The Christmas Spirit 1940 - Minneapolis Star Journal
I like this short story about "The Christmas Spirit" filling even the hearts of normally badly-behaved, negatively, antisocial, amoral criminals, to let them take a holiday off from crime, so that normal crime-fighters, like The Spirit, can also enjoy the holiday, not being needed for his normal work. It is a clever way to sneak in a completely positive story for the readers around Christmas Time (when all people should, by being kind and considerate to all others, should, by doing that, realize that they should behave like that EVERY day of each year.
Eisner packed a lot into these 7 pages, by using three tiers of 3-Panel lines, totalling 54 panels - the equivalent of 9 pages of normal 3-Tier format. For this lighthearted holiday story, he made his crooks petty thieves, rather than evil, hardened, violent dangerous gangster types. So, they fit in well with his having them change their normal behaviour for this holiday story. It was clever too, too connect their crime of depriving kiddies (like the bulk of this series' readership) from experiencing one of the major joys of this holiday - receiving gifts from generous, loving people. So, by having these normally mean and sad characters experience the joy of giving, and having the joy of receiving handed back to the normally unremembered, unloved and forgotten receivers, the reader gets the subconscious feeling that maybe the two crooks will NOT go back to their sad, mean and selfish lives, and that maybe if enough selfish people, overburdened by the trials of life could experience such an epiphany, there is yet hope for The World.
It's a bit preachy, but more tolerable, expected, and even desired at this time of year, as a break from all the normally hard-edged entertainment. The artwork is top-notch, and a little more comical than normal, and the colouring is excellent (to my taste) - bright and cheerful. Eisner's attempt at tying to tie the regular characters into The Spirit's example of why he doesn't need to work on Christmas Eve (the story of the two redeemed crooks) by using the gift-giving party, is weak, as it seems out of place and just thrown in. And I agree that the boxing kangaroo is too strong an idea, bringing too much curiosity about what will happen when Ellen opens the crate and let's the kangaroo out, which will immediately take the reader out of reflecting upon the story he or she just finished reading. Denny Colt given Ellen a boxing kangaroo as her new bodyguard is a great idea, which is good enough to spawn a series of stories featuring her getting into trouble because of that Australian boxer. Maybe he gets jealous when she is in the company of other males?
The Christmas Spirit 1941- Parkchester Review
This story about Three Tramps, but mainly the downtrodden, hardened, driven to crime, King Hobo, is similar, and yet different enough from the previous year's Christmas story, to be interesting. Eisner's tying Bethlehem, Pennsylvania to the original Christmas story, along with it's well-known steel industry (main reason for the town's existence), and to guns made of steel, is an interesting added touch. I like the added old-fashioned atmosphere produced introduced by the old-fashioned print font, and poetic style of the old-fashioned 1700s style English, used by the narrator. And the story about Angroff, the military conquering dictator (obviously a shot at a poorly-disguised Adolf Hitler) becoming redeemed, is interesting, too. And using that as a story told to King Hobo, ties the three-level, overall Spirit story connections together. This one also has a preachy tinge to it. But works, just the same, for the same reasons. And the similarity of Angroff's desire as a youngster to be a street fiddler, but being kept from doing so by circumstances, to Adolf Hitler's wanting to become a great artist and being turned down by Vienna's prestigious art academy, is an added evidence of to whom this story of redemption points. IF an evil character like Hitler, one of the most despised and feared characters in World History, can be redeemed, there is sill hope for Mankind.
Schoolgirls' Picture Library 40 - Christmas in The Highlands
This even more lighthearted story provides a break from the slightly preachy Spirit stories, although it has its own problems of being a little too obvious with pablum like "wholesomeness", attempting to appear like a crime mystery, and yet, having no real criminal. This is very typical of the normal British Schoolgirl's Picture Library stories, not just their special Christmas Holiday editions. The artwork on this one is good enough(not exceptional), and very pleasant to look at. But the characters are VERY superficial, especially for a long 64-Page story. And the attempt to manufacture a crime, criminal, and bad feelings among a family, when there is really none of that, and it is all based on a set of coincidences, and resultant misunderstandings, is easily seen through by the reader.
The key problem is that the young man, Angus, would-be villain, and Morag's cousin, is so young, handsome, innocent, and friendly-looking, that the reader automatically KNOWS, without a doubt, that he cannot be the villain. So, it is obvious that either there is no villain, or someone else stole the jewels. But, as there are no clues given to the reader leading even to the possibility of there being someone else well into the story, as is normal for mystery story writers, it is obvious to the reader that the loss of the jewels was caused by circumstances, coincidences, and there was no robbery.
Hector's breed appears to me as not a pure breed, but a mixture of a type of Bloodhound, and another breed or two.
As to the men being bare-legged in sub-freezing temperatures, I tend to agree that they wouldn't have wanted to be outside in that wet and windy Scottish Highlands air in such cold for very long. And I'm from sub-Arctic, Manitoba. In that casual, non-formal, non official atmosphere, of The Kilburnie family, there was no need for them to do so. Also, having been inside some old castles in Scotland in winter, and experienced that damp cold, outside of the main heated rooms, I doubt that they would walk around like that even inside, unless they had central heating which was warm enough to heat the entire inside area. But to do that, the rooms nearest the source would be wayyyy too hot for me, even with no clothes on. Believe me, I've experienced such terrible heat in mid winter in other peoples large homes (especially down in The USA, where they keep the insides of their homes, much much hotter than most Canadians do). Ha ha! That reminds me of when I lived in Eccles in Lancashire for a short while, and had to pop another half crown into my flat's heater pay box, to keep the inside temperature in my bedroom enough above freezing for me to get out from under my stack of blankets to go to the loo.