| Scorchy Smith And The Art Of Noel Sickles | 
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Avg. Customer Rating:   (based on 6 reviews) Sales Rank: 91350 Category: Book
Author: Noel Sickles Publisher: IDW Publishing Studio: IDW Publishing Manufacturer: IDW Publishing Label: IDW Publishing Languages: English (Original Language), English (Unknown), English (Published) Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 394 Shipping Weight (lbs): 6.3 Dimensions (in): 11.1 x 11 x 1.7
ISBN: 1600102069 Dewey Decimal Number: 741 EAN: 9781600102066 ASIN: 1600102069
Publication Date: July 30, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description Noel Sickles drew comics for three brief years, yet his groundbreaking work on the 1930s aviation adventure series Scorchy Smith is a milestone in the history of newspaper comic strips. Over the past 70 years, however, readers have seen only occasional excerpts of this seminal work. Now, IDW's Library of American Comics presents Scorchy Smith and The Art of Noel Sickles, a comprehensive, oversized volume that collects, for the first time, every Sickles Scorchy strip, from December 1933 through November 1936.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 1 more reviews...
  Finally a Quality Reprint of this Influential Comic Strip November 21, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Noel Sickles never really had any great ambition to be a comic strip cartoonist, but nonetheless ended up being one of the most influential of the 20th century.
Scorchy Smith was an awful Associated Press aviation adventure strip penned by John Terry. Sickles called Terry the worst cartoonist ever, and he wasn't exaggerating much. When Terry became ill Sickles was given the thankless task of ghosting the strip in that horrible 'style'. Luckily for Sickles the ghosting period didn't last long, as Terry soon died. Sickles was then given free rein to experiment, and in the process he revolutionized the way adventure strips are drawn. Sickles is credited with popularizing the chiarascuro technique for adventure comic strips, a style that his buddy Milton Caniff more famously appropriated for his Terry and the Pirates. Sickles experimented endlessly in Scorchy, and this volume shows Sickles playing with various techniques, changing the look of the strip practically on a week by week basis.
Little fanfare has been given to Sickles writing talents. He famously disliked the process of writing the strip, and I expected therefore to have a hard slog reading through his entire three year stint. However, I was gratified to find that Sickles' writing was far better than I had been led to expect. His stories make good internal sense, a basic factor lacking in some highly celebrated strips, and one that keeps me from enjoying many adventure strips. His plots, according to essayist Bruce Canwell often loose adaptations of his favorite western movies, are entertaining and solid. His story pacing, especially after he became more comfortable with his assignment, is unhurried and full of little details, a refreshing change from the frenetic pace maintained by much of his competition. About the only oddity in the stories, and I'm surprised that his editors let him get away with it, is that aviation, the raison d'etre of the strip, is noticeably absent. While strips like Tailspin Tommy strictly constructed their stories around flying, Sickles' Scorchy stories rarely use the aviation angle in any meaningful way. Sometimes the only flying that happens is in the segue from one story to the next. The stories are better off, though, because the slavish imperative of sticking to genre makes strips like Tailspin Tommy quite a bore for those not fascinated by wind shear and the latest advances in de-icers.
The reproduction of the strips is miraculously excellent if I assume correctly that tearsheets had to be used as source material. The smaller papers that tended to use the Associated Press features seldom had excellent print quality, but the strips here look fantastic. Even the zipatone, very hard to reproduce well from tearsheets, is clear and sharp. I doff my Photoshopping hat to the work of the restorer on this project.
The book is a giant, weighing in at a whopping seven pounds. Not only do we get the complete Sickles run on Scorchy (plus a little of Terry and Christman to pad out story arcs) but there is an exhaustive biographical essay by Bruce Canwell. It is accompanied by an incredible array of Sickles work all the way from rare early pieces to his later commercial and fine art work. This section of the book, comprising over 130 pages, could easily have been published on its own to rave reviews from Sickles fans.
  Buy this book October 3, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
If you have found this title and taken the time to explore these reviews then your interest in the subject matter is assured, even in the slightest. My only recommendation is to buy this book. Buy it right now. There are few times in life where $40 of your hard earned money is so justly spent.
  finally! October 1, 2008 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
it's easier to review bad things, than good, because there's very little to say except: fantastic! this is one of those 'big' books in the world of illustrators and comic book artists, covering many important things. through the work of noel sickles one can learn what matters in picture making. scorchy smith, the strip, has not lost a bit of it's visual impact in the seventy years. while it may not be the best reading, dramatically, visually it still fascinates.
if you're drawing, you should have this book. it's not expensive, and it contains a lifetime of work to explore... which might easily take a lifetime as well!
  The definitve work! September 17, 2008 Incisive, comprehensive and encyclopedic in scope this book is a must have for any serious student or fan of the narrative arts. Sickles work directly lead to the look and expression of generations of artists up to the present.
Joe Mannarino President Comic Art Appraisal LLC
  The Art of Noel Sickles September 4, 2008 5 out of 5 found this review helpful
Have you ever received a book you've been looking forward to and been disappointed? Well, that defintely won't happen when you receive your copy of "Scorchy Smith and the Art of Noel Sickles"! My first reaction when I opened up the book box was "WOW!" The book is so thick and finely produced (with coated paper and handy ribbon bookmark), that it feels substantial right out of the box. My next reaction was "I had no idea Noel Sickles had such a body of work". The first half of the book is loaded with rare art, photos and biography, jammed with incredible illustration art you've never seen before. The second half is a (near) complete run of the classic "Scorchy Smith" comic strip, with the best reproduction yet for this amazing narrative. Easily one of the books books on an illustrator/comic artist yet produced and a "must have" for fans of either genre. Congrats to Dean Mullaney and IDW Books for this terrific volume!
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