STANLEY STORIES

Thursday, February 12, 2015

Working Stiff, Working Loose: The 1950s Career of John Stanley | The Comics Journal

Working Stiff, Working Loose: The 1950s Career of John Stanley | The Comics Journal


I have an essay published today on the online version of The Comics Journal. Please check it out--thanks!

Posted by Frank M. Young at 8:54 AM 1 comment:
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THE JOHN STANLEY COMICS BIBLIOGRAPHY SERIES

I have compiled a detailed, fully illustrated (in color) story-by-story career bibliography of the comic book and magazine cartoon work of John Stanley, in three decade-specific oversized paperback editions. They're available in book form at Amazon.com.

You can read more about the 1940s volume HERE.

Check out the 1950s edition (the longest of the three books) HERE.

The 1960s volume can be previewed HERE.

Covers of the three books are seen below--and that of THE TAO OF YOW, a lavishly illustrated book of essays on John Stanley's world and his work, including expanded versions of essays first seen on this blog. TAO OF YOW may be perused HERE.





THE COMICS JOURNAL SEZ...

"Frank M. Young delivers unto us answers about John Stanley in reference to questions you didn’t know you had, and we should thank him for that. This kind of deep comic book archeology is needed. It gets to the weird smudgy bottom of aesthetic developments..."

"It’s always a good day when a new Stanley Stories post appears."

-- Dan Nadel



"One of the single best cartoonist resources on the internet..."

"Easily my favorite historical comics website."
So sez Tom Devlin in recent posts on Drawn + Quarterly's always-worthwhile blog... thanks, Tom!

"...FUN TIME WASTER OF THE WEEK!"

So says The Washington Post about Stanley Stories. We might have worded it differently, but there's no such thing as bad publicity, so...

"Oh, this is lovely!"

--columnist Monica Hesse

see the actual entry here: Permalink


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THESE ARE YOUR 10 FAVORITE STANLEY STORIES POSTS...

  • Two Stories From The First Little Lulu Comic, 1945: Story and Art by John Stanley
    John Stanley's early work on the one-shot issues of Little Lulu has been dealt a bad hand in reprints. Aside from the appearance of on...
  • The Last of Little Lulu, pt. 1: selections from issue 132, 1959
    1959 was a pivotal year in John Stanley's comics career. He ended a 14-year relationship with Dell's best-selling Little Lulu comic...
  • COMICSWORLD Is Gone... long live COMICSWORLD...COMICSWORLD Is Gone
    NOTE: As this is the most popular posting on the STANLEY STORIES blog, I'd like to encourage new visitors to take a moment and per...
  • Enslavement, Torment and Other Hot Topics; Two More Stanley "Tom and Jerry" stories
    We've done the Little Lulu thing to death recently. I know it's a fan favorite--and rightfully so. (In fact, each time I do a mul...
  • Post-Mortem Post 008: New Stanley Material Discovered--Oswald the Rabbit Four Color 39, 1944
    In all my years of research, I somehow overlooked this early 1944 one-shot, which is now important as containing John Stanley's first ...
  • The Last of The Last Of Little Lulu, pt. 4: issue 135, 1959
    Here's the finale of our multi-part series on the final four issues of John Stanley's Little Lulu. These scans are graciously provi...
  • The Last of Little Lulu, pt. 2: selections from issue 133, 1959
    Let's continue our look at the final issues of John Stanley's Little Lulu . Here are 4/5ths of the contents of issue 133 (July, 1959...
  • "The Bogyman"—John Stanley's Forbidden Little Lulu Story In Color; Farewell To This Blog
    This blog is a decade old. It's a done deal, for the most part. I wanted to mark its 10 years of existence with one last special po...
  • Comics Within Comics: John Stanley's Little Lulu Fairy Tale Meta-Stories
    The hundreds of spontaneous fairy-tales that occur in John Stanley's Little Lulu offered their creator a constant, reliable escape ro...
  • Meet Oona Goosepimple! From "Nancy" #162, 1959
    As John Stanley wound down on his 15-year stint writing Little Lulu , he took on a very similar project. Dell had acquired the publicatio...

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COPYRIGHT INFO AND SUCH

All comics stories reproduced on this blog are (c) their various owners.
All text on this blog is (c) 2008-2017 by Frank M. Young. It may not be reproduced without consulting me first for permission. (It's A-OK to post links to this blog, its entries, and to quote from the text if I am given credit.)
All enjoyment of this site is (c) YOU! Thanks for being here!

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A FERVENT PLEA TO FELLOW BLOGGERS

I would like to suggest that the following grammatical and punctuation errors be avoided by one and all;

1) misuse of the possessive apostrophe-s. It's means "it is," not "its." Appropriate use, e.g.: "It's hot outside today." Wrong usage: "I looked at it's cover."

I see this horrid mistake committed hundreds of times daily on the Internet and elsewhere. If a word ends in an s, chances are someone will ram that apostrophe in there. (e.g., "Today's Special's").

Please, please, PLEASE--unless you intend to convey that a person, place or thing is being discussed, in the present tense, or is in use as a contraction of two words (i.e., "it is, let us, what is"), DO NOT USE THE APOSTROPHE!

2) misuse of the apostrophe in dates. Again: unless it is intended to convey the location or possession of a certain quality, such as "1867's drinking water supplies" or "1978's energy crisis," DO NOT USE THE APOSTROPHE! The same applies to the use of decade-connoting dates. It is the 1950s, or the '50s--NOT the 1950's or the 50's!

3) the two most abused words in the English language are "amazing" and "hilarious." It pains me to see these words used thousands of times a day in print and in conversation.

If everything is amazing and/or hilarious, then NOTHING is amazing and/or hilarious.

There exists a wealth of synonyms--delightful words that convey these two properties. Please, please, please use them in the place of these two horribly over-worked adjectives.

Visit synonym.com for easy access to other words that will help you communicate better and smarter.

4) When in doubt, use Spell Check.

Computer users have a luxury--we can instantly determine if a word we've typed is properly spelled. Any computer's spell checking program will inevitably have bugs, but most of the time it's quite helpful.

There is no good reason (aside from un-caught typos) that Internet writing should have spelling errors. We no longer have to interrupt our work, walk over to the bookshelf, pull out the dictionary, find the word, and return to our task. Right-click on a highlighted word and you'll know if it's correct or not.

The speed of the Internet sometimes inspires sloppiness--in myself and in others. In our excitement to get our writing on-line, it's easy to forget that finely-tuned prose may require a little more time.

It is worth the effort--and it takes little effort anymore--to double-check spelling before you make a post live. I often go over old posts and correct typos or poor writing. I feel it makes a difference, and that it supports my worth as a scholar and critic.

If this plea can prevent the egregious misuse of proper English in the blogosphere, my life will not have been in vain.

Who Is This Guy, Anyway?

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Frank M. Young
Seattle, WA, United States
I'm an author, artist, and musician. My first article was published in 1980. Thousands of articles, essays and odd jobs later, I am the author of two graphic novels--THE OREGON TRAIL: ROAD TO DESTINY (Sasquatch Books) and the Eisner Award-winning THE CARTER FAMILY: DON'T FORGET THIS SONG (Abrams ComicArts; both with David Lasky).
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