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Article # : 16130 

Section : BOOK WORLD
Issue Date : 6 / 1989  2,489 Words
Author : Ron Goulart
Ron Goulart is a longtime free-lance writer based in Connecticut. He is the author of The Dime Detective (1988) and 150 works of fiction and nonfiction.

       A LIFE FORCE
       Will Eisner
       Princeton, Wisconsin: Kitchen Sink Press, 1988
       140 pp., $10.95
       
       THE SHADOW 1941
       Denny O' Neil, Michael W. Kaluta, and Russ Health
       New York: Marvel Comics, 1988
       64 pp., $12.95
       
        The modern comic book is a few years older than Superman, who recently celebrated his fiftieth anniversary in the business. Although some critics and reviewers are still fond of referring to movies and books that don't please them as being as simpleminded as comic books, the lowly comic book has been, gradually, working its way out of the intellectual slums in recent years. Both those purveying traditional slambang superhero fare and those using comic-book techniques to tell different sorts of stories are getting attention beyond the usual circles of fans. Like many escapes from the ghetto, this one has been helped in part by a change of name. These higher-minded, higher-priced funny books are now labeled graphic novels. The upgraded format was borrowed from Europe, where this sort of thing has been going on for decades.
       
        One of the pioneers was Belgian cartoonist Herge, whose first Tintin novel appeared in Europe in 1930. According to comics historian Richard Marschall, "Adults followed the series as avidly as did children, and were not embarrassed to be seen reading them." The books were full-length stories with subplots and twists. The Graphic Novel was established and publishers soon presented the work of many imitators and admirers of Herge. The sophistication of expression liberated the European comic strip from its juvenile associations. Thematic preoccupations were to be as varied as the brilliant colors of the graphic novels: kids' adventures; adult mysteries; science fiction; social satire; adaptions of classics; even the gamut from religious tales to pornographic stories.
       
        The Tintin books have sold millions of copies, as have those featuring such latter-day successes as Asterix, Lucky Luke, and the Schtroumpfs (known in this country as the Smurfs). Graphic novels in Europe offering straight adventure fare have also done well, particularly Jean Giraud's Lt. Blueberry series, Hugo Pratt's Corto Maltese tales, and Edgar Jacobs' Blake and Mortimer stories. For the past several years many of these European graphic novels, both in original foreign languages
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