Wednesday, March 31, 2021

DARLING LOVE "Second Hand Love"

This is not an early April Fools joke!
Did you know Archie Comics once published romance comics?
No, not like this!
Like this...
and this!
Like almost all comics publishers at the end of World War II, Archie (then MLJ Magazines) experienced a major drop in sales as action-oriented comics (and super-heroes in particular) fell out of favor with readers.
Luckily, one of their other characters, Archie (along with his supporting cast), proved extremely-popular, and quickly replaced the super-heroes in various titles like Pep Comics and Top-Notch Laugh Comics (which became Laugh Comics) as well as new solo titles for Archie, Betty, Veronica, Jughead and others.
In fact, the company was renamed Archie Comics in 1946!
But that didn't mean the company had abandoned non-Archie concepts!
Due to sales generated in 1949 by then-new romance titles like Young Love, Archie jumped into the brand-new (to comics) teen and young adult women with two titles, Darling Love and Darling Romance published under the Darling Magazines imprint!
Though most of the tales were of the usual breathless "true love" type, a few were stories surprisingly-mature (more in the vein of soap operas), such as this never-reprinted one from Darling Love #8 (1951)...

Illustrated by Harry Lucey (who was also one of the primary Archie artists at the time), the subjects include "older man/younger woman", "widower with child remarrying", and "inadvertent motherhood" 
The two comics were bi-monthly on alternating months and lasted only two years (1949-1951) before being forced out by a glut of romance comics flooding the newsstands as every other publisher entered the compeetition.
Neither series has ever been reprinted!
Next Week:
We're Not Yet Sure What We'll Present!
But We Can Guarantee that If You Miss It...
You'll Cry Your Eyes Out!
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Wednesday, March 24, 2021

LOVE 1971 "Reckless Losers"

50 years ago...
...romance comics were on their last legs.
But DC Comics' wasn't going down without a fight, starting with the torrid tale under this psychedelic Charlie Armentano cover!
Written/pencilled by Ric Estrada and inked by Tony DeZuniga, this cover-featured, never-reprinted story from DC's Super DC Giant #21 was the only new tale in the 64-page book.
The rest were reprints with hairstyles and clothing "updated" to the then-current styles!

Note: Charlie Armentano did only two comic pages that were ever published; this cover and the back cover of DC 100-Page Super-Spectacular #5 Love Stories (1971)!
The art was apparently submitted with coloring done on the original art itself, unheard-of at the time...
Armentano now runs his own graphics design/production company.
Check out his LinkedIn page HERE!
Next Week...
We Don't Know What We're Presenting...Yet!
But You'll Cry Your Eyes Out if You Miss It!
And now a word from our sponsor!
Support True Love Comics Tales
Visit Amazon and Buy...
Love Stories 1971 100-Page Super-Spectacular
Replica Edition
...which features Charlie Armentaro's only other comic book art on the back cover!

Thursday, March 18, 2021

YOUNG ROMANCE "Bonnie Taylor, Airline Stewardess in Never Let Go!" Part 2

We Have Already Seen...

...before we continue, I gotta ask: "What's a 'flaming love story'?"
A year ago, airline stewardess Bonnie Taylor met a charming Irish fishing boat captain named Johnny Shannon during a layover in Ireland!
The two fell deeply, intensely, passionately in love...
Continuing her penchant for Celtic men with a supernatural bent, the very next issue finds Bonnie falling for a Scotsman from a Brigadoon-like town that appears for a few days every century, then disappears!
(I think I'll save that one for our annual Halloween blogathon in October!)
This never-reprinted tale from DC's Young Romance #135 (1965) was scripted by Robert Kanigher and illustrated by a guy who would jump from DC to Marvel only a few months later...replacing Spider-Man co-creator Steve Ditko on the flagship title and eventually becoming Marvel's art director for over 20 years....John Romita Sr!
DC's Silver-Age editors believed romance titles needed ongoing strips to keep the readers coming back and every book had one during the mid-1960s.
They ran from traditional-style soap operas (Reach for Happiness and 20 Miles to Heartbreak) to series about unmarried working women seeking love in the Big City or their workplace (Private Diary of Mary Robin RN and 3 Girls -- Their Lives -- Their Loves)!
The Bonnie Taylor, Airline Stewardess series ran from #126 to #139.

Next Week:
We Don't Know Yet What We'll Present!
But We Can Guarantee...
You'll Cry Your Eyes Out If You Miss It!
And now a word from our sponsor...
Please Support
True Love Comics Tales!
Visit Amazon and Order...
(which features Bonnie Taylor's premiere story!)

Wednesday, March 17, 2021

YOUNG ROMANCE "Bonnie Taylor, Airline Stewardess in Never Let Go!" Part 1

For St Patrick's Day, we present the only Irish romance comic story I've ever found...
...from a series about a stewardess seeking love...all over the globe!
Actually, Part 2 will appear...tomorrow!
Bonnie Taylor, Airline Stewardess premiered in DC's Young Romance #126 (1963), featuring a character who fell deeply, intensely, seriously, in love with a different guy in every issue as she circled the globe!
Since this tale appeared in DC's Young Romance #135 (1964), less than a year after the strip's premiere, and Bonnie was ostensibly waiting out the year before marrying Johnny, what was she doing with all those other men between #127 and #135???
She wanted to marry a number of them!
Was this a script meant for a stand-alone story, but ended up being shoehorned into the series due to deadline problems?
Did Miss Taylor have Short Attention Span Disorder?
Or was Bonnie a Comics Code-approved nymphomaniac?
BTW, I wasn't intending to run Young Romance stories two weeks in a row, but I thought there'd be more romance stories set in Ireland than this lone tale...
Tomorrow:
You'll Cry Your Eyes Out If You Miss It!
And now a word from our sponsor...
Please Support
True Love Comics Tales!
Visit Amazon and Order...
(which features Bonnie Taylor's premiere story!)

Wednesday, March 10, 2021

YOUNG ROMANCE "Love Me, Love Me Not!"

What do you do when the one you love falls for someone else?
Art by Bill Draut
But, at the same time, something happens to you, as shown in the cover story from Young Romance #168 (1970)...
This titillating tale of heartbreak, horniness, and hypocrisy, was written by Jack Miller, and illustrated by Don Heck, who did a lot of romance work from the 1950s to the late 1970s, penciling or inking in conjunction with others, or doing his own complete art (like this tale)!
 Next Week:
We Don't Yet Know What We'll Present, but...
You'll Cry Your Eyes Out If You Miss It!
And now a word from our sponsor...
Please Support
True Love Comics Tales!
Visit Amazon and Order...