Now it's time for my own review of this giant, mixed bag book:
Sexton Blake - The Runaway Train:
Excellent artwork, and an engaging, albeit, very short story, which had a bit of nice action and managed to fit in some suspense. I'd rather have read it as a spread out story on 15-20 pages(rather than crammed into eight), with more action shown, and more background shown for the main characters.
Billy Bunter (All 4 vignette strips):
The artwork was passable, but not as good, to my taste, as the early 1900s engraving-style drawings that appeared as sporadic, individual drawings scattered one or two to a page in the classic text stories printed in the early Comet Weekly text papers from 1949 through to the mid 1950s. The so-called "stories" were too short to have enough build-up of character and plot development and to show motivations of characters other than Billy. They were really just gag-driven vignettes, all about Billy's carrying out plots to trick others into undeservedly obtaining food for his insatiable appetite, or undeserved luxuries or valuables. This becomes very predictable and boring after reading more than one or two .
Sporty & Sydney - (All Eight Gag Pages):
These are silly, dull, not very funny at all, and stretched out gags to fill a page. Not my cup of tea, to say the least.
Our Ernie - (All Four Gag Vignettes):
Well drawn. Ernie is the classic mischievous "Bad Boy", which gets old fast, as he seems not to have empathy for others. I DO like the fox hunt vignette 2-pager, which has Ernie conversing with a family of super-intelligent foxes who speak The King's English.
Lucky Logan (The Laughing Cowboy) 1 :
Excellent artwork. A decent story with good action, suspense, and good pacing. Which means that it fits nicely in its 6 pages. I do wonder why Lucky is nicknamed "The Laughing Cowboy"; which was the favourite song of a record collecting uncle of mine, who had the 1936 78 RPM Okeh record of it buried inside his burial coffin along with him. It was titled "The Laughing Cowboy", and sung by The Laughing Cowboy.
Beaver Patrol Boys:
Nice artwork, in a pastiche of similar themed gags, which are very cliche, old-fashioned, boring, and not very funny. But it is nice to look at. It reminds me of those two-page panorama scenes by Dick Ryan filled with funny animals with individual corny gags related to a similar theme in the late 1930s Chesler and Centaur multiple-genre comic books.
Johhny Wingco:
Great artwork, with a decent story, lots of good action. The wartime flashback becoming most of the story was an interesting surprise. I get the feeling that because WWII was much more costly, traumatic, and important in the lives of a much greater percentage of the population of Britain than USA, British comics focused more on that war's happenings for much longer than in American comic books, both in completely military series, and in flashbacks in individual stories in series from other genres.
Mike(all 4 strips):
Artwork is fairly standard for UK, but nothing special. The series is a typical silly comedy with a somewhat bright and curious kid, and a silly parent. I think it is very funny that the father wears a suit and tie to go camping in the woods.
Thunderbolt Jaxon and the Flying Wreckers:
Artwork is passable, but not great. The series is a typical superhero saga. He puts on his magic belt and becomes a super-strong, flying Greek Godlike superhero. I think it is funny that the hero wears an ancient Greek outfit in 1959. Superhero stories never had any appeal to me, even as a young child. I did, however, like stories about real Humans who rose to occasions to great heights of heroism when such actions were needed. Funny that I hated stories about magic and science fantasy, but enjoyed funny animal stories. That is probably because I treated the anthropomorphic animal/people as Humans, who just looked different, but lived in a World with similar rules of physics, chemistry and biology as our planet.
Tod & Annie - (Both stories):
A seemingly evil orphanage owner chases after runaway orphans under his charge, seems very like the US' recent children's book series, Lemony Snicket's "A series of Unfortunate Events". The second episode was more memorable than the first, and a reasonably entertaining story.
Davy Crockett:
Really top-notch artwork. And I like that this story is printed in 2-colour process (which really provides a 3-colour effect, resulting in orange a beige/yellow off yellow, white and black, which is fairly close to as enjoyable as full colour (4-colour process). As a historian, I cringe at seeing Davy Crockett portrayed as being physically in The Desert Southwest of The USA, when the closest he ever got to that area was the flat grasslands of east-central Texas, which doesn't have cliffs, mesas, and lots of bare rock and sandy soil. In addition, he died at The Alamo, near present day San Antonio, in 1836, so he never got to the desert area of far west Texas, and there were no trains operating in west Texas before the late 1840s. So that train being in the story would have been impossible. In addition, there were no Cherokees living anywhere near west Texas, or any other part of Texas at that time. That area was Comanche country. And Cherokees were not horse riders, at least until they were later re-located from North Carolina to Oklahoma well after 1836. They were not a Great Plains tribe, and so their chieftains never wore many-feather headdresses.
Mickey's Pal the Wizard (Both episodes)
This children's fantasy featuring a Jinn who performs magic feats for his master of the bottle, reminds me of several 1940s children's fantasy strips (Jim Tyer's Pete Parrot, Ken Hultgren's Izzy and Dizzy, and the 1930's Floyd Gottfredson's "Mickey Mouse - The Miracle Master"). It is decent, but nothing special.
Thunderbolt Jaxon and the Kidnappers:
I enjoyed this story a little more than the first Thunderbolt story. But would rather have had it not be a superhero story, but have Jack Jackson have been a relatively normal, bright, young, somewhat athletic teenager, who hates wrong-doing, and rises to each occasion needing some wrong-doing-hating citizen ton act quickly to stop a crime in progress, or help a fellow Human in danger. That is something a child reader can admire, to which I can relate. Young Jaxon could have used his ingenuity to foil the kidnappers in a way that might not be very likely to be accomplished by most young adolescents, but still is within the realm of possibility.
Sexton Blake - The Case of the Vanishing Thief:
A very simple very short story, not long enough to develop a plot with any suspense and characterisation of the villain, and so, not all that interesting.
Sinbad Simms - Shark Boy of The South Seas:
This story sports decent artwork, although somewhat stylized. But, its premise of a Human boy befriending a shark and training it to follow his command is way too fanciful for my taste. Sharks are not intelligent as dolphins. They don't think. They are likely to be totally instinctive.
Jimmy Topper and his Chums of St. Clement's (Text Story):
Excellent artwork, and a very good story. The highlight of the book. The story's plot was well-thought out, and paced well. And the story was plausible, and entertaining. And it had some decent suspense as well.
Sexton Blake - The Diamond Smugglers:
A seemingly more promising start to this vignette episode of this series than the train episode. But, my hopes for a great, adventurous tale of Blake's bout with a gang of clever smuggles were dashed by an abrupt, obvious easy and lazy ending! I would have liked a 20+ pages epic detective adventure story (spanning several episodes), with Blake being rescued too late to stop the criminal gang(more than just the two villains in this vignette) from getting the contraband stolen jewels past the customs danger, and Blake and The Customs Police working with Scotland yard, to ferret out the smuggler gang's boss, all started with clues Blake had noticed during his time with the two smugglers on their boat. These extremely short crime story vignettes in self-contained vignettes, rather than ideally having complete book self-contained stories, or at least having consecutive 8 or 10-page episodes forming 24 to 96-page serialised long stories, are very disappointing to me.
Lucky Logan (The Laughing Cowboy) 2:
Nice artwork (naturally, just like the first). And a very clever story, with a surprising, unexpected humourous ending gag! Very pleasing read.
Space Family Rollinson:
Excellent artwork. Although it has a typical level of non-scientifically-based fantasy especially common for the late 1950s (which is a quality I don't like as a scientist, but have to put up with as a comic book fan), the artwork and characterisation and mood give it some charm. It is an entertaining story, which is not so terribly unscientific as many of the SciFi comic book stories were in the 1950s. So, I was glad for that. But, it has too wide a story scope for its meagre number of pages. Instead of 8, the story would be better served to have at least 20, to fit in more action with the space monster, and some dwelling upon the potential dangers from it, as well as a more elaborate climax, and some background of the Rollinson Family (as EVERY episode is supposed to stand on its own, so that a reader new to the series will not be totally ignorant of what went on before in the series. And a little background about the newly-discovered planet and its people would help as well. And, perhaps a short discussion of theories about the space octopus, who can live in Space in an area of no atmospheric gases of any kind, and very little gravity. Surely readers wonder how its body holds together in almost nil levels of gravity. At the very least, this story should be told in a span of 24 pages (3 episodes). It would then have 2 excellent clifhanger episode endings, and the third would have room for a fantastic climax, and a short epilogue (perhaps at The King's palace, leading to a feeling that Skandock's planet and people might possibly return in later episodes of the series.
Deed-A-Day Danny:
The artwork is okay, and seems to be a style similar to that of some of the other comedy strips. The story is obvious and expected, and somewhat of boring.
Informational pages and special features:
These, as a whole, were drawn very well, and were interesting and informative, rather than boring fluff.