Illustrated Stories of The Operas - FaustI've already written a lot about this book. Its artwork is top notch. It doesn't look like Bernard Bailey's drawing style from 1943, although his signature is on the front cover, and his name is listed in GCD's credits for the artwork. So, I'm guessing that it may have been his partner in The Bernard Bailey Studio, Mac Raboy. They did the best job they could do in condensing the Opera into only 16 pages of comics art. I've read parts of Aida, as well. But I'd also like to read Rigoletto, also with fantastic artwork on its front cover, and Carmen, too.
Catholic Comics 10The Shrine of St. Theresa - The Little Flower - Information PageVery nice artwork.
Bill Brown of Notre DameHe was both a star football, basketball and baseball player for Notre Dame University (a very prestigious US University -in the area of sports). He apparently just twisted his ankle, not breaking a bone, nor tearing ligaments or tendons. So recovering from that mild injury in 10 days doesn't seem like even being prayed for its healing. IF praying would do any good, wouldn't it be better to pray that the wealthy people and wealthy nations of The World would help finance education (including the wisdom of birth control) and provide basic medical help for the poor countries, and help feed their starving people until those nations can do that, themselves, and also pray for permanent World peace, rather than wasting wishing for a sports player to be able to play in his basketball game? No surprise that Bill played as his team won their game. And it won them the US National Collegiate Championship. So, it was more than just any one game.
basketball game.
Pudgy Pig A bit of light-hearted fluff taken from Charlton's stock of secular Children's entertainment to take the kiddies' minds of the moral preachiness, and Church propaganda thrown at them in most of the other stories in this book. Pudgy had already been appearing in Charlton's "Zoo Funnies", funny animal series. The artwork is pretty poor compared to that of most of the young children's fare from the comic book packagers who handled that genre (Sangor Studios, Leon Jason's Jason Comic Art, Fago Brothers Studio, Chesler, Louis Ferstadt, Bernard Bailey Studio, Jerry Iger's Fiction House, and Lloyd Jacquet's Funnies, Inc.). I think this was the work of Ellis "Holly" Chambers, who having been fired by most of the comics packagers, for working slowly, and not meeting deadlines (rumoured to have been because of his drug problems), who, because of that, worked on a short project-by-project basis, as an ad-hoc free lancer. Despite being below standard, with his normal, very sparse backgrounds, at least it has fairly clean lines and not so psychedelic, surreal, and bizarre, as many of his 1942-44 stories were. And the figures are decently drawn, and move properly. This is actually some of his very best artwork. I agree with QQ that the "morals" demonstrated in this story are the opposite of what religious schools plan to teach. Most of Chambers' stories made little sense, - IF any, at all.
Father O'Malley and The Living RosaryNot knowing any Irish people very well, I'd never before encountered the Irish terms colleen and colin. We
learn something new every day! I knew what a shillelagh is from Irish-American, British and Irish films, and books about Irish lore. I grew up in a Scottish neighbourhood, but Irish immigrants had a representative effect on Canadian culture, as they did in Australia, and certainly in England. Of course, thanks to the Great Potato Famine, they had a major effect on American culture, and we got our share of immigration from that disaster, too. Committee members who will work on raising funds have to swear an oath (could it be to be careful not to lose any of the donations? Or not to be tempted to spend them on one's self???). That seems like a strange thing to have them do, especially in a religious organisation. What a BORING "story"!!! What is the "lesson" the readers should learn from this???
Aesop's Fables - Frogs Desiring A LeaderBloody awful "artwork"!!! I guess the editor let his 7-year old grandson draw it. They don't look like frogs, especially in the swimming scenes. Maybe the writer/artist was rather 4 years old than 7! Even a 6 -year old would know that storks have no teeth. I've heard of "vampire bats, but not "vampire storks"!
Sometimes we had storks make nests in the chimneys of our neighbourhood in Den Haag, when I was young.
Story of Pope Pius XIIThis non-fiction historical piece was interesting, to-the-point, and well-drawn.
Koroseal - The New MaterialI never heard the word "koroseal". We called it "synthetic rubber". Clearly, this is a bold-faced commercial advert, which shouldn't be placed in a school curriculum. I would have nothing against having a history of "synthetic rubber" used to teach a science lesson, EVEN mentioning that Waldo Semon, of BF Goodrich Corp. discovered it, and developed the first commercial version of it, for The US Military. But, I wouldn't allow an obvious commercial marketing tool like this, with 5 of its 6 pages showing and describing products that now use it in their construction, in schools. i would have wanted more science related to the process of its forming in the earlier pages (i.e. how its formation process works, chemical bonding reaction produced by heating up a particular combination of chemicals, etc.)
Droopy - Gag PageMore questionable art, this time by a 4-year old!
Musk-Ox Men Map The ArcticInteresting article on that project. Most of Norway is mountainous, rocky, and thickly forested. I can't imagine where such a tank would even have room to operate. The Nordic Ski Units of The Finns, Russians and Canadians did fine on their skis, in Finland, Norway, and Russia, and The US did well with theirs in The Alps. Lots of Canadian men wore fish-net long underwear during winters back in The 1940s. I didn't like it. It produced a lot of sweat, even in temperatures 20 or 30 degrees F below zero.
The Adventures Of Sir GalahadWhere was "The Land of Igeria". I was a history major in undergraduate, specialising in the ancient Middle East. I've never heard of it, and Google has nothing, at all, on it. It must be made up, just as were King Arthur's knights. The story showed thick forests near the Mediterranean coast of Palestine, which would have had almost none, because it was mostly flat farmland. Up in the hill country of The Judean Highlands is where the forests were. We should have seen them in the panels after it is mentioned that they were nearing Jerusalem. Instead, we saw totally flat land, with nothing growing (implying desert). That is totally opposite to reality. The pre-1800 Jerusalem "Old City" has no "Gate of The Great Sheep". Another made-up detail. This is a religious story for religious school students. One would think they would, at least try to get The Holy Land geography correct, even though King Arthur's knights are total fiction, used instead of the real historical European Crusader knights that we KNOW travelled to The Levant during those times. At least this story was drawn well. That's its only redeeming feature.
Odd InventionsInnocent of being false, if not very interesting.
Overall, this book was not very interesting. The Pope Pius XII and Operation Musk Ox features were interesting, and well done. To me, the rest was not worthwhile.