My pal James Cassara delivers a Guest Review about Atlas At War (a book I've been meaning to pick up), which reprints some classic war stories. Here's James:
After all, those trendsetting titles, which frequently portrayed the horrors of war in ways few other companies dared, had some of the finest stories and art of any comics before or since.
But not so fast. Atlas Comics, the forerunner of the Marvel Age that so many of us grew up with, were more prolific than EC, had a much longer run, and featured many of the same artists and writers.
Dr. Mike Vassalo (known affectionately as “Doc. V.”), a Manhattan dentist by trade and passionate comics historian, along with Welsh graphic artist Allan Harvey, have assembled a fantastic collection of Atlas war tales - scanned directly from Doc V’s extensive collection - that show how at their best Atlas War comics often matched EC in quality.
In fact many of the same artists (and a few of the writers) who produced work for EC can be found herein. Jack Davis, John Severin, Russ Heath, Bernie Krigstein, and the tandem of Reed Crandall / Al Williamson are all showcased within this book's generous 250 pages. Add the artistic talents of Gene Colan, Joe Maneely, Joe Sinnott, Steve Ditko (his only Atlas war story!), Jack Kirby, Don Heck, Bill Everett, and a slew of perhaps lesser known artists who didn’t so directly contribute to the Marvel Age and you have a book worth relishing over and again.
While artist credits are easier to identify, the writers of these stories are harder to pin down. We do know Stan Lee signed his scripts, and the prolific Hank Chapman is found among these pages, but for the most part the writers are sadly unidentified.
Most of the stories involve the Korean War, which was still raging at the time the earliest (1951) of these were created. A few World War II tales are told, including the powerful Nazi death camp story “City Of Slaves," exquisitely rendered by Sam Kweskin, and a handful of Kirby written and illustrated stories produced towards the end of the decade.
Most of the stories involve the Korean War, which was still raging at the time the earliest (1951) of these were created. A few World War II tales are told, including the powerful Nazi death camp story “City Of Slaves," exquisitely rendered by Sam Kweskin, and a handful of Kirby written and illustrated stories produced towards the end of the decade.
Other revelations include a series of one page “Atrocity Stories” stunningly drawn by Paul Reinman (if you’ve never seen Reinman’s work from this period prepare to be amazed) and “21 Days” drawn by Syd Shores. Both demonstrate how more well suited these two fine artists were for stories not involving costumed heroes.
The general distribution of stories is fine, giving the most prominent artists the most pages, but I would have preferred perhaps one less story by Joe Sinnott (I LOVE Sinnott but six stories seems a bit too much) and the inclusion of a civil war tale by George Woodbridge, a brilliant craftsman who rarely gets his due. But that’s a very minor quibble - more a matter of taste - that in no way detracts from this welcome and wonderful book.
At $65 it’s the price of about 16 modern day comic books and I cannot imagine any 16 comics providing this much entertainment and information. Doc V’s introduction sets the stage but the stories speak for themselves.
Grade A+
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2 comments:
Well, this is interesting! Thanks for the review!!
Nice review, I didn't know about that book, thanks.
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