ALL
STAR COMICS ARCHIVES VOL. 5 (DC,
First Printing, 1999; Hardcover)
Collects
All
Star Comics
#19-23 (cover
dates Winter, 1943- Winter, 1944)
Writers:
Gardner Fox and Sheldon Mayer (co-plotter) with Jack Kirby (some
Sandman rewrites)
Artists:
Joe Gallagher, Stan Aschmeier, Joe Simon, Jack Kirby, Bernard Baily,
Joe Gallagher, Sheldon Moldoff, Joe Kubert, Cliff Young, Steve
Brodie, and Frank Harry
The
novelty of reading scarce and expensive old comics has long since
worn off for me after nearly fifteen years into the golden age of
collected editions. We fans have been spoiled rotten by the
embarrassment of riches shoveled at us in all directions in any
number of formats. Since the novelty is gone, we are left with two
avenues with which to judge these works. One is reading these comics
in a purely academic sense, weighing their historical significance
against other comics of the day. The other is how does it read
through modern eyes in 2017. Modern meaning my middle-aged eyes, for
what it's worth, but eyes that have still never read these comic
books before.
With
that in mind we jump in to this sixth volume in the line (there was a
Vol. 0). The award winning formula of the day is still intact. The
team starts each issue with a meeting and are suddenly presented with
a challenge or mystery of some sort which requires the team to split
up in order to tackle the problem more efficiently. This formula is
used in every issue. While this might seem tedious or monotonous to a
modern day fan, bear in mind that these comics were read primarily by
children and that many people didn't buy every single issue of every
title back then.
At
this point The Justice Society Of America is Hawkman, Johnny Thunder
(and his Thunderbolt), The Spectre, Sandman (the second, crappier
version), Star Man, The Atom, Doctor Fate, Dr. Mid-Nite, and their
secretary, Wonder Woman. Yes, that's right, the second most powerful
member of the team is left behind to take notes. Societal mores being
what they were, I guess that this appealed to the kids of the 1940s.
#20
finds the team fighting their first true super villain, The Monster.
While they have fought costumed foes before, this is the first one
with augmented abilities. The story in #21 would have done nothing
but create multiple divergent timelines rather than solve the problem
that the team faced. I wonder how the DC continuity experts have
worked that one out. The Psycho-Pirate proved to be a worthwhile
nemesis in issue 23.
This
was a moderately entertaining read. The stories have no plot twists
and the endings are telegraphed a mile away, but these were aimed at
children over 70 years ago. It's easy to criticize the lack of
sophistication in the writing or artwork here in 2017. This stuff is
still important and worthy of your attention. If it weren't for The
Justice Society Of America we would never have gotten The Justice
League of America for Stan Lee to rip off with The Avengers.
Junk
Food For Thought rating: 3.5 out of 5.
The
OCD zone-
The following are omitted from this book:
On
Silver Wings,
a half page text story from #19.
Fuller
Phun And Archibald Club
one page gag strip from #20.
Fat
And Slat
one page gag strip from #21 and 22.
Who's
Who In Whoville
one page gag strip from #23.
Pervia
Problem,
one page text story from #23.
Why
were these omitted? DC's collected editions department has little
method to their madness.
Linework
and Color restoration:
Off-white matte coated stock with a slight sheen.
Binding:
Smyth sewn binding. It's a little tight but loosens as you read it.
Dustjacket
and Hardback cover notes:
Thick laminated dustjacket. Casewrap has faux leather grain with foil
stamping.
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