Thursday, April 29, 2010

The Heroes of Rural Home: Part VI

Today's stories are of Maureen Marine, The Blue Circle, The Crash Kid & Mussel-Man from: Blue Circle Comics # 3 (September 1944); Blue Circle Comics # 4 (February 1945); and Cannonball Comics # 2 (March 1945). The Blue Circle story was scanned from a copy of "Blue Circle Comics # 4" that I actually own, while the rest of the tales were taken from comic files available for download at the Digital Comic Museum.































Way to go, Canadiens! At least for a little while, I won't have to listen to people talk out their butt about Ovechkin being the best player in the NHL.

Monday, April 19, 2010

A Logo & Some Links

Yes, "My Opinion Doesn't Matter" now has a craptacular logo. The reason for this is due to the fact that I ran across another blog with a similar name (but entirely different content) recently. I thought I had something semi-original, and even did a search to see if "My Opinion Doesn't Matter" was free-and-clear to use for a blog title. Oh well, that's search engines for you! So now, I'm down to "M.O.D.M.", but really, what difference does it make what this thing is called?

I've been "surfin' the 'net" the last few days and have run across some interesting places. http://flameape.org/ is pretty neat with some "Public Domain Superhero-a-Day" original artwork, including "13" from Lev Gleason, Miss Masque (Nedor) & The Steel Fist (Rural Home). Check-out the "Portfolio" for even more original artwork. Hey, any place that mentions M.O.D.M. is ok by me!

http://www.vintagepbks.com/index.html isn't a place I've fully explored yet, simply because there's a lot to look at. What's it about? Well ...

"If you love vintage paperbacks, you have come to the right place. ...
"Cover artists featured are Rudolph Belarski, Earle Bergey, Sam Cherry, Reginald Heade, Robert Bonfils, Frank Frazetta, George Gross, Ray Johnson, Rudy Nappi, Rafael De Soto, Tom Adams, Lou Marchetti, Jeff Jones, Paul Rader, Robert Maguire, Robert McGinnis and Jim Steranko.
"Publishers featured are Ace, Avon, Bantam, Banner, Berkley, Dell, Eton, Gold Medal, Graphic, Handi-Books, Lion Books, Monarch, Popular Library and Pyramid. Other authors, artists and publishers will be added as time allows.
"Several pages are listed by theme."

You can browse by author, artist, publisher or theme, and view a lot of really nice artwork.

http://www.coverbrowser.com/ is a place to view the covers of thousands of comics, books, magazines & more, one gallery after another. There's a feature included that lets you jump from whatever cover you're looking at to an eBay search of that very same issue. Pretty handy if you run across something that makes you go "I want that!".

Want to check-out something a little more kid-friendly? Then head on over to http://www.bigblogcomics.com/ and you can read stories featuring Heckle & Jeckle, Supermouse or Homer The Happy Ghost.

Completely unrelated to comics ... Let's go Penguins!

Monday, April 12, 2010

Super Animals!

The post from April 1st was my attempt at an "April's Fool" joke. The link in that post does take you to a file I have on 4shared.com which you can download, and the features I listed for "issue six" are accurate in as much as that's what my file contains. Realistically, "Blue Circle Comics # 6" was never anything more than a cover used to repackage left-over interiors of other comics. While most of what I said came directly from my own butt, there's a little bit of truth sprinkled-in here & there.

My poll, "Who's Your Favorite Hero of Rural Home?", ended with The Green Turtle on top with 3 votes, Blue Circle received 2 votes, Steel Fist, Maureen Marine & Crash Kid each got one vote, and apparently nobody cares about The Prankster, Jun-Gal or The Judge (ok, that might not be true, but they didn't receive any votes).

Today's are from "Supermouse # 36" (August 1956: Pines Comics) and "Atomic Mouse # 26" (May 1958: Charlton Comics Group).





















If you click on the following links, you can download (for free & without registering) the entire contents of the books spotlighted here today from my 4shared.com folder:

Supermouse 36 August 1956

Atomic Mouse 26 May 1958

Thursday, April 1, 2010

My 50th Post!

50 posts! Something worth celebrating for me, considering how little posting I've done these last several months. I really wanted to something special for today, but I got involved in scanning some older comics earlier this week which chewed-up a bunch of my free time. One of the books I scanned is the subject of today's post.

Back in December, I won a comic lot that was listed simply as "Old Comic lot Mad house Archie". The main book I wanted from the lot was the issue of Atomic Mouse, but that's another story. Buried in the picture, which you can just about make out, is a something I didn't think actually existed: The original version of "Blue Circle Comics # 6"!

Fans of Golden Age comic books may be aware of something called "remaindered comics", which are unsold comic book interiors wrapped-up in covers that usually had nothing to do with the contents. "Blue Circle Comics # 6" was a remaindered comic, published by Green Publishing in the 1950s and using the cover of issue 6, with interior content comprised of books like Martin Kane, Private Eye or Colossal Features Magazine. For the most part, it was believed that a version of issue 6 that was published by Rural Home and contained the characters Blue Circle and The Steel Fist simply didn't exist.

I didn't receive the lot of books until January, but what a surprise I got when the books finally did arrive. I hadn't noticed in the photo that I was getting "BCC 6" because it's buried in the picture.



As you can see, it's a pretty lousy assortment of books, with Atomic Mouse & The Fly (in FAIR condition) being the titles I was most interested in. Apparently, the seller thought a coverless issue of "Wilbur" was more important than this rare issue of "Blue Circle", which have a cover-date of "April" but lacks a Copyright notice on the inside front cover.

I talked to a local comic shop owner about this, and I was surprised that he was able to get me in-touch with a former employee of Rural Home who lives in Pennsylvania now.
Rueben Edwin Patzer, now 92 years old, worked for Rural Home in the accounting department and after jogging his memory a little, he was able to tell me more about issue 6. He told me over the phone that by the time issue six was published, Rural Home had decided to cancel its comic line due to poor sales. While he couldn't remember actual numbers, Mr Patzer said that issue 6's sales were so bad that nearly 95% of the print run was returned by the newstand distributors. Looking to get something out the books, Rural Home sold everything that was left-over to Green Publishing, which is apparently how the covers were able to be used on so many remainder comics in the '50s. Green Publishing was also sold the original artwork to the issue, which was used as filler for issues of Liberty Comics & Roly-Poly Comics in 1946.



The contents of "Blue Circle Comics # 6" is pretty interesting. Blue Circle once again starts-off the issue, with Gail Porter following. Toreador is the third story, followed by The Prankster, who had appeared in the first three issues of Red Circle Comics. A text story precedes another chapter of Maureen Marine, which is followed by Slaphappy Grandpappy. The Steel Fist finishes-off the issue.

Rather than post every single page and ad from this issue (52 pages total), I thought I'ld make life easier on myself by just posting a link to the zip file I made: http://www.4shared.com/file/254566207/21bad8e3/Blue_Circle_Comics_006_April_1.html. If you don't know anything about "4shared.com", the deal is rather simple: People upload files to the internet which can then be downloaded by anybody. Downloading doesn't require an account, and it's free! Zip files are compatable with most comic readers, like CDisplay, or you can unzip the file and view the pages seperately ... whatever floats your boat.

And there you go, my 50th Post which I hope was worth your time to read.

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