ROY
THOMAS PRESENTS: THE HEAP VOL. 2 (PS
Artbooks, First Printing, 2013; Hardcover)
Collects
The
Heap
stories from Airboy
Comics
Vol. 5 #5-12, Vol. 6 #1, 12, Vol. 7 #1-8, 10, 11 a/k/a #52-60, 65-79,
81, 82 (cover dates June, 1948- December, 1950)
Writers:
Carmine Infantino, Ernest Schroeder, and other unidentified writers
Artists:
Carmine Infantino, Leonard Starr, Mike Roy, John Belfi, Clement
Weisbacker, Bob Butts, Dan Zolnerowich, Frank Bolle, Paul Reinman,
and Ernest Schroeder
This
batch of stories with the original comic book swamp monster aren't as
enjoyable as the earlier ones found in Volume 1. The artwork remains
good throughout, and the writing has honest to gosh continuity, an
uncommon occurrence for the era. This was a fun read in smaller
doses.
The
OCD zone-
This
is the part where I go into tactile sensations and materials used in
physical media. Those with heart conditions, high blood pressure, or
women who are pregnant should exit my blog at their earliest
convenience, as their safety cannot be guaranteed beyond this point.
I
enjoy huffing these Chinese made books. PS Artbooks smell the best.
Whenever I crack one open I sit there and snort it...Oh
yeah, that's the stuff.
This
book has the ever delectable sweet, sweet toxic Chinese printing
press smell, likely the result of paper sourced from virgin Amazon
rainforests and ink which is a concoction of lead paint chips, broken
and pulped asbestos tiles, mercury from recalled thermometers, and
the final magical ingredient: the blood, sweat, and tears of the
children working the sweatshop printing presses. If loving these
books is wrong then I don't want to be right!
The
sweet smell seems to go away from these books after a few years, so
huff them early and often.
Linework
and Color restoration: Like any PS Artbook, the quality
varies issue by issue. This looks decent for a scan and print
collection.
The
raw scan presentation has the benefit of the feeling of reading the
original comic book. The drawback, which is a huge one subjectively
speaking, is that all of the shortcomings of the primitive four color
printings presses are apparent. Line bleed, off register printing,
and other anomalies are all present. It's a warts and all approach.
Your mileage may vary and it all boils down to your preference.
Paper
stock: Bright white matte stock.
Binding:
Sewn binding.
Hardback
cover notes: Matte casewrap with
spot varnish. No dustjacket. Images printed directly onto the
casewrap.
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