For my money, there are only a handful of comic book artists that deserve the title of ‘master’. They are Jack Kirby, Steve Ditko, and Wally Wood.
Wood’s art was always superb no matter if he were drawing a science fiction strip, a humor story or superheroes. Wood’s hyper-realism and mastery of the now lost art of zip-a-tone transfixed me as a kid and still does. After all these years, I can look at his art and STILL find something new to marvel at.
This collection brings together all of Wood’s stories from MAD issues #1-23 when MAD was virtually changing the comic landscape around it. The bulk of the stories are Wood’s satires on movies (“The Wild 1”), comic books (“Bat-boy and Rubin”) or comic strips (“Flesh Garden”) but there are a few other items included as well. I especially enjoyed the strip that compared what really happened in movies to how they were portrayed in movie posters.
Most of this material isn’t particularly rare, having been reprinted several times in different formats. This, however, is an inexpensive collection featuring bright, full color pages that are the same size as comics. If you bought these comics off the stands in the 1950s, this is how they would look.
Comic artists (and writers as well) would do well to study Wood who drew comics as if he had been born to do it and hated them with an almost equal passion.
As usual, the link to buy the book is here.

I love Evan Dorkin’s work. I’ll read literally anything by him and the comic series about the members of the Eltingville Comic Club have been some of his best work. The series is actually a scathing indictment about many of the problems, prejudices and sheer ugliness that can, and has, appeared in fandom. Dorkin’s pen is ruthless here drawing blood as he provokes laughs. The members of the club are all deplorable human beings and there is really little about them that is likeable but they are not meant to be people one would look up to or aspire to be like. They are meant to be warnings against the type of people that fandom often creates and nurtures.
Every so often I read a book or graphic novel that just blows me away so completely that, after finishing it, I am speechless.
It would be basically impossible to be a fan of weird literature from the 80s on and NOT be aware of Clive Barker. His ground-breaking collection, THE BOOKS OF BLOOD, set the standard for much of what was to follow. After his health crisis, and near death, it was worried that Barker would never write again but he proved everyone wrong with this novel that came out in 2015.
I think that I must have read a different REVIVAL book by Stephen King than other people did. I kept seeing rave after rave about this book and how Lovecraftian it was and that it was a great story. So I must be missing something here.
This is an interesting novel that plays a bit with the history of Lovecraft and his mythos. I enjoyed it overall but found the fact that some of the Providence geography was off to be somewhat annoying. I know, in one case, it was important for the story but when one lives right near Providence, it can be aggravating to see mistakes like this. The way it’s written leaves it open for a sequel which I would read. This was a curious blend of noir and Lovecraft and it worked rather well.
I’ve always loved ghost stories.
I discovered this book while browsing the Mystery section in my local library. It immediately caught my attention.
It’s hard to overstate the importance of this book in the history of comics in general and Superman in particular.