I'm only going to be concerned here with the Christmas theme.
The Spirit (1941-12-28) - Parkchester Review - A trilogy.https://comicbookplus.com/?dlid=39126Eisner used this idea, telling a classic or well-known story in modern guise, more than once.
Lets just look at the first page,
The font creates the Christmas mood.
The top three panels introduce us to 'Bethlehem' and also move the story along and also introduce us to 'the three wise men' Presumably Hobos were still common in 1941.
The next three panels introduce us to the child king and from here we apparently digress.
Note - so far, the Spirit is not present.
The third story is the most interesting, The dictator is reduced to his childhood and reforms.
Then everything begins to be tied together, the ex-dictator is one of the hobos and uses his Christmas gift to raise money to give the boy king a gift. And the boy king reforms and returns the money to the Spirit, finally in the tale.
Eisner was the master of the visual narrative, but makes it look so effortless that the reader takes it for granted.
Given the three stories were probably all written or plotted by Eisner, and published together as one unit, I like the way he gets all the characters together - like the cast of a play - on the last page, to wish the reader Merry Christmas.
The Spirit (1940-12-22) https://comicbookplus.com/forum/?action=post;topic=22909.50;last_msg=88707Eisner pencils, Joe Kubert inks. This gives the work a quite different look.
The Christmas mood and exposure to poor kids in a church gives two crooks an attack of conscience - and again the Story ties in with the Spirit's actions even though he is entirely outside the narrative until the end.
My thought is that we live in far too cynical times, I can't imagine anyone today publishing a story as optimistic as this.
The other stories, good as they are, don't tie into a Christmas theme.
I should have reviewed these in reverse order as they show how much Eisner had improved his craft in the intervening 12 months.
Schoolgirls' Picture Library 040 - Christmas in The Highlandshttps://comicbookplus.com/?dlid=76870 Not much I can say about this one that hasn't already been said.
It's what you expect from those English 'girls' comics from that period.
Your comments and reviews were all excellent and discerning.
I enjoyed it for what it is.
Good Cheer to all!