I first read It Rhymes With Lust when it was posted four years ago, so I re-read it to refresh my memory. It's a fascinating project, more significant for its place in history than for its content. The book brings up a number of interesting points.
Launching a new format like a "picture novel" would have been quite a challenge. I can understand why St John might have figured it would work. From what I gather online It Rhymes With Lust was published in digest size, roughly 5x7 inches, similar to British picture libraries. Though paperback books were the big thing in the 50s, quite a few publishers issued one-shot novels, both originals and reprints, in digest format. They followed the paperback formula: lurid titles and blurbs combined with equally lurid cover paintings. Though both paperbacks and digests emphasized sleaze, the digests tended to be sleazier--at least in terms of what they promised--than their square-backed cousins. Crime, sex, and tough guys were the dominant themes.
I can imagine St John intending Lust to be shelved with the digest novels. It was definitely aimed at the same adult readers as paperbacks and digests. While comic books enjoyed large adult readerships during WWII and Korea, they were nevertheless generally considered to be kid stuff. Lust would likely miss its target audience if displayed with the comics. Besides, a digest wouldn't fit on a spinner rack and it'd quickly be buried among the 7x10 inch comic books on newsstand shelves. If I'm right about St John's intentions, I think he missed a bet by using a comic-art style cover. Lust would certainly have stood out from all the painted-cover digests, but a colored pen drawing wouldn't have had nearly the same shelf appeal. Compared to the bursting bosoms and provocative poses of its neighbors Lust's cover would look downright stodgy.
This brings up another point: the conservative nature of both story and art. Despite occasional mentions of torrid embraces and passionate kisses, the sex angle is limited to one shot of Hal with rumpled shirt and loosened tie following a full-page kiss. Given that the sexual tension between Hal and Rust is central to the story, one would expect more of it, especially in a book aimed at adults. Even the "good girl art" is dialed back. There was more lingerie and skin in Leslie Turner's Captain Easy newspaper strip than there is here. This may have been a deliberate choice. St John romance comics are famous for double entendre dialogue on the covers but straight-arrow content inside. Even Matt Baker's Canteen Kate, wearing a shirt open to the navel, had her cleavage edited out (as is demonstrated by the fact that a couple of times it was accidentally left in). Perhaps Archer St John wasn't comfortable with sleaze. One can imagine how Fiction House or EC--or Fox!--would have handled this material. On the other hand St John may just have been covering his tail. Though paperbacks abounded with (written) nudity and obsessive descriptions of female breasts, in 1950 actually picturing such stuff in a newsstand magazine could land you in jail.
Lust owes a great debt to paperback novels. The story uses a postwar dramatic trope that was recycled endlessly in paperbacks and, to a lesser extent, noir movies for over two decades: a damaged hero struggles against the overwhelming influence of an evil woman possessing vast power and irresistible sexual allure. He either triumphs over the evil, as Hal does here, or he's destroyed by it, as are the heroes of David Goodis novels.
Consider that writers Arnold Drake and Les Waller were both in their mid-twenties, an age at which we're strongly influenced by whatever is popular at the time. It Rhymes With Lust might be their shot at writing a sleaze paperback in comics form. The effort falls short on several levels. The main problem is Hal's relationship with Rust. The "evil woman" trope requires the damaged hero, who is basically good, to be consumed by lust to the point that he performs increasingly evil deeds despite knowing they're wrong. He can't help it. Run though he might, the hero struggles in vain to escape the evil woman's influence. She just shows him her heaving bosom and gives him a torrid embrace and once again he's ready to murder for her.
Personally I could never take this theme seriously, but it was surprisingly popular, part of the whole hate/fear-strong-women thing that persists to this day. To sell it an author must convince the reader that the despicable villainess is so sexually overwhelming that no man can resist her. Rust Masson is evil enough, but we never see evidence of an animal allure potent enough to derail Hal's conscience. We're told she has that allure, but without more evidence Hal comes off as a wishy-washy dummy who can't make up his mind, not a tortured being fighting for his soul. This is partly due to the self-censorship mentioned above but also is a side effect of space constraints.
Throughout the story things that need time to develop--Hal's romance with Audrey, his gradual surrender to the Dark Side, Rust's growing political and business power--are rushed through in a few panels or worse, a caption or two. The complex plot might have worked in a paperback novel, but It Rhymes With Lust simply hasn't enough pages to contain it all. Hal's big scene where he chooses between addiction to Rust and alcohol versus loyalty to Audrey and honor doesn't work because Hal's alcoholism (a prominent postwar heroic imperfection) had until then played no part in the story. Hal hardly even drinks, much less "escapes into the bottle." We'd have been better off without this subplot. Overcoming his addiction to Rust would have been drama enough--though Hal would have been left with nothing to throw at the mirror.
Matt Baker's art is good throughout. I prefer his own inking to Ray Osrin's but that's a minor quibble. The art is finished as if it were for a color comic, with large open spaces and minimal rendering. The result is a bit flat. They've used Ben Day tones to add interest but these are applied inconsistently. Sometimes the tones enhance a panel, making the foreground pop and the background recede. Other times they weaken the ink lines and wash the panel out. I'd rather they'd have gone the Roy Crane-Leslie Turner route and used Doubletone paper with its more useful choice of greys.
It Rhymes With Lust was a good try. I'm sorry Picture Novels didn't catch on. Some articles I've read state that the second one, The Case of the Winking Buddha, was published in the same format as Lust. Does anyone know if this is so? I'd thought it only appeared in Authentic Police Cases #25.