Friday, August 12, 2022

David McKay’s American Library Reprint Series

This series is covered in the The Overstreet Comic Book Price Guide and on The Grand Comics Database (comics.org), but the information presented here is more complete and accurate.  In addition to limited credits, Overstreet and GCD make no mention that these books were reprints of the Book-of-the-Month strip.

 


If King Features Syndicate’s Book-of-the-Month newspaper comic strip was reminiscent of Classics Illustrated, its comic book reprints were even more so.  The reprints were not only comic adaptations of famous books but were in comic book format, with the same dimensions (7-3/8” x 10-1/4”), number of pages (68 or 52), a slick cover, and newsprint interior.  Of course, there was the same question as to whether they were actually comics, since they had no word balloons or narration boxes and were mostly text with a lot of illustration panels.  But they looked like comic books and were published by a comic book company.

Actually, David McKay Company was a book publisher that also produced comic books, mostly (but not exclusively) reprints of newspaper comics owned by King Features, like Blondie, Popeye, and The Katzenjammer Kids.  So it’s not surprising that King Features would choose McKay to reprint its Book-of-the-Month strip.

The reprints differed from the originals in that they had additional content, namely a painted cover, a title page, and usually an author biography.  While painted covers were the norm in pulp magazines at the time, they were by no means common in comic books.  Dell had done a few, but the publishers most associated with them – Classics Illustrated and Gold Key – didn’t begin using them until years later.  Artists Clayton Knight and E. Franklin Wittmack provided most of American Library’s covers.

Ex-World War I pilot Knight made his mark in comics in the late 1930s with the aviation-themed newspaper strips Ace Drummond and Hall of Fame of the Air, both written by famed ace pilot and airline executive Eddie Rickenbacker, distributed by King Features, and reprinted by David McKay Company in King Comics.  Knight followed this up with a couple of 2-page strips entitled The Romance of Flying and Heroes on Wings, appearing in the McKay-published Magic Comics.  Knight also illustrated children’s books, sometimes in collaboration with his wife and fellow illustrator, Katherine Sturges Dodge.

Wittmack did centerfolds called Battle of the Atlantic and Battle of the Seven Seas in McKay’s Ace Comics.  He was also a prolific cover painter for pulp magazines like Adventure, Clues Detective Stories, Frontier Stories, Short Stories, The Popular Magazine, Weird Tales and Western Story and provided illustrations for Collier's, Liberty, The Saturday Evening Post, and Scientific American.  He is particularly known for his Popular Science covers.

Assigning publication dates to American Library comics is problematic, since the King Features copyright years listed in them indicate when the adaptation originally appeared in newspapers, not when the reprints were published.  The back covers can help, as they feature ads for other books, but at best all they can do is tell the earliest date possible.  Even the order of publication is uncertain.  The Overstreet Comic Book Price Guide designates Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo as American Library #1 and Guadalcanal Diary as American Library #2 (and comics.org follows its lead), but there’s reason to believe that Guadalcanal Diary was published first.  (See the note below under Guadalcanal Diary.)

American Library wasn’t the only place the King Features Book-of-the-Month strip was reprinted.  There was also one reprint published by Gilberton Company (publisher of Classic Comics, which later became Classics Illustrated).  It appears that this book came out in 1944, but it’s not known if this was before or after the American Library series.


Credits and Notes


Page counts include covers.

 

Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo by Capt. Ted W. Lawson, Edited by Bob Considine

68 pages, 15¢ cover price

Published by David McKay Company, Washington Square, Philadelphia

Cover painting by Clayton Knight

Title page art by Anonymous

Illustrations by Don Komisarow

A Picture Version of Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo, published by Random House and selected by Book-of-the-Month Club

Reprinted from the King Features newspaper comic strip

  • Back cover has ad for More Cuties in Arms by E. Simms Campbell (1943)
  • The Overstreet Guide designates this comic book as American Library #1, but there is no mention of that title or number anywhere in the book.





 

Guadalcanal Diary by Richard Tregaskis

68 pages, 10¢ cover price

Published by David McKay Company, Washington Square, Philadelphia

Cover painting and title page art by E. Franklin Wittmack

Illustrations by I. B. Hazelton

A Picture Version of Guadalcanal Diary, published by Random House and selected by Book-of-the-Month Club

“This story is the basis for Twentieth Century Fox motion picture of Guadalcanal Diary

Drawings copyright, 1943, by King Features Syndicate

Text copyright, 1943, by Random House, Inc

Reprinted from the King Features newspaper comic strip

  • Back cover has ad for Cuties in Arms by E. Simms Campbell (1941, 1942)
  • The Overstreet Guide designates this comic book as American Library #2, but there is no mention of that title or number anywhere in the book.
  • There are a couple of facts that support the idea that Guadalcanal Diary was published before Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo, not after.  The first is that the price is 10¢ – 5¢ less than Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo’s price (with no difference in page count).  It seems logical that the price would go up, not down.  Also, the book advertised on Guadalcanal Diary’s back cover (Cuties in Arms) was published before the book advertised on Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo’s back cover (More Cuties in Arms).  If it’s true that Guadalcanal Diary was published first, then it would make sense to consider it American Library #1, while Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo would be American Library #2.  (Are you listening, Overstreet Guide?)





 

American Library #3 – Look to the Mountain by Le Grand Cannon Jr.

68 pages, 15¢ cover price

Published by David McKay Company, Washington Square, Philadelphia

Cover painting and title page art by E. Franklin Wittmack

Illustrations by John Fulton

A Picture Version of Look to the Mountain, published by Henry Holt and Co. and selected by Book-of-the-Month Club

Drawings copyright, 1942, by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

Text copyright, 1942, by Henry Holt & Co.

Reprinted from the King Features newspaper comic strip

  • Back cover has ad for Blondie: 100 Selected Top-Laughs of America's Best Loved Comic (1938, 1939, 1940, 1941, 1942, 1943, 1944)








American Library #4 – The Case of the Crooked Candle by Erle Stanley Gardner

68 pages, 15¢ cover price

Published by David McKay Company, Washington Square, Philadelphia

Cover painting by Anonymous

Title page art by E. Franklin Wittmack

Illustrations by Stephen Grout

Drawings copyright, 1944, by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

Text copyright, 1944, by Erle Stanley Gardner

Reprinted from the King Features newspaper comic strip

  • Back cover has ad for Blondie: 100 Selected Top-Laughs of America's Best Loved Comic (1938, 1939, 1940, 1941, 1942, 1943, 1944)
  • This reprint has something its comic strip counterpart didn’t – a lead-in to the next Erle Stanley Gardner/Perry Mason book.  In addition to a much more extensive recap of the case in the wrap-up scene in Mason’s office, the reprint – like the original novel it’s based on – ends with a visit from “a blonde woman out there with a black eye.”  As Mason comments, “An hysterical blonde with a black eye would seem to be an emergency case, at least an interesting one–The Case of the Black-Eyed Blonde.”  Gardner’s Black-Eyed Blonde novel was also adapted in King Features’s Book-of-the-Month strip, and it would seem that it was slated for a future American Library reprint.  But AL was canceled before that could happen.









American Library #5 – Duel In The Sun by Niven Busch

52 pages, 15¢ cover price

Published by David McKay Company, Washington Square, Philadelphia

Cover painting and title page art by E. Franklin Wittmack

Illustrations by F. R. Gruger

An illustrated condensed version of the novel published by Wm. Morrow & Co.

Drawings copyright, 1944, by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

Text copyright, 1944, by Niven Busch

Reprinted from the King Features newspaper comic strip

  • Back cover has ad for More Cuties in Arms by E. Simms Campbell (1943)











American Library #6 – Wingate’s Raiders by Charles J. Rolo

52 pages, 15¢ cover price

Published by David McKay Company, Washington Square, Philadelphia

Cover painting by Clayton Knight

Title page art by Anonymous

Illustrations by L. H. Greenwood

A picture version of Wingate’s Raiders published by The Viking Press, Inc.

Drawings copyright, 1944, by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

Text copyright, 1944, by Charles J. Rolo

Reprinted from the King Features newspaper comic strip

  • Back cover has ad for More Cuties in Arms by E. Simms Campbell (1943)









 

Combined Operations: The Story of the Commandos (From the Official Records)

68 pages, 15¢ cover price

Published by Long Island Independent, Long Beach, NY/Gilberton Company, New York, NY

Cover painting and title page photo by Anonymous

Illustrations by William Sharp

Based on the Book-of-the-Month

“The complete book is published by The Macmillan Company, New York, and is available at all bookstores at $2.00.”

Drawings copyright, 1943, King Features Syndicate, Inc.

Text copyright, 1943, H. M. Stationery Office

Reprinted from the King Features newspaper comic strip

  • Back cover has ad for Classic Comics gift boxes that includes list of 20 Classic Comics published to date (HRN 20).  The last of these comics is The Corsican Brothers, published June 1944.
  • There’s some confusion about the publisher of this comic book.  The indicia lists the Long Island Independent, a New York newspaper, as publisher, but because of the Classic Comics ad on the back cover, it’s generally assumed that Gilberton Company (publisher of Classic Comics) is the real publisher.  It was probably an example of the arrangement Gilberton made with local New York area newspapers to use their newsprint allotments to circumvent wartime rationing restrictions.  You can read more about this in my post entitled Classic Comics and the Illegal Paper Allotment Scheme.
  • The book this adaptation was based on was written by Hilary St. George Saunders but published anonymously. 
  • In comic book databases, this book is usually listed as The Story of the Commandos: Combined Operations.  But the title page inverts that and calls it instead Combined Operations: The Story of the Commandos, as do the original book and comic strip.  For that reason, I’ve opted to use the original, inverted title.






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