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Dick Briefer's Frankenstein by Craig Yoe, Dick Briefer

rickklaw's review

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5.0

Continuing the early 21st century trend of repackaging largely forgotten comic book classics in affordable handsome editions, historian Craig Yoe re-introduces Dick Briefer's horror-cum-comedy-cum-horror-again Frankenstein. Briefer's tale of a monster's revenge against his maker initially appeared in Prize #7 (1940), spawning the first ongoing series of horror comics. This incarnation of Shelley's creation proved to be very popular, largely thanks to Briefer's intelligent scripts and ghastly illustrations. In Prize #45 (1945), Briefer re-imagined the series as a humor strip. Proving he was as adapt at comedy as terror, Briefer hilariously lampooned popular culture, horror, and social conventions. Following an editorial edict, the stories returned to their spooky roots three years later in Frankenstein #18. With the advent of the Comics Code Authority in 1954, the long running series ended. In Dick Briefer's Frankenstein, Yoe collects the finest Frankenstein tales from all three epochs. Yoe's introduction recounts the creator and series history alongside rare art including an example of Briefer's Daily Worker strip Pinky Rankin (someone needs to collect those Communist action hero's stories) and [a:Alex Toth|62990|Alex Toth|http://www.goodreads.com/images/nophoto/nophoto-U-50x66.jpg] fan doodles.
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