Hi everyone
Thanks for your participation this fortnight. It looks like most of you found something of interest in these selections, plot holes aside.

I've already made a number of comments in reply to the different posts, so I won't repeat all of those. Here are some general comments about the Miss Cairo Jones book.
Miss Cairo JonesI agree with Panther that the cover isn't very appealing. It gives the book an amaterish feel, which is a shame because the art inside is quite good. Some of us were mystified at the number of frames showing Cairo whizzing around in her lingerie/underwear. I thought it was unintentionally funny that she was supposedly running from a killer, while all the time having her coat draped over her arm. Wouldn't it have been easier to put the jolly coat on? And why did she hand the sword back to Schlye? Front Page Peggy wouldn't have done that!
A few of us also picked up on the funny expressions. My faves were 'Heckle a herring' and 'Luger-luggin' lassie'. And what secretary wouldn't love a boss who told her to 'get those glamorous gams moving'? Um ... okay, we were still a long way before sexual harrassment policies. And I liked the added humour of all the folk in the telephonist's office who were listening in to the private phone call.
Steve's dialogue in the last frame is cringeworthy now - 'You're due for a good rest, Cairo ... and I'm the guy who's going to anchor you on the Miami sand and take a whip to you if you lift a finger', to which Cairo replies, 'Steve ... nothing could sound sweeter than that!'. Oh dear. I know it's the 1940s, but Katharine Hepburn would have slapped Spencer Tracy if he'd said that to her!.
As others have mentioned, there were a few plot holes. We know that it used to be a newspaper strip, but it's not clear where this book fits in. Did the series start like this or are we coming in partway through a story? It felt like the latter to me.
But in spite of some problems, I liked the art, the snappy dialogue and the overall premise. It's a shame they didn't give Cairo more of a chance to develop and shine. Given the timing of the strip, I wonder too if people weren't looking for these types of stories so much once the war ended, though there would be exceptions of course.
In any case, I'm glad we had a peak at Cairo. Too bad we can't see a compilation of all the strips.
Simp O'Dill#1 - The first one was lost on me. I can't see how the punchline works.
#2 - Okay, but pretty corny.
#3 - Okay, but not great.
#4 - Two fellows in bed together in 1945? I guess it's platonic or maybe they're brothers. Gag okay.
#5 - Punchline falls flat.
Silly Dilly's
#1 - Maybe the humour has dated, but I don't understand what the five red points are.
#2 - Very dated humour in the portrayal of a black character, but I guess it fits with the times.
#3 - Okay but pretty corny.
#4 - Oohh ... very black humour and not funny by today's standards.
Okay, I know that these one and half-page gags were just fillers, and that humour has changed, but they were medicocre at best and seem like a strange mix for this comic book. Perhaps shows the publisher wasn't trying too hard.
Cheers
QQ