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Failed Escapism
Wednesday, August 6, 2008

Through the Past Swamply
Thursday, June 26, 2008

One More Time with Feeling: Get Smart, Get Scalped
Tuesday, June 10, 2008

The Comic Strip Life and Fade of Schulz’s Shermy
Monday, May 19, 2008

Thank You For “Voting”…And Where ARE The Rabid Fanboys?
Monday, April 14, 2008

Pick Your Favorite Comic Book!
Wednesday, March 26, 2008

A Bright Cinder from Neglected Ashes
Monday, March 10, 2008

Trapped in a World He Helped Us Tolerate
Saturday, February 16, 2008

Confessions of a KISS Fan
Saturday, February 2, 2008

Men of Action
Monday, January 14, 2008




Who's Who in the CBU 2008

Name: Jim Kingman

Jim Kingman has been a faithful reader and collector of comic books for over thirty years. He currently publishes Comic Effect, a quarterly fanzine dedicated to emphasizing the fun in reading comics from all ages Golden, Silver, and Modern! For more on CE, check out its website at ComicEffect.Com.

Long Week, Short Column, Great Cover

Print 'Long Week, Short Column, Great Cover'Recommend 'Long Week, Short Column, Great Cover'Discuss 'Long Week, Short Column, Great Cover'Email Jim KingmanBy Jim Kingman

I will give DC’s 1997 mega-crossover event, Genesis, some credit; if I hadn’t been searching for tie-in issues over the weekend I wouldn’t have stumbled across this great illustration by John Totleben that graces the cover of The Spectre #56. It just stopped me in my tracks. It’s breathtaking (just as a landscape), gruesome (that is one ugly face), captivating (it has a familiar quality; Ray Harryhausen would’ve had a field day with the monster design), and terrifying (how would one stop a creature like this?).

The painting has nothing to do with the story inside, which stands on its own merits (writer John Ostrander and artist Tom Mandrake created a fantastic Spectre series; I highly recommend it). You don’t really need a story for a cover like this, the image tells it all. It disturbs and unsettles, and you just can’t take your eye off it (pun intended; I need some levity here). The people on the ship are so doomed.



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© 2004-, Jim Kingman