This is the first of two volumes reprinting copious amounts of comics stories and recounting the career of cartoonist Basil Wolverton. Based on his correspondence and journals, the biographical portion of the books follows Wolverton from childhood to adult day-to-day life as freelance cartoonist, itinerant handyman, persistent contest enterer, and local pastor of the Radio Church of God. Wolverton lived and worked in the Pacific Northwest, unique among the first generation of comic book pioneers. In the precious period before the industry calcified into a commercial institution, Wolverton was free to work under the radar to explore in detail his weird tales of the future. All of Wolverton's non-humorous comic book stories will be presented in full, along with prime examples of his humorous comics and dozens of pages of unpublished art, including editorial drawings, advertisements, caricatures, pulp illustrations, rejected comic book covers, and unsold features.
"It's remarkable to see art so twisted applied to such vivid pulp tales - almost as though Wolverton was trying his hardest to be Alex Raymond, but couldn't help turning out images to rival Salvador Dalí." - The A.V. Club
Basil Wolverton remains an intriguing fixture in the comics medium simply due to his ability to push boundaries, particularly with what early publishers dictated their literary parameters to be. Wolverton was an early non-conformist and pioneered the early crop of weird, esoteric sci-fi comics. This edition by Fantagraphics provides a thorough documentation of Wolverton's early career, starting from his childhood where he demonstrated immense talent producing strips and earning a modest income working in a cannery. Greg Sadowski works with the Wolverton estate to compile an immensely entertaining biography and also includes many of Wolverton's early works like "Brain Bats of Venus", "Escape to Death", "Creeping Death of Neptune", "Spacehawks" and "Robot Woman". The stories may not always resonate due to the oddball structure of the narratives, but the illustrations show of Wolverton's unending creativity and propensity for the grotesque.
As a note, only a minor fraction of this book are made up of Wolverton's comics, the rest is essays, photos and commentary by Sadowski. It's perhaps not the best for those less familiar with Wolverton and might simply appeal to those who have more of an interest in learning more about his career.
I admit it – I picked up this book solely on the cover! The name Basil Wolverton didn’t ring a bell but I had to know who this genius was who created such fabulous art. Turns out he was a comics creator who was born in Oregon in 1909 and began his career in the 1930s. This first volume of two covers his early years.. Comics were then as they are now, a tough business to be in when you’re trying to make a living. Wolverton couldn’t get by on the infrequent checks he received for his work and subsidized them by working in a cannery. All throughout this book there are photos of his many comics, artwork, sketches, family photos, notebooks, and even rejection letters. Author Greg Sadowski presents a treasure trove of artifacts from Wolverton’s career, from childhood to 1940. It was surprising to me the almost dictatorial instructions he received in communications from publishers. He was constantly told to change things, to tone down the grotesque, to be patriotic, that his space themes were passé. It would have been enough to make me quit! Is it still this way in the comics world? It’s clear that Wolverton’s work became better and better over time. But the pressure to produce was harmful to his health and got to his nerves. Guess I’ll find out how he fared in the next volume. I loved this book because Wolverton’s old school space art is some of the best I’ve ever seen.
It's difficult to imagine how this could be surpassed as an overview of Wolverton's early work. Lots of well-reproduced art and photographs, and an abundance of documentary material, including Wolverton's own diary and correspondence with agents and publishers.
The last is particularly illuminating, since it demonstrates how comic artists were micromanaged by their employers—it looks to me like a miserably harried way of making a living—and indeed Wolverton seems to have frequently teetered on nervous breakdowns from the poor pay and countless rejections he endured. One senses that most publishers, with rare exceptions like Stan Lee, actually abhorred unusual or interesting work. Glancing through the online files of comic books from the late '30s and early '40s, one sees the generally tedious result.
My only complaint is that Sadowski plainly favours Wolverton's sci-fi over his humour comics, and we are shown much more of the former than the latter, while my taste runs in the opposite direction. But the book is still a magnificent achievement.
Damn I'm conflicted. I wanted so much to give this 5 stars. For Basil Wolverton's amazing outlandish art work and stories it is definitely a five star book. The biographer and compiler of this great art book, Greg Sadowski, is to be commended and widely lauded by comic fans everywhere for the prodigious work he did on this book. For my taste he relies a bit too much on letters written to Basil from his New York publishers. Instead of a narrative flow to the biographical segments, Sadowski pretty much reprints whole the letters by said publishers which bogs down the text a bit. I found my eyes glazing over a few times because of the repetitive nature of this correspondence. Still, all in all, this is an almost perfect book, beautifully designed and of course includes all that eye-popping Basil Wolverton art.
Esta biografía exhaustiva es una maravilla. Creo que ni los familiares del buen Basil llegaron a ver tanta info junta. Claro que por momentos se puede volver repetitiva, en especial las cartas de rechazo que tuvo en sus comienzos. Pero o se saltea o lectura diagonal... está todo bien. Hay fotos personales, dibujos, bosquejos, historias completas. La edición hermosa, tapa dura rugosa, papel de excelencia, es titánica la tarea de Sadowski. Wolverton fue un precursor a la hora de expandir las posibilidades del dibujo, creando deformidades monstruosas y divertidas a la vez. Imagino que Tex Avery se habrá cruzado con estos trabajos..
A comprehensive look at the life and art of Basil Wolverton. This follows his early development up until the early 1940s. Wolverton had a distinctive style that easily set him apart from his peers as can be seen in this volume, which collects most of his non-fiction work from this time period (excluding Spacehawk, but including art pitch for Disney).
Amazing artis! Ahead of the curve and times! I can not believe a lot of his ideas were rejected. He came into his own once the nineteen fifties kicked in.
Covering Wolverton's earliest years of struggling to get published to is first successful years, this book is text heavy with detailing Wolverton's beginnings in the industry. That said, I thought the essays made for compelling reading in that we see Wolverton was not an overnight success, and that he received much support and guidance form the many editors, agents, publishers who were instrumental in developing his talent and in getting his stories into the early comics of the 1930s and 1940s. The book also features several of his humor stories, as well as a few of Wolverton's adventure stories. The humor stories are quite good and have held up well. Not so much the few adventure stories.
Wonderful book about the "weird" cartoonist Basil Wolverton covering his life up through 1941. Many, many pages of well-reproduced science fiction and humor done for both newspapers and comic books. Also covers his life, with special emphasis on this professional career. Diary entries and letters from publishers are included. It is a bit more detailed than I need, but it is a fascinating look at the comics-publishing world in the first half of the 20th century.
This is more a biography of Basil Wolverton than anything else, the comics included from this era of his career are fun (although if I never see Disk-Eyes again it'll be too soon), but altogether felt like a brief sampling of a larger, better body of work yet to come. No word on a second volume—blegh.
This was perhaps the most important comics publication in 2014, an absolutely essential addition to the understanding of the Golden Age of comic books, and an utterly fascinating biography of the legendary Basil Wolverton.
This is an excellent book exploring the early life and career of comic artist Basil Wolverton. It contains plenty of Wolverton's unmistakable artwork as well as an interesting "behind-the-scenes" look at the early days of the comic book industry.