Today's releases from Rebellion – 13 March 2019.
2000AD Prog 2122
Cover: Alex Ronald
JUDGE DREDD: MACHINE LAW by John Wagner (w) Colin MacNeil (a) Chris Blythe (c) Annie Parkhouse (l)
SKIP TRACER: LOUDER THAN BOMBS by James Peaty (w) Paul Marshall (a) Quinton Winter (c) Ellie De Ville (l)
THARG'S 3RILLERS: TOOTH AND NAIL by Andi Ewington (w) Staz Johnson (a) Abigail Bulmer (c) Simon Bowland (l)
GREY AREA: SHOOT TO KILL by Dan Abnett (w) Mark Harrison (a) Ellie De Ville (l)
JAEGIR: BONEGRINDER by Gordon Rennie (w) Simon Coleby (a) Len O'Grady (c) Annie Parkhouse
Judge Anderson: Devourer by Laurel Sills (ebook / paperback)
Rebellion 978-1781-08648-3, 14 March 2019. Available via Amazon. (ebook)
Abaddon Books 978-1781-08745-9, 14 March 2019, 135pp, £7.99. Cover by Christian Ward. (paperback)
The latest fiction novella from 2000 AD – it’s Psi-Judge
Cassandra Anderson’s second year on the streets as a full-Eagle Judge,
and something’s taking down Psi-Judges. More and more are turning up in
the infirmary with only one phrase in their minds: I am not worthy.
Pulled off a hunt for a missing child, Anderson finds herself partnered
with seasoned Judge Mei Yin on the trail of the cult behind the madness.
But Mei Yin doesn’t do partners. And she’s more closely connected with
the case than she’s willing to admit to…
Available as an ebook and as a limited edition paperback.
Wednesday, March 13, 2019
Sunday, March 10, 2019
R H Brock
R.H. BROCK
by
Robert J. Kirkpatrick
R.H. Brock is the “forgotten” Brock brother. Two of his siblings, C.E. Brock and H.M. Brock, were amongst the best-known and most talented illustrators of their era, both with a similar but instantly recognisable style. R.H. Brock was generally regarded as the least talented of the three, and he was certainly nowhere near as prolific. Yet he was a competent and versatile artist, equally at home painting in oils and watercolours as he was illustrating in black and white and colour. Unfortunately, he has been very much ignored by all the major commentators – he merits just a few lines in Simon Houfe’s The Dictionary of British Book Illustrators and Caricaturists 1800-1914, and he hardly features at all in C.M. Skelly’s biography of the Brock family, The Brocks: A Family of Cambridge Artists and Illustrators.
The brothers’ father was Edmund Brock, born in Shepreth, Cambridgeshire, in 1840. His father, Jeremiah, a painter, took the family to Islington, London, where, in his late teens, Edmund became a bookmaker. However, by the mid-1860s he was a member of the Early English Text Society, and he was publishing his own texts – for example translations from the medieval English of some of Chaucer’s works, and a translation of Thomas Malory’s Le Morte d’Arthur. He subsequently spent 40 years working for the Cambridge University Press as a reader specializing in medieval and oriental languages. He married Mary Ann Louise Pegram (born in London in 1836) at Regent’s Park Chapel, Marylebone, on 23 February 1867, moving to Leighton Road, Kentish Town, where their first child, Alice Emma, was born in 1868. They then moved to Hampden Road, Holloway, where C.E. Brock, christened Charles Edmund Brock, was born on 5 February 1870. They then moved to Cornwall Terrace, Friern Barnet, where R.H. (Richard Henry) was born on 21 July 1871, before moving to Cambridge, firstly to Coronation Street, where a third son was born, and then to 4 Perowne Street, where a further three children, including H.M. (Henry Matthew), were born.
Richard, along with his brothers, was educated at St. Barnabas Church of England School and then at the Higher Grade School for Boys in Paradise Street, Cambridge. At the time of the 1891 census he was living with his parents and siblings at 3 Barrie Villas, Abbey Road, and described as a “Pupil Teacher in Art School.” This was the Cambridge School of Art, where he had been studying since 1888. He remained there until at least 1895 – he was a regular prize-winner, and for some years was studying alongside his two brothers.
His career as an illustrator seems to have begun in 1897, when he contributed to The Infants’ Magazine and The Family Friend, both published by S.W. Partridge & Co. However, this appears to have been a false start, as he spent the following 20 years or so concentrating on painting. He specialised in rural scenes, in particular farming, horses, hunting and other country pursuits. He exhibited at the Royal Academy of Arts in 1901, 1903, 1906, 1911, 1912 and 1913, and also occasionally elsewhere, such as Derby in 1905 and Bradford in 1907. He was also a keen musician, playing the violin and cello with the Cambridge Orchestral Society.
In 1916 he began contributing to The Tatler and Punch (he had four drawings published in Punch in 1916 and 1917), and he later contributed to Chums, Printer’s Pie, Outward Bound, The Boy’s Own Paper, The Boys Magazine, Chatterbox, The Wide World Magazine, The Happy Mag, The Detective Magazine, The Red Magazine, The Scout and The Golden Mag. However, he was not a regular contributor to any of these periodicals, although he did contribute sporadically to The Boy’s Own Paper between 1921 and 1932. Between 1918 and 1920 he also illustrated stories published in The Sheffield Weekly Telegraph.
From the mid-1890s onwards he lived with his parents at Arundine House, where he shared a studio with his brothers. In the 1901 census, he was described simply as a painter, whereas his brothers were both recorded as “Artist Painter & Book Illustrator.”
On 25 August 1917, at the Independent Chapel, Hanworth Road, Hounslow, he married Mary Cooke, a schoolmistress, born on 27 November 1882, the daughter of Charles Henry Cooke, a jeweller. Richard continued living in the family home in Madingley Road until late 1938.

Many of the books he illustrated were girls’ stories, by authors such as Margaret Batchelor, Ethel Talbot, E.E. Cowper, Alice Massie, Dorita Fairlie Bruce, Katherine Oldmeadow, Nancy M. Hayes, Brenda Girvin, Violet Methley and Jessie Leckie Herbertson. Amongst the boys’ writers whose books he illustrated were Alfred Judd, Herbert Strang, R.A.H. Goodyear, Stanton Hope and George Manville Fenn.
In total, more than 80 books containing his illustrations have been recorded, although there are almost certainly several more. This does not include the numerous children’s annuals and similar large-format books to which he contributed – these included The Big Book of School Stories for Boys , The Boys’ Book of School Stories, Blackie’s Boys’ Annual, Blackie’s Children’s Annual, Schoolboy Stories Splendid Stories for Girls, The Girls’ Budget, The Boys’ Budget, The Big Budget for Boys, The Grand Adventure Book for Boys, The Golden Budget for Girls, The Golden Budget for Boys, The Blue Line School Stories for Girls, Delightful Stories for Girls, The Jolly Book, Nelson’s Jolly Book for Boys, Nelson’s Budget for Girls, Storyland for Girls, The Empire Annual for Girls, Hulton’s Girls’ Stories, Jolly Days for Girls, The Schoolgirls’ Bumper Book and A Story Book for Me.
He was also responsible for the covers for many of George Newnes’s Black Bess Library and Dick Turpin Library between 1921 and 1930, along with C.P. Shilton.
R.H. Brock’s periodical work appears to have come to an end in 1932, although he continued illustrating books until around 1940. However, he appears to have more or less abandoned his career as an artist prior to this – by 1939 he and his wife were running a boarding house at 14 Priory Avenue, Hastings. They appear to have stopped advertising the boarding house after June 1940, and they subsequently moved to 32 Bulstrode Road, Hounslow.
Richard Henry Brock died, of heart disease, at Bulstrode Road on 11 June 1943, apparently without leaving a will. It is not known when his wife died.
PUBLICATIONS
Books illustrated by R.H. Brock:
Three Girls on a Ranch by Bessie Marchant, Blackie & Son, 1920
Uncle Tom’s Scrape by Theodora Wilson Wilson, Blackie & Son, 1922
A Little Rhodesian by Margaret Batchelor, Oxford University Press, 1922
Camp-fire Stories by Herbert Strang, Oxford University Press, 1922 (with C.E. Brock)
Neighbours at School by Ethel Talbot, Thomas Nelson & Sons, 1923
The Mystery Term by E.E. Cowper, Blackie & Son, 1923
The Secret of Canute’s Island by G. Godfray Sellick, “Boy’s Own Paper” Office, 1923
The Bringing Up of Mary Ann by Alice Massie, Oxford University Press, 1923
A Cherry Tree by Amy Le Feuvre, Oxford University Press, 1923 (re-issue)
The Scouring of the White Horse by Thomas Hughes, Blackie & Son, 1925 (re-issue)
The Holiday Story Book, Blackie & Son, 1923 (with other artists)
One Summer Holiday by Natalie Joan, Thomas Nelson & Sons, 1924
Sally at School by Ethel Talbot, Thomas Nelson & Sons, 1924
Gwenda’s Friend from Home by Margaret Batchelor, Oxford University Press, 1924
Don’s Treasure Trove by Alice Massie, Oxford University Press, 1924
The Children of Sunshine Mine: A Story of Rhodesia by Margaret Batchelor, Oxford University Press, 1924 (with C.E. Brock)
Uncle Tom’s Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe, abridged by C.H. Irwin, ”Boy’s Own Paper” Office, 1924
The Boarding School Girl by Dorita Fairlie Bruce, Oxford University Press, 1925
By Honour Bound: A School Story for Girls by Bessie Marchant, Thomas Nelson & Sons, 1925
The Stranger in the Train and other stories by Ethel Talbot, Sheldon Press, 1925
The Secret Brotherhood by Marjorie C. Bernard, Thomas Nelson & Sons, 1925
Castle Dune by Katherine L. Oldmeadow, Blackie & Son, 1925
Tracked on the Trail by Nancy M. Hayes, Sheldon Press, 1925
Red Roof Farm by Joan Leslie, Oxford University Press, 1925
Witch of the Wilds by E.E. Cowper, Thomas Nelson & Sons, 1925
The Young Folk’s Treasure Chest, “Daily Express” Publications, 1925 (with other artists)
Gytha’s Message: A Tale of Saxon England by Emma Leslie, Blackie & Son, 1925 (re-issue)
The Rood and the Raven by Gertrude Hollis, “Boy’s Own Paper” Office, 1926
June the Girl Guide by Brenda Girvin, Oxford University Press, 1926
Bringing Back the Frasers and other stories by Ethel Talbot, Thomas Nelson & Sons, 1926 (with other artists)
Out and About by various authors, Blackie & Son, 1926 (with other artists)
The Riddle of Randley School by Alfred Judd, Blackie & Son, 1927
Bab’s Two Cousins, or The Organist’s Baby by Kathleen Knox, Blackie & Son, 1927
An Island for Two: A School Story by L.F. Ramsay, Sheldon Press, 1927
Kitty’s Kitten by Herbert Strang, Oxford University Press, 1927
Tom Leaves School by Herbert Strang, Oxford University Press, 1927
Cap’n Benny by Henry Lawrence Phillips, Thomas Nelson & Sons, 1927
The Camp Across the Road by H.B. Davidson, Sheldon Press, 1927
The White Standard by Eliza F. Pollard, Blackie & Son, 1927 (re-issue)
Peterina on the Rescue Trail by E.E. Cowper, Thomas Nelson & Sons, 1928
The Guide Adventurers by Margaret Middleton, Blackie & Son, 1929
The New Centre Forward by Ethel Talbot, Collins, 1929
Another Pair of Shoes by Jessie Leckie Herbertson, Sheldon Press, 1929
The Channings by Mrs Henry Wood, Oxford University Press, 1929 (re-issue)
The Battlefield Treasure by F. Bayford Harrison, Blackie & Son, 1929 (re-issue)
The Three Musketeers by Alexandre Dumas, Blackie & Son, 1930 (re-issue)
Twenty Years After by Alexandre Dumas, Blackie & Son, 1930 (re-issue)
Tales of Beasts and Birds by various authors, Gresham Publishing Co., 1930 (with other artists)
Playing the Game! A Public School Story by Kent Carr, S.W. Partridge & Co., 1931 (re-issue)
The Windmill Guides by Violet Mary Methley, Blackie & Son, 1931
The Makeeshift Patrol: A Story of Girl Guides by H.B. Davidson, S.P.C.K., 1932
The Oakhill Guide Company by Felicity Keith, Blackie & Son, 1933
The Girls of Mystery Gorge by E.E. Cowper, Thomas Nelson & Sons, 1933
The Holiday Story Book, Blackie & Son, 1933 (with C.E. & H.M. Brock)
Warne’s Book of Nursery Tales, Frederick Warne & Co., 1933 (with other artists)
Good Yarns for Boys by various authors, Thomas Nelson & Sons, 1933 (with other artists)
Mystery Camp by Violet Methley, Blackie & Son, 1934
The City of Death: A Story of Mexico by Oliver Barton, Eyre & Spottiswoode, 1934
The Canadian Family Robinson: A Modern Tale of the Shipwreck and the Subsequent Adventures of a Family by Grace E.P. Leonard, “Boy’s Own Paper” Office, 1935
Our Kiddies’ Tales by various authors, William Walker & Sons, 1935 (with other artists)
Pulling Templestone Together by R.A.H. Goodyear, Sampson Low, Marston & Co., 1936
The Mystery of Mingo by Ethel Talbot, Thomas Nelson & Sons, 1936
Two Boys in Australia by Roger Burns, Thomas Nelson & Sons, 1936
How Judy Passed Her Tests by H.B. Davidson, Sheldon Press, 1936
The Marigolds Make Good by Catherine Christian, Blackie & Son, 1937
Robber Castle by Dinah Pares, George G. Harrap & Co., 1937
Orinoco Trail by Stanton Hope, Eyre & Spottiswoode, 1937
Dog-Face by John Easton, Eyre & Spottiswoode, 1937
Malachi’s Cove by Anthony Trollope, re-told by Margaret E. Johnson, Oliver & Boyd, 1937
More Stories of Robin Hood by Albert Sydney Hornby, George G. Harrap & Co., 1938
Dick o’ the Fens by George Manville Fenn, Blackie & Son, 1940 (re-issue)
For the Little Ones by various authors, Blackie & Son, 1941 (with other artists)
Dates not known:
Everyday Stories by various authors, Gresham Publishing Co., (with H.M. Brock & H.R. Miller)
Loran Doone: A Romance of Exmoor by R.D. Blackmore, Blackie & Son,
The Pilgrim’s Progress by John Bunyan, Thomas Nelson & Sons,
The Children of the New Forest
The Cloister and the Hearth by Charles Reade, Blackie & Son,
Two’s Company by Anne Gannell, Blackie & Son, (with other artists)
The Moonstone by Wilkie Collins, Blackie & Son, (re-issue)
Put to the Proof by Mrs Henry Clarke, Blackie & Son, (re-issue) (with W. Dodds)
Friday, March 08, 2019
Juan Arancio (1931-2019)
Argentinean comic artist and painter, Juan Arancio, died of respiratory failure at a hospital in his home town of Santa Fe on March 1, 2019, aged 87. In the UK he is best known for his work on 'Shako', the early 2000AD strip which pitted a CIA hunter, Jake Falmuth, against a polar bear with a taste for human flesh that has swallowed a deadly germ-filled capsule. Arancio's opening episode to the strip set the tone, as Shako sinks his teeth into the pilot of a downed US military plane and bites his head off.
In the tradition of Action's 'Hook Jaw', 'Shako' was created by Pat Mills and John Wagner as an idea potentially for the debut issue of 2000AD, but shelved it until issue 20, with Arancio producing the art for the first four issues.
Juan Arancio was born in Santa Fe, Argentina, on August 24, 1931, and remained a resident of that city his whole life. Self-taught, he won a competition organised by a local daily newspaper with one of his childhood creations, 'El Gaucho Saverio'.
Debuting in 1950, Arancio became famous as an illustrator and artist working from his own scripts for comics such as Privateering Pete, Trinchera, Puño de Hierro, Poncho Negro and Vida Escolar; he also produced westerns for Interval, El Tony and Anteojito y Clarin. At the same time, he adapted classic novels by Héctor Pedro Blomberg, Lucio V. Mansilla, Alberto Vaccarezza, Emilio Salgari, Julio Verne, H. Rider Haggard, Robert Louis Stevenson, Alexandre Defoe, Jorge Luis Borges; amongst the novels he adapted were Cadazdores de Ballenas, Misterios de la Jungla Negra, El Quijote, La Conquista del Desierto, Una Excursión a los Indios Ranqueles, Dick Turpin and, on numerous occasions, Martin Fierro, the famous Argentinian gaucho. One of his adaptations originally published by Editorial Colmegna in Santa Fe won an award in Philadelphia.
Arancio worked with Hector Oesterheld on ‘Patria Vieja’ for Hora Cero in 1960, following the departure of Carlos Roume, and on ‘Santos Bravo for Hora Cero Extro (1961).
Outside of his native country, as well as ‘Shako’ (1977), Arancio drew the western ‘Timber Lee’ (1978-80) for Scorpio Editorial (Milan, Italy) and for Walt Disney Studios (USA). His illustrations appeared in Europe, Asia, South Africa, Australia, Rhodesia, Canada, the Dominican Republic and New Zealand. He also illustrated a version of Don Segundo Sombra for Japan.
He has won numerous awards and prizes, dating back to 1954 when a painting won a prize from the Museo Municipal de Artes Visuales. He was awarded the Distinción Bienal at Lucca in 1976 and was appointed a Ciudadano Ilustre de la Ciudad de Santa Fe [Illustrious citizen of the city of Santa Fe] in 1991.
Since the early 1980s, Arancio had concentrated on painting and exhibitions of his work have been produced in Spain, Germany, Sicily, Canada and the USA. His oil paintings hang in the Museo Provincial de Bellas Artes, the Museo Provincial de Artes Visuales and elsewhere.
In the tradition of Action's 'Hook Jaw', 'Shako' was created by Pat Mills and John Wagner as an idea potentially for the debut issue of 2000AD, but shelved it until issue 20, with Arancio producing the art for the first four issues.
Juan Arancio was born in Santa Fe, Argentina, on August 24, 1931, and remained a resident of that city his whole life. Self-taught, he won a competition organised by a local daily newspaper with one of his childhood creations, 'El Gaucho Saverio'.
Debuting in 1950, Arancio became famous as an illustrator and artist working from his own scripts for comics such as Privateering Pete, Trinchera, Puño de Hierro, Poncho Negro and Vida Escolar; he also produced westerns for Interval, El Tony and Anteojito y Clarin. At the same time, he adapted classic novels by Héctor Pedro Blomberg, Lucio V. Mansilla, Alberto Vaccarezza, Emilio Salgari, Julio Verne, H. Rider Haggard, Robert Louis Stevenson, Alexandre Defoe, Jorge Luis Borges; amongst the novels he adapted were Cadazdores de Ballenas, Misterios de la Jungla Negra, El Quijote, La Conquista del Desierto, Una Excursión a los Indios Ranqueles, Dick Turpin and, on numerous occasions, Martin Fierro, the famous Argentinian gaucho. One of his adaptations originally published by Editorial Colmegna in Santa Fe won an award in Philadelphia.
Arancio worked with Hector Oesterheld on ‘Patria Vieja’ for Hora Cero in 1960, following the departure of Carlos Roume, and on ‘Santos Bravo for Hora Cero Extro (1961).
Outside of his native country, as well as ‘Shako’ (1977), Arancio drew the western ‘Timber Lee’ (1978-80) for Scorpio Editorial (Milan, Italy) and for Walt Disney Studios (USA). His illustrations appeared in Europe, Asia, South Africa, Australia, Rhodesia, Canada, the Dominican Republic and New Zealand. He also illustrated a version of Don Segundo Sombra for Japan.
He has won numerous awards and prizes, dating back to 1954 when a painting won a prize from the Museo Municipal de Artes Visuales. He was awarded the Distinción Bienal at Lucca in 1976 and was appointed a Ciudadano Ilustre de la Ciudad de Santa Fe [Illustrious citizen of the city of Santa Fe] in 1991.
Since the early 1980s, Arancio had concentrated on painting and exhibitions of his work have been produced in Spain, Germany, Sicily, Canada and the USA. His oil paintings hang in the Museo Provincial de Bellas Artes, the Museo Provincial de Artes Visuales and elsewhere.
Labels:
Juan Arancio,
Obituary
Comic Cuts 8 March 2019
I can see the light at the end of the tunnel on these company profiles that I have been writing since December. I'm working on sixty-something of eighty, so another few weeks and I'll be on the job market again.
I should be hauling stuff out of boxes and putting it on Ebay, because I've always put it off "until I get some spare time". Well, my time might be going spare for some while, judging by the job market around here, so maybe I should be looking on this as an opportunity, not unemployment.
A couple of fun things from this week. We had pancake day on Wednesday rather than Tuesday, Mel cooking up some batter that tasted superb with lemon and sugar – some people go all-out these days with honey, syrup or red pepper & cheese filling, spicy beans, lettuce & avocado (I kid you not). Did you toss your batter, I hear you ask, and I say Ooooh, no, missus. Actually, yes, and despite the pancakes being thin and floppy, we both managed a couple of successful tosses. At least nothing ended up on the floor.
I'm also very pleased to say that I've managed to pick up a couple of books I've been looking out for and relatively cheaply. One is Satan Ltd. by Gwyn Evans, the third and final Bill Kelloway novel in a series that started with Hercules, Esq. I wrote a book about Evans – The Lunatic, the Lover and the Poet – but I was always short of a few of his books in my collection. This fills one of the gaps and I have a second book on the way to fill another. I'm seriously thinking of reprinting some of his work for Kindle and in print form... something else to fill my ample spare time with!
Incidentally, the cover to my book on Evans used a colour rough of the Satan Ltd. cover. It was painted by Hynd G. Wolfe, an artist living in Hornsey in the 1930s with his mother and sister. Mother Alice V. Wolfe died in 1944, aged 78, and I can find her daughter, Alice V. E. Wolfe, at addresses in Hornsey in 1947-52, but can find no further trace of artist Hynd, nor his sister.I'll have to do a bit more digging when I get a chance.
With Mel away for the weekend, I was left to my own devices and took the opportunity to watch The Punisher. I loved the first season and the new season, out on Netflix a couple of months ago, didn't disappoint. Too often in comics, and in their TV and movie adaptations, the hero differentiates himself from the villain by not taking the villain's life at the end of the story.
This is fine in a kid's comic – who wants to waste a good villain? But not when the the majority of the audience are adults and your protagonists continue to make the decisions they made in the 1930s. You can't place your heroes in the real world and tell the audience "comics aren't just for kids anymore," and then ignore the real-world consequences of letting villains go, or jailing them only to have them escape time and time again.
(Don't forget, I'm a tree-hugging, Guardian-reading lefty and comments here apply only to comic books and their adaptations.)
I say, kill 'em all.
If Batman had snapped the neck of the Joker after their first meeting, think of the lives he would have saved. Hundreds, maybe thousands, of bank tellers, police officers, innocent bystanders and even fellow criminals who would be alive today if only Batman had had the courage and foresight to just snap the neck of this monster with no empathy, no morals, and no regrets. No amount of therapy is going to make him safe to walk the streets... and, frankly, I'm surprised he doesn't face the death penalty every time he's captured. An insanity plea might work at first, but eventually a jury would have seen him for the cold, calculating monster he actually is.
How many times does he have to escape from Arkham Asylum to murder again before Batman decides that, in order to protect Gotham, it's better that the Joker doesn't survive their next encounter?
Which brings me to The Punisher. He has the attitude that the bad guys need to be killed before they kill you or others. He has a code that stops him from killing randomly. That's a code I can get behind.
(Again, I remind you that we're talking about comic book characters, not real life.)
The TV series has an advantage over, say, Gotham, or even some of its rapidly diminishing Netflix family of Marvel titles, in that the Punisher isn't fighting recognisable, iconic villains of the stature of The Joker, Penguin or The Riddler. His ongoing battle across seasons one and two is with Billy Russo, whose actions inadvertently led to Frank Castle's family being killed. Castle subsequently throws Russo through a glass window, giving him the jigsaw of deep facial scars that earn him his nickname in the comics (Jigsaw), although it isn't used on the TV series.
For the most part he's faced with (often literally) dozens of goons who are the red shirts of all action thrillers. The sidekicks and minions that can be slaughtered without anyone feeling anything for them. It can be done with style or with brute force, but rarely is it done with both quite as well as it is here. It lacks the balletic qualities of a John Woo or even a John Wick, but every brutal pummeling in the show is choreographed to maximize moments of bone-crunching horror.
The Punisher may overcome his enemies but he never escapes unhurt, and here is the difference between this show and other thudding heroes... Frank Castle is troubled by what he is, thinking himself a necessary evil in a violent world. He is aware that he is damaged. Compared to the old Stallone and Schwarzenegger movies, Jon Bernthal gives a nuanced performance worthy of an Oscar. I've enjoyed every one of his appearances, which started with Daredevil season 2 and grew from there.
There's only one season of Jessica Jones to go before the Netflix / Marvel collaboration ends. What a shame. I really wish that wasn't the case.
I should be hauling stuff out of boxes and putting it on Ebay, because I've always put it off "until I get some spare time". Well, my time might be going spare for some while, judging by the job market around here, so maybe I should be looking on this as an opportunity, not unemployment.
A couple of fun things from this week. We had pancake day on Wednesday rather than Tuesday, Mel cooking up some batter that tasted superb with lemon and sugar – some people go all-out these days with honey, syrup or red pepper & cheese filling, spicy beans, lettuce & avocado (I kid you not). Did you toss your batter, I hear you ask, and I say Ooooh, no, missus. Actually, yes, and despite the pancakes being thin and floppy, we both managed a couple of successful tosses. At least nothing ended up on the floor.
I'm also very pleased to say that I've managed to pick up a couple of books I've been looking out for and relatively cheaply. One is Satan Ltd. by Gwyn Evans, the third and final Bill Kelloway novel in a series that started with Hercules, Esq. I wrote a book about Evans – The Lunatic, the Lover and the Poet – but I was always short of a few of his books in my collection. This fills one of the gaps and I have a second book on the way to fill another. I'm seriously thinking of reprinting some of his work for Kindle and in print form... something else to fill my ample spare time with!
Incidentally, the cover to my book on Evans used a colour rough of the Satan Ltd. cover. It was painted by Hynd G. Wolfe, an artist living in Hornsey in the 1930s with his mother and sister. Mother Alice V. Wolfe died in 1944, aged 78, and I can find her daughter, Alice V. E. Wolfe, at addresses in Hornsey in 1947-52, but can find no further trace of artist Hynd, nor his sister.I'll have to do a bit more digging when I get a chance.
With Mel away for the weekend, I was left to my own devices and took the opportunity to watch The Punisher. I loved the first season and the new season, out on Netflix a couple of months ago, didn't disappoint. Too often in comics, and in their TV and movie adaptations, the hero differentiates himself from the villain by not taking the villain's life at the end of the story.
This is fine in a kid's comic – who wants to waste a good villain? But not when the the majority of the audience are adults and your protagonists continue to make the decisions they made in the 1930s. You can't place your heroes in the real world and tell the audience "comics aren't just for kids anymore," and then ignore the real-world consequences of letting villains go, or jailing them only to have them escape time and time again.
(Don't forget, I'm a tree-hugging, Guardian-reading lefty and comments here apply only to comic books and their adaptations.)
I say, kill 'em all.
If Batman had snapped the neck of the Joker after their first meeting, think of the lives he would have saved. Hundreds, maybe thousands, of bank tellers, police officers, innocent bystanders and even fellow criminals who would be alive today if only Batman had had the courage and foresight to just snap the neck of this monster with no empathy, no morals, and no regrets. No amount of therapy is going to make him safe to walk the streets... and, frankly, I'm surprised he doesn't face the death penalty every time he's captured. An insanity plea might work at first, but eventually a jury would have seen him for the cold, calculating monster he actually is.
How many times does he have to escape from Arkham Asylum to murder again before Batman decides that, in order to protect Gotham, it's better that the Joker doesn't survive their next encounter?
Which brings me to The Punisher. He has the attitude that the bad guys need to be killed before they kill you or others. He has a code that stops him from killing randomly. That's a code I can get behind.
(Again, I remind you that we're talking about comic book characters, not real life.)
The TV series has an advantage over, say, Gotham, or even some of its rapidly diminishing Netflix family of Marvel titles, in that the Punisher isn't fighting recognisable, iconic villains of the stature of The Joker, Penguin or The Riddler. His ongoing battle across seasons one and two is with Billy Russo, whose actions inadvertently led to Frank Castle's family being killed. Castle subsequently throws Russo through a glass window, giving him the jigsaw of deep facial scars that earn him his nickname in the comics (Jigsaw), although it isn't used on the TV series.
For the most part he's faced with (often literally) dozens of goons who are the red shirts of all action thrillers. The sidekicks and minions that can be slaughtered without anyone feeling anything for them. It can be done with style or with brute force, but rarely is it done with both quite as well as it is here. It lacks the balletic qualities of a John Woo or even a John Wick, but every brutal pummeling in the show is choreographed to maximize moments of bone-crunching horror.
The Punisher may overcome his enemies but he never escapes unhurt, and here is the difference between this show and other thudding heroes... Frank Castle is troubled by what he is, thinking himself a necessary evil in a violent world. He is aware that he is damaged. Compared to the old Stallone and Schwarzenegger movies, Jon Bernthal gives a nuanced performance worthy of an Oscar. I've enjoyed every one of his appearances, which started with Daredevil season 2 and grew from there.
There's only one season of Jessica Jones to go before the Netflix / Marvel collaboration ends. What a shame. I really wish that wasn't the case.
Labels:
Comics News
Thursday, March 07, 2019
Commando 5207-5210
Spiders, jets, avengers, and rebels! All this in brand new Commando issues 5207 – 5210 out today! Plus, the debut of a new Commando cover artist and the second part of the WAR ACROSS EUROPE trilogy!
5207: WAR ACROSS EUROPE: Resist!
The second instalment of Commando’s one-off, three-part series WAR ACROSS EUROPE! After fleeing their homeland after its invasion, Stefan and Grigor join the French Resistance to take the fight back to the Nazis! With strong iconography of the Free French Forces symbol superimposed over the French flag, Neil Roberts really captures the spirit of the French rebels fighting to reclaim their homeland!
Story: Iain McLaughlin
Art: Morhain & Defeo
Cover: Neil Roberts
5208: Jet Blitz
An exciting aviation adventure brought to life by the incomparable Gordon C Livingstone! A tale of cowardice and blackmail from McOwan, which is so exciting it keeps the audience —and the Hawker Tempest pilot protagonists — collectively on the edge of their seats!
Story: McOwan
Art: Gordon C Livingstone
Cover: James
Originally Commando No. 243 (1967). Reprinted No. 907 (1975).
5209: American Avenger
Commando is very, very, VERY happy to introduce the newest artist to join the squadron, Keith Burns! And what a way to start – with the cover for ‘American Avenger’! There’s so much energy and atmosphere packed into the cover of Ferg Handley’s Pacific war story, we could stare at it for hours! Burns is well know for his wealth of experience and prowess painting aviation covers, so when the Commando Team met him at Military Odyssey in 2018, they couldn't wait to have Burns join to Commando ranks!
Story: Ferg Handley
Art: Paolo Ongaro
Cover: Keith Burns
5210: Shadow of the Spider
Along came a spider in this Commando issue! We hope you aren’t afraid of creepy crawlies as there’s a big hairy boy on Alan Burrows eye-bulging cover! What’s more, CG Walker’s plot catches you in its web, and weaves a mystery which traps the reader like a fly! But we’ll keep the story secret for now – we wouldn’t want to string anyone along!
Story: CG Walker
Art: CT Rigby
Cover: Alan Burrows
Originally Commando No. 2952 (1996).
5207: WAR ACROSS EUROPE: Resist!
The second instalment of Commando’s one-off, three-part series WAR ACROSS EUROPE! After fleeing their homeland after its invasion, Stefan and Grigor join the French Resistance to take the fight back to the Nazis! With strong iconography of the Free French Forces symbol superimposed over the French flag, Neil Roberts really captures the spirit of the French rebels fighting to reclaim their homeland!
Story: Iain McLaughlin
Art: Morhain & Defeo
Cover: Neil Roberts
5208: Jet Blitz
An exciting aviation adventure brought to life by the incomparable Gordon C Livingstone! A tale of cowardice and blackmail from McOwan, which is so exciting it keeps the audience —and the Hawker Tempest pilot protagonists — collectively on the edge of their seats!
Story: McOwan
Art: Gordon C Livingstone
Cover: James
Originally Commando No. 243 (1967). Reprinted No. 907 (1975).
5209: American Avenger
Commando is very, very, VERY happy to introduce the newest artist to join the squadron, Keith Burns! And what a way to start – with the cover for ‘American Avenger’! There’s so much energy and atmosphere packed into the cover of Ferg Handley’s Pacific war story, we could stare at it for hours! Burns is well know for his wealth of experience and prowess painting aviation covers, so when the Commando Team met him at Military Odyssey in 2018, they couldn't wait to have Burns join to Commando ranks!
Story: Ferg Handley
Art: Paolo Ongaro
Cover: Keith Burns
5210: Shadow of the Spider
Along came a spider in this Commando issue! We hope you aren’t afraid of creepy crawlies as there’s a big hairy boy on Alan Burrows eye-bulging cover! What’s more, CG Walker’s plot catches you in its web, and weaves a mystery which traps the reader like a fly! But we’ll keep the story secret for now – we wouldn’t want to string anyone along!
Story: CG Walker
Art: CT Rigby
Cover: Alan Burrows
Originally Commando No. 2952 (1996).
Wednesday, March 06, 2019
Rebellion Releases (2000AD)
Releases from Rebellion for 6-7 March 2019.
2000AD Prog 2121
Cover: Simon Fraser
JUDGE DREDD: MACHINE LAW by John Wagner (w) Colin MacNeil (a) Chris Blythe (c) Annie Parkhouse (l)
SKIP TRACER: LOUDER THAN BOMBS by James Peaty (w) Paul Marshall (a) Quinto Winter (c) (a) Ellie De Ville (l)
THARG'S 3RILLERS: TOOTH AND NAIL by Andi Ewington (w) Staz Johnson (a) Abigail Bulmer (c) Simon Bowland (l)
GREY AREA: THE GREY & THE BLACK by Dan Abnett (w) Mark Harrison (a) Ellie De Ville (l)
JAEGIR: BONEGRINDER by Gordon Rennie (w) Simon Coleby (a) Len O'Grady (c) Annie Parkhouse
Judge Dredd: Cold Wars by Rob Williams, John Wagner, Michael Carroll (w) Trevor Hairsine, Barry Kitson, Dylan Teague, Dan Cornwell, Pj Holden, Colin MacNeil, Paul Davidson (a).
Rebellion 978-1781-08695-7, 7 March 2019, 145pp, £14.99 / $19.99. Available via Amazon.
The timely and critically acclaimed brand-new collection featuring Judge Dredd’s latest thrilling adventures! After returning from a mission into Sov territory, Judge Dredd finds himself at odds with fellow veterans of another past conflict – The Apocalypse War. Under orders from the Justice Department, Dredd returns to the depths of Siberia where things start to go wrong… even his training and iron will might not be enough against the bitter cold, angry mutants and the echoes of past conflicts! Re-awakening the Cold War, this prescient satire on current events viewed through the lense of Dredd’s world is written by legendary 2000 AD creators Michael Carroll (Every Empire Falls, Judges), Rob Williams (Trifecta, Doctor Who) and Dredd co-creator John Wagner, and features breath-taking art by 2000 AD icons Trevor Hairsine (Cla$$War), Dan Cornwell (Rok of the Reds), Paul Davidson (Moon Knight), and Colin MacNeil (Wolverine)
2000AD Prog 2121
Cover: Simon Fraser
JUDGE DREDD: MACHINE LAW by John Wagner (w) Colin MacNeil (a) Chris Blythe (c) Annie Parkhouse (l)
SKIP TRACER: LOUDER THAN BOMBS by James Peaty (w) Paul Marshall (a) Quinto Winter (c) (a) Ellie De Ville (l)
THARG'S 3RILLERS: TOOTH AND NAIL by Andi Ewington (w) Staz Johnson (a) Abigail Bulmer (c) Simon Bowland (l)
GREY AREA: THE GREY & THE BLACK by Dan Abnett (w) Mark Harrison (a) Ellie De Ville (l)
JAEGIR: BONEGRINDER by Gordon Rennie (w) Simon Coleby (a) Len O'Grady (c) Annie Parkhouse
Judge Dredd: Cold Wars by Rob Williams, John Wagner, Michael Carroll (w) Trevor Hairsine, Barry Kitson, Dylan Teague, Dan Cornwell, Pj Holden, Colin MacNeil, Paul Davidson (a).
Rebellion 978-1781-08695-7, 7 March 2019, 145pp, £14.99 / $19.99. Available via Amazon.
The timely and critically acclaimed brand-new collection featuring Judge Dredd’s latest thrilling adventures! After returning from a mission into Sov territory, Judge Dredd finds himself at odds with fellow veterans of another past conflict – The Apocalypse War. Under orders from the Justice Department, Dredd returns to the depths of Siberia where things start to go wrong… even his training and iron will might not be enough against the bitter cold, angry mutants and the echoes of past conflicts! Re-awakening the Cold War, this prescient satire on current events viewed through the lense of Dredd’s world is written by legendary 2000 AD creators Michael Carroll (Every Empire Falls, Judges), Rob Williams (Trifecta, Doctor Who) and Dredd co-creator John Wagner, and features breath-taking art by 2000 AD icons Trevor Hairsine (Cla$$War), Dan Cornwell (Rok of the Reds), Paul Davidson (Moon Knight), and Colin MacNeil (Wolverine)
Sunday, March 03, 2019
New Ebay listings
A few items that I'm listing on EBay. Click on the link to see the listing.
Vargo Statten Magazine, v1no1, 1954, Ron Turner cover, stories by Fearn, Tubb SOLD
Vargo Statten Magazine v1no.2, 1954, John Richards cover, stories by Fearn, Tubb
Vargo Statten Magazine v1no.3, 1954, John Richards cover, stories by Fearn, Glasby
Vargo Statten Magazine v1no.4, 1954, Ron Turner cover, stories by Fearn, Tubb, Bayley SOLD
British SF Magazine, ed. Vargo Statten no6, 1954, John Richards cover, stories by Fearn, Tubb
British SF Magazine, ed. Vargo Statten no8, 1954, John Richards cover, stories by Fearn, Burke
British Space Fiction v2no1, 1955, cover by Ron Turner, stories by Fearn, Bulmer
British Space Fiction v2no2, 1955, cover by Ron Turner, stories by Fearn
British Space Fiction v2no3, 1955, cover by Ron Turner, stories by Fearn
British Space Fiction v2no4, 1955, cover by Ron Turner, stories by Fearn, Bayley
British Space Fiction v2no5, 1955, cover by Ron Turner, stories by Fearn, Bayley, Coverless
No Man's Land by George Pratt
Wired, May 1996, James Cameron interview, Greenpeace, etc.
Wired, June 1996, Iain M. Banks interview/story SOLD
Wired, February 1997, George Lucas interview, pirate software, etc.
Wired, May 1999, George Lucas int., Universal theme park, etc.
Giles 24th series, cartoons from 1969-70
Giles 25th series, cartoons from 1970-71, intro by The Two Ronnies
Giles Annual 28th Series, cartoons from 1973-74, intro. by Mike Yarwood SOLD
Giles Annual 29th series, cartoons from 1974-75, intro by Tommy Cooper
Giles Annual, 49th Series, cartoons from 1965-84, intro by Lesley Joseph
Giles - A Life In Cartoons by Peter Tory, Pedigree, 1992, hardcover
Vargo Statten Magazine v1no.2, 1954, John Richards cover, stories by Fearn, Tubb
Vargo Statten Magazine v1no.3, 1954, John Richards cover, stories by Fearn, Glasby
British SF Magazine, ed. Vargo Statten no6, 1954, John Richards cover, stories by Fearn, Tubb
British SF Magazine, ed. Vargo Statten no8, 1954, John Richards cover, stories by Fearn, Burke
British Space Fiction v2no1, 1955, cover by Ron Turner, stories by Fearn, Bulmer
British Space Fiction v2no2, 1955, cover by Ron Turner, stories by Fearn
British Space Fiction v2no3, 1955, cover by Ron Turner, stories by Fearn
British Space Fiction v2no4, 1955, cover by Ron Turner, stories by Fearn, Bayley
British Space Fiction v2no5, 1955, cover by Ron Turner, stories by Fearn, Bayley, Coverless
No Man's Land by George Pratt
Wired, May 1996, James Cameron interview, Greenpeace, etc.
Wired, February 1997, George Lucas interview, pirate software, etc.
Wired, May 1999, George Lucas int., Universal theme park, etc.
Giles 24th series, cartoons from 1969-70
Giles 25th series, cartoons from 1970-71, intro by The Two Ronnies
Giles Annual 29th series, cartoons from 1974-75, intro by Tommy Cooper
Giles Annual, 49th Series, cartoons from 1965-84, intro by Lesley Joseph
Giles - A Life In Cartoons by Peter Tory, Pedigree, 1992, hardcover
Labels:
Ebay
Thomas Somerfield
THOMAS SOMERFIELD
by
Robert J. Kirkpatrick
Thomas Somerfield was once known to two or three generations of readers of the boys’ story paper Chums as a prolific illustrator of adventure and historical stories. He also contributed to several other periodicals from 1904 onwards, and he also illustrated several boys’ novels as well as two or three girls’ stories and a couple of books for younger readers, but he is now completely forgotten.
He was born on 26 December 1876 at Ecclesall Bierlow, Sheffield, and baptised in the Parish Church at Heeley (now a suburb of Sheffield). His father was Thomas Somerfield, born in Ecclesall Bierlow in 1850, a surgical instrument maker who also patented several (non-surgical) inventions. His mother was Annie, née Memmott, born in Sheffield in 1853. Thomas was the first of their five children. At the time of the 1881 census the family was living at 209 Richard Road, Heeley. Ten years later, they were recorded at 16 Bradwell Street, Heely.
Thomas junior was educated at the Sheffield Central School before entering the Sheffield School of Art in 1897, where he went on to be a regular prize-winner.
His career as an illustrator appears to have begun in 1904, when he began contributing caricatures and illustrations for short stories in The Sheffield Weekly Telegraph. At the same time he also contributed to the Amalgamated Press’s The Boys’ Friend, and two years later, having moved to London, he began contributing to Cassell’s Magazine and, most notably, to Cassell’s boys’ paper Chums. He went on to work for Chums until 1937, illustrating 16 adventure, mystery and historical serials by authors such as Lewis Hough, D.H. Parry, Eric W. Townsend, George E. Rochester, John Hunter and Charles Gilson, and numerous short stories.
On 9 July 1908, at St. Luke’s Church, Chelsea. He married Edith Absolon, born on 25 June 1883 and the daughter of Philip de Mansfield Absolon, whose father was the illustrator John Absolon. Thomas was living at 49 Danvers Street, Chelsea, at that time, but after the marriage he and Edith moved to “Chelsey,” 18 Beverley Road, New Malden, Surrey, where they had their only child, Denis Hugh, born on 4 June 1911.
By then, Thomas had begun contributing to various other periodicals, including The Red Magazine, The New Magazine and The Wide World Magazine, and up until just after the outbreak of the First World War he went on to contribute to Cassell’s Magazine of Fiction, The Strand Magazine (for which one of his contributions was two illustrations for an article, “Stranger Than Fiction,” by Arthur Conan Doyle in December 1915), and The Boy’s Own Paper (for which he illustrated several short stories plus four serials including one by Percy F. Westerman).
On 21 June 1916 he joined the Royal Naval Air Service, serving as an Aircraftsman until he was transferred to the RAF Reserve in February 1919 and discharged on 30 April 1920.
He had also begun illustrating children’s books in 1913, beginning with Jack Corvit, Patrol Leader, a boy scouts story written by V.R. Nendick and published by C. Arthur Pearson, and, in sharp contrast, My Book About the Post Office, written by Edith Robarts and published by Blackie & Son the following year. He went to illustrate a further ten or so books until 1923, including two stories by May Wynne. In the meantime, he had also been contributing to The Yellow Magazine, The Detective Magazine, and to the boys’ magazines The Captain and The Scout.
He appears to have concentrated on his work for Chums after the mid-1920s, although seven more boys’ adventure stories appeared with his illustrations between 1935 and 1937, all published by George G. Harrap & Co. He had also contributed to a small number of children’s annuals and story collections, such as The Boys’ Treasury, The Brown Book for Boys, The Oxford Annual for Scouts, and Jolly Pets (published by Blackie).
By 1930, he had moved to 26 Beverley Road, New Malden, which is where he died on 21 February 1937, leaving an estate valued at £1,751 (just over £100,000 in today’s terms). His wife remained at that address until her death at the Royal Hospital, Richmond, on 2 January 1947 – she left £668, with probate granted to her son Denis, then working as a commercial artist. (He occasionally exhibited his paintings, for example at the Royal Academy in 1941, and he also worked as the publicity artist for The Daily Mail. He died in Woking in May 1986.)
PUBLICATIONS
Books illustrated by Thomas Somerfield
Jack Corvit, Patrol Leader, or Always a Scout by V.R. Nendick, C. Arthur Pearson, 1913
My Book About the Post Office by Edith Robarts, Blackie & Son, 1914
Wonders of the Post by Edith Robarts, Blackie & Son, 1915
The Buried Treasure by R.G. Wood, George Newnes Ltd., 1915
Kitchener’s Army and the Territorial Forces: The Full Story of a Great Achievement by Edgar Wallace, George Newnes Ltd., 1915
Round the Camp Fire by Herbert Strang, Oxford University Press, 1917
Stories of War and Peace by Herbert Strang, Oxford University Press, 1917
Mervyn, Jock or Joe by May Wynne, Blackie & Son, 1921
The White Man’s Trail: A Story of Adventure and Mystery in the Canadian Wilds by Robert Leighton, C. Arthur Pearson, 1922
Christmas at Holford: A Story of Exciting Holidays by May Wynne, Blackie & Son, 1922
The People of the Chasm by Christopher Beck, C. Arthur Pearson, 1923
A Heather Holiday by May Wynne, Blackie & Son, 1923
The Vicar’s Little Treat by Gregson Gow, Blackie & Son, 1929
Romany Wonder Tales by Frederick I. Cowles, George G. Harrap & Co., 1935
The Menace of the Terribore: A Modern Adventure Story by John Dolben Mackworth, George G. Harrap & Co., 1936 (with Reginald Mills)
The Sanctuary of the Maidar by A. Lloyd Owen, George G. Harrap & Co., 1936 (with Reginald Mills)
The Secret Aeroplane by D.E. Marsh, George G. Harrap & Co., 1936
Red-Leg Morgan by William Macmillan, George G. Harrap & Co., 1936
The Fighting “Seagull” by D.E. Marsh, George G. Harrap & Co., 1937
The Rajah of Gungra by D.E. Marsh, George G. Harrap & Co., 1937
by
Robert J. Kirkpatrick
Thomas Somerfield was once known to two or three generations of readers of the boys’ story paper Chums as a prolific illustrator of adventure and historical stories. He also contributed to several other periodicals from 1904 onwards, and he also illustrated several boys’ novels as well as two or three girls’ stories and a couple of books for younger readers, but he is now completely forgotten.
He was born on 26 December 1876 at Ecclesall Bierlow, Sheffield, and baptised in the Parish Church at Heeley (now a suburb of Sheffield). His father was Thomas Somerfield, born in Ecclesall Bierlow in 1850, a surgical instrument maker who also patented several (non-surgical) inventions. His mother was Annie, née Memmott, born in Sheffield in 1853. Thomas was the first of their five children. At the time of the 1881 census the family was living at 209 Richard Road, Heeley. Ten years later, they were recorded at 16 Bradwell Street, Heely.
Thomas junior was educated at the Sheffield Central School before entering the Sheffield School of Art in 1897, where he went on to be a regular prize-winner.
His career as an illustrator appears to have begun in 1904, when he began contributing caricatures and illustrations for short stories in The Sheffield Weekly Telegraph. At the same time he also contributed to the Amalgamated Press’s The Boys’ Friend, and two years later, having moved to London, he began contributing to Cassell’s Magazine and, most notably, to Cassell’s boys’ paper Chums. He went on to work for Chums until 1937, illustrating 16 adventure, mystery and historical serials by authors such as Lewis Hough, D.H. Parry, Eric W. Townsend, George E. Rochester, John Hunter and Charles Gilson, and numerous short stories.
On 9 July 1908, at St. Luke’s Church, Chelsea. He married Edith Absolon, born on 25 June 1883 and the daughter of Philip de Mansfield Absolon, whose father was the illustrator John Absolon. Thomas was living at 49 Danvers Street, Chelsea, at that time, but after the marriage he and Edith moved to “Chelsey,” 18 Beverley Road, New Malden, Surrey, where they had their only child, Denis Hugh, born on 4 June 1911.
By then, Thomas had begun contributing to various other periodicals, including The Red Magazine, The New Magazine and The Wide World Magazine, and up until just after the outbreak of the First World War he went on to contribute to Cassell’s Magazine of Fiction, The Strand Magazine (for which one of his contributions was two illustrations for an article, “Stranger Than Fiction,” by Arthur Conan Doyle in December 1915), and The Boy’s Own Paper (for which he illustrated several short stories plus four serials including one by Percy F. Westerman).
On 21 June 1916 he joined the Royal Naval Air Service, serving as an Aircraftsman until he was transferred to the RAF Reserve in February 1919 and discharged on 30 April 1920.
He had also begun illustrating children’s books in 1913, beginning with Jack Corvit, Patrol Leader, a boy scouts story written by V.R. Nendick and published by C. Arthur Pearson, and, in sharp contrast, My Book About the Post Office, written by Edith Robarts and published by Blackie & Son the following year. He went to illustrate a further ten or so books until 1923, including two stories by May Wynne. In the meantime, he had also been contributing to The Yellow Magazine, The Detective Magazine, and to the boys’ magazines The Captain and The Scout.
He appears to have concentrated on his work for Chums after the mid-1920s, although seven more boys’ adventure stories appeared with his illustrations between 1935 and 1937, all published by George G. Harrap & Co. He had also contributed to a small number of children’s annuals and story collections, such as The Boys’ Treasury, The Brown Book for Boys, The Oxford Annual for Scouts, and Jolly Pets (published by Blackie).
By 1930, he had moved to 26 Beverley Road, New Malden, which is where he died on 21 February 1937, leaving an estate valued at £1,751 (just over £100,000 in today’s terms). His wife remained at that address until her death at the Royal Hospital, Richmond, on 2 January 1947 – she left £668, with probate granted to her son Denis, then working as a commercial artist. (He occasionally exhibited his paintings, for example at the Royal Academy in 1941, and he also worked as the publicity artist for The Daily Mail. He died in Woking in May 1986.)
PUBLICATIONS
Books illustrated by Thomas Somerfield
Jack Corvit, Patrol Leader, or Always a Scout by V.R. Nendick, C. Arthur Pearson, 1913
My Book About the Post Office by Edith Robarts, Blackie & Son, 1914
Wonders of the Post by Edith Robarts, Blackie & Son, 1915
The Buried Treasure by R.G. Wood, George Newnes Ltd., 1915
Kitchener’s Army and the Territorial Forces: The Full Story of a Great Achievement by Edgar Wallace, George Newnes Ltd., 1915
Round the Camp Fire by Herbert Strang, Oxford University Press, 1917
Stories of War and Peace by Herbert Strang, Oxford University Press, 1917
Mervyn, Jock or Joe by May Wynne, Blackie & Son, 1921
The White Man’s Trail: A Story of Adventure and Mystery in the Canadian Wilds by Robert Leighton, C. Arthur Pearson, 1922
Christmas at Holford: A Story of Exciting Holidays by May Wynne, Blackie & Son, 1922
The People of the Chasm by Christopher Beck, C. Arthur Pearson, 1923
A Heather Holiday by May Wynne, Blackie & Son, 1923
The Vicar’s Little Treat by Gregson Gow, Blackie & Son, 1929
Romany Wonder Tales by Frederick I. Cowles, George G. Harrap & Co., 1935
The Menace of the Terribore: A Modern Adventure Story by John Dolben Mackworth, George G. Harrap & Co., 1936 (with Reginald Mills)
The Sanctuary of the Maidar by A. Lloyd Owen, George G. Harrap & Co., 1936 (with Reginald Mills)
The Secret Aeroplane by D.E. Marsh, George G. Harrap & Co., 1936
Red-Leg Morgan by William Macmillan, George G. Harrap & Co., 1936
The Fighting “Seagull” by D.E. Marsh, George G. Harrap & Co., 1937
The Rajah of Gungra by D.E. Marsh, George G. Harrap & Co., 1937
Friday, March 01, 2019
Comic Cuts - 1 March 2019
Just my luck: it's the warmest February on record, the sun is shining and I've managed to catch a cold. I woke up on Tuesday feeling a bit rough, but got through the day with a few sniffles and sneezes. Dosed up with paracetamol, I had an early night, but woke up at four in the morning with a blocked nose and sore throat.
Will some of the Co-op's own "Max Strength Cold & Flu Relief Powder for Oral Suspension: Lemon Flavour" – that's what it's called! – do the trick. Let me just take a sip of my oral suspension and I'll let you know.
I've just finished the third season of Berlin Station, which is one of the better spy series on TV at the moment. (You can find it on More4 here in the UK, although they're still catching up on earlier episodes.)
A Russian oligarch close to the Kremlin plans to destabilize Estonia by way of ramping up tensions between Estonians and Russians living in the country. Assassination takes out the moderate political voice, misinformation drives a wedge between the populations, and an attack takes out the electricity and communications across large portions of the country.
An invasion force has been created to rush in and "rescue" Russian citizens, drawing Estonia back into Russian control; other Baltic states will likely follow suit, re-creating the USSR and the conditions to bring down the Iron Curtain once again.
Far-fetched? Not when you learn that the US military had to block a Russian troll farm from disrupting the US midterms last year. The military shut down the Internet Research Agency of St. Petersburg, "a company underwritten by an oligarch close to President Vladimir Putin," the action taken in order "to thwart attempts to interfere with a US election" according to The Washington Post (26 February 2019). It's not quite an invasion, but, as they would have said in Berlin Station, it's "right out of the Crimean playbook."
Richard Armitage, central to the first two series, is sidelined for much of the new series, a captive of the Russians and although Rhys Ifans is back, he's hasn't the screentime he was given last season. No, this time, centre stage is Leland Orser as Robert Kirsch, who hasn't had the flashy, front man role in previous seasons but who still managed to establish himself as deputy chief at the CIA's Berlin office under both Richard Jenkins (as Steven Frost, also returning this series) and Michelle Forbes (Valerie Edwards, the current Section Chief). The whole series could be run from Kirsch's nervous energy like a battery. He could probably have powered Estonia.
It's an up-to-the-minute Spooks, more colourful than Le Carre with all the usual spycraft and plenty of twists and turns. The show is unflinching when it comes to its treatment of characters; some self-serving bastards for once act and behave like self-serving bastards and, like Spooks, not everyone is going to survive to see season four. And I do hope there is a season four.
My oral suspension isn't helping much.
I don't know what it is about Berlin, but I've just started watching the second season of Counterpart, which I'll discuss once I've watched it all the way through. I'm also reading the spy thriller Berlin Nightfall by Jack Grimwood (or Jon Courtenay Grimwood as he's better known) which I suppose I could also describe as more colourful than John Le Carre. It's certainly an enjoyable romp.
I was going to talk about what a no deal Brexit means to me as a small publisher, but it's too damn depressing. I feel like we're putting up our own Berlin Wall and in a few years we're going to be queuing up at the Eurotunnel, sitting in our equivalent of a Trabant, desperately wanting to buy jeans in France.
Instead, here's a picture of a kitten wondering what the hell we're doing to ourselves and our country.
Will some of the Co-op's own "Max Strength Cold & Flu Relief Powder for Oral Suspension: Lemon Flavour" – that's what it's called! – do the trick. Let me just take a sip of my oral suspension and I'll let you know.
I've just finished the third season of Berlin Station, which is one of the better spy series on TV at the moment. (You can find it on More4 here in the UK, although they're still catching up on earlier episodes.)
A Russian oligarch close to the Kremlin plans to destabilize Estonia by way of ramping up tensions between Estonians and Russians living in the country. Assassination takes out the moderate political voice, misinformation drives a wedge between the populations, and an attack takes out the electricity and communications across large portions of the country.
An invasion force has been created to rush in and "rescue" Russian citizens, drawing Estonia back into Russian control; other Baltic states will likely follow suit, re-creating the USSR and the conditions to bring down the Iron Curtain once again.
Far-fetched? Not when you learn that the US military had to block a Russian troll farm from disrupting the US midterms last year. The military shut down the Internet Research Agency of St. Petersburg, "a company underwritten by an oligarch close to President Vladimir Putin," the action taken in order "to thwart attempts to interfere with a US election" according to The Washington Post (26 February 2019). It's not quite an invasion, but, as they would have said in Berlin Station, it's "right out of the Crimean playbook."
Richard Armitage, central to the first two series, is sidelined for much of the new series, a captive of the Russians and although Rhys Ifans is back, he's hasn't the screentime he was given last season. No, this time, centre stage is Leland Orser as Robert Kirsch, who hasn't had the flashy, front man role in previous seasons but who still managed to establish himself as deputy chief at the CIA's Berlin office under both Richard Jenkins (as Steven Frost, also returning this series) and Michelle Forbes (Valerie Edwards, the current Section Chief). The whole series could be run from Kirsch's nervous energy like a battery. He could probably have powered Estonia.
It's an up-to-the-minute Spooks, more colourful than Le Carre with all the usual spycraft and plenty of twists and turns. The show is unflinching when it comes to its treatment of characters; some self-serving bastards for once act and behave like self-serving bastards and, like Spooks, not everyone is going to survive to see season four. And I do hope there is a season four.
My oral suspension isn't helping much.
I don't know what it is about Berlin, but I've just started watching the second season of Counterpart, which I'll discuss once I've watched it all the way through. I'm also reading the spy thriller Berlin Nightfall by Jack Grimwood (or Jon Courtenay Grimwood as he's better known) which I suppose I could also describe as more colourful than John Le Carre. It's certainly an enjoyable romp.
I was going to talk about what a no deal Brexit means to me as a small publisher, but it's too damn depressing. I feel like we're putting up our own Berlin Wall and in a few years we're going to be queuing up at the Eurotunnel, sitting in our equivalent of a Trabant, desperately wanting to buy jeans in France.
Instead, here's a picture of a kitten wondering what the hell we're doing to ourselves and our country.
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