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P**F
Harvey Kurtzman Goes To War!
Before he created Mad Magazine, Harvey Kurtzman worked on EC comic books "Frontline Combat" and "Two-Fisted Tales" in the early 1950's. Right here in this fantastic volume, are the first 6 issues of: "Two-Fisted Tales" and all of them in COLOR !!!With art by Jack Davis, Will Elder, Alex Toth, John Severin, Wally Wood, Johnny Craig and Harvey. This is Stunning Stuff. All of these tales were written and edited by Harvey, and with themes that vary from pirates, cowboys, jungle tales, World War II and Korea, these gritty stories are dark, funny and smart.This isn't your father's, Sgt. Rock or Nick Fury...These are "Two-Fisted Tales" and if you enjoy five star comics you are gonna have a great time reading this Book. If you want to find out just what the fuss is all about concerning the EC Comic Books, give this Volume a try...These are Excellent Stories with some of the Greatest Art, ever seen in the Comics Genre.Four Stars !!!
V**2
An Eye opener in my youth
As a child who grew up watching the World at War series with my dad on tv, and loving tales from teachers, family , and friends about their time in the military, I grew up loving these movies. Movie portrayals mostly painted the US military as invincible and with few mistakes against a faceless enemy out to undo our way of life, then I read Frontline Combat and Two Fisted Tales, and all of the sudden war wasn't as glamorous, not that I was that naive, war was never real on film until the late 60's on. These were just comics, but stories that hit home. Kurtzman and company showed more of a human element to war than Hollywood ever did. This is something I'm impressed the most of all about these books.With that being said and out of the way, the artwork is what has always separated EC from all other comics. The faces, the emotions, and the horror in the details is what brought out a visceral response to their stories by (grown-ups) of their day. Plus it did represent well a picture of what was going on at the time. The artwork is and will always be some of the finest ever and the story telling is a lot of times right on the mark.
B**S
Two-Fisted Tales - beautiful old school comic book brilliance
I am a huge fan of William Gaines, Mad Magazine and his EC comics from the early 50's - before congress censored them. They are beautiful drawn, and, even more significant, extremely well written stories. "Two Fisted Tales" are generally war stories, but with more than just explosions and other violence. So glad Russ Cochran re-published these great, fun works in stunning volumes.
R**N
Five Stars
great would buy more!!
T**N
THE LESSER KNOWN EC COMICS ARE STILL GREAT!
When you think about EC Comics you normally think about those wonderfully ghoulish titles such as Tales from the Crypt, Vault of Horror, and Haunt of Fear. However, EC Publisher William Gaines and editor/writer Harvey Kurtzman were nothing if not resourceful and pragmatic. While EC's horror titles get the most notoriety, the company produced a multitude of different types of comics including thrillers, science fiction and fantasy comics, medical dramas, adventures, and much more. On the surface, Two-Fisted Tales appears to be nothing more than the average war comic...but in truth, nothing was average about EC Comics. These stories were produced in the early 1950's, just a handful of years after World War II. America was settling in and enjoying a decade of prosperity and relative peace.The Korean Conflict had broken out and EC was there to produce war comics just as so many others were. Yet Kurtzman went in a completely different direction than most of his contemporaries. While most war comics were gung-ho, rah-rah, all aboard the patriot train rides, Kurtzman and EC were the first to truly look at the serious side of war. As Kurtzman states, he felt an obligation to the youth of the nation not to glamorize war but to rather show the reality of war as opposed to the comical stereotypes that we'd seen in comics since the early 1940's.This kind of groundbreaking realism is exemplified in a tale simply called "War Story" written by Kurtzman with art by John Severin. This is a Korean War yarn about a soldier who hurls racial slurs, as well as bullets, at the enemy and is only too happy to kill the them, even after they've surrendered. This sadistic view of the American soldier had to shock many readers in 1950 whose idea of military men were formed primarily by pro-American war films of the 1940's.But before you think that Two-Fisted Tales is only about war, think again...These stories are brimming with adventure, from mutiny on the high seas to intrigue in the Far East, to diamond smugglers in the Amazon to shootouts in the Wild West. As usual, the roll-call of artists whose work is included in the book features some of the all-time greats including Wally Wood, Al Feldstein, Johnny Craig, Jack Davis, Alex Toth, and Kurtzman himself, who also wrote all of the stories.As a long time fan of the mercurial Wally Wood, I loved all of his work in Two-Fisted Tales. "Brutal Captain Bull" finds a young English gentleman pressed into service aboard a British naval ship in the early 1800's, serving under the sadistic Captain Bull. Later, Wood's story "Devils in Baggy Pants" features his brilliant art in a tale about the legendary paratroopers of the Army's 82nd Airborne Division.Two-Fisted Tales Vol. 1 features the first six issues of the series in a hardcover format that includes several side articles by Publisher Russ Cochran. It's a gorgeous book with re-mastered colors making them look as bold as the day they were printed.
D**S
Color EC Archives Two-Fisted Tales Volume 1
This is an excellent reproduction of the anti-war comics that were published by Entertaining Comics (EC) in the early 1950's. The archive collection is in color (as compared to an earlier collection printed in black and white format). The stories cover the Korean War, World War II, World War I, and many other wars dating back throughout history. The artists were the best in the field at that time and the stories by Harvey Kurtzman are considered comics classics. This volume contained the first six comics in the Two-Fisted Comics series. Three more future volumes will provide the complete run of this highly collectible title.
H**S
Great Comic Art
In the 1950s EC Comics was the rage of comic readers. Unfortunately, too many "bleeding hearts" came out to reform the comics industry and many comics which today are considered great art in the comics genre stopped publishing, among these casualties was the great EC line which included the "Two Fisted Tales" and "Frontline Combat" series. Those two titles carried stories that were beautifully illustrated and accurately researched by the artists of the EC stable. The two publications stood head and shoulders in quality above other war comics of the day. It is good that the reprinted Archive series of the EC line have been made available to today's readers and collectors and have acquired a new legion of EC fans.
K**R
Arghhh!!!!!
Gut wrenching, perspiring, tosterone filled war tales. Love this stuff. Liked it when I was a kid, and I like it now.
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