Flex Mentallo Posted April 11, 2011 Share Posted April 11, 2011 I think those are Westland Whirlwinds on the prowl. A nifty looking plane which reminds me of the speedy Mosquito which was made out of plywood. The Germans made the flying pencil out of aluminun which should be light but I don't think it moved as fast as the Mosquito. Jets were pretty fast but entered too late to make a difference. Most of that was was fought with technology that was developed in the thirties. The Rolls Royce Merlin engine was designed in 1933, improved with a two stage supercharger and placed in every type of plane possible. Correct. Virtually every type of WW2 plane was featured on thes covers, however exotic - Nighthawks, Mosquitoes, Dorniers, Swordfish, Flying Tigers... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Scrooge Posted April 11, 2011 Share Posted April 11, 2011 Do you have any scans of the interiors you can post? +1 ... Esp. interested in any Pratt work you could show Loved seeing the Kennedy line work already. :thumbsup: Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Flex Mentallo Posted April 11, 2011 Share Posted April 11, 2011 (edited) I will try to find some Pratt but with 300 plus issues it may be like looking for the proverbial needle! meanwhile, a couple of early covers by the wonderfully named Septimus Scott! Edited April 12, 2011 by alanna Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
AJD Posted April 11, 2011 Share Posted April 11, 2011 Ian Kennedy: That Messerschmitt 110 panel is wonderful! I had a boxful of Air Aces thirty years ago - they ended up in landfill when my mum did a cleanup. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BangZoom Posted April 11, 2011 Author Share Posted April 11, 2011 I will try to find some Pratt but with 300 plus issues it may be like looking for the proverbial needle! Hugo Pratt Check these issues. War Picture Library WPL 25 - The Iron Fist WPL 40 - Pathfinder WPL 50 - The Crimson Sea WPL 58 - Up the Marines! WPL 62 - Strongpoint WPL 91 - The Bayonet Jungle WPL 92 - Dark Judgment WPL 133 - The Big Arena Battle Picture Library BPL 62 - Night of the Devil War at Sea Picture Library WSPL 34 - Battle Stations Thrilller Picture Library TPL 297 - Battler Britton and the Wagons of Gold Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Flex Mentallo Posted April 12, 2011 Share Posted April 12, 2011 I will try to find some Pratt but with 300 plus issues it may be like looking for the proverbial needle! Hugo Pratt Check these issues. War Picture Library WPL 25 - The Iron Fist WPL 40 - Pathfinder WPL 50 - The Crimson Sea WPL 58 - Up the Marines! WPL 62 - Strongpoint WPL 91 - The Bayonet Jungle WPL 92 - Dark Judgment WPL 133 - The Big Arena Battle Picture Library BPL 62 - Night of the Devil War at Sea Picture Library WSPL 34 - Battle Stations Thrilller Picture Library TPL 297 - Battler Britton and the Wagons of Gold Fast work BZ! I was just about to say that I had tracked down the 8 WPL issues! May also have the War at Sea issue. I will dig them out tomorrow... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BangZoom Posted April 12, 2011 Author Share Posted April 12, 2011 Fast work BZ! I was just about to say that I had tracked down the 8 WPL issues! May also have the War at Sea issue. I will dig them out tomorrow... Thanks. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BangZoom Posted April 12, 2011 Author Share Posted April 12, 2011 Flying Aces (May 1935) Cover: August Schomburg Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
AJD Posted April 12, 2011 Share Posted April 12, 2011 Since we are deep into aviation artwork territory, I can't help but think it would be a disservice to leave out Roy Cross. While he never did work for comic books, his work was certainly known by the same generations of young boys who bought them. Cross was the main artist for model comapny Airfix during their heyday. Here's two examples of very different interpretations. B-17 Flying Fortress, in trouble but with all guns blazing: and my favourite, the Short Stirling preparing for a mission: This is a very different sort of painting from the usual 'blood and thunder' boxtop, but it worked. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Scrooge Posted April 12, 2011 Share Posted April 12, 2011 Allright, I am a little late on this but, Re: Lovecraft. One summer I worked the vineyard in Bavaria and took with me the Complete Lovecraft in 3 volumes of 1,300 pages each along and read through these while I was aching from the back-breaking work we were doing Ahhh, to have that much time again I like the collection so much that it made the trans-oceanic trip at some point - Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Scrooge Posted April 12, 2011 Share Posted April 12, 2011 My lone issue of Flying Aces (March 1942) - Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Moondog Posted April 12, 2011 Share Posted April 12, 2011 Allright, I am a little late on this but, Re: Lovecraft. One summer I worked the vineyard in Bavaria and took with me the Complete Lovecraft in 3 volumes of 1,300 pages each along and read through these while I was aching from the back-breaking work we were doing Ahhh, to have that much time again I like the collection so much that it made the trans-oceanic trip at some point - I've never seen this Michael. Who published them and when? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Scrooge Posted April 12, 2011 Share Posted April 12, 2011 Oopps. Forgot to mention. These were (are?) published in the Bouquins imprint of Robert Laffont and are all in French translation. They were originally published in 1991 / 1992. It is comprehensive reprinting anything (though not all his correspondence but some made it) HPL ever wrote from his first (?) work as a 6-yr old to his essays, including his reflection on literary genres and one that struck me 20 years ago, titled in english: "Suggestions for a Reading guide" dated September 1936 in The Dark Brotherhood and Other Pieces in which HPL lays out what works, in his opinion, a cultivated person and reader should be familiar with in order to establish that knowledge base necessary for intelligent reflection. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BangZoom Posted April 12, 2011 Author Share Posted April 12, 2011 Allright, I am a little late on this but, Re: Lovecraft. One summer I worked the vineyard in Bavaria and took with me the Complete Lovecraft in 3 volumes of 1,300 pages each along and read through these while I was aching from the back-breaking work we were doing Ahhh, to have that much time again I like the collection so much that it made the trans-oceanic trip at some point - 3900 pages of Lovecraft! That's quite a commitment to an author. When I was much younger I used to fixate on a particular author (Edgar Rice Burroughs, Thomas Wolfe, Robert Howard, Ross Macdonald, Raymond Chandler, etc.) and read everything I could lay my hands on by them; one story after another. But I'm certain I never came close to reading 3900 pages by a single author. That's amazing. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
adamstrange Posted April 12, 2011 Share Posted April 12, 2011 I also strongly recommend Robert Weinberg's book, The Weird Tales Story . Ordered (thnx). I just read the chapter with E. Hoffman Price's recollections and insights on Farnsworth Wright, the edtior of Weird Tales. A remarkable essay on a remarkable man. That essay is but one chapter from Price's marvelous elegy: Book of the Dead: Friends of Yesteryear : Fictioneers & Others (Memories of the Pulp Fiction Era). He corresponded and visited almost all the early Weird Tales authors including Lovecraft and Howard and died, aged 90, working on another book. http://www.amazon.com/Book-Dead-Yesteryear-Fictioneers-Memories/dp/087054179X/ref=sr_1_6?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1302582196&sr=1-6 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
adamstrange Posted April 12, 2011 Share Posted April 12, 2011 3900 pages of Lovecraft! That's like 2 Tolstoy novels! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BB-Gun Posted April 12, 2011 Share Posted April 12, 2011 Flying Aces (May 1935) Cover: August Schomburg I think August and Alex combined to do US Fliers in Action Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BB-Gun Posted April 12, 2011 Share Posted April 12, 2011 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Annihilus Posted April 12, 2011 Share Posted April 12, 2011 That essay is but one chapter from Price's marvelous elegy: Book of the Dead: Friends of Yesteryear : Fictioneers & Others (Memories of the Pulp Fiction Era). He corresponded and visited almost all the early Weird Tales authors including Lovecraft and Howard and died, aged 90, working on another book. http://www.amazon.com/Book-Dead-Yesteryear-Fictioneers-Memories/dp/087054179X/ref=sr_1_6?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1302582196&sr=1-6 I'm not a huge Price fan, but that is a great book, full of stories of the period. His reminiscences of HPL aren't all that rosey, but hey...it is what it is, I guess. Any fan of pulp fiction should certainly pick it up at some point. Related in an ancillary way (concerning Price), I was lucky enough to attend MythosCon in January, the first ever totally HPL driven convention in Phoenix, and on day 3 attended a panel entitled 'The Arkham Collector' (one of my favorite panels of the week, incidentally). The panel consisted of Alan Dean Foster, Walt Debill, Ramsey Campbell, Donald Sidney-Fryer and W. Paul Ganley. Foster related a short, yet funny anecdote transcribed below: "“The last time I did a purely Lovecraftian panel was 38 years ago and the other panelists, who were all coincidentally seated to the left of me, were L. Sprague DeCamp, Robert Bloch and E. Hoffman Price, and to say that I felt out of place at that time is a massive understatement. I mean, why am I on this panel? I’m sitting here listening to E. Hoffman Price talking about traveling around the country in his Model-T to visit Robert E. Howard and Lovecraft; I wanted to be in the audience and not on the panel, but I contributed what I could at the time.” Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Annihilus Posted April 12, 2011 Share Posted April 12, 2011 Allright, I am a little late on this but, Re: Lovecraft. One summer I worked the vineyard in Bavaria and took with me the Complete Lovecraft in 3 volumes of 1,300 pages each along and read through these while I was aching from the back-breaking work we were doing Ahhh, to have that much time again I like the collection so much that it made the trans-oceanic trip at some point - Wow, that's great...thanks for posting! I have heard of these editions, but have never seen them before. It's curious that they have so many pages, though I guess if they contain a lot of essays and such, they could fill some 4200 pages. I think the 4 combined Arkham House editions of his complete fiction (including revisions) only fill about 2000 pages (max). The Barnes and Noble collection, ghastly as it is with errors, is about 1100 pages. I'd have freaked out at having access to something like you did back when I was a kid Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...