L. B. Cole drew, by his estimation, nearly 1,500 covers in his career. He was a decent artist on these inside continuity pages, but it’s for his covers he’s famous. His ability to make eye-catching poster-like covers sold an awful lot of otherwise mediocre comic books. Except for his loving renditions of sexy Toni, I don’t think there’s much else about this artwork that would send anyone’s pulse racing. But then, maybe that was enough for those readers in 1949 looking for a little something extra for their dime.
And as for the cover, despite, or maybe because of, the silliness of fashion model Toni in high heels fighting a shark, I think it is one of the great covers of the Golden Age.
4 comments:
Think it's interesting that a title called "Guns against Gangsters" has neither on the cover but is an underwater scene of a beauty facing a giant shark. Maybe that should be telling the publisher something about a problem with the title of their book?
“Skirts against Sharks”?
“Frails against Fins”?
“Girls against Galeocerdos”?
“Molls against Megaloda”?
“Dames against Dalatiidæ”?
“Shes against Selachimorphæ”?
Cash, meet Daniel. Daniel, meet Cash.
Oh, yeah. He's the guy with the mysteriously Romanian 'blog.
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