Love advice columnists were as popular in romance comics...
...as they were in other media, like radio, tv, and newspapers!
Unfortunately, my archive of Love Journal is limited, and I don't have the issue that featured the results!
Anybody want to offer their solution?
Mark Ford was Love Journal's resident busybody, but when some of his S.O.S for Love! tales were reprinted in Journal's sister title Love Diary several years later, his name was changed to Ray Mann and the strip was retitled Prescription for Happiness!
This never-reprinted tale from Orbit's Love Journal #16 (1952) was an early assignment for John Buscema, one of the primary artists at Marvel Comics from the late 1960s until his untimely passing in 2002!
Incredibly-versatile, there was nothing John couldn't illustrate, from war to superheroes to romance to his most famous work on Conan the Barbarian!
This particular never-reprinted story is both penciled and inked by Buscema, a practice he almost
always did during his first period in comics from 1949 to 1960.
After a brief stint in advertising, he returned to comics in 1966, quickly becoming the number two artist at Marvel behind Jack Kirby.
In order to match Kirby's legendary speed (up to five pages a day),
Buscema stopped inking his work, except on very rare occasions.
When Kirby moved to DC in 1970, Buscema's style rapidly became the "house style" for the company.
(In fact, the original version of How to Draw Comics the Marvel Way features Buscema demonstrating anatomy, perspective, and storytelling with his unique flair.)
Next week:
You'll Cry Your Eyes Out if You Miss It!
(Things are really getting juicy...)