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Friday, 31 January 2020

Could People In The UK Spell "UK"??


If I look at the daily stats for this blog the one thing I notice is that, for being the largest Independent UK black & white comics publisher (with a great line of prose books, too if I need to mention that) I see little in the way of views from the UK. Take today, Friday at 12 noon:

United States
Portugal
Germany
Argentina
Russia
Brazil
France
Phillippines
"Unknown region"
Canada

The UK seems to come down pretty low on daily views. I thought we were "All British" and wanted our own comics alongside US imports...and Franco-Belgian imports, of course. UK literacy is bad. I know what you are saying: "Oh he isn't selling books so he has to find an excuse!"  No excuses -the books are good and cover genres: they just are not selling.

As for the, uh, 'excuse':

Adult Illiteracy in the UK. According to the National Literacy Trust a major 16% of adults are considered to be 'functionally illiterate' in the United KingdomLiteracy levels are falling among the younger generations and it is stated that 1 in 5 adults struggle to read and write.

That is awful.  In the UK most kids used to learn to read with comics -fun but learning- and I used to teach Indian, Pakistani and Bangladeshi kids using comics. I have known people from their 20's to 60's who could not spell/write their own names and, yes, had to use an "X" when signing documents.

So what about France where there is a strong comics industry?

Adult literacy rate is the percentage of people ages 15 and above who can both read and write with understanding a short simple statement about their everyday life. France literacy rate for 2018 was 99.00%, a 0% increase from 2015. France literacy rate for 2015 was 99.00%, a 0% increase from 2010.

So 1% illiteracy rate.

So what about Germany?  Ahem....

Adult literacy rate is the percentage of people ages 15 and above who can both read and write with understanding a short simple statement about their everyday life. Germany literacy rate for 2018 was 99.00%, a 0% increase from 2015. Germany literacy rate for 2015 was 99.00%, a 0% increase from 2010.

Coincidence that the UK has such a poor literacy rate and absolutely no real comics industry (ignore the people who say that there is one because if they admitted the truth...they would not be 'stars' in their own minds).  But here is the shock: 

Between 1800 and 1840 literacy in the North rose from 75 percent to between 91 and 97 percent. In the South the rate grew from about 55 percent to 81 percent. By percentage and circumstance that means UK literacy was better in the 1800s!

And according to Trends in standards of literacy in the United Kingdom, 1948-1996 By Greg Brooks, National Foundation for Educational Research (NFER)  (Paper presented at UK Reading Association conference, University of Manchester, July 1997, and at British Educational Research Association conference, University of York, September 1997):

"... for the period 1948-76 the results from these tests are the only national monitoring survey information available for England and Wales. The results can be summed up as follows:

- the average reading score rose slightly between 1948 and 1952; this improvement was widely attributed to a recovery in the education system after the war years;- average reading scores then remained essentially unchanged from 1952 to 1979."
This means that people in the UK are actually not as educated as they were (which might explain Brexit and voting in Johnson).

I am always thankful to the thousands who read my posts on Black Tower Comics and Books, both on this blog and on Face Book, but I really would be ecstatic if some of them actually purchased books.

In the United States more and more comic stores are closing due comic companies having lost any idea how to run or publish ("make the money fast and ***** the fans!" is no way to keep a good business. Nor is 24 cover variants....20 cover variants or 30 cover variants -someone somewhere went insane.  Comic shop owners and "comic pundits" (gods help us) are now talking of a comic industry collapse in the United States. Is France, Germany, the Phillippines concerned about a comic industry collapse? No.

The UK is definitely not worried. It has no industry.

I once put it to three US comic store owners that they needed to try something new. I suggested, of course, that they try a few of the cheaper Black Tower titles (since most are self contained and not series) and see if they sold. They buy in the US the books are printed in the US and shipped in the US. No international postage blah blah blah.

No.  Oh, some, like a couple of European comic shop owners, were willing to have ME pay for and ship books to them for free so that THEY could put whatever comic price they wanted on them THEN decide if they would order anything (I worked it out and the cost to me came out as £350 -$400?- and I would get nothing. And, no, I never took up this "great deal to get your books seen in our stores".

They need to keep customers and I need to keep eating and paying bills.

So, please, where ever you live, consider checking out the online store -they are printed and shipped from YOUR area not overseas so no big shipping fee!

Thank You

Thursday, 30 January 2020

The Adventures Of Mark Tyme Collection

The Adventures Of Mark Tyme Collection
A4B&W104 pagesList Price:£10.00

http://www.lulu.com/shop/terry-hooper-scharf/the-adventures-of-mark-tyme-collection/paperback/product-11918029.html
Only two issues were published of The Adventures of Mark Tyme.

As with the companion title,The Purple Hood, the artist was Michael Jay who has since faded into obscurity.

Join scientist Mark Tyme as he uses his time watch and travels on adventures to Roman Britain, the Stone Age, a pirate island, 9th century Britain, outer space and other exciting destinations.

The Purple Hood Collection

The Purple Hood Collection
A4B&W

It was the Swinging Sixties! Britain was hip as hip could be -The Beatles ruled Pop! And everyone was looking toward a bright future…if there wasn’t a nuclear war! Middle Eastern threats,Eastern European fascists,flying saucer flying megalomaniacs and super mole machines and others threatened our little island. 
But we had the ultimate answer to these:The Purple Hood -International crime-smasher! Michael Jay’s Purple Hood now collected into over a hundred pages of action and text back-up.

This is THE ultimate collection!


Okay, I Have A Question

It seems that no one has a question for me either here or on Face Book so I will ask YOU, the 42,105 people who have visited this blog, a question:

Why?  Why do you all come here and read the posts but never leave a comment and certainly never buy Black Tower Books or comics?

It is a quite simple question.  Thousands of views would, normally, indicate an interest in the books I am publishing but if so why are you not buying them?

That's my question.

I doubt very much that any of you will respond.

Wednesday, 29 January 2020

Ask Your Questions!

Seriously. I am assuming that some of you at least are coming to this blog or the Face Book page because you are interested in some way in Black Tower Comics and Books.

On the 27th of this month visitors totalled 41,851 and that has risen, in just two days, to some 42,095...unless the same person has clicked onto here 42, 095 times (if so it was not me and most of my family are in insane asylums with no internet access!).

If you have a question about the books, creators (I will no longer respond to questions about what colour underpants I am wearing!) -just ask in comments or via the Face Book page because it is free to ask and I always respond.

Russian Red Star Squadron, Chinese Phoenix Team and Others

Just a post title change. I heard back that people were not checking the post as they assumed it was a political post about Brexit.
No. Just...no.*********************************************************************************
Back in the late 1980's I courted political controversy.  Well, not really.  You see I was putting together Black Tower Adventure and Previews Comic -both of which were anthologies. 

Fast Fiction Small Press service -or Ed Pinsent to be precise- once wrote: "You can see his DC comics collection opening up in front of you" re. my comics.

As I pointed out to dear Ed that was a bloody insult -"Ich bin ein Marvelite!" I roared and making his cheese sandwich shake across the table!  :-) Honestly, one has to remember that these were the "elite" who declared time and again that Europe had never had super hero comics.  Therefore, if I had a comic with such characters (costumed and uncostumed as was the British tradition) it had to have been inspired by American comics. Being a Marvelite in those days I did grab any Justice League of America comic I could see but that was my shameful secret revealed only now almost 40 years later :-)

But at one Westminster Comic Mart I was talking to Tom Elmes, John Erasmus and others when some idiot I did not know (he was one of those comics 'nice guys' it turns out) called me a communist. Considering the experiences of my mother's (German) family during the Second World War that was quite insulting and I did ask -politely- what they were talking about.

It turned out to be The Evil of the Salamander strip. Why?  Well, obviously they could not give any cogent reason other than the fact that I had showed Soviet and Chinese super heroes -actually part of the military of the PRC and USSR therefore more soldiers than civilian vigilantes.  Not just that but I had shown  the Phoenix Team and Red Star Squadron -brace yourselves!- cooperating to fight a common foe.

No ugly faced, gnarly toothed evil sons of bitches out to subjugate the free world.  That it seems is where the problem was.  Dammit they were not even fighting each other but trying to prevent what could turn into -at best and least- a border war.

Some little twit did later write that I probably hated democracy and read Soviet Weekly between comic books.  Actually, I did not reveal that I had read Soviet Weekly -back in the pre internet days we had to read things that were printed and if you wanted the latest Russian photos from the Moon or Venus don't think they were in all the news papers: you bought a copy of SW with the photos and report in.

So here are parts 1 and 2....















Krakos; Sands of Terror


Krakos: The Sands Of Terror
Terry Hooper-Scharf
64pp
black and white
comic album (A4)
£8.00
http://www.lulu.com/spotlight/hoopercomicsuksearchTerms=Krakos%3B+Sands+of+Terror

Created by William A. Ward for Swan Comics in the 1940s,Krakos was one of Ward’s supernatural anti-hero types.

Used,with Swan’s permission,in Black Tower Adventure strips in the 1980s/1990s,this is the character’s first solo outing.

But will Krakos fulfill the Goddess Isis’ dream and become the new pharoah of a New Egyptian Kingdom that will encompass all of the Middle East? Did anyone actually ask Krakos?

The book contains information on Ward and his work plus sample pages rescued after 60 years of neglect!


Hoist the Jolly Roger!

I mentioned internet piracy ("Oh here he goes again!" -yes, I will because this is my only income!) but what do you do or call it when a printed copy of one of your books appears on a (in this case) Polish site selling odds and ends yet you KNOW that title never sold and you were never paid for any sale?
The only people with the publishing PDF was me, the POD company and the printers they use in different countries WHEN a copy is ordered.
This has happened three times and the POD (Lulu) response to my query? Absolutely not one word. Someone was making money on the side.
In case you wonder this looks like it was placed on a floor to photograph. And the yellow box on the bottom right with "New edition" was the temporary version between original cover and the new 2010 cover.

THE BAT TRIUMPHANT!

The Bat Triumphant! was the first of the comic albums published by BTCG on 1st May 2009 and that was the original cover design. Republished with a new design on 30th July 2010.Here are the details:

In 1941,The Bat sets about modernising the backward Duchy of Stahl, over which his dynasty has ruled since 1410 A.D..

The Bat is soon involved in experiments with the infamous Count Cogliostro. One of these experiments involves suspended animation;The Bat deciding he will be the test subject. When he wakes,The Bat finds that not days have gone by but 51 years!

Worse, his kingdom is in ruins and an enclave of Kamora. The Bat tries politics to win back his homeland and when that fails he decides to fight for it!

However, he is unaware that some old, and new, enemies are lying in wait to stop him and all of them want one thing:The Bat dead!

Originally a back up strip in Black Tower Adventure in 1994,The Bat proved very popular as an anti-hero. The story was never completed.

It is now.
A4 Black and White 60 pp saddle stitched Price: £8.00 (excl. VAT) http://www.lulu.com/shop/terry-hooper-scharf/the-bat-triumphant/paperback/product-12046091.html










WHY I Do NOT Offer PDF Downloads

Someone suggested this idea. No. Outright no.

I posted why on the CBO blog and I'll re-post that below.  To prove a point: a small publisher in the United States offered a pdf of his comic. Three downloads purchased. At a comic event someone told him they had read the book online.  He responded that he had no comics online and was then given a link to follow: one of the people who had purchased his pdf uploaded it to an illegal download site and it had been download 1,450 times.  That is 1,450 lost sales.  He gave up.

Do You Download or Upload Comics Illegally?

I was sent a link today to a site with illegal downloads of the books I produced for Fantagraphics/Eros with artists Art Wetherell and David Gordon.

In the space of a year one book was downloaded 34,831 times.  That is 34,831 thefts of copyright and money from us as creators.  Read and liked it? Did they buy copies? No.

Including just one other book downloaded with 60,881...that's  95,712 thefts.

To put that in perspective my percentage from these were they sales would be £478,560 and that is from just ONE site.  Others exist and it must be remembered that these are sites run by criminals accepting copyright theft -they KNOW what they are doing as do the thieves downloading.

As I've just had a can of cold Heinz spaghetti for my main meal you can see why even 5% of that £478,560 would be welcome.

THIS IS WHY I ACCEPT NO EXCUSES FROM PEOPLE WHO ILLEGALLY UPLOAD BOOKS OR THOSE WHO DOWNLOAD THEM. YOU ARE THIEVES

The Ultimate Improbability Of The British Super Hero

Since I originally wrote this piece things have changed.  For one thing Paul Grist's Jack Staff ended and despite my asking a couple of times I have received no response from him about future plans and being years later I doubt there are any plans for a return.  The same can be said for Grist's Mud Man that left the reader with many questions.  Again I have asked a couple of times but no response.



They were such fun books, too.

Perhaps the downloaders made it not worth the work going into producing the titles?

Black Tower's own line of characters has increased.

But the thing that has not changed is the 'comic fan' apathy.  We could have great fun action comics out there but people don't buy why put them together.  So this post is more of a "What we had and could have" but comic buyers don't support so we are stuck with the memories.



This 2014 article "At Long Last! The Return Of The Improbability Of The British Super Hero" got some of the highest views on CBO so  this seemed a good time to repost but under a new heading and with a lot more cover and interiors art added.


I think it well worth re-posting this item (with some new artwork) because, as I pointed out in my post on Delcourt jumping on to the cash-cow of super heroes (admitting it!) by having its series Sentinels made into a film, super heroes are highly profitable and if the rather conservative big Franco-Belgian BD publishers realise this....

But where are the business entrepreneurs -hmm?

Myself, Stransky, LaBatt and Ben Dilworth sit ready.  Yes, after years of just saying "someone" needs to be a figure-head to launch such a project I am now so fed up that I am putting myself forward ("Blimey! A Saviour complex -I told you!" I can just hear that little moron screaming it now).

Forget skyscrapers. We have high streets, coastal towns, villages and cities -we have unique scenery in the UK and all are ripe for British super heroes!



“Hmm. Don’t you understand?  Think about it –we have no skyscrapers!  How can you have American style super heroes in England?”

Those were the words of a Marvel UK editor (Dave White) back in the 1980s as I sat across from him having travelled from Bristol to London at his suggestion to discuss new projects.  About a month later a very senior Marvel UK editor responded in the same words but adding “That is why UK comics have never had super heroes.”


Firstly, as I pointed out to Marvel UK editor, we are the UK. Britain. You think of characters for a comic as being English you are excluding Wales, Scotland and Ireland.  Why?

My response to the senior editor is probably why things went a little “odd” work-wise.  My first response was “So, what exactly is Marvel UK publishing? And Power Comics (Odhams) before it? And…” I went on to rattle off a very, very long list of British super characters going back to the 1940s.  I think I ticked him off.  Really, he should have known better though, in one respect, he was right.



British comics never had super heroes.

Before you start thinking that I’m on new medications and answering “Yes” and “No” at the same time allow me to explain.

Tim (Kelly’s Eye) Kelly travelled the world and even in time and space at one point and was totally indestructible.  He was not a super hero.


 Clem Macy, television news reporter had a costumed archer alter ego…The Black Archer.  He was not a super hero. 

Cathy had amazing cat-like abilities and wore a costume.  She was not a super heroine.

William and Kathleen Grange were incredible acrobats and wore costumes as Billy the Cat and Katie The Cat.  They were not super heroes.



In fact, for my graphic novel featuring many old IPC and Fleetway costumed characters, The Looking Glass, I noted several times that the characters were not super heroes.  In the UK we tended to call them “costumed adventurers” or even “masked crime fighters” but not super heroes.


Some, of course, were…uh..”revived” for the Wildstorm Studios Albion mini series which had great art but, sadly, showed a lack of any real knowledge of the characters by the writers –which they admitted to.  In comics you get paying work you take it!



Characters such as Adam Eterno, the focal point in the Looking Glass story had no choice and were at times almost anti-heroes.  Whereas The Spider had a choice of being a master crook and then changing sides (basically all ego driven), Eterno did not.  He was cursed to be taken by the mists of time from one period to another where he encountered Spanish Conquistadores, pirates, sorcerers and even modern day (well, 1970s) crooks.


Olaf (“Loopy”) Larsen a rather meek school teacher found the Viking helmet of one of his ancestors and, donning it (that’s putting it on his head) became a super strong, flying Viking hero…The Phantom Viking.  There are stories of The Phantom Viking rescuing ships and much more and not a skyscraper in sight.



The great exponents of British roof-top crime-busting were, first, Billy The Cat and later Katie The Cat.  Running across the rooftops and leaping the often not so great gaps between one row of terraced houses and another, the duo were the fictional ancestors of today’s urban free-style runners/jumpers –examples found here:

To most people who never get to see the rooves of terraced houses they assume they are all steep and sloping.  However, having on two occasions chased someone across terraced root-tops I can tell you there is plenty of room to move about (though at my age I now look back and get nauseous over that memory!).

Later, in the 1970s, William Farmer became the costumed crime-fighter known as The Leopard From Lime Street.  As one Fleetway boss told me (later confirmed by artist Mike Western) “Thomson had a schoolboy who fights crooks in a costume and if Billy the Cat was popular I was sure we could do better!”




Interestingly, in the Billy The Cat series he was later to be hunted as a vigilante by authorities who did not like what he was doing.  Likewise, The Leopard was also hunted down at one point.  In fact, a number of British comic crime-fighters found themselves not just ducking the crooks out for revenge but also the very side they were fighting for!




Towns, cities, villages, countryside, coastal locations –all featured in some very fun stories that endure in the memory to this day.  And not a bloody skyscraper in sight!



When UK creators were recruited to save the ailing US comic companies such as DC in the 1980s (I was at those UK comic art conventions watching how desperate they were to recruit British talent –and in some cases introduced both parties to each other) the idea of outlawing super heroes and tracking them down so they could be arrested was a new concept.  In the UK we’d been doing that since the 1940s ( thanks to the creators who churned out material for publishers such as Gerald Swan)!

The mistake in the minds of publishers is that they equate costumed crime-fighters with skyscrapers and the United States.  Despite the long history of such characters in the UK going back to the Boys Papers of the 1900-1930s.

What it says, really, is “This is just a job.  I don’t care about comics history.”


D. C. Thomson (may they be forever cursed in the hallowed halls of British Comics Hell) have enough characters to produce good costumed-crime-fighter comics.  The same applied to IPC who appear to have now taken the stance (a letter to me from senior management dated 19th July, 2011) “We were once publishing comics but that was over 30 years ago and have no further interest in comics.” Of course, had a rich stable of characters.




I have no doubt at all that a good “super hero” comics could work in the UK but so few Independent Comics writers/publishers seem to be able to produce an obscenities free script that does not also include over the top violence and rape –the “Millar-Ennis-Morrison Legacy (MEML).”  I may not like it but it sells...obviously!




But let’s mention, I really must, two shining examples of British “Super Heroes” by British creators that have excellent plotting, story and action without having to resort to the MEML.
Jack Staff and cast
The first is, naturally, Paul Grist’s Jack Staff.  Okay, he’s never accepted my offer to interview him in the last decade but I’ll not hold that against him!  When I first saw Jack Staff I thought “**** that anatomy is really off!”  I bought a copy.  I’m a comics bitch, I just can’t help it.

I read through issue 1 and do you know what? I..I..deep breath…I enjoyed it!  There it’s out now!  The anatomy did not put me off and, as the manager of Forbidden Planet (Bristol) said “It doesn’t make a blind bit of difference –it’s so enjoyable!” With references to old British TV comedy series and so much more each issue of Jack Staff was a must read. There was, I must point out here, a major flaw in each issue. There were not enough pages!

And while Grist takes a break from Jack Staff he came up with a new series –Mud-Man (which should not be confused with my German character Schlamm Mann –mud-man!).  Lovely stuff but, again, the major fault of not enough pages but maybe that is why this works: it is almost episodic like old British weekly strips…but with more pages…okay. Grist wins.

Then we have, and I have to say this on bended knees and in very humble tone…Nigel Dobbyn. When someone told me that he was drawing Billy The Cat I remember thinking to myself “I wonder whether his art style is any different than when he was drawing for Super Adventure Stories?”  (a 1980s comic zine).  I opened up the comic and a big thought balloon appeared above my head in which was written in bold Comic Sans “WOW!”


To this day Fish Boy is still hunting the serial killer who committed multiple murder and then placed his victims in tin cans.
Forty years on the Sardine Can Killer has never been caught!

The style and colouring I had not seen outside of European comics (say Cyrus Tota’s work on Photonik).  After that I never missed an issue and I made a point of grabbing The Beano Annual as soon as it appeared in shops. But with this incredible talent working for them did Thomson take advantage?  No, they did something ensuring he would not work on new strips for them.  The story can be found here:


You want to see how good Dobbyn is?  Visit his website which has great art on show including Billy The Cat colour pages:

http://www.nigeldobbyn.com/


Dobbyn even re-introduced (with help from scripter Kev F. Sutherland, of course) General Jumbo but as The General.  In fact, you go over those issues and I can see why so many people were telling me that they only bought copies for Billy The Cat. I could drool on and wax lyrical for hours about Dobbyn’s style and colouring.


A giant spider lives in my electricity meter box.  I'm being cautious -he says that he has "connections"!Now here is the real kicker.  Two talents such as Grist and Dobbyn whom any UK publisher (I know –“Who??”) should be fighting, spitting and kicking to get their hands on but are they?  Nope.  And while Grist publishes his books via Image Comics you have to wonder why Marvel or DC have not tried to get him on a title?  

Could it be his style is just not understandable by people in US Comics?


Robot versus dino...where are the RSPCA and Humane Society when needed??  Well, SJWs -WHERE??

I know that if as a publisher I had the money I’d be employing both full time!!

I need to stop mentioning Dobbyn now as my knees hurt (a lot) and it’s hard typing from this position.

Walking over terraced rooves in a colourful skin tight costume can get you into trouble with the authorities. I was lucky to get off with a fine after, uh, accidentally landing on that woman's window ledge.


What both creators have shown is that there really do not have to be skyscrapers for a “super hero.”  There is enough car crime, drug crime…violent crime of most types going on in the UK and believe it or not none involve a single skyscraper.  Incredible, isn’t it?

Also, the UK is rich in legends, myths, fairy tales and much more that are just crying out to be included in storylines.  The reason the Americans and other comic readers world-wide like UK strips is because they are uniquely British.  In India, particularly in Southern India, The Steel Claw, Robot Archie, The Spider and many others are still very popular in reprint form over 35 years since they last appeared in print here.
 One of the better British comic super heroes was Zenith and I still look through the Titan Books collection every so often!






Black Tower Comics has published a wide range of comics and the costumed crime-fighters (or even non-costumed in the case of Krakos) are the most popular.

So the market is there but where are the moneymen, the backers needed to help revive the corpse that is British comics so that it can proudly boast an industry once more that takes advantage of talents such as Grist, Dobbyn et al?

However improbable British super heroes might seem to some I can tell you they are not.  There is a history going back 80 years and even longer if you include the Penny Dreadfuls of the Victorian era.


And there is a point I need to make: just because I do not like something does not mean it is no good.  And vice versa because comics, ultimately, are there to be read and enjoyed from the professionals to Independent right down to Small Press creators.  Read and make comics but always HAVE FUN!


And remember British characters were popular enough in France to have long runs in various titles:

Image result for UK comics When Vulcan became Kobra

And when the UK Vulcan weekly became Kobra in Germany its run outlasted that of its British counter-part:

What I forgot and highly recommend is Accent Comics and Whatever Happened To The World's Fastest Man? involved no costume.  No mask.  In fine British tradition....some times.

It really was great to read but it was a while ago so my review was on the old CBO and I never saved it!


According to the Forbidden Planet blog:


“With a sigh he put his half-empty pint glass on it’s beer mat …. and stopped time”
Yep, that’s it. Bobby Doyle can stop time. He’s the mysterious “World’s Fastest Man” that all of the papers have been talking about ever since he carried all of those people from that train crash. But he’s not fast, not in the way they think. He just has this strange power where he can stop time for the world and carry on with his life inside his own time-zone. Bobby’s no hero, not in the way people think of them. He’s just an average 25 year old bloke who wants a normal life. But that’s not his fate. He may have saved people before, may have been the hero before, but never on this scale. And he knows what’s coming, he knows the end result. That’s why he looks so resigned to his fate in the artwork above.


So Bobby sets off to the future ground zero – Prometheus Tower in London, where the bomb proves to be just as big, just as deadly and just as impossible to turn off as he feared. Which means he knows for certain now – he has 59 minutes to rescue everyone he can, 59 minutes to get as many people to safety as he can.But he knows how his powers work – everything’s frozen when he stops time – so no transport works, doors remain shut unless he temporarily unfreezes time and opens them and the only way he can get people to safety outside the 2 mile blast radius is by the slow, physical, back-breaking way – he has to carry them. And he knows that even though time may be stopped for them, for him it carries on as normal, saving all of these people, carrying them all to safety will be no more than a blink of an eye for them, but for him it will take 50+ years of his life – possibly even all of his life – it’s the ultimate sacrifice and what makes him a true hero – no gaudy spandex, no incredible powers of flight and adulation, his is a special power that no one will ever know about.

I think the book is still available: http://www.accentukcomics.com/index.html 
Here endeth the sermon.....

Your Ally Against Crime.......

(c)2019 T. Hooper-Scharf/Black Tower Comics