Thank you Robb for bringing these to a wider audience. Sitting down to post this, (1) I just realized that in the COMICS section of CB+ we have a British and an Australian/New Zealand section but not a Canadian one. Maybe it's time?
Also thanks for the list of our regular posters who hail from Canada.
Again, also, I find myself (2) wondering if there may have been a separate or parallel French Language Comic industry in Canada, and expanding on that, if there was/ is any interaction/mutual exchange between the French Comic scene and Canada?
Lucky Comics v2 5
https://comicbookplus.com/?dlid=58400
A simple but powerfully effective cover, the eyes, the mouth and that hand say it all. In this case, Less is definitely more.
Lucky
Basic Art but a good narrative. I really enjoyed having a WWII realistic story for a change! And a story with a Boy [not a sidekick] for the hero.
Juke Box Joe.
I understand that Zoot Suit wearers were singled out and beaten up during the War has being visibly self-indulgent.
Love the slang!
(3)"Playing records from an central office over open telephone lines to our machines all over town"
Wow, 1940's ITunes/Spotifly. Did anyone ever do that? Probably not, since you couldn't rig a speaker, and would have to sit with your ear to the phone, and couldn't get or make any other calls, but what creative thinking!
They had a lab at SingSing?! Could they make explosives?!
"How's about a jitter, Bug?"
(4) Unsatisfactory and confusing ending tho.
Chapter XIV: The Haunted Castle
Ok. But Melodrama and cliches. Reading one episode inside a serial is always unsatisfactory
Derry Dreamer
Way too word heavy at the beginning. Not a good example of this type of Genre.
Black Wing
I like the fact that in all these stories the fourth wall is broken casually.
"'Say, is he swearing at me?' 'He wants to know when you will publish Black Wing stories in Spanish?'"
(5) And a Canadian 'Masked Mystery Man' are there more stories?
But, the inside last page disturbs me.
(6)In 1943 a detailed illustrated list of Canadian Army Equipment? Shouldn't this be confidential information?
(1) Yes, there should be a Canadian comics section set up in CB+, just as there is one on DCM (which has quite a few more Canadian books than we have here). Maybe Yoc can arrange for copies of those to be uploaded on CB+? We have very few here, partly because The National Library of Canada has some projects involving The Canadian Whites and other comic books in their special collections, and so, they are not in The PD (that includes ALL of Bell Features comics). But, I've seen several Canadian books on DCM that I haven't seen here, that I think must be PD, as DCM is just as careful about not infringing on copyrights as we are.
(2) Yes, there has long been a French language comic book industry in French Canada (mainly Québec, but probably also distributed in the French speaking half of New Brunswick, and the French speaking areas of Ontario, near Québec's border). But, mainly they were just the French and Belgian books sent as is, to Canada. Glénat, Dargaud, Dupuis, Le Lombard, Casterman and Delcourt are the publishers I remember offhand. I only know of French Disney, Asterix, Tin Tin, Spirou, etc. The cartoony comics. Sometimes, for short periods Canadian publishers imported French books and placed local adverts in them. But, I don't recall
any publishers productions of purely French Canadian creators being sold in comic book form in Canada. But, I never looked for them. So, I don't know what exists. But for Disney Comics, I know there was only importation from France. No local production. Maybe Morgus, Bowers, or Yoc can answer that question for you.
(3) The way it was explained by Crash was that there were telephone lines from the city's central telephone switching terminal, which emanated from a single source that broadcast the recording, sending that sound through telephone lines connected directly to selected juke boxes inside drug stores, malt shops, clubs and dance halls around the city. When a customer pushed a nickel into the coin slot, an impulse would be sent to the record library, that would automatically start the record player or tape recording machine playing the song, whose sound would be sent in the telephone cable to the specific juke Box of the order, and the people there would hear it. This all doesn't seem to be a practical way to bring in more revenue than this system's costs of operation.
(4) Yes, the ending "joke" is racist, and was against the cultural practices of the time. It wouldn't be funny to almost anyone, and it would be throwing current problems in North American society into the faces of the children and adolescent readers, who would ask their parents embarrassing questions they wouldn't want to address. The African-Canadian sidekick arranges a date for his friend, the Caucasian lead male character, with the former's current "Black" girlfriend. That simply was not done-not acceptable. It's no wonder that he felt cheated, and humiliated. But why would anyone, even a racist, think that is funny?
(5) Yes, I remember that there were more issues of Lucky Comics that had Black Wing stories in them. Lucky ran about 30 issues, but "The Black Wing" was not in all of them.
(6) The detailed information on Canadian military equipment on that page was probably what they had at the start of the war, in late 1939, before war industries started up. There is also a several month gap from the production of pages, printing, and comic book assemblage, to delivery to the subscriber or vendor. So, by the time these books hit the bookshelves and comic book racks, the armies were using newer, more effective models. And, German spies operating inside USA and Canada would already have passed such information on to their bosses by then, in any case. The source of this information was likely the military. So they wouldn't hand their own top secrets to comic book publishers. The kids didn't really see all the details about their nation's armed forces' weapons and vehicles they were currently using in a Worldwide war to determine the fate of Humankind. And that wasn't a problem for those kids, who didn't know the difference, or the publishers, who lost no sales because no large mass of children were disappointed.