Who Knows What Evil Lurks in the Heart of Presidential Candidates…?

The man in the photo at right is Walter Gibson.

A few items ago, I posted the cover to an actual Barry Goldwater comic book that came out from the same company, Dell, in 1964. There was, of course, a Lyndon B. Johnson issue…and gee, doesn't L.B.J. look unhappy to be on a comic book cover? It's like he's thinking, "Geez…first, the Gulf of Tonkin and now this!" I have no idea where my copies are but as I recall, both books were drawn by Jack Sparling. Sparling, who was enormously prolific in comic books and strips, actually started his career with a political comic. He illustrated a newspaper strip called Hap Hopper, all about a reporter, and the strip was allegedly created and written by Washington columnist Drew Pearson.

To answer a question I often get here, I'm told Mr. Sparling passed away a few years ago. He struck me as a pretty good illustrator who rarely did comics that let him be as good as he could be. From all reports, he was very fast and in comics back then, if you were fast, you often got into the rut of only getting assignments that paid poorly and had to be drawn at lightning speed. We can argue some other time to what extent that's the fault of the publisher (for paying so poorly) or of the artist (for accepting such assignments) but clearly, Sparling was banging it out pretty rapidly for most of his career. In the sixties, he did a lot of 32-page books for Dell that were reportedly pencilled and inked in about four days each, which is about how long some artists would take to sharpen their pencils. I suspect that on these "biography" comics he did for Dell — there were others, as well — they knew how difficult it was to do all those likenesses and research so they paid him a few bucks more a page. And instead of doing an issue in four days, he took five.

Until about an hour ago, I had not known who wrote these comics. That's when I received an e-mail from my pal Anthony Tollin…

I'm pretty sure that my late friend Walter B. Gibson wrote both this [the Goldwater comic] and a corresponding LBJ biographical comic book. Walter had a major, largely unchronicled comic book career, including tons of commercial and industrial giveaway comics. I do recall that Walter was quite amused that he had written biographical comic books for both candidates in the 1964 presidential election.

For those of you unfamiliar with the career of Mr. Gibson, he was a giant in the fields of pulp magazine writing and in magic. He wrote hundreds of Shadow novels under the pen name of Maxwell Grant. That's his photo above next to one of them. He also authored a couple of shelves full of non-Shadow books, including many on the principles and art of prestidigitation. I had not known he ever wrote comics but it makes sense: He was writing mystery novels for Dell at the time and he was known to be an expert on U.S. history and its major figures. He passed away in 1985. I only met him once, ever so briefly at a comic convention but he seemed so bright and clever that I envy folks like Tony who knew him well.

By the way: Tony also reminds me that Harry Langdon, who was mentioned in the previous item, was a cartoonist. So were a couple of other popular silent comedians, including Larry Semon. Some of the gagmen who fashioned their material were also cartoonists. Ernie Bushmiller, the renowned artist of Nancy, for example, wrote for Harold Lloyd and some others. Someone ought to research this topic further and see what kind of correlations can be found between visual physical comedy and gag cartooning. I get around ten e-mails a month from folks who want to write scholarly papers on Jack Kirby and the religious underpinnings in his work. Maybe I can divert one of those authors to this topic.