Certainly, the pulps had fun with cross genre books,
and comics tended to follow suit.
Here is an eye-catching cover of a DC Comics Special from 1970.
The Special is a crafty idea, as it repackages
previously published tales about several DC frontier characters within a
cross-genre story arc. There’s a book-end and linking storyline ‘Behold the
Wild Frontier’ where the modern-day Gramps tells frontier tales to his two grandsons.
This arc is drawn by Gil Kane, I reckon (author and artist credits were not
given), and here’s the first page.
The rest of the stories are drawn by their
respective illustrators of the time. There begins a Daniel Boone tale, ‘Son of
Chief Black Fish!’ Then Gramps went on to relate the story of ‘The Junior Ghost
Patrol!’ featuring Tomahawk. Next up was Davy Crocket with ‘War Stick of Chief
Fighting Elk!’ This was followed by Kit Carson and ‘The Raiders of the Oregon
Trail!’ We’re moving forward a little in
time, I guess, and now meet Buffalo Bill in ‘Young Bill – of the Pony Express!’
No sooner is that story told than Gramps relates the story of Pow-Wow Smith,
Indian Lawman. (The only story title that doesn’t boast an exclamation mark!)
And the book-end/story arc concludes with Gramps meeting up with aliens. The comic
is rounded off with a DPS text story, ‘Death Hunt’, uncredited.
[Eli
Katz (April 6, 1926 – January
31, 2000) who worked under the name Gil
Kane and less famously Scott
Edward, Gil Stack and
other pseudonyms, was a comic book artist whose
career spanned the 1940s to 1990s and every major comics company and character.
Kane co-created the modern-day version of the superhero
Green Lantern.]
Ah, those were the days.
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