I can't wait until next Sunday to post my reviews and comparisons of the 2 books, because I cannot type for a long period, nor look at the bright screen for a very long straight-through stint, because I've just had my 2nd cataract operation within 5 weeks, so both my eyes are sensitive. I'll have to cover one story at a time. I will put it all in one post, as usual, but by adding each feature's review one at a time in individual editing modifications.
Hooded Menace
Terror of The Northwest - This first story segment, based on what really happened in Tennessee directly after The US Civil War, (rather than what happened in Oregon after The Spanish-American War). But, what would be the problem in telling real history? It could be that IF the writer had to spend a lot of time researching, to make sure all the details would be correct, that amount of work wouldn't have been worth the low-level comic book storywriting pay.
The artwork, to me, was a little lower than average for an early 1950s Western. But, I feel that the colouring is well below par, and their wasn't enough variety in the staging and perspectives. There were some "amateurish basic No-Nos", like showing the soldiers' entire bodies, and just cutting off their feet (one of the first things an artist, especially a storyboarder, learns. I also got very little feeling of emotion. I know that cranking out tonnes of penciled and inked pages at low-level comic book pay is mundane, often boring, and often grueling work. But I felt that this artist was especially unconnected emotionally to this job.
All of the description above fits the 2nd story segment, "Reign of Terror", just as well. "The Fun Club" murdered some people, and extorted many others at gunpoint, and yet participants to those felonies get only 5 years hard labour and permanent banishment as punishment. IF we are to assume that the one example of a sentence was for one of the lesser offenders, why did the author not use one of the key leaders as the single example? Clearly, the author didn't spend much time thinking about this assignment that he cared little about. That was during the heyday of comic books, when demand for decent quality writers and artists often outstripped supply. People were hired, even if their work was shoddy. These days, as I have always done, my heart is in my work, or I wouldn't be doing it. The pay for the hours put in does not translate into making a living. Many comic book artists and storywriters do that work just for love of the genre, and a higher percentage of their living wages from higher paying projects, like animation, illustration, live action films, TV, magazine, and book work.
Mad Dog Killer, Vincent Coll
I know well, the story of Dutch Schultz. And, I remember reading a little about "Mad Dog" Vincent Coll. So, I assume this story is based on true events. I find it interesting that the first two stories had their settings (geographic locations and era) changed drastically, while the third story tells true historical facts as its basis. I can just hear Walter Winchell's raspy voice reading the narration boxes in this story as news headlines. The artwork is on the same level as the two Hooded Menace segments. But the colouring and staging was a little better (maybe roughly average for the period). The story is tighter, like a police procedural. Not a great entertaining story, but not a waste of time.
Forecast For Death
A very short story about a an inheriting woman's brother trying to kill her by having his hypnotist friend give her suicidal post hypnotic suggestions. A decent plot. But these few page stories don't have time enough to establish a detailed setting (so the reader can really feel like he/she is really there, living in the story), or to build up any character traits, or develop some suspense in the plot (which also must be quite thin due to inadequate time and space to do so). The action is fast, furious, and choppy. the story doesn't flow well. It's more like highlights of a decent, longer story.
Overall, this book is run-of-the mill. Clearly slightly lower than average for its period. And it's a book that's not very entertaining to me. If it were a series, rather than a one-shot, I wouldn't waste time reading other issues.
Masked Bandit
This book's cover is quite well drawn and staged, and starts to build interest from the reader. The introduction page was also well-drawn and has interesting poses, to compel the reader to want to start reading the story. The artwork, staging and colouring in this book are much better and more professional than in "The Hooded Menace". Everett Kinstler was really an excellent artist. I wouldn't mind reading other Western-themed stories, by him, as well as seeing his work in other genres.
"The Masked Bandit's Death Ride"
The artwork and staging are good. The story is "possible", but not terribly believable. And it is predictable (but that can't be helped. So, are we to believe that The Masked Bandit opened the bullet shells, poured the gunpowder into a small pile, lit it with a match, and it exploded just enough to explode open his cell door, AND make a large hole in his cell wall, big enough for him to run out, and jump on a horse and ride away, while townsfolk were running towards the jailhouse to see what the explosion was about. Uncanny good luck, as often occurs in Western fiction.
"The Sixgun Robin Hood"
Now we get to the even harder to believe "Cowboy with the Robin Hood Syndrome" legend story. I have a hard time believing that the ranchers GAVE $50,000 they found in their tormentor fake landlord's safe to The Masked Bandit and his gang, as payment for The Masked Bandit and gang having given them one rent payment, and proving that their fake landlord didn't own the property. I might have believed that they'd give the gang $10,000 of it, and kept the rest as it was mostly made up of their gauged, illegal previous rental payments. The entire story is hard to believe, and surely not well thought out. Ideally, writers for such a series should have been researching old newspaper stories to find interesting stories to emulate (ideally, recombining events from different places and times to make new, fictional stories containing plausible, realistic types of events that actually had taken place in America's West during the late 19th Century.
"Death At The Rodeo" - Text Story
This is one of the best-plotted 2-page text stories I ever read. Many are stories with no plot, and are stretched to make it to the end of Page 2. More are 3 to 4-page plots worth, crammed and jammed into 2 pages, and their story flow is wrong, everywhere(beginning, early development, climax, epilogue). This one is a perfect plot for 2 pages, and progresses at the proper speed in the right places. Despite being somewhat predictable, it was not a burden to read through it, as most text stories usually are. The author even was able to inject a little bit of character into The Rodeo owner, his Cowgirl Daughter, her fiancee(the hero cowpuncher), and even the villain, in just a short 2 pages of text. Achieving THAT, as well as a proper-flowing story plot, in a mere 2 pages, and even having a little suspense, is quite a good job of writing.
I do, however, find it hard to believe that The Rodeo's owner brought his bag of money with him to the hospital, where he is holding it while lying in bed. Any nurse, cleaning woman, janitor, or unauthorised "visitor", could snatch that bag from him at any time. That's more of a Carl Barks, Uncle Scrooge type last story panel.
"Terror In A Top Hat"
Interesting story. No man could outdraw Ben Thompson. He went on a trail of ego-driven murders, until he was killed by a saloon owner's dog! Just desserts!
Joe, The Boob, Quinto
Apparently Avon's obligatory "modern day" story. I wonder if this is a true story, or the gangster's name and city's location were changed. But, I never heard of any Joe "The Boob" in Philadelphia, or anywhere else. And a Google search on him came up with nothing. The story is not memorable at all, being about an egotistical, violent gangster's rise to power, and predictable death at the hands of a competing gang. This was by far, the weakest story in this book.
Overall, this book was quite a bit better than "The Hooded Menace", because the artwork and the stories were better, on the whole.