Total Pageviews

Saturday, 29 February 2020

Obscure British Heroes and Crime-Fighters and Finding Them






I have to say that I have never heard of the book The British Superhero By Christopher Murray. Pity really as a friend just sent me a screen shot of a paragraph from the book: 


Now I'll thank Christopher for the mention and it repeats something I have heard over and over again -Yahoo groups, old Google Plus and so on: even comic enthusiasts are often taken aback by some of my finds.  Comic strips in boys' papers when the 'experts' claim these never existed (my thanks to Bob for that discovery -I only published and added to it); masked and costumed and even super powered characters -ahem- 'before' super heroes were created in the United States and going back to the mid 1800s and possibly earlier.  We never called them "super heroes" but "masked/costumed crime fighters" or even what we would later term anti-heroes.


Men dressed in theatrical costumes. Men spitting fire, taking huge leaps, deflecting gun-fire, wearing devil masks, domino masks, hoods or even real horns.  Or characters like The Iron Man dating back to the turn of the 20th century. My greatest discovery -please, as a Nation ensure that this is engraved upon my monument- that there were so many flying, gliding bat-winged costumed villains, heroes, anti-heroes in British pulps, boys papers and comics between the late 1800s to early 1940s that Bob Kane would faint -yes, the UK had Bat-men long before the United States had a Bat-Man!  I am not showing off my incredible talents here but...I found another one last week!! 

Oh, despite all the problems there is one thing that I cannot be shaken from -a love of comics as well as weird and bizarre characters (I first started research Spring-Heeled Jack -all of them- in 1980).  I refer to a certain character and someone invariably asks "Who??" because I get too engrossed in the work and assume that everyone with an interest in the subject knows everything I do.  

Before my old PC and all of its programs went I began work on compiling all of the characters into a Who's Who.  Those bloody bat-men took some work!  

Think of Slicksure the detective come spy and super spy tackling not just clever villains but a mole machine, werewolf and, uh, flying bat-man, Yet Harry Banger (pron. as in "Ranger") renowned for his humour strips pulled it all off.  Glenn Protheroe was known for his "Brain's Trust" strip and the "puppet-like characters" yet he drew a few action strips in a serious style.  Believe me when I say that when I find an obscure character -very old or from pre-1990- that I have never seen or heard mention of before I smile widely. I've been told I do by someone who saw my face light up when I did.  


It is nice to get credit occasionally and I would like to thank those who have either corrected the source of some scans to me and have appreciated the (fun) hard work that goes into this.

THANK YOU

ps -I also have an online store and books

Friday, 28 February 2020

The Cover Really DOES Matter

To be honest, unless you have an artist drawing his own book cover, as a publisher-editor you need to learn fast how to put covers together -and promo pieces.

Everything has to march up from text type, colour of text, size  of text and so on. Lettering that is too large or too much cover text can ruin the cover art. You do not want that -the cover art is what catches the punter or potential customer's eye.

Even in black and white everything has to work. The dark, simple cover for Ben Dilworth's The Dark Night Detectives is a case in point.

Here are examples of art rejected or used.

All material/character (c)2020 Black Tower Comics & Books/T. Hooper-Scharf























The Date Is Set In Stone

It is quite staggering that despite the number of blog views rising not one single person has commented or reacted to anything posted let alone offered support of some kind.

I have spent over a decade providing brief, indepth and even mega posts for readers of the UK Golden Age and Black Tower blogs. Some two decades on Comic Bits Online but....

I really cannot afford to waste time writing further indepth posts -they simply waste my time. I decided a year ago that if things had not changed by the time of the 2020 San Diego Comic Con then CBO was going. That still stands.

Quite obviously no one gives a fuck so come SDCC it'll be a relief to quit and you can all go off to try to find another blog.

Tuesday, 25 February 2020

The Chilling Ghoulish Tales Of Terror From A Budding Wannabe Publisher!

I don't think I have published the story here before....

I was going through old posts the other day when I found this one. I read through it and realised I had made a HUGE error!

So, to correct that, here is an up-dated, better illustrated posting!

Above: Myron Fass (by Jeff Goodman) and his shirt and, yes, I believe that is the famous gun under his vest!

Back in the 1970s I was young,foolish and so desperately wanted to be a comic book publisher.  One day a friend working at BBC TV Pebble Mill phoned me and said:”Stan Lee is going to be on Pebble Mill At One-can you get to Birmingham?”

Pebble Mill At One was a chat/features show that went out at 1p.m. each day and Stan Lee was only “guaranteed” for that show’s duration.  Could I get there?  Yes!

Well,that was the plan.  There used to be an old newsagents/tobacconist on Newfoundland Road before it became part of the motorway into Bristol.  The owner at the time,Reg,didn’t like distributors of magazines and comics for reasons I never learned.  When I asked I was told,in amongst the coughing,”Theyz all a buncha bastids”.

Anyway,I got a good few of my Charlton Comics in there and Reg loved horror comics.  I mentioned going to Pebble Mill and Reg told me he had to “pop up to” Leicester on that day to pick up new issues of a comic -he could drop me by Pebble Mill?


Well,leaving early we got to Thorpe & Porter and if you bought comics in the UK the “T&P” stamped on those comics meant they were distributed and repackaged in some cases by Thorpe & Porter.   I got chatting with one of the managers there and within half an hour I was talking to bosses with a cup of tea getting colder by the minute as I asked question after question.

“Kid in a sweet shop”

I missed Stan Lee.  I’m sure he’ll forgive me.  But I got into regular correspondence with people at T&P and paid a few more visits with Reg [who would also have nothing to do with management -apparently they were all "Bastids" as well!

 On one visit I had plucked up enough courage to ask about buying rights to horror strips -T&P were repackaging Tales From The Tomb,Terror Tales and others [as well as Official UFO which had interests for me].
Above: A Myron Fass publication that I submitted articles for -no idea if they were published!

Now, up to this point my original article was correct but I then found my notes and I realised the huge error I had made. T & P were distributors and someone there -I have "Mar" in my notes so it could be Martin?- gave me the number of some contacts. These were at Moore Harness Ltd and Portman Distribution Ltd.

Time for some more about the UKs very, uh, "murky", comics going ons.

Castle of Terror and Tales Of Terror caught my eye because they were UK comic magazine format and were both in 1978 and published by Croydon based Portman Distribution. A number of Marvel comic weeklies had been cancelled -Dracula Lives!, Planet Of The Apes, etc.. So my assumption was, since they seemed to utilise a fair bit of that material, that these were somehow Marvel sanctioned and legit.

But in later conversations with Marvel UK folk (oh, if only I'd done that years before!) it seems the deal to publish this material was agreed upon between Portman and Marvel in the United States, totally bypassing the new Marvel UK.  Marvel UK complained to head office and the deal was scrapped. I think both titles only got as far as issues 4 or 5.  Monster Monthly was Marvel UKs response but that didn't last very long.


Now, Portman I spoke to and I, uh, purchased two titles...but no content! Obviously I had not realised that at the time because I was told "We don't really feel comfortable publishing comics".  Yes, I was a ***** idiot.
But Moore Harness, a Surrey based company, were publishing less high quality titles such as Chilling Tales Of Horror and Ghoul Tales and, it seems, they wanted to shift them along to someone else. Me.

I shook hands. I paid the money.
I was in a cold sweat.  By today’s standards £100 isn’t much but in the 1970s it was a small fortune.  I sold loads of items and duly got the rights.  However, printers then asked for more and more money as they claimed this-and-that had to be “tweaked in house”.  So, I was there with comics but it would be too expensive to print.

I asked Alan Class about his printers and he gave me the details.  Their rates were very reasonable.  Then, out of the blue, I heard from Portman and then Moore Harness: it seemed I’d have to also negotiate with the original publisher in the United States.  This was a shock to me.  I thought all the work belonged to those companies and no one ever mentioned a US publisher.  Apparently, one of those notorious oversights that happened in UK comics.

If I was in a sweat before....



I wrote a long letter to MF Enterprises and I sat back nervously awaiting a reply.  One week turned into two and then three.  I really thought I’d sold a great many things and paid out money for nothing.  It was a depressing month.

On the fourth week the telephone rang at 2 a.m. -either someone was ill or had died [no one ever calls that time of night about anything else!].  I’m assuming that it was a loud New York [?] voice that greeted my nervous “hello?”.  Apparently, I was talking to Myron Fass who told me he’d gotten my letter and read it through and told me I’d gotten a “shitty deal” (and I AM toning down the exact words).  I was regaled by talk of pulp SF publishing and how he’d made a good $4 million dollars on a magazine about the Kennedy Assassination and how he was making "fast bucks with porn books."

At this point I ought to point out that I was wondering why he was telling me all of this and was he impressing me before telling me to take a hike?

Then came the crunch.  Mr Fass said he’d read what I’d sent him (a proposal of how I intended to use the strips and so forth) and it looked good –a brief moment of thinking he was going to offer to publish the title was soon dashed.  He said he’d noted I was going to add a super hero strip into the comic to draw in fans of that genre (a bad idea that I'd never try today!) and asked if I had a super hero comic strip?  I said I was still looking.  There was a laugh and a “Kid, yer ****** lucky!” ["kid"??].

He then told me how he had a super hero that had been a hit in the 1960s called Captain Marvel.

Here I immediately thought of Fawcett’s Captain Marvel.  I asked if he meant that character?  I was told that the Captain Marvel he’d published was far more popular and original.  After five minutes of talking from him I had agreed to pay a sum for the horror strip rights in the UK and Captain Marvel.

The money was sent and then I hit the major snag.  I was told Marvel Comics would sue if I used the name Captain Marvel.  In fact, when I tried to clarify the position I learned that DC comics owned Captain Marvel [Fawcett's] and they would sue.

I was young,inexperienced and out of money and in it deep.

So,I still have the horror pages and I have the Captain Marvel pages [though issue #1 pages are missing after 30 years] but never used them.

Oh, and just to point two things out regarding murkiness...Moore Harness and Portman seem to have shared a similar cover artist on their titles (?) AND both companies (supposedly unconnected) had their titles edited by a Theodore S. Hecht.

Intriguing, no?

 Captain Marvel (1966) 2-A by M.F. Enterprises

Of course, I only learned in the 1990s about the man known as Myron Fass.  The business partner beating, gun-toting, wheeler-dealer.  I have to say, though, at the time he was very nice but loud, as I expected Americans to be.

I was in awe.

In fact,I wonder whether I had a lucky escape.  I was typing this and wondered whether there was anything on the internet about him.  There is!  So,to learn more of the legend visit:

http://www.badmags.com/bmmyronfass.html

Oh,youth!

Below: Myron Fass: "YAHOO! That dumb kid bought it!"


Just To Make It Clear

It seems that I am not the only person getting this Lulu crap so I just sent them this:

I am afraid that after 11 years of this nonsense from Lulu I am no longer going to publish new books through it.

In 2018 I published Strange and Mysterious Animals and Mysterious and Strange Animals (same book different formats) and I was told by potential buyers that "Ships only from North America" put them off due to huge international postage rates. Apparently that was a Lulu system error and I was promised once...twice...thrice that techs would sort the problem out. They never have.

Over 10 years ago I decided to use a POD in India as Lulu said it had no printers there. I did make an error in uploading an unedited file with three pages at the wrong size. The company got in touch and pointed this out to me...as well as the fact that they simply auto-corrected the document. That was India 10 years ago and they could do something Lulu cannot do in 2020.

I printed out my pages with the printer set to the specific file size. Printed perfectly. I have not changed one thing in creating a PDF since 2009 and I always double and triple check pages and documents. I have had two other people check the PDF involved and they can find no problems.

I have had books miss-printed -pages missing, VERY poor quality printing making things hard to read or resulting in very poor image reproduction and each time I have to wait until it gets sorted but my PDFs are fine.

Maybe when Lulu upgrades to a 21st century compatible system I might think of re-using them but enough is enough -and I am fed up with the document creator being blamed (I know a few publishers who use Lulu and they have had the same thing).

I thank you for your assistance but Lulu needs to seriously upgrade.

T. Hooper-Scharf

I Have made Rs450!!! No, really.

Interestingly I just checked my Indian print on demand company, Pothi.com, to see what's been going on there and I see I have earned RS 450 which is ...£4,84.  Unfortunately, to try to make the books affordable in India I lowered the price so much that it took a lot of sales to get the £4.84.

One thing I came across was people telling me they would buy if I lowered the prices even more -which was impossible since the printers HAVE to be paid!  I flatly refused to make PDF copies of books downloadable because I ran the Yahoo IdoPakBang comics group for years as well as did business with India publishers and a pdf sent to even 'trusted' sources ended up distributed through online groups (I caught on when the links were shared on my IndoPakBang group).

I also read how some of these people were complaining about the prices of my books (they were literally free!) while talking about spending RS1000 (that's £10) plus on other books "out of curiosity"!

Two books of mine that were bought were scanned and uploaded to illegal download sites and last time I checked (4 years ago) had reached over a million downloads -getting the point why I HATE illegal scanners and uploaders/downloaders? I have lost thousands through this. 

As this was beyond Pothi to deal with I just decided to cut my losses and later involvement with Indian publishers saw me scream "Never again India!!"

A pity since Indian publishers could quite easily jump into the UK non existent comics market and do well. 4.84283

No New Books To Appear


As far as I am concerned, after 11  years of problem after problem with my Print on Demand company (Lulu), I am no longer publishing using it.

Apologies if I repost something from yesterday here:

Being paranoid when it comes to pdf files and page sizes, whenever I get completed books together I will double, triple and quadruple check every page and make sure the sizes are right.

I got sent a link to a free PDF converter and it only does pages in batches of 20s so an 80 book equals 4 PDF files that then get combined into one 80 pager.

Went through the New Project phase with my POD and then uploaded the file.....


Rejected because pages were of differing sizes.

WTF??!

So I checked all the pages and made the PDF from start again then uploaded.
rejected due to different page sizes.

Double checked and all pages are okay so tried up,loading three more times (Robert the Bruce would be proud of me). Failed.

So I contacted the site assistant who asked me to upload the file to My Files so she could check it. That upload was rejected every time for the same reasons. Then it uploaded. So off went the lady to check the file and I downloaded it to see if I could see a problem. Everything looked perfect so I wrote back stating this and she told me that the file looked perfect so she tried uploading it for me....failed due to page size difference. Now she is asking their useless tech people to open a case file and look into it.

Four hours wasted.

Remember when you slapped the art pages onto a photocopier platten and made your own comics without this crap?  Anyway, I was promoting the books until about 0200 hrs today and this morning I get this:

"Dear Terry,

"Thank you for contacting our support team at Lulu.com. My name is Julia and we chatted earlier this afternoon.

"Thank you for your patience as one of our print team members was taking a look at your file. She let me know that she had some trouble finding out what program you used to produce the file. She also suggested that you  open the file in the source program that was used to create it and manually set the size of the pages in that program.

"Here is a message from her:

"I would suggest exporting the file to PDF using our job options profile. I can tell he's publishing using the A4 size, which calls for 8.26 x 11.69 in. pages, and his PDF is sized at 8.35x11.81. Our joboptions save the PDF as version 1.3 which prevents transparencies from flattening with boxes, and basically heads off a bunch of issues."

"You can download the Lulu Job Options .zip file at the very bottom of this article. She also mentioned to me that your PDF version is of Adobe 1.7, which our system doesn't work very well with. Our system works best with version 1.6 or older, so this is another thing to keep in mind.

"I hope this helps! If you try these suggestions and are still experiencing problems uploading the file, please let me know.

Kind regards,
Julia D."

I have not changed or done anything different than when I have published every other one of the 90 plus books with the company.  These are scanned art pages of the correct dimension and size as always and I double checked every page of the document -as did their support agent and like her found everything was okay. 

So going through the document to re-size the pages to the size they are...?

Oh, and the Lulu Job Options pdf is basically a beginners guide and after 11 years I do not think that I need to learn how to do this again. I ought to point out that I do not need to flatten any boxes either....:-/

Lulu appears to have such an old system that it cannot even offer basic functions -I once asked about a stat counter to see how many visited the online store: "We are not considering that but if we upgrade our system we might one day".  Analytics? "No". 

Mysterious and Strange Beasts and Strange and Mysterious Beasts (same book but different size formats) were published in 2018 but Lulu's programming listed it in the store as "Only ships from North America". The thought of international postage put people off and when I realised what was going on I contacted Lulu support. They promised tech support would deal with the matter as it was a problem with their system. Two years later after repeatedly asking for this to be dealt with...nothing.

I will point out again that the books are printed "locally" to where the person ordering lives. There is NO INTERNATIONAL SHIPPING involved.

I think it says it all that their techie had no idea what system I used but then goes on to clearly identify Adobe but their system can only cope with much older ones.

I have 8 books each of 80 pages that, according to Lulu I am now going to have to re-size to the size that they are....but the books will still be rejected because their old system cannot handle anything but older programs.  The Green Skies is 500 plus pages....you know what Lulu can go and do there!

Here is an example of how old Lulu's system is: back in 2010 I opened a similar Print on Demand account in India with a company called Pothi. At the time the printing was cheap and the intention was to buy in bulk but then the new shipping costs(it was international shipping) kicked that in the head.  However, Pothi was new and I made the mistake of uploading the wrong book file (I have a LOT of files stored so they all have unique IDs now!) and it had some pages that were the wrong size.  I got a message from Pothi that some pages were not the correct size...but they had adjusted the sizes and sent me the PDF to double check. 

HOW could Pothi carry out this Herculean task of changing pages that were the wrong size in a PDF???!!

It was explained to me that it only took a brief adjustment on their system and all the pages were then the right size.

Over the last decade or so a number of people in the UK have set up POD companies. They are all gone now as the businesses were profitable but involved much more work than they thought (I am not kidding as I just double checked the old emails from two of them). I talked to these people and varying page sizes in PDF came up as it was a common mistake amongst people producing their first comics. I was told "It just needs you to auto reset to the page size required and that's it".

Lulu used to -still does?- attend conventions pushing its 'product' and it has been doing this for a couple decades now yet has a system that throws up so many problems and is so old and always notes how it is the document creators fault -as in the current case even though their own support person checked the document and found no problems.

If you can put up with that sort of thing then go for it but if you upload the correct sized file and it gets rejected over and over and you are willing to take the blame for that then go for it. I just printed out the entire book and every page came out perfectly and I've a crappy old Canon printer not a hi-tech laser printer.

The Green Skies will not be published as intended. Too many problems and I have no faith in Lulu which should have updated its system LONG AGO. The 80 pagers? Ditto. And, yes, I did try uploading one of the previously accepted PDF to Lulu to check -it was rejected due to "different sized pages" (I once had a book rejected because the "image on page 43 is low res and must be at least 300 dpi to print correctly" -they were talking about a 300 dpi comic page and when I asked they referred to one panel on the page !! Their system misidentified the panel as an image in a prose book....my fault of course).

Until I can afford to get books printed by someone competent nothing new is going to appear.  The internet has proven itself to be useful but it's the people you deal with that is the problem.

Monday, 24 February 2020

What's My Name? A Purple Hood Adventure!

Graveyard

Tales of Terror

The Iron Warrior v. Big Bong! in: "When Giants Fought."

The Purple Hood in "Fox On The Prowl"

Dr Morg Video.wmv

Four Hours to NOT Publish a book -Where's the photocopier??


Being paranoid when it comes to pdf files and page sizes, whenever I get completed books together I will double, triple and quadruple check every page and make sure the sizes are right.

I got sent a link to a free PDF converter and it only does pages in batches of 20s so an 80 book equals 4 PDF files that then get combined into one 80 pager.

Went through the New Project phase with my POD and then uploaded the file.....
Rejected because pages were of differing sizes.

WTF??!

So I checked all the pages and made the PDF from start again then uploaded.
rejected due to different page sizes.

Double checked and all pages are okay so tried up,loading three more times (Robert the Bruce would be proud of me). Failed.

So I contacted the site assistant who asked me to upload the file to My Files so she could check it. That upload was rejected every time for the same reasons. Then it uploaded. So off went the lady to check the file and I downloaded it to see if I could see a problem.

Everything looked perfect so I wrote back stating this and she told me that the file looked perfect so she tried uploading it for me....failed due to page size difference. Now she is asking their useless tech people to open a case file and look into it.

Four hours wasted.

Remember when you slapped the art pages onto a photocopier platten and made your own comics without this crap?

Liz and Jen


Paperback
A4
B&W
21 pages
Price: £5.00 (excl. VAT)Prints in 3-5 business days

Originally drawn back in the 1980s, this story of the coming out of two life long friends has never been properly published.

Up-dated for 2011 with story and pencils by Terry Hooper and inks by Ben R. Dilworth

The Amazing World Of Alan Class


A4
Paperback
B&W
24 pages
Price: £5.00
Marvel, Timely, Atlas, Charlton, ACG, MLJ/Archie Dennis the Menace (US) -one man published them all. Alan Class. Who? Class is legendary for bringing black and white reprints of US comics to a country starved of the medium thanks to a certain war! From 1959-1989 Suspence, Sinister, Astounding and Uncanny gave us a comic fix for a few pennies. Learn more about the man and how Class Comics came about in the long awaited print version of Terry Hooper's exclusive interview!

Saturday, 22 February 2020

Tick Tock Its The Clock


Ben R. Dilworth
Cover T. Hooper-Scharf
A4
Black & White
Paperback,
31 Pages  
Price: £5.00
Ships in 3–5 business days
Feature Comics #21, 1936. the Clock, eventually revealed to be society man and former district attorney Brian O'Brien, wore a three-piece suit, a fedora, and a black full-face mask. The first masked hero of comics dealt with crime using guile and gun and usually left a calling card that bore an image of a clock and the words "The Clock Has Struck."

Ben Dilworth steps in to fill in the gaps and what MADE the Clock -plus a revelation: What happened to O'Brien's look-alike and crime busting companion Pug?

Prepare for violence, harsh language and to ask the question:can there ever really be justice from the barrel of a gun?