Showing posts with label Prize Comics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Prize Comics. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 28, 2016

YOUNG ROMANCE "Different!" Conclusion

Successful businessman Jack Williams and his family move to a small town where they're welcomed with open arms...until the locals discover he's an immigrant and his real name is Jacoby Wilheim!
(Note: he and his wife appear to be naturalized American citizens, and the children are apparently native-born Americans!)
Suddenly, business falls off, and his family become social pariahs!
Joe Simon and Jack Kirby weren't the sorts to let social injustices stand without speaking out.
The prejudices presented here, though mild, were (and are) quite real, and Simon & Kirby should be credited with trying to present the truth about them to their impressionable audience in Prize's Young Romance #30 (1951).
Next Week...
Our Annual Month-Long Halloween Extravaganza Begins!
We can guarantee that...
You'll Cry Your Eyes Out if You Miss It!
(Yeah, we say that a lot...but it's true!)
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Wednesday, September 21, 2016

YOUNG ROMANCE "Different!" Part 1

With ethnic and religious prejudice on the rise again...
...perhaps we should look back on how pop culture tried to deal with it back in the 1940s...
Joe Simon and Jack Kirby weren't the sorts to let social injustices stand without speaking out.
The prejudices presented here, though mild, were (and are) quite real, and Simon & Kirby should be credited with trying to present the truth about them to their impressionable audience in Prize's Young Romance #30 (1951).
And now a word from our sponsor..
Please Support True Love Comics Tales
Visit Amazon and Order...

Wednesday, July 20, 2016

YOUNG ROMANCE "Man-Hater"

WIth the GOP Presidential Convention in full swing...
...let's look at what Repugs (and immature boys) think women are like and what it takes to "tame" them!
Written and penciled by Jack Kirby and inked by Kirby and Joe Simon, this never-reprinted tale from Prize's Young Romance #3 (1948) is almost a spoof of the "I'll trick the superior (more intelligent/athletic) woman into loving me" storyline that actually was popular in B-movies of the period!
Next Week...
We don't know yet what we'll present!
But, we can guarantee that...
You'll Cry Your Eyes Out if You Miss It!
(Yeah, we say that a lot...but it's true!)
And now a word from out sponsor...

Wednesday, April 8, 2015

YOUNG ROMANCE "I Love You, Frank Gerard"

You think "mansplaining" is a new phenomenon?
Hardly.
It was happening at least as far back as 1948, when this tale appeared!
This never-reprinted story of business, love, and the business of love is from Prize's Young Romance #4 (1948).
Layouts by Jack Kirby, pencils by Jerry Robinson & Mort Meskin, inks by Joe Simon.
The writer is unknown, but believed to be Simon and/or Kirby.
Next week:
The Return of Reach for Happiness...
You'll Cry Your Eyes Out if You Miss It!
(Oh, you've heard that, eh?)

And now a word from out sponsor...

Wednesday, March 11, 2015

YOUNG LOVE "Twist"

Maybe the party-pooper adults in FootLoose were right...
...dance is the Devil's instrument to lure teens to naughtiness!
This cover-featured tale from Prize's Young Love #33 (1962) was an attempt to cash in on the then-hot dance "The Twist".
The problem of translating the frantic hip gyration of the dance to single images is never really solved satisfactorily, with veteran Bob Powell's making it look more awkward than exciting.
Next week:
The Return of Reach for Happiness...
You'll Cry Your Eyes Out if You Miss It!
(Oh, you've heard that, eh?)

And now a word from out sponsor...

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

STRANGE WORLD OF YOUR DREAMS "I Talked with My Dead Wife!"

Can the power of love enable a deceased spouse (and mother) to communicate...
...from beyond the grave to protect her loved ones?
In 1950, the writer/artist team of Simon & Kirby created Black Magic, a comic book about unexplained phenomena which quickly became a best-seller.
Their publisher, Prize Comics asked them for another, related series, so they conceived and produced Strange World of Your Dreams.
The theme was dreams and nightmares, with the added aspect of having readers submit their own dreams to be dramatized and analyzed in the comic!
This particular tale from SWoYD #1 (1952), written and illustrated by Joe Simon and Jack Kirby, theorized that a deceased mother's love for her child transcended the boundaries of life and death with the unwitting aid of her still-grieving husband, a tale of true love, but not a romance, per se.
SWoYD was an interesting approach to the horror genre, but unfortunately, it didn't sell well enough to survive past it's 4th issue.
Next week:
We wind up our fantasy-themed October posts with a woman who returns from the grave to protect her spouse from werewolves!
And, as always, we can guarantee that...
You'll Cry Your Eyes Out if You Miss It!
(Oh, you've heard that, eh?)
And now a word from out sponsor...
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