Monday, June 30, 2025

A Tasty Spirit Jam!


Spirit Jam is a 1998 reprint of one of the more impressive artistic stunts of the Indy era. In the 30th issue of The Spirit Magazine from 1981, the folks at Kitchen Sink (spearheaded by in-house Eisner expert Cat Yronwode) arranged for a host of artists and writers to try their hand at a few pages of a single shared Spirit story. The story was kicked off and wrapped up by Will Eisner but in between were all manner of renditions of the 40's comic icon by some of the most potent names of the era.


Pete Poplaski penciled the wraparound cover. It's gorgeous and features the inking of the following talents: Peter Poplaski, Will Eisner, Milton Caniff, John Pound, Denis Kitchen, Richard Corben, and Leslie Carbaga.





































Also included in the square-bound reprint was the four-page Cerebus Jam story by Eisner and Dave Sim. Eisner handled the Spirit figures and Sim most everything else.







And to close things off here are two wonderful renderings of the Spirit with some iconic heroes.



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Sunday, June 29, 2025

Captain Kentucky Day!




(Don Rosa as Captain Kentucky)

Don Rosa was born on this date in 1951. He of course is most famous for his outstanding Uncle Scrooge stories which relate the epic fictional life of Disney's grouchiest duck. I first ran across the work of Rosa on his comic series Captain Kentucky for the Louisville Times. I had these collections at one time but no longer. But the covers are smashing nonetheless. 


Lancelot Pertwillaby was created originally by Rosa for his Pertwillaby Papers, a strip that ran in the University of Kentucky campus newspaper The Kentucky Kernal. Pertwillably was an adventurer and many aspects of these early Rosa yarns made their way into his later Disney work. Lancelot himself went on to become Captain Kentucky. 


Following the local success of The Adventures of Captain Kentucky, Rosa was able to find far greater success when he was able to get his mitts on his favorite characters, the Duck clan as realized in comics by Carl Barks. It is the "Barksian Universe" which is magnificently realized in Rosa's masterpiece The Life and Times of Uncle Scrooge. The series was originally run in comic book form in America in the Gladstone days of the comics in the 90's. 

















The series was collected in two magnificent trades by Gladstone's successor Gemstone. The advantage of these editions is the detailed information about the sources and inspirations for each story. 



Much more recently Fantagraphics has published the saga in two very handsome hardback volumes, which can be bought in a handsome slipcase. But alas, the stories are presented minus the background information found in the earlier Gemstone volumes. If you've never experienced Rosa's artwork, I heartily recommend it in whatever form you can find it. 

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