
The knockout feature in this comic is that, as well as having art spilling out into the margins of the pages, each of the stories opens with a double page spread:

I love the fresh, bright and healthy quality that emanates from King's artwork.

Note also that the stories are not told in the first person, which would become de rigeur in the romance books.

Of the other three stories, one is a 'western-romance', a genre hybrid that had a short popularity, another is a light comedy and a third has a 17th century historical setting. When the smoke cleared after the glut, this kind of variation became rare. Of these other three stories, two 8-pagers were drawn by Leonard Starr, last seen in this series of posts doing assignments for Simon and Kirby earlier in 1949. In a period when most comic book stories were drawn anonymously, the artists have signed their names proudly in this book.

I'd love to see the second issue, in which Starr is in Caniff territory with a 20-page(!!) story titled China Bombshell. The other artistic contributor is Frank Bolle who I think nowadays is to be found drawing Apartment 3-G in the newspapers. The Grand Comics database gives the writing of this one to Dana Dutch. Furthermore, in a time when so many of these publishers were resorting to the formalities of Leroy mechanical lettering (if you look back over these posts you'll see it in the pages from Avon, EC and Famous Funnies. Quality were also using it), look at how smart the calligraphy is in this story. Perhaps the artist did it himself, since it is so perfectly integrated into the job as a whole. Look for example at the way the motif of the raised eyebrow in the final panel is inverted in the initial 't' of 'the end' that runs beneath the panel.

I read it and sampled the pages at The Digital Comics Museum, an online site that is a real education in old comics. I salute them! This particular book must have been scanned for a mint copy or somebody knows more about digital restoration than I do. That does not look like 62 year old newsprint. in fact, now that I look again, there are no staples showing in those spreads. Well done, whoever it was!

That's the second issue's cover at left. (found at the Grand Comic Book Database, another invaluable source for comic book history.) The idea of a book of romances with a Hollywood angle may even have been Kubert's idea, and he may have put the whole thing together himself too. ( A little later he would be a creative force at St. John, with Tor in the world of 1,000,000 years ago and the very first 3D comic book.) On the other hand, it wasn't to be a unique idea. Quality Comics had two new comics out with Hollywood in the title over the following two months, and neither of them lasted more than six issues.

The above sequence is very unusual in a romance book. And the following story's pencilling by Giunta is full of unpretentious charm:

Here doggy, have some chocolate. Classic! I love these posts, makes me want to create a new romance comic series.
ReplyDeleteThat's an absolutely stunning cover on ADVENTURES IN ROMANCE.
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You almost make me want to read romance comics. Almost.
ReplyDeleteDoes the story eventually pay off the fact that chocolate is harmful (deadly, in fact, in some cases) to dogs? Or did it just encourage a generation of young readers to unwittingly poison their best friends??
ReplyDeleteThe colouring on Adventures in Romance is phenomenal!
ReplyDeleteFlushed cheeks, patterned fabrics.
There was a lot more care taken here than in just about any other US comic-book I've seen from before the late 60s.
What an ambitious project it must have been.
I read a bit more about the book since I posted. The artists King and Starr packaged the thing themselves for the publisher. They clearly had some ambition for it and put everything they had into it. "We had a piece of the action, so we were very anxious and worked very hard on it..." That was Starr in an interview. However, he couldn't recall who wrote the stories, though as artists I guess it would be fair to assume they oversaw the coloring themselves.
ReplyDeleteThe colors on the original pop even more in person. The stat for the 'September Squall' has come off, leaving a small glue stain. But it's a large painting that is still a stunner!
ReplyDeletehttp://comicartfans.com/gallerypiece.asp?piece=966714
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