Hi Crimsy, [From Crimson? Or crime? or the German, Krimi?]
I'm trying to get a feel for comics from the '40s and '50s, to better understand what those eras of comic history felt like.
A great quest to embark on!
I'd appreciate your opinion on which comics and creators best represented those two eras similar to how, say, Kirby, Ditko, and the early Marvel books represented the '60s as far as mainstream comics.
Well, before Marvel reduced the US action comic output to comics done by the Marvel Method, there was much more variety in US comics. And to really get the picture you need to go back to
comic strips, Action strips like Tarzan, Dick Tracy, Flash Gordon, to name only a few of the better known ones, had huge audiences before comic 'books' existed. Then there were the
'Pulp' magazines which introduced characters like
the Shadow, Doc Savage and the Spider. And the science fiction magazines which introduced characters like
'the Lens-men' which were the inspiration for the 60's Green Lantern.
My suggestion, if you want to learn, look at the threads on this site, find one that interests you and then go to the comics discussed in those threads.
Start with the 'comic talk' threads, here.
https://comicbookplus.com/forum/?board=8.0Also, bear in mind that CB+ posts books that is PD, - in the public domain - and a lot of comics are not in the public domain.
In the Golden Age,
EC comics were very important and influential.
There are no
DC or Early Marvel [Atlas and Timely] comics on this site.
Also nothing from
King Features [Tarzan, Phantom,, Flash Gordon, Prince Valiant, Mandrake and others - all of which are important in comic history]
Jack Kirby was influential way before Marvel, and you will find much of his work here. Have a look at his romance comics as well. Also you will find
Ditko here. If you know the 60's and 70's artists from Marvel and DC, you will find earlier work here from most of them. But there are many others here just as good.
Also, check out the threads in the Comic Book Plus Reading Group where we discuss individual comics in detail. And please join in.
https://comicbookplus.com/forum/?board=26.0When it comes to looking at our Non-English books, don't worry if you don't speak the language, Comic books are primarily a visual medium and many of the stories are generic, so you can often work out the basics. But there are some great artists there.
In the English speaking section, you will find comics from the
UK, Australia, New Zealand, Canada and South Africa. Crimsy, if you are jut beginning this adventure, I envy you! You have just fallen down the rabbit hole!
Cheers!