likely, the Editor agreed with the letter writer. Hell, the editor may have been the letter writer!
Crash Wrote:-
The first issue of this magazine that I read (#6) prompted me to look at others. I'm struck by the defensive subtitles on many pages:
"A good comic provides exciting action, minus objectionable scenes." "Evil men appear in some good stories. The point is, what happens to them?" "This magazine does not glorify crime. It deals chiefly with the pursuit of criminals." "Poor grammar or slang is used in this magazine only for purposes of characterization." And even, "Large, easy-to-read lettering in all 'balloons' in this magazine."
The spirit of Dr W looms high over Novelty Press headquarters!
Well, '
Seduction of the Innocents' was 1954 and this book was published in 1949 [ Great year - and my birthday!]
So that increases my thought that what we have here is a disgruntled editor, trying to either get his publisher to listen or get his writers and artists to conform to his standards. '
Fascinating!' as the guy with the pointy ears used to say!
Interestingly, a search for Novelty Press brings up mostly links back to
CB+! We are becoming influential, aren't we?
From Wikipedia,
Novelty Press (a.k.a. Premium Service Co., Inc.; a.k.a. Novelty Publications; a.k.a. Premier Group) was an American Golden Age comic-book publisher that operated from 1940 to 1949. It was the comic book imprint of Curtis Publishing Company, publisher of The Saturday Evening Post.
and
In 1949, due to the growing criticism over violence in comic books, Novelty Press sold its assets to Blue Bolt cover artist L.B. Cole.[5] Using his new assets, Cole began his own company, Star Publications
I can well imagine Editorial figures on
the Saturday Evening Post not being happy about having a comic company as a stablemate.
At this time
Simon and Kirby were heavily involved with the output of
Novelty Press. I wonder if
Simon was the managing editor at the time?
Fascinating.