Article here from the Kirby Museum - I can get lost over there! - on Win a Prize and Simon and Kirby's time with Charlton. Clearly the comic was produced by Simon and Kirby's Mainline, not by Charlton.
The End of Simon & Kirby, Chapter 3, Unlikely Port In The Stormhttps://kirbymuseum.org/blogs/simonandkirby/archives/64Win A Prize was unique for Simon and Kirby. They had produced anthologies before but they were always genre specific. They did crime, horror and romance, but Win A Prize with just a general anthology. That sort of thing was common during the war, but I suspect it was unusual in the mid 50?s.
So!
Win a Prize #1. Cover:- Excellent Kirby action scene. The hero is holding a shield, as is one of the baddies. Was Kirby nostalgic for Captain America?
Was this the first comic with advertising right on the front cover? Marvel definitely and I thin DC did this for a while, I think in the 80's. I don't like it, I think it cheapens the book.
'World's first giveaway comic' 'Price 10cents.Huh? Not clear.
It's not clear how they financed the give-aways, perhaps with sponsorship deals? But that doesn't seem to be the case.
Whatever the contents, the splash page works well, its all promise and lures you in to open the book.
The first story is a rehashing of the plot of the movie, 'The day the earth stood still' with a few Kirby touches thrown in.
Write a short story based on Kirby's one page drawing. Wonder if anybody did?
The Tragic Clown:-
The Art is good, but I don't recognize the artist. The story is messy and unsatisfying. Looks like the clown has homicidal tendencies and we build up to an horrific ending, but in the last page, everything gets turned on its head and the clown gets the girl.
One page text article explaining the cover. Interesting idea.
That giveaway guy:- Kirby indulging himself and having fun,but without losing sight of the purpose of the book, which is to give away prizes.
ON ICE. A puzzle to solve.
Tell-tale heart, nice but a fairly pedestrian telling of this tale. And all to get the reader to write in with suggestions and 'Win a prize'
War Diary - nice story - artist unidentified and once again' send in suggestions to win a prize.'
Overall impressions. The creative thinking went into how to movivate people to 'win a prize' and the stories were selected towards that goal.
But, since most of the ideas were about asking the reader to make creative decision, that may have limited the number who would respond.
Gamblers don't like to think too hard.
Win a Prize #2. Great attention-getting cover. Question, how is that diver breathing? He doesn't appear to have oxygen tanks.
Bullet Ballard:- Looks like an inventory story.
[Maybe Simon and Kirby thought they could save money on these books, by using pre-existing stories?]
Sir Cashby of Moneyvault! Silly and unsatisfying ending. I can see they thought that leaving the ending unclear would be motivating to the reader to supply the ending, but that's in defiance of the basic reason you read a story. I found it irritating.
[Plastic Aircraft carrier with 5 catapulting Jets - how fast was that catapult? Might have been quite a dangerous toy. ]
Torpedoed! Underwhelming.
The Handsome Brute. The story title seems deliberately ironic. Clever. Paul may have won a 'perfect man' contest but his behaviour towards his wife tells us that the Martian got dudded. A more interesting competition might have been, 'Describe the perfect man.'
The BullLow key ending, but it bites.
Win A Prize #2
?Bullet Ballad? by Bill Draut (western)
?Sir Cashby Of Moneyvault? by Jack Kirby (humor)
?Torpedoed? (war)
?The Handsome Brute? by Joe Albistur (science fiction)
?The Bull? (sports)
I don't know what was going on here, but there is an underlying melancholy or bitterness throughout both these books which wouldn't have made them attractive to most kids.
Possibly because Kirby and Simon were at a low ebb in their publishing career.
it did not last long, ending with issue #2 in April 1955, the same month that Mainline ended. The ?hook? really wasn?t the contents, it was the prizes. With all the logistical problems these prizes brought I am sure Charlton wanted to see really good sales really quick. When they failed to materialize, the title was cancelled.
As the comic strips used to say - Tomorrow, new story!