Showing posts with label Joe Sinnott. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Joe Sinnott. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 22, 2020

Xmas in the Emergency Room YOUNG DOCTORS "Dr Tom Brent: Christmas Comes in August!"

You have no idea how few medical-themed Yuletide comics stories there are...

...until you try to find one...and end up with a tale that's the victim of terrible printing!
This never-reprinted tale from Charlton's Young Doctors #6 (1963) unfortunately shows off the terrible printing Charlton Comics was famous for.
The publisher didn't utilize the printing companies literally every other comics publisher used.
Instead, to save money, they printed on old, second-hand presses.
But these presses had been constructed to handle cardboard and plastic packaging, not the much-thinner paper used for comics!
As a result, their comics had an amazing amount of smearing and off-register color, as you can see from the first page.
It's a shame, because the art by penciler Joe Sinnott and inker Vince Colletta deserves a better presentation!
BTW, Young Doctors was an anthology title featuring tales of all the MDs who had their own Charlton books, including, of course, Dr Tom Brent, Young Intern!
We're taking next week off, but we'll be back after New Year's Day!

Friday, June 26, 2020

CoronaVirus Comics SUE AND SALLY SMITH: FLYING NURSES "No Serum for Greed"

Though the title characters usually worked together...
...both Sue and Sally also had solo globe-trotting adventures!
The twin Smith sisters worked for "Emergency Corps", a Doctors Without Borders-type organization that sent medical personnel to hot spots all over the world.
From forest fires to typhus outbreaks, the Flying Nurses could handle it all, as this never-reprinted story by writer Joe Gill, penciler Joe Sinnott and inker Vince Colletta from Charlton's Sue and Sally Smith: Flying Nurses #48 (1962) proves!
Notes: #48 was the duo's first issue!
Before that, the comic was My Secret Life, but after the duo debuted in #47...
...the book was renamed for them!
No mention of a psychic link the two shared in this debut was ever made again — which is a shame, because it really would have come in handy for them in later stories...at least until the book was cancelled with #54!
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Marvel Comics, The American Cancer Society and the Story So Nice, They Told it Twice!

Actually, it wasn't a "nice" tale, but we wanted an alliterative title... In 1982, Marvel and the American Cancer Society  c...