[b]Bat Masterson 2[/b] Written by Gaylord DuBois, pencils by Bob Forgione, inks by Jerry Robinson
(1) The Lead Souvenir
This 13 page story, whose scope and plot have the feel of the half-hour US TV series, which ran from 1958 through 1961. I checked IMdb to see if this story was one of the TV show's episodes, but it doesn't seem to have been. I agree that the young bank robber gang member having been wounded, with no feeling in his legs, having the bullet removed from his back , and then being instantly able to walk and ride a horse is a little much to believe. The artwork is quite good, penciling of background and figures, inking, and staging of the panels (as they were for all the stories in this book).
(2) The Red Hot Ringer featuring Softspoken Smith
Nice little 4-page story about a sharp local, who foils a bank robber. The story is very well-staged, and very efficiently plotted, with perfect pacing. The artwork is excellent.
(3) The Vanishing Gandy Dancers
This 14-pager has great artwork and wonderful staging. I like the colouring job by the colourist, too. Interesting that normal townsmen would break the law and take payment from one railroad company for them to sabotage a rival company. And also interesting that a band of Cheyenne (Native American) tribesmen would aid one railroad company against its rival just to obtain a couple hands full of rifles and ammunition, given that they might have been blamed for any violence that resulted, and might have faced retaliation from the townspeople's vigilantes. They usually wanted to stay out of "The White Man's " business, lest they be wrongly blamed for acts that would give the greedy element among them to allow their government or military to enforce further "punishment" on their tribes.
The Cheyenne were a Northern Plains tribe, which resided on grasslands and near patches of forest, in cold climates (of Montana, the western portions of The Dakotas, eastern Wyoming, northern Colorado and Nebraska. They hunted buffalo, and wore buffalo and deerskin (buckskin) breeches and shirts. Normal tribesmen did wear headbands with a few feathers in Them, and chieftains wore headdresses with many Eagle feathers. They braided their hair. The Chief appearing earlier in this story is dressed like a southwestern desert tribesman (Apache or Navajo), with a featherless headband, freeflowing long locks of hair, and warm weather clothing. Later, at the Cheyenne campsite, there are tribesmen with feathers held by their headband, and the Chief there, has a full eagle feather headdress, but none of the warriors have braided hair, and some of them have the thick, cloth, desert-style headbands and are wearing nothing but a small loin cloth. It seems that the artist tossed in tribesmen from several different tribes (some from several hundreds of miles away, into one scene (just to provide variety). I think the warriors, even if they went shirtless in mid summer, because of the heat, would be wearing breeches.
I worked on two jobs for The Cheyenne Tribes at two different reservations, back during the early 1970s. I also worked for The Blackfeet, Mandan, Hidatsa, Nez Perce, Umatilla, Rosebud Sioux Tribe, Paiutes, and Shoshone US Great Plains tribes, and The Navajo Nation and a few Pueblo Tribes in The USA's Southwest. So, I know the difference, as I've seen them wear their traditional pre-20th Century clothing during festivals and religious ceremonies. And, of course I've seen many photographs of them from the last half of the 19th Century. Despite the slight error, Dubois/Forgione seem to have done at least some research before the drawing started, unlike so many other US Western genre comic books I've read.
(4) Roaring Towns of The Old West - Bisbee, Arizona
Being an amateur historian, I enjoyed learning about the highlighted robbery event at Bisbee. It was drawn very dramatically, and being on the inside of the back cover, we get to enjoy the inking much more than with colour overlain. During the early 1970s, I worked in both Arizona and New Mexico for The Navajo Nation (whose reservation takes up a good chunk of the land area of both states.
(5) The Saline Pueblos
Interesting to learn about the conflicts between The Apaches and Pueblo Tribes back in the 17th through 19th Centuries. The Spanish Catholic missionaries came to New Mexico in 1598, and built their first cathedral there in 1613. I worked on jobs for 2 different Pueblo Tribes in New Mexico during the early 1970s.
All in all, reading this book was very entertaining, and it was also enjoyable to see the high-quality artwork.