Usually it's a comic's artwork that interests me the most. This time the artwork is typical Iger shop: perfectly adequate but overall meh.
On the other hand the stories aren't bad. I like that they work in elements from crime and adventure comics.
"My Sister Loved Him Too!" has a good twist but the writer blows it (see below.) I'm not sure why, at the end, the heroine is afraid Boots will steal her man. He has just told her he wants to "thrash it out" with Boots. If this were a Fox comic he'd probably thrash Boots. This entire comic honors the hallowed tradition that Bad Guys (and Girls) smoke cigarettes while Good Guys smoke pipes. (I haven't yet found a Good Girl smoking a pipe, though.) Bonus: we get two drunk Bad Girls in one issue.
The ending of "My Love Was For Sale" is no surprise, but the efficient script gets us from here to there in an interesting fashion. Too bad the artist cops out in some key sequences (e.g. Mom's fall down the stairs and anything having to do with small figures). EHowie 60 has a nice justification for Lorna's overflowing the panel borders. I wish it were true. But we all know it is so the artist can draw the entire female body and show plenty of leg/lingerie/butt/whatever. A time-honored practice pioneered by Fiction House and Fox.
Speaking of the artwork, a single figure in a single panel (the grimacing guy in our page 15, panel 3) is so out of sync with the rest of the art that I'd swear it was drawn by someone else. It's the only 3/4 head in the story where the features line up. It's funny: I know it isn't, but it looks like it was pencilled by Steve Ditko. Probably a swipe from somewhere.
The text story, "I Was a Gypsy's Sweetheart," is too short for its subject. It would have made a better 8-page comic story. Hard to swallow that the heroine decides to hop a freight with this dude without ever seeing his face.
"She Hi-Jacked My Heart" is the most satisfying story in the book. It's a romance grafted onto a South Sea he-man story. Plenty of action, a decent romance and a coherent plot.. Except for Rose's reasoning for hijacking Papa's sugar shipments. It's convoluted and I had to read it twice. I wonder if female romance readers appreciate stories told in first person by men.
"She Hi-Jacked My Heart" avoids a maddening problem in the first two scripts. Though the stories are told in first person by the heroine, we hear the thoughts of the other characters. This misstep spoils "My Sister Loved Him Too." In her very first appearance we know Boots is a Bad Girl when she thinks, "This is too easy!" In "My Love Was For Sale" we likewise hear Dirk congratulate himself on a successful con while the heroine still thinks he's a straight arrow. Not that the final revelations wouldn't have been predictable, but at least they'd be revelations.
I have been trying to puzzle out what "Boots" stands for. Of course she might be a girl who likes to wear boots. Or maybe it's short for Beautiful (Booty-full?). I'm reminded of a 1920s newspaper strip, Boots and Her Buddies. I don't think they explained her name either.