Eerie 8 [Fiction House's Ghost Comics #10]https://comicbookplus.com/?dlid=17263Great Cover. What, I wonder, is the significance of the colour green in depicting the monstrous?
Is it that green is associated with decay and rottenness, like the mold on food at the back of the refrigerator?
Ever notice that most 'good' superheroes are variations on Blue, Red and Yellow, while green in reserved for villains or characters who could go either way?
Example, Quicksilver started green, then became blue when he 'reformed', The Hulk, Dr Doom, Baron Mordo, The Skrulls. Lex Luthor's armour. Green.
Ghost of the Gorgon. 1/ Why has John Bell, unusually for the Golden Age, chosen to depict her Nude? I suppose with green and scaly skin he could get away with it.
2/ Occurs to me, Medusa must be under a curse. How lonely must she be, completely isolated from everybody because they get turned to stone.
3/ So you can look at a Medusa when she's dead?
4/ Great art.
The Ghost of Dr. RenickAlso great art.
Morgus, both your choices of books are high quality examples of comic book writing and art.
A very different type of story for this type of book. it's a story of redemption and hope. Benulis' art elevates the narrative and makes it sing.
Halfway to HadesCliche beginning, (But it works) which is why
'Rocky Horror show' and a number of movies in the 30's and 40's used it.
Great story, well told - as fiction. But the
'Valentine day massacre' was in a warehouse, not a speakeasy. So that spoiled it for me.
The strange case of the absent floor. On the other hand Michael Gilbert, who produced the Dr Drew reprint hardback, is adamant that it was entirely Grandenetti's work, quoting the artist saying that he was merely copying Eisner's style.
'Merely copying?'
Every page, every panel, every face screams Eisner. Including the pacing, the thought processes, the lettering and the fonts. If this is merely a copy it deserves an 'Eisner award' just by itself.
Thanks Morgus, excellent choices.