DELTA D GICLEE GALLERY AND DESIGN ATELIER, RETROACTIVE INFORMATION SERVICES, LOUIS COOK JAMES, JR

Louis James | Create Your Badge
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Friday, August 13, 2010

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(4)
*?RARE?*

love & romance
 
#1 fn, sexy charlton romantic girls

#13 fn, sexy charltons romantic girls
["lost castaways" - "robison crusoe, 1973"]

*scarce* #16 fn 1974 pence variant, sexy charltons romantic girl
[psychedelic colors cover art]

*scarce* #17 VF 1974 pence variant, sexy charltons romantic girls
[criminal lover in jail story]

HIGH SCHOOL CLIQUES GIRLS LOVE ROMANCE

The scans/pictures are of the actual books for sale. Photobucket


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Shipping




All comics are bagged and boarded.


In the continental U. S.,

I can ship up to 3 books for $3.00 media mail,


4-8 books, shipping is $4.50 media mail,


9-20 books, shipping is $6.00 media mail,


Over 20 books? Relax. No worries.


I’ll have to get back to you on that with an exact quote.
Shipping to Canada is $9.00. Worldwide shipping is $11.00



Image hosting

Grading is (and always will be) subjective, so I recommend you
view the comic's picture and grade it yourself before you bid.
I'm confident you'll find my grading both fair and accurate.

Image hosting

Terms and Conditions



Please email me with any questions you may have.
Payment must be received within 7 days after end of auction
or item may be re-listed and negative feedback may be left,
(unless special arrangements are made with seller via email).
If there is a problem with your item after delivery, please contact
me within 3 days after receiving it to resolve the problem.
Please do this before leaving negative or neutral feedback.
I am more than willing to work with you to make things right
if you are unhappy with your purchase. (You won't be.)



layout for myspace


ROMANCE COMIC BOOKS




One comics form, though it enjoyed a decades-long history, became a
casualty to the changing mores of the culture (in addition to the other
vectors that lead comics to extinction). The perceived obsolescence of
the monogamistic ideal, as viewed through the selective lens of the
sexual revolutionary, rendered tales that idealized old-school
approaches to pair-bonding themselves obsolescent. Sometime between the
fifties, romance literature (including prose and comics) would shift
from fantasies about meeting and marrying Prince Charming to fantasies
about husbands who conveniently die to clear the field for the newer,
younger, and more interesting Prince Charmings (see publishers like
Harlequin, et al). In the process, comics fans - which, over time,
increasingly comes to mean superhero comics fans - came to view romance
comics with a sneer, in spite of a much more solid grounding in reality
and an overall greater relevance to readers even vaguely within the
gene pool. Examined as literature, however, the romance comic does not
necessarily have less to offer, storytelling-wise, than, say, the
superhero comic; it just averages a more plausible wardrobe all around,
a few less space aliens, and sound effects less likely to rouse the
children from their naps. And, as with other specimens of the other
comics - the pieces that once existed before superhero comics consumed
the market - the romance comic generally played a variation of one of a
set of fairly reliable themes.



Origins




A great die-off of superheroes began with the end of World War II. The
loss of military contracts to provide disposable reading matter to
servicemen overseas ate into sales figures; the aging of a readership
in a day when one generally considered teenagers too old for reading
comics moved domestic patrons out of the market; and, of course, not
all heroes had what it takes to create an enduring readership. If the
superhero ailed in those days, comics creators themselves kept moving
to attempt to present material that would engage readers and,
therefore, move off the news stands. Sometimes existing genres rose
into the vacancies created by expiring superhero material; sometimes
publishers crowded out failing heroes to make way for other,
theoretically more commercial material. In this era, we saw as a
defining event the eviction of Green Lantern from his own title to make
space for a wonder dog strip. After the end of the war, popular
interest somewhat shifted from martial concerns (say, costumed heroes)
to domestic ones (say, radio serials and movies dealing with romance).
Radio, television, and theater consumed increasing chunks of recreation
time in the decade immediately following the end of the War, and two
innovative talents from the thirties and forties - Joe Simon and Jack
Kirby - decided to test the waters of romance in comic book form in
1947. For its moment, the form would flower, even spawning sub-variants
such as cowboy romance material and Black romance comics. And the
flagship romance comic, Young Romance, would endure through over 200
issues and over 20 years, spanning more than one publisher in the
decades of its existence.



Conventions




False confessions became an early conceit of the romance comics back in
the day when the entire genre belonged to its creators, Simon and
Kirby. Given the fictional device of first-person narration combined
with the relentless maleness of the two creators, one can see as
inevitable that a certain amount of fraud (of the kind absolved by
willing suspension of belief) would originate with comics with female
protagonists. Magazines with titles like True This and Real That led
the way for this approach. Moralism also played a central role, as it
would in a number of comics forms that predated the Code that arose to
address the immorality of the form. Characters met bad ends in
proportion to the bad deeds they perpetrated; blackmailers and
scoundrels could expect disgrace, jail, or even death so reliably that
one would assume moral laws drove the physics of comics. One may also
note that, since the romance comics barely endured into the seventies,
that the morality they depicted resounded with pre-sexual revolution
themes. Hence a norm of hetero-monogamy prevailed. This provided the
third key element: The monogamistic happy ending that stood as the
Mecca all characters seemed to seek in the romance comics. In an age
where Everyman seemed to view marriage as central to long-term
happiness - certainly an arguable position - all tales sought, and
either achieved or failed to achieve, this goal. With some combination
of the three principle conventions of the form, romance comics
furthermore explored tales which typically fell into categories such as
Cinderella fantasies, near escapes, tragic endings, fantastic
redemptions, and just deserts.



Cinderella Fantasies




A harsh commercial of an earlier decade featured a young girl, playing
with some dolls, and babbling on about how a prince would someday take
her as his wife and solve, once and for all, her material needs. This
particular gem of advertising ended with the claim that the young
heroine could expect to appear on the welfare rolls with a head full of
such fantasies. While one might well invite the authors of such
shock-and-naysaying material to lighten up or at least leave the
pessimism at home a few days out of the year, the Cinderella Fantasy
does still offer a sometimes-destructive lure to females in a variety
of cultures. The fantasy tends to do its damage by training young
people to expect a Prince Charming - a kind of deus ex machina but with
money and big pectorals - to make everything right. While one focuses
one's strategies on waiting for unlikely happenings such as the timely
appearance of a Prince, one does not invest in a future made better
through one's own efforts; and this applies across lines of sex,
gender, or whatever folks call it these days. Preparing for the worst
does more good than idling away time hoping for the best without human
effort to back it up. The romance comic originated in a day where
western culture offered many fewer opportunities for self-reliance for
females, and quietly expired in a period that suggested new
possibilities. Perhaps the perceived "corniness" of Cinderella-fantasy
material helped bring the romance comics down; and perhaps such fantasy
became less and less relevant. The publishers of the pure-prose
bodice-ripper don't seem to think so, however.



Near Escapes




The near escape story enjoyed a flexible range of components, depending
on the thing from which our protagonists - typically female - needed to
escape. Their own pasts, simple bad luck, or the schemes of wicked
rivals for a partner's affections (or of wicked contenders for their
own) provided the raw material for the near escape story. Temptation
frequently played a central role in stories of this sort. Partially
because this helped real people to relate to fictional stories, and
partially because too much strength of character can make players
dishwater dull, our stalwart heroines risked falling into the gap
between what they wanted, what they could have, and what they should
have, a differential frequently thrown into contrast by desires for
material security or simple devotion from a tenuous partner in love.
However, the moral determinism of many comics - the poetic justice that
could, if necessary, overturn natural law - ultimately righted wrongs
brought about by the evil intent of characters in the romance comics.
So, if one looks at contemporaneous material, one can see a common
pattern of karmic retribution. The Comics Code Authority did not invent
this morality; it just codified it as an editorial standard with the
power of preemptive censorship for material that failed to comply.



Tragic Endings




On one level, romance comics dared take a more adult approach than many
other forms of comics, including the earlier and later superhero
comics. Free from the burdens created by combining a shared
universe/continuity model with an ongoing monthly publishing schedule,
the romance comic could, if the story required, kill off major players
(who, we must admit, probably never appeared before and almost
certainly would never appear again anyway). This gave a freedom lacking
from comics forms that use editorial models that claim to allow for or
even require change yet must not dispose of the intellectual properties
that move the books in the first place. A widow or ex-lover could
relate the details of the event which forever separated her from her
beau. The five-and-ten pager, after all, allowed creators to reach for
effect rather than requiring them to build on a canon of stories. If
the tone writers and artists sought required the Loving Husband to die
saving the world from the Hun so that his bereaved could get maudlin
and reflect on an idealized version of a short yet intense marriage,
they could slaughter with impunity.



Fantastic Redemptions




Although wickedness tended to bring characters to well-deserved bad
ends, plenty of stories allowed once-wayward characters a chance to
redeem themselves from a past not always fully of their own creation.
Variants of the Reform School Girl Romance and the Poor Girl Transcends
Her Humble Origins made for a consistent fodder of the romance comics.
In general, though, these stories deal with either reformed characters
- meaning protagonists with a seedy past but a fairly upright present
or those who, in the present, do little worse than attempt to conceal a
long-past seediness lest it wreck their futures. And they also conveyed
a moralistic, and frequently unrealistic, message about the concrete
and external benefits due to those who reform on an abstract and
internal level. With this kind of story, the wish-fulfillment element
of the romance comics shows more strongly than in many of the other
versions.



Just Deserts




Wicked women and scandalous rakes both appeared, as a kind of ferment,
in many tales of the old romance comics. Without the Serpent in Eden,
after all, the story amounts to little more than two people picking
fruit off trees all day and trying to invent new ways to combat the
ever-mounting boredom. Someone has to make trouble or nothing might
ever happen. [Misbehaving beaux and belles, as staples of the form.] As
well, the Just Deserts model of romance comics story served its wish
fulfillment aspect rather well. People whom others have wronged, after
all, may wish to see some of the suffering bad people inflict return to
them rather than fall exclusively on the shoulders of the innocent and
the exploited. Typical romance-comics offenses include mate-stealing;
mate-killing, to replace an older model with a newer one; concealment
of an ongoing lurid or criminal double life; and a repertoire of
methods for ruining the lives of married couples for the sake of
attempting to have more than one deserves. The moralism of the form
makes itself well-felt here. Ignore the nihilism of twentieth-century
classical prose pieces like Kafka's "The Metamorphosis;" the rogue and
the vampire (in the old sense of the term, used to label a woman as
greedy and parasitic) either found themselves alone, or in jail, or
even dead.



The Fate of the Form




A multi-tiered attack ultimately caused the romance comics, after a
quarter of a century, to disappear from the news racks. No one of these
forces killed off the form - indeed, it could resurface someday - but
the combination of factors working against this genre ultimately
smothered it under its cumulative weight. A changing morality made
their moral emphasis appear quaint and dated (by modern standards, the
emphasis on hetero-monogamy might appear positively malign); the reward
of home and hearth began to seem irrelevant or even a form of bondage;
across all genres, comics had suffered in the mid and late fifties from
factors including growing disinterest and a censorship of prior
restraint; the post-Stan Lee comics would preempt somewhat the romance
theme by allowing superheroes solid romantic connections; and, finally,
the superhero comic would come to dominate the aesthetic ecosystem of
the form to the point of crowding out other material, regardless of
genre.



The Talent




Names that one normally doesn't associate with the romance comic, since
they attach to other, previous or subsequent, achievements, belong in
the canon of romance comic talent, including its inventors, Joe Simon
and Jack Kirby. Observers of the medium suggest that a number of
canonical figures of fifties and sixties comics (or that got their
start there) did so in the early romance comics, acquiring a different
set of skills than required by the superhero stories that once
propelled the medium. Names like Matt Baker, Frank Frazetta, Everett R.
Kinstler, Jay Scott Pike, John Romita Senior, Leonard Starr, Alex Toth,
and Wally Wood belong in this set (according to Jim Korkis in Teen
Angst). Some would go on to distinguish themselves in other genres,
including, but not limited to, the ubiquitous superhero form. We can
add other names to this. Marie Severin, for instance, described one
Marvel job she received doctoring old romance comic pages from the
sixties to make the clothes more appropriate for 1970, installing
details like flared trouser cuffs and pointy collars (a task of
considerable tedium). A particular set of talents developed in the
romance form, including skills not always acquirable in today's
superhero-dominated comics market. In a romance comic, the credibility
of characters and settings assumes an importance generally foreign to
more fantastic genres: Anatomy that never occurs in nature, clothing
that would violate the dress code of a circus, and facial expressions
that fall into two categories (snarl and non-snarl) would all ruin the
plausibility of a romance comic. So artists learned to bring out the
nuances of emoting faces, the detail of conventional clothing, and
human bodies that suggested the beautiful but not the impossible. Using
Romita as an example - if an exceptional one - we can note that his
assumption of the artistic role on Amazing Spider-Man saw an
increasingly expressive set of characters and a definitely more
beautiful female (and, for that matter, male) cast. Romita may not have
worked in the wildly imaginative manner typical of Ditko on pieces like
Dr. Strange stories, but he certainly brought a great deal to the books
he worked on, regardless of the subject matter, and the best things he
brought seemed relevant to his romance comics background. Owing to the
small footprint that romance comics seems to have left on fandom - the
superhero form dominates fandom in a way that leaves some of the
once-diverse comics medium to the attention of scholarly historians of
the subject - locating a canonical list of the artists and writers who
made their careers on this material represents a problem of the very
availability of the information.


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NOTE: THE BELOW COUNTRIES MUST PAY $5.00 (USD) S/H.

    * Afghanistan                                      Albania
    * Angola                                              Belarus
    * Bolivia                                               Bosnia and Herzegovina
    * Bulgaria                                            Burma
    * Democratic Republic of the
    * Cote d Ivoire (Ivory Coast)                  Republic of the Croatia
    * Cuba                                                  Greece
    * Iran                                                   Iraq
    * North Korea                                     Lebanon
    * Liberia                                               Macedonia
    * Montenegro                                     Nigeria
    * Paraguay                                           Serbia
    * Somalia                                             Sudan
    * Syria                                                  Zimbabwe
.
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s

py spies soldiers pilots snipers bombers 1940's 1950's 1960's 1970's forties fifties sixties seventies






Shipping




All comics are bagged and boarded.

In the continental U. S.,
I can ship up to 3 books for $3.00 media mail,


4-8 books, shipping is $4.50 media mail,


9-20 books, shipping is $6.00 media mail,


Over 20 books? Relax. No worries.


I’ll have to get back to you on that with an exact quote.
Shipping to Canada is $9.00. Worldwide shipping is $11.00




Image hosting
Grading is (and always will be) subjective, so I recommend you
view the comic's picture and grade it yourself before you bid.
I'm confident you'll find my grading both fair and accurate.

Image hosting
Terms and Conditions



Please email me with any questions you may have.
Payment must be received within 7 days after end of auction
or item may be re-listed and negative feedback may be left,
(unless special arrangements are made with seller via email).
If there is a problem with your item after delivery, please contact
me within 3 days after receiving it to resolve the problem.
Please do this before leaving negative or neutral feedback.
I am more than willing to work with you to make things right
if you are unhappy with your purchase. (You won't be.)





layout for myspace


ROMANCE COMIC BOOKS



One comics form, though it enjoyed a decades-long history, became a
casualty to the changing mores of the culture (in addition to the other
vectors that lead comics to extinction). The perceived obsolescence of
the monogamistic ideal, as viewed through the selective lens of the
sexual revolutionary, rendered tales that idealized old-school
approaches to pair-bonding themselves obsolescent. Sometime between the
fifties, romance literature (including prose and comics) would shift
from fantasies about meeting and marrying Prince Charming to fantasies
about husbands who conveniently die to clear the field for the newer,
younger, and more interesting Prince Charmings (see publishers like
Harlequin, et al). In the process, comics fans - which, over time,
increasingly comes to mean superhero comics fans - came to view romance
comics with a sneer, in spite of a much more solid grounding in reality
and an overall greater relevance to readers even vaguely within the
gene pool. Examined as literature, however, the romance comic does not
necessarily have less to offer, storytelling-wise, than, say, the
superhero comic; it just averages a more plausible wardrobe all around,
a few less space aliens, and sound effects less likely to rouse the
children from their naps. And, as with other specimens of the other
comics - the pieces that once existed before superhero comics consumed
the market - the romance comic generally played a variation of one of a
set of fairly reliable themes.



Origins




A great die-off of superheroes began with the end of World War II. The
loss of military contracts to provide disposable reading matter to
servicemen overseas ate into sales figures; the aging of a readership
in a day when one generally considered teenagers too old for reading
comics moved domestic patrons out of the market; and, of course, not
all heroes had what it takes to create an enduring readership. If the
superhero ailed in those days, comics creators themselves kept moving
to attempt to present material that would engage readers and,
therefore, move off the news stands. Sometimes existing genres rose
into the vacancies created by expiring superhero material; sometimes
publishers crowded out failing heroes to make way for other,
theoretically more commercial material. In this era, we saw as a
defining event the eviction of Green Lantern from his own title to make
space for a wonder dog strip. After the end of the war, popular
interest somewhat shifted from martial concerns (say, costumed heroes)
to domestic ones (say, radio serials and movies dealing with romance).
Radio, television, and theater consumed increasing chunks of recreation
time in the decade immediately following the end of the War, and two
innovative talents from the thirties and forties - Joe Simon and Jack
Kirby - decided to test the waters of romance in comic book form in
1947. For its moment, the form would flower, even spawning sub-variants
such as cowboy romance material and Black romance comics. And the
flagship romance comic, Young Romance, would endure through over 200
issues and over 20 years, spanning more than one publisher in the
decades of its existence.



Conventions



False confessions became an early conceit of the romance comics back in
the day when the entire genre belonged to its creators, Simon and
Kirby. Given the fictional device of first-person narration combined
with the relentless maleness of the two creators, one can see as
inevitable that a certain amount of fraud (of the kind absolved by
willing suspension of belief) would originate with comics with female
protagonists. Magazines with titles like True This and Real That led
the way for this approach. Moralism also played a central role, as it
would in a number of comics forms that predated the Code that arose to
address the immorality of the form. Characters met bad ends in
proportion to the bad deeds they perpetrated; blackmailers and
scoundrels could expect disgrace, jail, or even death so reliably that
one would assume moral laws drove the physics of comics. One may also
note that, since the romance comics barely endured into the seventies,
that the morality they depicted resounded with pre-sexual revolution
themes. Hence a norm of hetero-monogamy prevailed. This provided the
third key element: The monogamistic happy ending that stood as the
Mecca all characters seemed to seek in the romance comics. In an age
where Everyman seemed to view marriage as central to long-term
happiness - certainly an arguable position - all tales sought, and
either achieved or failed to achieve, this goal. With some combination
of the three principle conventions of the form, romance comics
furthermore explored tales which typically fell into categories such as
Cinderella fantasies, near escapes, tragic endings, fantastic
redemptions, and just deserts.



Cinderella Fantasies




A harsh commercial of an earlier decade featured a young girl, playing
with some dolls, and babbling on about how a prince would someday take
her as his wife and solve, once and for all, her material needs. This
particular gem of advertising ended with the claim that the young
heroine could expect to appear on the welfare rolls with a head full of
such fantasies. While one might well invite the authors of such
shock-and-naysaying material to lighten up or at least leave the
pessimism at home a few days out of the year, the Cinderella Fantasy
does still offer a sometimes-destructive lure to females in a variety
of cultures. The fantasy tends to do its damage by training young
people to expect a Prince Charming - a kind of deus ex machina but with
money and big pectorals - to make everything right. While one focuses
one's strategies on waiting for unlikely happenings such as the timely
appearance of a Prince, one does not invest in a future made better
through one's own efforts; and this applies across lines of sex,
gender, or whatever folks call it these days. Preparing for the worst
does more good than idling away time hoping for the best without human
effort to back it up. The romance comic originated in a day where
western culture offered many fewer opportunities for self-reliance for
females, and quietly expired in a period that suggested new
possibilities. Perhaps the perceived "corniness" of Cinderella-fantasy
material helped bring the romance comics down; and perhaps such fantasy
became less and less relevant. The publishers of the pure-prose
bodice-ripper don't seem to think so, however.



Near Escapes



The near escape story enjoyed a flexible range of components, depending
on the thing from which our protagonists - typically female - needed to
escape. Their own pasts, simple bad luck, or the schemes of wicked
rivals for a partner's affections (or of wicked contenders for their
own) provided the raw material for the near escape story. Temptation
frequently played a central role in stories of this sort. Partially
because this helped real people to relate to fictional stories, and
partially because too much strength of character can make players
dishwater dull, our stalwart heroines risked falling into the gap
between what they wanted, what they could have, and what they should
have, a differential frequently thrown into contrast by desires for
material security or simple devotion from a tenuous partner in love.
However, the moral determinism of many comics - the poetic justice that
could, if necessary, overturn natural law - ultimately righted wrongs
brought about by the evil intent of characters in the romance comics.
So, if one looks at contemporaneous material, one can see a common
pattern of karmic retribution. The Comics Code Authority did not invent
this morality; it just codified it as an editorial standard with the
power of preemptive censorship for material that failed to comply.



Tragic Endings



On one level, romance comics dared take a more adult approach than many
other forms of comics, including the earlier and later superhero
comics. Free from the burdens created by combining a shared
universe/continuity model with an ongoing monthly publishing schedule,
the romance comic could, if the story required, kill off major players
(who, we must admit, probably never appeared before and almost
certainly would never appear again anyway). This gave a freedom lacking
from comics forms that use editorial models that claim to allow for or
even require change yet must not dispose of the intellectual properties
that move the books in the first place. A widow or ex-lover could
relate the details of the event which forever separated her from her
beau. The five-and-ten pager, after all, allowed creators to reach for
effect rather than requiring them to build on a canon of stories. If
the tone writers and artists sought required the Loving Husband to die
saving the world from the Hun so that his bereaved could get maudlin
and reflect on an idealized version of a short yet intense marriage,
they could slaughter with impunity.


Fantastic Redemptions




Although wickedness tended to bring characters to well-deserved bad
ends, plenty of stories allowed once-wayward characters a chance to
redeem themselves from a past not always fully of their own creation.
Variants of the Reform School Girl Romance and the Poor Girl Transcends
Her Humble Origins made for a consistent fodder of the romance comics.
In general, though, these stories deal with either reformed characters
- meaning protagonists with a seedy past but a fairly upright present
or those who, in the present, do little worse than attempt to conceal a
long-past seediness lest it wreck their futures. And they also conveyed
a moralistic, and frequently unrealistic, message about the concrete
and external benefits due to those who reform on an abstract and
internal level. With this kind of story, the wish-fulfillment element
of the romance comics shows more strongly than in many of the other
versions.



Just Deserts



Wicked women and scandalous rakes both appeared, as a kind of ferment,
in many tales of the old romance comics. Without the Serpent in Eden,
after all, the story amounts to little more than two people picking
fruit off trees all day and trying to invent new ways to combat the
ever-mounting boredom. Someone has to make trouble or nothing might
ever happen. [Misbehaving beaux and belles, as staples of the form.] As
well, the Just Deserts model of romance comics story served its wish
fulfillment aspect rather well. People whom others have wronged, after
all, may wish to see some of the suffering bad people inflict return to
them rather than fall exclusively on the shoulders of the innocent and
the exploited. Typical romance-comics offenses include mate-stealing;
mate-killing, to replace an older model with a newer one; concealment
of an ongoing lurid or criminal double life; and a repertoire of
methods for ruining the lives of married couples for the sake of
attempting to have more than one deserves. The moralism of the form
makes itself well-felt here. Ignore the nihilism of twentieth-century
classical prose pieces like Kafka's "The Metamorphosis;" the rogue and
the vampire (in the old sense of the term, used to label a woman as
greedy and parasitic) either found themselves alone, or in jail, or
even dead.



The Fate of the Form



A multi-tiered attack ultimately caused the romance comics, after a
quarter of a century, to disappear from the news racks. No one of these
forces killed off the form - indeed, it could resurface someday - but
the combination of factors working against this genre ultimately
smothered it under its cumulative weight. A changing morality made
their moral emphasis appear quaint and dated (by modern standards, the
emphasis on hetero-monogamy might appear positively malign); the reward
of home and hearth began to seem irrelevant or even a form of bondage;
across all genres, comics had suffered in the mid and late fifties from
factors including growing disinterest and a censorship of prior
restraint; the post-Stan Lee comics would preempt somewhat the romance
theme by allowing superheroes solid romantic connections; and, finally,
the superhero comic would come to dominate the aesthetic ecosystem of
the form to the point of crowding out other material, regardless of
genre.



The Talent



Names that one normally doesn't associate with the romance comic, since
they attach to other, previous or subsequent, achievements, belong in
the canon of romance comic talent, including its inventors, Joe Simon
and Jack Kirby. Observers of the medium suggest that a number of
canonical figures of fifties and sixties comics (or that got their
start there) did so in the early romance comics, acquiring a different
set of skills than required by the superhero stories that once
propelled the medium. Names like Matt Baker, Frank Frazetta, Everett R.
Kinstler, Jay Scott Pike, John Romita Senior, Leonard Starr, Alex Toth,
and Wally Wood belong in this set (according to Jim Korkis in Teen
Angst). Some would go on to distinguish themselves in other genres,
including, but not limited to, the ubiquitous superhero form. We can
add other names to this. Marie Severin, for instance, described one
Marvel job she received doctoring old romance comic pages from the
sixties to make the clothes more appropriate for 1970, installing
details like flared trouser cuffs and pointy collars (a task of
considerable tedium). A particular set of talents developed in the
romance form, including skills not always acquirable in today's
superhero-dominated comics market. In a romance comic, the credibility
of characters and settings assumes an importance generally foreign to
more fantastic genres: Anatomy that never occurs in nature, clothing
that would violate the dress code of a circus, and facial expressions
that fall into two categories (snarl and non-snarl) would all ruin the
plausibility of a romance comic. So artists learned to bring out the
nuances of emoting faces, the detail of conventional clothing, and
human bodies that suggested the beautiful but not the impossible. Using
Romita as an example - if an exceptional one - we can note that his
assumption of the artistic role on Amazing Spider-Man saw an
increasingly expressive set of characters and a definitely more
beautiful female (and, for that matter, male) cast. Romita may not have
worked in the wildly imaginative manner typical of Ditko on pieces like
Dr. Strange stories, but he certainly brought a great deal to the books
he worked on, regardless of the subject matter, and the best things he
brought seemed relevant to his romance comics background. Owing to the
small footprint that romance comics seems to have left on fandom - the
superhero form dominates fandom in a way that leaves some of the
once-diverse comics medium to the attention of scholarly historians of
the subject - locating a canonical list of the artists and writers who
made their careers on this material represents a problem of the very
availability of the information.


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NOTE: THE BELOW COUNTRIES MUST PAY $5.00 (USD) S/H.

    * Afghanistan                                      Albania
    * Angola                                              Belarus
    * Bolivia                                               Bosnia and Herzegovina
    * Bulgaria                                            Burma
    * Democratic Republic of the     * Cote d Ivoire (Ivory Coast)                  Republic of the Croatia     * Cuba                                                  Greece     * Iran                                                   Iraq     * North Korea                                     Lebanon     * Liberia                                               Macedonia     * Montenegro                                     Nigeria     * Paraguay                                           Serbia     * Somalia                                             Sudan     * Syria                                                  Zimbabwe .
how communication arts comics magazines computer designs types fonts graphics grafix graphics arts graphic arts CAD lowbrow lot romances sexy pinups pin-ups headlights GGA BGA bad girl art good girl art sleaze sleazy cartoons playboys penthouses hustlers pornography pornographic vintage risque mens mans nudity classics detectives killers murders murderers mysteries mystery crimes strippers burlesque nudes Spiderman Spider man Batman Daredevil Superman Wonder Woman X-Men Hulk Thor horrors wars loves indy indie weirdos oddballs womans womens army navy air force marines male female

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py spies soldiers pilots snipers bombers 1940's 1950's 1960's 1970's forties fifties sixties seventies



(4)
*?RARE?*

love & romance

#1 fn, sexy charlton romantic girls

#13 fn, sexy charltons romantic girls
["lost castaways" - "robison crusoe, 1973"]

*scarce* #16 fn 1974 pence variant, sexy charltons romantic girl
[psychedelic colors cover art]

*scarce* #17 VF 1974 pence variant, sexy charltons romantic girls
[criminal lover in jail story]

HIGH SCHOOL CLIQUES GIRLS LOVE ROMANCE

The scans/pictures are of the actual books for sale. Photobucket


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Shipping




All comics are bagged and boarded.

In the continental U. S.,
I can ship up to 3 books for $3.00 media mail,


4-8 books, shipping is $4.50 media mail,


9-20 books, shipping is $6.00 media mail,


Over 20 books? Relax. No worries.


I’ll have to get back to you on that with an exact quote.
Shipping to Canada is $9.00. Worldwide shipping is $11.00




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I'm confident you'll find my grading both fair and accurate.

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Please do this before leaving negative or neutral feedback.
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ROMANCE COMIC BOOKS



One comics form, though it enjoyed a decades-long history, became a
casualty to the changing mores of the culture (in addition to the other
vectors that lead comics to extinction). The perceived obsolescence of
the monogamistic ideal, as viewed through the selective lens of the
sexual revolutionary, rendered tales that idealized old-school
approaches to pair-bonding themselves obsolescent. Sometime between the
fifties, romance literature (including prose and comics) would shift
from fantasies about meeting and marrying Prince Charming to fantasies
about husbands who conveniently die to clear the field for the newer,
younger, and more interesting Prince Charmings (see publishers like
Harlequin, et al). In the process, comics fans - which, over time,
increasingly comes to mean superhero comics fans - came to view romance
comics with a sneer, in spite of a much more solid grounding in reality
and an overall greater relevance to readers even vaguely within the
gene pool. Examined as literature, however, the romance comic does not
necessarily have less to offer, storytelling-wise, than, say, the
superhero comic; it just averages a more plausible wardrobe all around,
a few less space aliens, and sound effects less likely to rouse the
children from their naps. And, as with other specimens of the other
comics - the pieces that once existed before superhero comics consumed
the market - the romance comic generally played a variation of one of a
set of fairly reliable themes.



Origins




A great die-off of superheroes began with the end of World War II. The
loss of military contracts to provide disposable reading matter to
servicemen overseas ate into sales figures; the aging of a readership
in a day when one generally considered teenagers too old for reading
comics moved domestic patrons out of the market; and, of course, not
all heroes had what it takes to create an enduring readership. If the
superhero ailed in those days, comics creators themselves kept moving
to attempt to present material that would engage readers and,
therefore, move off the news stands. Sometimes existing genres rose
into the vacancies created by expiring superhero material; sometimes
publishers crowded out failing heroes to make way for other,
theoretically more commercial material. In this era, we saw as a
defining event the eviction of Green Lantern from his own title to make
space for a wonder dog strip. After the end of the war, popular
interest somewhat shifted from martial concerns (say, costumed heroes)
to domestic ones (say, radio serials and movies dealing with romance).
Radio, television, and theater consumed increasing chunks of recreation
time in the decade immediately following the end of the War, and two
innovative talents from the thirties and forties - Joe Simon and Jack
Kirby - decided to test the waters of romance in comic book form in
1947. For its moment, the form would flower, even spawning sub-variants
such as cowboy romance material and Black romance comics. And the
flagship romance comic, Young Romance, would endure through over 200
issues and over 20 years, spanning more than one publisher in the
decades of its existence.



Conventions



False confessions became an early conceit of the romance comics back in
the day when the entire genre belonged to its creators, Simon and
Kirby. Given the fictional device of first-person narration combined
with the relentless maleness of the two creators, one can see as
inevitable that a certain amount of fraud (of the kind absolved by
willing suspension of belief) would originate with comics with female
protagonists. Magazines with titles like True This and Real That led
the way for this approach. Moralism also played a central role, as it
would in a number of comics forms that predated the Code that arose to
address the immorality of the form. Characters met bad ends in
proportion to the bad deeds they perpetrated; blackmailers and
scoundrels could expect disgrace, jail, or even death so reliably that
one would assume moral laws drove the physics of comics. One may also
note that, since the romance comics barely endured into the seventies,
that the morality they depicted resounded with pre-sexual revolution
themes. Hence a norm of hetero-monogamy prevailed. This provided the
third key element: The monogamistic happy ending that stood as the
Mecca all characters seemed to seek in the romance comics. In an age
where Everyman seemed to view marriage as central to long-term
happiness - certainly an arguable position - all tales sought, and
either achieved or failed to achieve, this goal. With some combination
of the three principle conventions of the form, romance comics
furthermore explored tales which typically fell into categories such as
Cinderella fantasies, near escapes, tragic endings, fantastic
redemptions, and just deserts.



Cinderella Fantasies




A harsh commercial of an earlier decade featured a young girl, playing
with some dolls, and babbling on about how a prince would someday take
her as his wife and solve, once and for all, her material needs. This
particular gem of advertising ended with the claim that the young
heroine could expect to appear on the welfare rolls with a head full of
such fantasies. While one might well invite the authors of such
shock-and-naysaying material to lighten up or at least leave the
pessimism at home a few days out of the year, the Cinderella Fantasy
does still offer a sometimes-destructive lure to females in a variety
of cultures. The fantasy tends to do its damage by training young
people to expect a Prince Charming - a kind of deus ex machina but with
money and big pectorals - to make everything right. While one focuses
one's strategies on waiting for unlikely happenings such as the timely
appearance of a Prince, one does not invest in a future made better
through one's own efforts; and this applies across lines of sex,
gender, or whatever folks call it these days. Preparing for the worst
does more good than idling away time hoping for the best without human
effort to back it up. The romance comic originated in a day where
western culture offered many fewer opportunities for self-reliance for
females, and quietly expired in a period that suggested new
possibilities. Perhaps the perceived "corniness" of Cinderella-fantasy
material helped bring the romance comics down; and perhaps such fantasy
became less and less relevant. The publishers of the pure-prose
bodice-ripper don't seem to think so, however.



Near Escapes



The near escape story enjoyed a flexible range of components, depending
on the thing from which our protagonists - typically female - needed to
escape. Their own pasts, simple bad luck, or the schemes of wicked
rivals for a partner's affections (or of wicked contenders for their
own) provided the raw material for the near escape story. Temptation
frequently played a central role in stories of this sort. Partially
because this helped real people to relate to fictional stories, and
partially because too much strength of character can make players
dishwater dull, our stalwart heroines risked falling into the gap
between what they wanted, what they could have, and what they should
have, a differential frequently thrown into contrast by desires for
material security or simple devotion from a tenuous partner in love.
However, the moral determinism of many comics - the poetic justice that
could, if necessary, overturn natural law - ultimately righted wrongs
brought about by the evil intent of characters in the romance comics.
So, if one looks at contemporaneous material, one can see a common
pattern of karmic retribution. The Comics Code Authority did not invent
this morality; it just codified it as an editorial standard with the
power of preemptive censorship for material that failed to comply.



Tragic Endings



On one level, romance comics dared take a more adult approach than many
other forms of comics, including the earlier and later superhero
comics. Free from the burdens created by combining a shared
universe/continuity model with an ongoing monthly publishing schedule,
the romance comic could, if the story required, kill off major players
(who, we must admit, probably never appeared before and almost
certainly would never appear again anyway). This gave a freedom lacking
from comics forms that use editorial models that claim to allow for or
even require change yet must not dispose of the intellectual properties
that move the books in the first place. A widow or ex-lover could
relate the details of the event which forever separated her from her
beau. The five-and-ten pager, after all, allowed creators to reach for
effect rather than requiring them to build on a canon of stories. If
the tone writers and artists sought required the Loving Husband to die
saving the world from the Hun so that his bereaved could get maudlin
and reflect on an idealized version of a short yet intense marriage,
they could slaughter with impunity.


Fantastic Redemptions




Although wickedness tended to bring characters to well-deserved bad
ends, plenty of stories allowed once-wayward characters a chance to
redeem themselves from a past not always fully of their own creation.
Variants of the Reform School Girl Romance and the Poor Girl Transcends
Her Humble Origins made for a consistent fodder of the romance comics.
In general, though, these stories deal with either reformed characters
- meaning protagonists with a seedy past but a fairly upright present
or those who, in the present, do little worse than attempt to conceal a
long-past seediness lest it wreck their futures. And they also conveyed
a moralistic, and frequently unrealistic, message about the concrete
and external benefits due to those who reform on an abstract and
internal level. With this kind of story, the wish-fulfillment element
of the romance comics shows more strongly than in many of the other
versions.



Just Deserts



Wicked women and scandalous rakes both appeared, as a kind of ferment,
in many tales of the old romance comics. Without the Serpent in Eden,
after all, the story amounts to little more than two people picking
fruit off trees all day and trying to invent new ways to combat the
ever-mounting boredom. Someone has to make trouble or nothing might
ever happen. [Misbehaving beaux and belles, as staples of the form.] As
well, the Just Deserts model of romance comics story served its wish
fulfillment aspect rather well. People whom others have wronged, after
all, may wish to see some of the suffering bad people inflict return to
them rather than fall exclusively on the shoulders of the innocent and
the exploited. Typical romance-comics offenses include mate-stealing;
mate-killing, to replace an older model with a newer one; concealment
of an ongoing lurid or criminal double life; and a repertoire of
methods for ruining the lives of married couples for the sake of
attempting to have more than one deserves. The moralism of the form
makes itself well-felt here. Ignore the nihilism of twentieth-century
classical prose pieces like Kafka's "The Metamorphosis;" the rogue and
the vampire (in the old sense of the term, used to label a woman as
greedy and parasitic) either found themselves alone, or in jail, or
even dead.



The Fate of the Form



A multi-tiered attack ultimately caused the romance comics, after a
quarter of a century, to disappear from the news racks. No one of these
forces killed off the form - indeed, it could resurface someday - but
the combination of factors working against this genre ultimately
smothered it under its cumulative weight. A changing morality made
their moral emphasis appear quaint and dated (by modern standards, the
emphasis on hetero-monogamy might appear positively malign); the reward
of home and hearth began to seem irrelevant or even a form of bondage;
across all genres, comics had suffered in the mid and late fifties from
factors including growing disinterest and a censorship of prior
restraint; the post-Stan Lee comics would preempt somewhat the romance
theme by allowing superheroes solid romantic connections; and, finally,
the superhero comic would come to dominate the aesthetic ecosystem of
the form to the point of crowding out other material, regardless of
genre.



The Talent



Names that one normally doesn't associate with the romance comic, since
they attach to other, previous or subsequent, achievements, belong in
the canon of romance comic talent, including its inventors, Joe Simon
and Jack Kirby. Observers of the medium suggest that a number of
canonical figures of fifties and sixties comics (or that got their
start there) did so in the early romance comics, acquiring a different
set of skills than required by the superhero stories that once
propelled the medium. Names like Matt Baker, Frank Frazetta, Everett R.
Kinstler, Jay Scott Pike, John Romita Senior, Leonard Starr, Alex Toth,
and Wally Wood belong in this set (according to Jim Korkis in Teen
Angst). Some would go on to distinguish themselves in other genres,
including, but not limited to, the ubiquitous superhero form. We can
add other names to this. Marie Severin, for instance, described one
Marvel job she received doctoring old romance comic pages from the
sixties to make the clothes more appropriate for 1970, installing
details like flared trouser cuffs and pointy collars (a task of
considerable tedium). A particular set of talents developed in the
romance form, including skills not always acquirable in today's
superhero-dominated comics market. In a romance comic, the credibility
of characters and settings assumes an importance generally foreign to
more fantastic genres: Anatomy that never occurs in nature, clothing
that would violate the dress code of a circus, and facial expressions
that fall into two categories (snarl and non-snarl) would all ruin the
plausibility of a romance comic. So artists learned to bring out the
nuances of emoting faces, the detail of conventional clothing, and
human bodies that suggested the beautiful but not the impossible. Using
Romita as an example - if an exceptional one - we can note that his
assumption of the artistic role on Amazing Spider-Man saw an
increasingly expressive set of characters and a definitely more
beautiful female (and, for that matter, male) cast. Romita may not have
worked in the wildly imaginative manner typical of Ditko on pieces like
Dr. Strange stories, but he certainly brought a great deal to the books
he worked on, regardless of the subject matter, and the best things he
brought seemed relevant to his romance comics background. Owing to the
small footprint that romance comics seems to have left on fandom - the
superhero form dominates fandom in a way that leaves some of the
once-diverse comics medium to the attention of scholarly historians of
the subject - locating a canonical list of the artists and writers who
made their careers on this material represents a problem of the very
availability of the information.


layout for myspace

NOTE: THE BELOW COUNTRIES MUST PAY $5.00 (USD) S/H.

    * Afghanistan                                      Albania
    * Angola                                              Belarus
    * Bolivia                                               Bosnia and Herzegovina
    * Bulgaria                                            Burma
    * Democratic Republic of the     * Cote d Ivoire (Ivory Coast)                  Republic of the Croatia     * Cuba                                                  Greece     * Iran                                                   Iraq     * North Korea                                     Lebanon     * Liberia                                               Macedonia     * Montenegro                                     Nigeria     * Paraguay                                           Serbia     * Somalia                                             Sudan     * Syria                                                  Zimbabwe .
how communication arts comics magazines computer designs types fonts graphics grafix graphics arts graphic arts CAD lowbrow lot romances sexy pinups pin-ups headlights GGA BGA bad girl art good girl art sleaze sleazy cartoons playboys penthouses hustlers pornography pornographic vintage risque mens mans nudity classics detectives killers murders murderers mysteries mystery crimes strippers burlesque nudes Spiderman Spider man Batman Daredevil Superman Wonder Woman X-Men Hulk Thor horrors wars loves indy indie weirdos oddballs womans womens army navy air force marines male female

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py spies soldiers pilots snipers bombers 1940's 1950's 1960's 1970's forties fifties sixties seventies




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