charms of the circus (Willie bought one when he was feeling bored…) this is a cracking, straightforward tale which acts as pace-setter for ‘The Junk Men’, a moody murder mystery set in Turkey. Willie is playing stuntman on a science fiction film before getting accidentally embroiled in a war between the police and the world’s three biggest drug lords. And whenever Willie is in trouble can Modesty be far away?

Closing the book is a truly sinister plot from a vengeance-crazed Warsaw Pact commissar determined to punish Modesty for past offences in the gripping, brutal thriller ‘Death Trap’. Comrade Director Breslin wants the retired super-criminal to suffer so he begins his campaign by murdering her current lover in the most appalling manner he could conceive of, but the ambitious politician could never imagine just how dangerous an angry Modesty Blaise could be…

Tightly plotted, with twist after turn, and cross after double-cross, this is no simple revenge story but a sharp, incisive romp that uses the madness of the Cold War “Mutually Assured Destruction” philosophy to great advantage and devastating effect…

In an industry where comic themes seem more and more limited and the readership dwindles to a slavish fan base that only wants more and shinier versions of what it’s already had, the beauty of such strips as Modesty Blaise is not simply the timeless excellence of the stories and the captivating wonder of the illustration, but that material like this can’t fail to attract a broader readership to the medium. Its content can hold its own against the best television and film. NCIS, Chuck Bartowski and Sydney Bristow beware – Modesty’s back to show you how it should be done…

© 2007 Associated Newspapers/Solo Syndication.

Modesty Blaise

Modesty Blaise

By Peter O’Donnell & Dick Giordano (DC Comics)
ISBN 1-56389-178-6

Here’s an odd little item that’s worth a second look. Modesty Blaise is a reformed criminal genius who got rich and retired clean, but came back to the game out of boredom, only this time on the other side.

Originally a newspaper strip created by Peter O’Donnell and drawn by the brilliant Jim Holdaway, she and her charismatic partner in crime (and latterly crime-busting) Willie Garvin have starred in 13 books/short story collections, two films, one TV pilot, a radio play and nearly one hundred comic strip adventures between 1963 and the strip’s conclusion in 2002. The strip has been syndicated world-wide, and Holdaway’s version has been cited as an artistic influence by many comic artists.

In this volume O’Donnell adapts his first novel, which expanded upon the origins of the characters before reprising the first strip sequence, ‘The Gabriel Set-Up’, where she is seduced out of retirement by British Secret Service Chief Sir Gerald Tarrant. Willie Garvin has been arrested in a banana republic, and by informing Modesty so she can rescue him from a death sentence, the civil servant has accrued a debt of honour she can never repay. Also, she was so very, very bored with a life of ease.

To acquire oil rights for Britain, a payment must be made in diamonds to the ruler, but the government has caught wind of a plot to steal the gems en route. Old rival and criminal super-genius Gabriel wants the loot and nothing has ever stopped him before…

This classic adventure thriller is given a slick and glossy sheen in this original adaptation for the US market. The scripts crackles with energy and tension, the heroes are indomitable yet never implausible, and veteran Dick Giordano produces some of the best art of his career, free to work with a full page rather than within the tier of panels the daily strip was restricted to.

While not to every fan’s taste, the story is a solid entertainment, and a worthy addition to the fund of splendid pictorial action O’Donnell has crafted over his long career.

™ & © 1994 Modesty Blaise Ltd. All Rights Reserved.

Modesty Blaise: The Inca Trail

Modesty Blaise: The Inca Trail 

By Peter O’Donnell & Enric Badia Romero (Titan Books)
ISBN 10: 1-84576-417-X

The greatest heroine in English comics returns in another superb collection from Titan Books. First reprinting this time is ‘The Reluctant Chaperone’. As a vacationing Modesty is pressured into babysitting the teen-aged daughter of a CIA acquaintance in Malta. As if young girls aren’t trouble enough, the involvement of Mafia thugs trying to take over the island make for an explosive combination. Kidnapping is wicked, but snatching a kid with an “Aunt Modesty” proves to be suicidal for the unfortunate mobsters.

‘The Greenwood Maid’ is a somewhat more traditional escapade as Modesty and Willie do a favour for one of their old criminal gang and find themselves reliving the gory glory of Robin Hood whilst on the trail of hidden loot in a Mediaeval castle.

A deranged and dying playboy millionaire seeks a bizarre and final revenge on our heroine in ‘Those About to Die’, and all her skill and cunning are needed to rescue Willie from an ancient bloody doom, whilst ‘The Inca Trail’ tests the minds as much as the mettle of the duo as a South American revolution makes them and their juvenile charges the targets of death squads whilst holidaying in the mountains.

O’Donnell and Romero were at the top of their game during this period (1975-1976) and the continuing exploits of this unique character simply got better with every episode. In this edition, as well as an interview with the writer, are four black and white crackers no comic fan or adventure-lover can afford to miss.

© 2007 Associated Newspapers/Solo Syndication.

Modesty Blaise: Cry Wolf

Modesty Blaise: Cry Wolf 

By Peter O’Donnell & Enric Badia Romero (Titan Books)
ISBN 1-84023-869-0

This volume kicks off with what seems a most unconventional tale for the reformed super-criminals – investigating an alien invasion. ‘Take Me To Your Leader’ finds Modesty and Willie Garvin asked to verify whether mysterious beings on a tropical Island are what they seem. As past masters of the criminal con-game our Derring Duo should have it all over mere scientists and diplomats. They’re also much better in a fight which is quite fortunate…

When these tales first saw print in the mid 1970s the strange and the supernatural was common parlance in everyday life so naturally a more fantastic playing field was going to intrude into the hard, tough world of entertainment fiction. Hard on the heels of their extra-terrestrial foes our heroes find themselves tackling ‘The Highland Witch’. Although nominally another go-round with the Great Unknown, this is a solid adventure tale involving a beautiful girl nearly murdered by bloodthirsty gangsters, a spectacularly unique villain in the un-comely form of Sister Binks and a classic combat incursion scenario from Modesty and her extended band of helpers.

‘Cry Wolf’ concludes this volume on a high note as a retired cryptographer and friend of the family is kidnapped from his new home in the Arctic Circle. In a unique twist, Willie and Modesty find themselves at odds with their old friend Tarrant as the abductors might be British Intelligence rather than those pesky old KGB types. This is a superb spy caper full of twists and turns, exotic locales, spectacular villains and heart-stopping action. If there ever is another movie, this should top the list for scripts to adapt.

Modesty Blaise is one of the greatest characters in comic strips, and indeed adventure fiction. Why she is not a household name is probably the only mystery she can’t solve. Read this book, or any/all of the others this current series and you’ll see I’m right whilst at the same time helping to correct that situation.

© 2006 Associated Newspapers/Solo Syndication.

Modesty Blaise: The Puppet Master

Modesty Blaise: The Puppet Master 

By Peter O’Donnell & Enric Badia Romero (Titan Books)
ISBN 1-84023-867-4

The collection of begins by reprinting probably the most controversial story in the strip’s history, and as usual the furore was caused by the tawdry spectre of sex.

‘The Stone-Age Caper’ is a taut, action-packed chase-thriller that has our heroine, Willie Garvin and the mandatory innocent bystanders hunted by a scurrilous pack of thugs through the Australian Outback. It is however, usually remembered – despite being a very exciting and tension-filled episode in the never-dull life of our heroine – as the story where she first got her baps out.

Originally running from July to November of 1971, during a period that saw quite a few censorious doors flung open, the devastating sight of a pair of lady-nipples drawn in full-frontal mid-shot bade fair to bring down governments and topple countries, if the accompanying text feature is to be believed. And yet here we all are safe in the far-future and able to re-read a pretty good story without fainting, forcibly calming the livestock or having to replace the servants.

Next O’Donnell revisits the theme of mind-control (as seen in ‘The Hell-Makers’) with Modesty subjected to the Guantanamo Bay treatment when an old enemy tries to crush her by making her kill Willie Garvin. Despite the seeming repetition, this fresh look at real monsters committing despicable of acts is a sobering balance to some of the more fanciful exploits of this unique duo. ‘The Puppet Master’ is also notable as it features the introduction of home-grown British agent in training, Maude Tiller, of whom more in forthcoming volumes.

One such light romp closes the book in ‘With Love From Rufus’. When Modesty is burgled by a villain who breezes through all her security to leave a bouquet of roses in her safe, she becomes involved with a love-struck criminal prodigy who promptly gets himself, and her, in trouble way over their heads. She needs tact and diplomacy, as much as bullets and bravado to set things right and destroy another vicious gang.

These timeless tales of crime and punishments are as vital and enthralling now as they ever were, and provide much-needed relief in a world increasingly bleak and confusing. At least here you always know who to cheer for and who to boo at.

© 2006 Associated Newspapers/Solo Syndication.

Modesty Blaise: The Gallows Bird

Modesty Blaise: The Gallows Bird 

By Peter O’Donnell & Enric Badia Romero (Titan Books)
ISBN: 1-84023-868-2

The latest compilation of Modesty Blaise tales is not only timeless adventure in its purest form, but also manages to capture the current pop-culture zeitgeist by reprinting tales that originally appeared in that oddly magical year 1973. Combining style and derring-do with masterful story-telling and entrancing art is always going to produce wonderful results, but managing it twice with the same strips must be something of a world record!

The strips in question begin with ‘The Bluebeard Affair’ as Modesty and Willie Garvin are asked to help an old friend whose niece is in line to become the forth dead wife of that ruthless and sardonic charmer Baron Rath. The hedonistic French Riviera and heavily-fortified Villa Beaumaris provide a vivid backdrop to a suspenseful tale of damsels in distress, whilst the creepy daughters of the Baron supply macabre menace aplenty.

‘The Gallows Bird’ is a more traditional crime-caper set in New Orleans, as a blackmail plot to drown the city embroils our heroes in a murderous duel with a retired southern Colonel and his hanging-obsessed bride.

Willie’s protégé and British agent-in-training Maude Tiller returns as a kidnap victim in a scheme to free a soviet super-spy from a British prison in ‘Wicked Gnomes’, a light-hearted but no less thrilling romp that pits the adventurers against a sinister espionage corporation and a truly bizarre pair of eccentric assassins.

The jungles of New Guinea are the setting for the final tale. ‘The Iron God’ fairly rattles along, with the duo crashing their light plane deep in head-hunter territory, rescuing a native nurse from killers, discovering a long-lost rival criminal from their past massing the tribes for his own nefarious purposes, and contesting all and sundry for the secrets of an abandoned World War II Japanese treasure horde. Once again this strip courted controversy in its initial publication, as many bare native breasts were on show, although this time Modesty gets to keep her own top on (mostly).

How censorship affected the series at a time when society, and especially the newspaper industry was daily discovering the commercial value of undraped mammary glands is addressed in a bonus feature that compares printed episodes of the strip – heavily redrawn and censored – with the original art supplied by Spanish artist Enric Badia Romero – who probably couldn’t understand what all the fuss was about.

More than three decades later it’s quite odd to realise just what a big deal this kind of racy material was, and just how vehement the opposition to it could be. I trust this will be all the warning you need, should you be of a sensitive disposition, and that such sights won’t discourage you from reading these tales of one of the lost gems of adventure fiction.

© 2006 Associated Newspapers/Solo Syndication.

Modesty Blaise: The Green-Eyed Monster

Modesty Blaise: The Green-Eyed Monster 

By Peter O’Donnell & Enric Badia Romero (Titan Books)
ISBN 1-84023-864-X

This volume is the first to feature Enric Badia Romero as sole artistic hand, following the unexpected death of the legendary Jim Holdaway partway through ‘The Warlords of Phoenix’ and as a means of easing him into the job author O’Donnell was asked to quickly write a lighter tale to follow up the epic. ‘Willie the Djinn’ plays well to the new artist’s strengths, and although there are echoes of a previous O’Donnell and Holdaway Romeo Brown adventure, this tale of kidnapped dancing girls, oil sheikhs and military coups is a short, sweet romp, and a nice change of pace to the usual storm of murder, intrigue and revenge.

Those elements return in full in the eponymous ‘Green-Eyed Monster’ as the spoiled and obnoxious daughter of a British ambassador is kidnapped by South American rebels and Modesty and Willie must use all their skills to get her out of the terrorists’ clutches, escape the deadly jungles and resist the overwhelming temptation to kill her themselves.

‘Death of a Jester’ closes out the volume as our heroes stumble across a bizarre murder that leads to another job for British spymaster Sir Gerald Tarrant. A man in Jester’s garb is impaled by a knight’s lance and thrown to lions in a caper that revolves around Mediaeval Re-enactments, a band of bored and dangerous British ex-commandos and the impossible theft of the Navy’s latest super torpedo.

The infectious whimsy of the early 1970s was becoming increasingly present but under the strictly controlled conditions of the prolific and ingenious O’Donnell, Blaise and Garvin continued to carve out a well deserved reputation for excellence in these magnificent tales of modern adventure. Certified Gold.

© 2005 Associated Newspapers/Solo Syndication.

Modesty Blaise: The Hell Makers

Modesty Blaise: The Hell Makers 

By Peter O’Donnell & Jim Holdaway with Enric Badia Romero (Titan Books)
ISBN 1-84023-865-8

‘The Hell Makers’, lead story in this Modestly Blaise volume, concentrates on developing the unique relationship between the heroine and her partner-in-crime, Willie Garvin. When enemy agents capture and subject him to an horrendous ordeal of drug-induced torture as a means of bending Modesty to their will, we learn just how powerful are her platonic feelings for Willie and also just how deadly and ruthless she can be in defence of her friends.

‘Takeover’ is a more conventional crime thriller with our heroes reluctantly compelled to thwart an attempt by the Mafia to take control of the British crime scene.

In many ways ‘The War-Lords of Phoenix’ is the most memorable story, and not solely because it was the last that unsung genius Jim Holdaway worked on. Tragically he died, at the miserably young age of forty-three, midway through a truly exceptional adventure, featuring a Japanese secret society, assassination, martial arts mayhem and a generational saga of Atomic Armageddon that truly typified the super-agent genre so popular at the time.

The frantic search for a replacement artist is told in a text feature, but it is a lasting tribute to all concerned in the strip’s creation that a seamless transition was accomplished with the hiring of Barcelona-based Enric Badia Romero, who, whilst speaking no English, adapted his style to a passable imitation of Holdaway’s, and settled in for a long and competent run on the strip.

Perhaps the most fitting tribute to the mastery of Holdaway’s genius is that his best work remains as vibrant and captivating as ever.

© 2005 Associated Newspapers/Solo Syndication.

Modesty Blaise: Black Pearl

Modesty Blaise: Black Pearl 

By Peter O’Donnell & Jim Holdaway (Titan Books)
ISBN 1-84023-842-9

The greatest heroine in comics returns for four more high-octane capers and dark intrigues. Starting off with the classic, exotic mystery of “The Black Pearl”, the deadly duo move on to an almost science fiction driven thriller in “The Magnified Man”.

We return to basics with the all-action set-piece “The Jericho Caper” and the book concludes with the little known gem “The Killing Ground”. This was produced to fill pages in the syndicated Scottish periodical when industrial action hit the parent paper (the London Evening Standard).

O’Donnell and Holdaway produced some of the best comic strips in the world during their collaboration and these breakneck pace, subtly engaging tales show all their skills at their creative peak, whilst the captivating behind-the-scenes features are an absolute treat. A ‘can’t miss’ collection.

© 2004 Associated Newspapers/Solo Syndication