Apologies this is a day early - I'm going to be tied up with a family birthday tomorrow
This time, I thought I'd choose something outside my comfort zone. I rarely look at a teenage romance comic book (except for my well-thumbed copy of Jeanne Martinet's hilarious Truer than True Romance) but I am intrigued at where it all went wrong.
Arguably, the genre began with Joe Simon and Jack Kirby's Young Romance (1947) - you can't get a finer pedigree than that. They obviously struck a vein of gold because by the mid-fifties, Romance comics were outselling all other genres - including superheroes - estimates vary but around six million copies a month. Not only that, but I have it on good authority, they would be passed from hand-to-hand in high school - so readership was much greater.
It's clearly what girls wanted - yet Q1) how many women were involved in their production? Q2) was it really what girls wanted or was it what they were conditioned to want - were girls in the fifties essentially brainwashed?
This brings us to the sixties. Romance comics failed to adapt to the growing tide of what today we would call feminism. They would have lost sales anyway - by the sixties, TV was supplanting printed matter as the chief source of entertainment - but other comic genres adapted and relaunched - superheroes in the main. Q3) why did romance comics fail to adapt to changing demands?
By the seventies, it was all over.
Q4) Did teenage girls stop reading comic books/sequential art? Q5) Does that mean the industry gave up half of its audience and has never reclaimed it - what kind of crazy business decision is that - to ignore half your potential market?
So, looking at today:
Q6 and more) Do girls have access to comic books today? How many readers are girls? Are female superheroines (Batwoman, Black Widow) really what girls want - or do they exist mostly to satisfy the teenage fantasies of boys?
Q7) What would a teenage girls comic look like today? In the UK, we grew up with anthology comics - would a modern girls comic include, let's say, a) a soap opera based in a tower block, b) a strictly ballroom style dance strip of a girl fulfilling her ambitions to win the gold award at Blackpool, c) a Twilight-type story of vampires and romance, d) a girls school story of friendship, secrets and treasure, e) a teenage female detective who sees ghosts and f) the story of three girls in an entertainment troupe on a cruise liner.
I'm sure you can think of other potential strips and I look forward to hearing them - but is that what girls want or once again, is it only a man thinking he knows what girls want?
Then, of course, we come to the comic book needs of non-binary teens.........
Meanwhile, the book I've chosen is Charlton - because I do appreciate their work - from mid-period of the genre - that's 1962. It's at the start of the sixties rush to re-examine social structures (Dylan had launched his first album and Leichtenstein had chosen parody over pastiche in his homage to Romance comics) - what signs are there in the chosen book that there's something blowing in the wind and the times they are a-changin'?
Happy reading!
https://comicbookplus.com/?dlid=68399
This is quite new to me. I've NEVER before read a "Romance" nor a "Teen Romance" comic book. And, after reading its first story, I have to say that I was attending high school just when this book was out, and NONE of the characters (apart from the little sister (in only a few of her panels) appeared to be even remotely young enough to be attending high school. The three male dates, and the star all looked to be in their late 20s, and could pass for very early 30s.
Double DeceitThe story is interesting, and had a reasonably expected, but how else could this story be ended and have ANY level of surprise to the reader. The only other possibilities are what would happen in real life, -(1)the 3rd man would not be interested in her because he doesn't want to spend a lot of time and money on a two-timer, or (2) conversely, he wants to date a lot of women at the same time, so he'll enjoy dating her sporadically (as long as she's no prude), because she won't want to get too serious with him or try to tie him down permanently. This story is a vignette, with no room to develop characters, based on a perceived ironic surprise ending, and an unusual situation. Unfortunately, it's not all that novel a situation, not very ironic, and not especially surprising. So, it is just mildly entertaining. It's one of those that one is not sorry to have taken the time to read it, and does, in itself, not make the "comedy romance" fan sorry he or she spent his or her 12? on it, and is nowhere near so terrible that it makes the reader want to throw the book on the ground and jump up and down on it.
Second ChanceThis was also a very short vignette and plot. It was a tighter plot that could fit perfectly in just a few pages. Again, both main characters looked way too old for high school. The story was entertaining, and told well with absolutely no dead space. But, again, it is a very common theme and many-times-told story, and something probably almost every reader has experienced. And, being so, almost every reader knows exactly how it will end.
The Greatest GiftHer mother died young, and her father never showed interest in her, nor gave her the attention and affection she needed. What a deep, psychological drama to be told in a ridiculously short 3 pages! It is more like a leader advert for a week-long psychiatrists' symposium. How could anyone tell a meaningful STORY in 3 pages. Thank goodness I never get restrictive assignments that are THAT impossible. All one can make of that plot given a measly 3 pages is an anecdote: "Love-starved girl finds man she can trust, learns to appreciate him, and then learns to accept love and give it back." Throw in a couple illustrative illustrations, et voila!
All That GlittersYet another 3-page vignette! A girl not satisfied with all the ordinary guys she's been dating covets the handsome, star athlete, successful young career up-and-comer, and sets out to win him. She succeeds, and then finds out he's very selfish, with not nearly as much place in his life for her than she'd like. This book is like a condensed notes "primer" for young women's relationships with men. I wouldn't call ANY of these vignettes, "STORIES".
The Taming of Tema's Terrible Temper (2-Page Text Story)
This was best story so far. It actually had some character development and a little description of the setting. It had a tight plot, which had some change in pace. And, although the ending was as expected, it was interesting to see how the author got them there. Maybe I'm learning why I'd rather read a short story or novel than a human-figure "serious" comic book graphic novel?
Lonely HeartsAn actual 10-pager! Room for a plot and some details! An actual short story to read!
And yet another story heavy on psychology (but, I guess relationships between people are all about psychology, so I shouldn't expect otherwise). The oh so common tale of an older man with a young girl. I've had one of those situations myself. I wish the let down in the end had been so easy for me! This one was better than the vignettes, with character development, pacing, plot twists, etc. It almost had room to breathe. Ten pages was actually enough to tell THIS story. Many books give the artist and writer only 6 for such a plot line, and that cramps the author's and artist's styles.
Your Role In The Cold War (1 page PS advert)
Did teenaged boys actually read books like this??? I never once thought of reading one. But, then, I stopped reading comics when I was 13. If American teenage boys (and the girls who read this book) only would have taken the advice to get plenty of exercise and eat right, there wouldn't be the obesity and diabetes epidemics that ravage that country now! But, I see those problems creeping their way into even northern Europe nowadays. So, I guess it's just the modernised, technological way of life that makes it tough to reject the easy path.