Wednesday 30 August 2023

Crime does not pay (#22-#147) 1942 - 1955. Lev Gleason Publications - Complete Series

 

Publisher: Lev Gleason
Publication Dates: July 1942 – July 1955
Number of Issues Published: 126 (#22 – #147)
Color: Four color interiors; full color covers
Dimensions: Standard Golden Age U. S.
Paper Stock: Newsprint
Binding: Saddle-stitched
Publishing Format: Was ongoing series
Pages: 68  Indicia Frequency: bi-monthly
Tracking:
numbering continues from Silver Streak Comics (Lev Gleason, 1939 series) #21
Notes :
See also: Complete Book of True Crime Comics (Wm. H. Wise & Co., 1944 Series) [nn]; which reprints the contents of #22 and #24, rebound under a new cover.

Information thanks to the Grand Comics Database

Crime Does Not Pay is the title of an American comic book series published between 1942 and 1955 by Lev Gleason Publications. Edited and chiefly written by Charles Biro, the title launched the crime comics genre and was the first “true crime” comic book series. At the height of its popularity, Crime Does Not Pay would claim a readership of six million on its covers. The series’ sensationalized recountings of the deeds of gangsters such as Baby Face Nelson and Machine Gun Kelly were illustrated by artists Bob Wood, George Tuska, and others. Stories were often introduced and commented upon by “Mr. Crime”, a ghoulish figure in a top hat, and the precursor of “horror hosts” such as EC Comics’ Crypt Keeper. According to Gerard Jones, Crime Does Not Pay was “the first nonhumor comic to rival the superheroes in sales, the first to open the comic book market to large numbers of late adolescent and young males.”

When Lev Gleason hired Bob Wood and Charles Biro to edit Daredevil and Silver Streak comics in 1941, he rewarded the two cartoonists with a profit-sharing program and creator credits on the covers of the comics. In addition, Gleason urged the pair to create new titles for his company under the understanding that they would share in the profits. Biro and Wood discussed the matter and eventually came up with a concept that would become Crime Does Not Pay, a comic book series chronicling the lives of murderers and gangsters based in part on real world people. Biro is reputed to have been inspired by a meeting with a kidnapper and pimp one night in a bar, although publisher Arthur Bernhard has stated that the entire concept was created by Gleason. The title was based on a popular radio and MGM film series.

First issues

Heralded by ads in other Gleason tiles, Crime Does Not Pay took over the numbering of Silver Streak comics with issue 22 cover dated July 1942. The first issue featured articles and comic stories about real criminals and was written by Biro and Wood. Biro designed and drew the first cover and wrote stories about mobsters Louis Buchalter and “Diamond Joe” Esposito, and gunfighter Wild Bill Hickok and  Belle Starr written by Dick Wood


Initial issues sold approximately 200,000 copies each, a healthy number for the time, but by the end of World War II the title was selling 800,000 per issue. When sales reached one million in 1948, the editors added the claim “More Than 5,000,000 Readers Monthly” to the cover, a reference to the pass-along effect of comics circulation.


Content

Mostly written by Charles Biro, the stories in Crime Does Not Pay became known for their lurid detail, confessional tone, and exceptional, violent artwork. The stories often dealt frankly with adult relationships, drug use and sex, in addition to the depictions of physical violence, torture, and murder that were standard for every issue.

Recurring features included “Officer Common Sense”, beginning with issue 41, “Chip Gardner”, issue 22, and “Who Dunnit”, puzzle mystery series with art by Fred Guardineer, beginning with issue 39.

Mr. Crime

Issue 24 introduced the Biro-designed figure of Mr. Crime, the cartoon mascot of the series, who narrated and commented on the action depicted in the comics, addressing his readers in a joking, conspiratorial tone. Mr. Crime dressed in a white top hat (labeled “Crime”) and white sheet. His bizarre visage resembled a gremlin, with pointed ears, nose and teeth. In many ways he was similar to the character of Mr. Coffee Nerves from a series of print ads for Postum designed by cartoonists Milt Caniff and Noel Sickles. The character of Mr. Crime pre-dated the Horror Hosts of EC Comics and other publishers, and his ghostly presence is very similar to that effected by Rod Serling on The Twilight Zone television series and of Raymond Edward Johnson on the Inner Sanctum radio program.

Mr. Crime’s attitude toward the tales he narrated was ambivalent at best. In some panels he seemed to approve of and even encourage the crimes of a story’s miscreants (acting as a sort of anti-conscience, invisible to the characters), while in others he was openly contemptuous of criminals, rarely failing, as the story’s protagonists met their end in the denouement, to remind readers that, as the title indicated, “Crime Does Not Pay”.






This series is presented complete thanks to the contribution of numbers 
23-24,33, 36,40,46 & 54, not scanned until now. 
Thank you Jens Terje for this magnificent contribution.


Sunday 27 August 2023

2000 AD ##1751 - #1800. Rebellion

   Publisher:  Rebellion

Publication Dates10 October 2001 - present
Number of Issues Published: 1051 (#1263 - #2313)
Color: colour with some stories in black and white; colour cover.
Paper Stock: glossy cover; white interior pages
Binding: Saddle-stitched
Publishing Format: Was Ongoing Series
Publication Type: magazine
Page: 32        Indicia Frequency: Every Wednesday

Notes
numbering continues from 2000 AD (Egmont Fleetway Ltd, 1996 series) #1204.
Under license from Rebellion.
Merged after #85 into 2000 AD and Starlord
Merged after #126 into 2000 AD and Tornado
Numbering continues with #178 from 2000 AD and Tornado
Numbering continues with 2000 AD (Fleetway Publications, 1987 series) 
#536 - #1013
Numbering continues with 2000 AD (Egmont UK, 2000 series) #1014 - #1204
Numbering continues with 2000 AD (Egmont UK, 2000 series) #1205
Numbering continues with 2000 AD (Rebellion, 2001 series) #1263

2000 AD #1751 - #1800  Rebellion

Publication Dates: 14 September 2011  / 12 September 2012











Wednesday 23 August 2023

Thriller Comics Library.- #068 Hopalong Cassidy #069 The Last of the Barons #070 The Three Musketeers (IPC 1954 Series)

       Thriller Comics Library

Publisher: IPC
Publication Dates: November 1953 - 5 February 1957
Number of Issues Published: 122 (#41 - #162)
Color: Colour cover; black and white interior
Dimensions: Digest
Binding: Squarebound
Publishing Format: was ongoing
Publication Type: magazine 
68 pages   -   Indicia Frequency: The First Thursday in Each Month

Numbering continues from Thriller Comics (IPC, 1951 series) #40



 Hopalong Cassidy

IPC,  Aug 1954

Cover/  Pencils & Colors :  Sep E. Scott (painting)

Script: 
Clarence E. Mulford (original story); ? (adaptation)

Pencils & Inks: John McNamara,

The fearless, quick-shooting cowpuncher of the Bar 20 rides again.


  The Last of the Barons

IPC,  Aug 1954

Cover/  Pencils & Colors :  Sep E. Scott (painting)

Script:
Edward Bulwer-Lytton (credited) (original story); ? (adaptation)

Pencils & Inks: Tom Peddie

All the glamour and high
adventure of the armoured knights of old.

 The Three Musketeers

IPC,  Aug 1954

Cover/  Pencils & Colors :  George Cattermole (painted)

Script:
Alexandre Dumas (credited) (original story); ? (adaptation)

Pencils & Inks: Robert Forrest,

With a yard of steel in his hand,
D’Artagnan fights his way to fame and fortune.



Sunday 20 August 2023

Secrets of Young Brides v1 #05 - #44 (1957-1964) Complete Series [Charlton Comics Collection]

 

  Charlton, 1957 Series 
Published in English (United States) United States
 
Publication Dates: October 1957 - October 1964
Number of Issues Published: 40 (#5 - #44)
Color: Color
Dimensions: Standard Silver Age US
Paper Stock: Glossy cover; Newsprint interior
Binding: Saddle-stitched
Publishing Format:Was ongoing
Publication Type: Magazine
Pages: 36    Indicia Frequency: bi-monthly


Authors:
Script:
Joe Gill ?
Pencils:
Jon D'Agostino ?, Bill Molno, Vince Alascia, Charles Nicholas (signed), 
John Severin [as Le Poer] (signed), Paul Reinman (signed), 
Norman Nodel ?, Joe Sinnott, 
Tony Tallarico ?,
Inks:
Jon D'Agostino ?, Sal Trapani (signed), Vince Alascia,
John Severin [as Le Poer] (signed), Paul Reinman (signed), Vince Colletta,
Letters:
Jon D'Agostino













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