Because I've always like to read a lot of history books from an early age, I liked to read Classics Illustrated, historical novels in comic book form, Westerns, 1800s and early 1900s Science Fiction and Detective comics, and Medieval Tales (all period pieces that gave us modern-day kids an idea of what things looked like in bygone days) - especially those which displayed excellent artwork. In that spirit, I have chosen, for this fortnight, two comic books from The Golden Age that include stories about pirates.
One is Dell and Western Publishing's "Famous Stories #1 from 1942, which contains only one long 60+ page story, Robert Louis Stevenson's classic pirate tale, "Treasure Island". It was drawn (both penciled and inked), very well, by Robert Bugg.
The other book is Hillman Periodicals' Pirate Comics #1, from 1950, a 52-page book, split into several fairly short stories, each one from a different century of pirating on the open seas, set in various far-flung portions of The World's oceans.
I'll be very curious to read what other members think of the story writing and artwork in theses stories.
Dell's "Treasure Island" can be found here:
https://comicbookplus.com/?dlid=16829I'll be curious to find out how it measures up to Dell's later, Disney version, based on Disney's own feature film, starring Robert Newton as Long John Silver. I wonder if the 1942 book was based on the earlier film starring Wallace Beery, or strictly on Stevenson's novel?
Hillman's "Pirates Comics #1 can be found here:
https://comicbookplus.com/?dlid=21258I'll be curious to see how the Hillman stories portray their supposed "historical novelettes" - (e.g. how close they are to being reasonably realistic, or if they include events that couldn't have happened the way they portray them due to lack of an adequate level of research being done). Certainly, Michael Suchorsky's excellent artwork, on the first two stories, is a big plus for it. Jon Small(Captain Roberts), and Allen Ulmer (Philip Ashton) drew the other pirate stories, and Jack Oleck wrote the script for "Alpha The Slave Pirate". The artist of the Viking story is still unknown. Ernie Schroeder is thought to have been the cover artist.