The art in a comic is what interests me the most, so in my book this one is Grade A. Good drawings with a light touch were Matt Baker's specialty,. He hits the mark in all four Canteen Kate stories. Kate herself is cute and lively. She's sexy without being overtly sexual, which may be surprising in a comic that was obviously aimed at GI's, not kids. But then Baker always showed greater restraint than his "Good Girl Art" contemporaries like Howard Larsen and Jack Kamen. Which brings us to Kate's shirt.
In her earliest appearances in Fightin' Marines, Kate occasionally showed the cleavage one would expect to see when a woman's shirt is unbuttoned halfway down. But soon there was no breast showing; in fact the "V" of the open shirt moved upward in poses in which we might see too much. I wonder if this was self-censorship on Baker's part. Or did the editor, even without a Comics Code, choose to make Kate more respectable than the typical 50s comic cheesecake girl?
Turning to the stories means we leave the good stuff behind. Though I can appreciate Mazzucchelli's points, the Kate stories didn't put me off in that way. Back in my childhood there were tons of "service humor" movies, books and TV shows. It seems to be a genre that appealed to WWII-era men. The stories always dealt with a few stock situations: harmless hijinks amongst the men, privates vs. sergeants, enlisted men vs. officers, guys trying to make time with local babes. They were set somewhere distant from the fighting to avoid the unpleasantness of combat. In this comic Kate's canteen is in Japan--except for one story in which she's magically transported to Korea.
Perhaps ex-GI's related to service comedies, but they never appealed to me. Neither do these Canteen Kate stories. It doesn't help that they're weakly written and barely funny. M. A. S. H. this ain't.
The story that really repels me is "Screw Ball Strategy." Here destruction and death are just jolly excuses for (unfunny) gags. The writer even makes light of the possible deaths of the "good guys"--the enemy don't count, of course, not being human. Overall the writing is a mess. The story is a choppy succession of situations that hardly make sense. "Incomprehensible" about sums up the script.
About those "jokes." The stilted writing style and the odd choice of subjects (two Whistler anecdotes on one page?) make it seem like these were cribbed from a forty-year-old issue of Captain Billy's Whiz Bang.