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Man of Rock: A Biography of Joe Kubert | 
enlarge | Author: Bill Schelly Publisher: Fantagraphics Books Category: Book
List Price: $19.99 Buy New: $13.59 You Save: $6.40 (32%)
New (32) Used (5) from $10.35
Rating: 5 reviews Sales Rank: 362789
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 320 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.9 Dimensions (in): 8.9 x 6 x 0.8
ISBN: 1560979283 Dewey Decimal Number: 741 EAN: 9781560979289 ASIN: 1560979283
Publication Date: November 24, 2008 Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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Product Description A full portrait of one of the comic book field's greatest talents.
Joe Kubert's extraordinary career spans the history of the comic book in America: he began drawing comics in 1938, just as Superman made his debut in Action Comics #1, and continues to be one of the most vital cartoonists working today, writing and drawing both mainstream comic book characters as well as, more recently, graphic novels of his own conception.
Kubert made his name working for DC Comics on acclaimed series starring Sgt. Rock of Easy Co., Hawkman, Tarzan, and has worked on many of DC's most commercially successful properties (Superman, Batman, Flash, et al.). Kubert has created comics for virtually every major publisher over an incredible 70 years in the business, including Marvel and EC. He started the Joe Kubert School of Cartoon and Graphic Art in the 1980s. In the 1990s, he wrote and drew his own graphic novels, including Fax from Sarajevo, which won the Will Eisner Comics Industry Award for Best Graphic Novel. He was subsequently inducted into both the Harvey Awards' Jack Kirby Hall of Fame and the Will Eisner Comic Book Hall of Fame.
Joe Kubert: Man of Rock provides a unique, behind-the-scenes look at the career of one of the most distinctive, dynamic artists in the history of comics. Schelly's insightful book covers all facets of Kubert's creative life: artist, writer, innovator, entrepreneur, and educator. It abounds in heretofore unknown details about Kubert's life and work, and is rich in colorful anecdotes drawn from numerous interviews the author conducted with Kubert's colleagues, family and friends. Joe Kubert: Man of Rock is a full-bodied biography intended to be read and enjoyed by anyone interested in the history of American popular culture.
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Man of Rock December 27, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Back in May 1962 I was a young teenager getting seriously interested in comic book collecting. That was a magic time which saw the revival of numerous super heroes from the 1940s. In some of the Julie Schwartz edited books I was finding intriguing ads for The Brave and the Bold starring a character called Hawkman. This I was later to learn was a revival of another hero from the Golden Age of Comics. When I visited the local drugstore that carried comics I purchased a copy of The Brave and the Bold #42. As the ad had proclaimed Hawkman was star feature in this issue. Hawkman was a flying policemen from another planet who with his wife and fellow law enforcement officer had come to Earth to learn our planet's police techniques. Hawkman's methods were to use ancient Earth weapons to subdue alien and supernatural foes.
However it wasn't the character but the artwork that made Hawkman a standout among the super heroes of the early 1960s. Most of those super doers were drawn with a very slick line and the spotting of blacks were used sparingly. The artist on Hawkman, however, used a deceptively rough line and made liberal use of blacks which gave the artwork a rather foreboding atmosphere. I learned that this artist was Joe Kubert. As a young teenager just beginning to look at comic book art seriously I gravitated toward the more slick work of people like Murphy Anderson and Sid Greene. A year later I started to become aware of emerging comics fandom. One of the first rallying cries of this young movement was "Save Hawkman by Kubert" The Brave and Bold issues of Hawkman that I had purchased were the second tryout for the Winded Wonder and apparently the sales were not warrant giving the character his own book. Fans began besieging National Comics (now DC Comics) with a letter campaign to not only publish Hawkman but to keep Kubert as the artist. Part of Kubert's appeal as artist was that he had drawn the strip years earlier during the Golden Age. It was natural for the fans of the older comics to want to see one of their favorite artists work on a strip that he had cut his eye teeth on years earlier. However that was not to happen. Hawkman next appeared as a backup strip in Mystery in Space with the very slick Murphy Anderson doing the art. Eventually in 1964 Hawkman received his out bi-monthly title again with Anderson doing the art chores. I'll have to admit I preferred Anderson's Hawkman work at that time to Kubert's.
However over the years I became more and more to appreciate the virtues of Kubert's wonderful storytelling abilities. I even began to like his work on things like Enemy Ace. He was (is) simply a great comic book designer and even his use of blacks and that not so slick line worked very well. He is truly a master of the comic book medium.
In 1977 at the San Diego Comic Convention had the pleasure of sitting at his banquet table and told him that I'd grown to really appreciate his work.
Bill Schelly has written an excellent and thorough summary of Kubert's life. He starts his story with Kubert's grandparents in Poland setting the stage for Kubert's parents emigrating to America in 1925 shortly after Joe was born. Schelly skillfully weaves the tapestry of Kubert's life with anecdotes, comic book history, his family context and how Kubert approaches his craft. How do you critique a living legend's work. Schelly does a commendable job in describing and analyzing Kubert's growth as a artist. Kubert wasn't always the flawless visual storyteller. Kubert grew and improved in his craft from the very start in 1938 as a 11 1/2 year old boy visited Harry "A" Chesler's comic book production shop and began asking the artists a lot of questions and actually doing some work. Schelly follows Kubert's career trajectory through the 1940s with his work on Hawkman to the 1950s with his friendship/partnership with Three Stooges manager Norman Maurer and his part in launching 3D comics and his caveman strip Tor. The late 1950s saw him returning to National where he teamed up with writer Robert Kanigher to create one of comic's most enduring war heroes, Sgt. Rock. Then came the revival of Hawkman. Why didn't Kubert stay with Hawkman? Mostly Sgt. Rock was a much more popular character and Kubert was needed to chronicle his adventures. Then came the amazing Enemy Ace and in the late 1960s he got his chance with a syndicated newspaper strip called the Tales of the Green Berets. In the early 1970s DC Comics acquired the rights to publish Tarzan and Kubert produced some of his greatest work--a homage to one of his artistic heroes-Hal Foster. After that we discover the circumstances behind founding of the Joe Kubert School of Cartoon and Graphic Arts in New Jersey. In more recent years Kubert has been involved in writing and drawing excellent and well-received autobiographical graphic novels such as Fax from Sarajevo and the alternative reality biography Yossel April 19, 1943.
Bill Schelly has matured as a writer and toward the end of the book renders a profound, sensible and articulate summary to a man who has given much to his family, his profession, his art and society. For anyone interested in comics history or Joe Kubert this book is highly recommended. While this reviewer believes in divine providence I appreciate Joe Kubert's positive estimate of his own life, "I really am the luckiest man on earth."
Man of Rock - an excellent book December 24, 2008 Back in the day, in 1962 when I was a tender 11 year old, I was seriously starting to examine the comic book medium. I found a few comics drawn by Joe Kubert. These were the 3 1962 ssues of DC's The Brave and the Bold featuring Hawkman. While I was enjoying these titles, my other comic book reading experiences were contemporary with the various other comics of that time. I always had a great appreciation for these Kubert comics because they were so unique. His style was way different from much of the blander, run of the mill DC "product" of the time. Kubert was harsher. He was dar ker. He had more depth. He inspired my imagination in exciting, imaginative directions. Let's hear it for Joe Kubert, one of the finest cartoonists of our time!
I always wondered what the story was behind the artist behind these grim gritty comics. With the publication of Man of Rock: A Biography of Joe Kubert, the veil of mystery has been lifted.
The very excellent Bill Schelly has concocted here yet another of his fine historical documents. This time Bill's subject is the long, productive life and works of cartoonist, Joe Kubert. Bill examines Kubert's life from the beginning to the present. According to an article in Alter Ego magazine, Bill had access Joe's works and he had first hand access to Joe himself.
I love the book, Man of Rock: A Biography of Joe Kubert. Joe is still working and growing. Bill Schelly has recognized these qualities and imparted this importance for us all to appreciate. The text and illustrations used in this book fully inform us of what Joe is all about.
The publication of this book is gives us all a splendid opportunity to witness and appreciate an important keystone-figure underlying the American comic book medium. Thank you Joe, and thank you Bill!
Exceptional Comics Career Overview December 16, 2008 Comic book and comic fandom historian Bill Schelly has pulled another rabbit out of his hat with this well-researched overview of the life of Joe Kubert, whose career in comics spans over 60 years and is still going strong. Kubert was there at the beginning of comics and still works regularly, so his personal history in many ways mirrors the history of the medium itself. Schelly has done his usual exceptional job of digging for interesting tidbits and scoops, as well as presenting a fascinating look at this talented comics creator and the ever-changing comics industry itself. The book is always a pleasure to read and the accompanying graphics are mouth-watering. This book needs to be on any comic fan's shelf!
Stunning! December 11, 2008
Once upon a time there was a young man named Joseph Kubert who traveled across the ocean to arrive in New York. His father, Jakob, and mother, Etta, encouraged him as a young man in his pursuit of art. With the arrival of Action Comics #1, and the influence of the daily comic strips by Raymond and Foster, he found himself. Joe the young man had become Joe the artist.
He arrived at the Harry "A" Chesler shop, a precocious 12-year-old eager to learn. At $5 a week, he practised and watched the industry grow from the shops. Growing up as a professional artist while still in school, Joe's early work can be found in books from Fox, Quality, Fawcett, MLJ, and eventually DC comics. His stops at the Demby, Eisner, and finally the All-American shop under Shelly Mayer proved invaluable.
His age presented no barrier to his development. He learned at the elbows of the early practitioners that included Irv Novick, Tex Blaisdell, Alex Kotzky, Lou Fine, Will Eisner, Nick Cardy, Reed Crandall, Jack Cole, and many other talented individuals. His first published work was for Holyoke, a back-up story that featured Volton that Kubert thought stunk. For a young artist of 13, it was the beginning of a long career that still continues today.
"Man of Rock" is an amazing, in-depth, passionate, detailed, living chronology of the story of Yosaif Kubert. Bill Schelly discusses Joe's beginnings in the Jewish ghetto, and his rise to prominence as an art school owner/director/teacher. The book is addictively fascinating, with each chapter unveiling the genesis of Kubert through his work and interests. It is very fitting that he and his late wife Muriel created the Kubert School to mentor future artists given his steep learning curve in the shops at the tables of the legends.
Within the pages, Schelly discusses Sgt. Rock, the Green Berets, Tarzan, his graphic novels, his school, his early work at DC with All-American, and St. John on the 3-D titles. In a prior discussion with Mr. Kubert, he told me that this book was coming out, and that he had no choice but to co-operate as Schelly would write it, whether or not Joe participated
I am glad that he did.
This book is truly amazing. If you can imagine that this man, in his early 80's now, is still creating published material for DC, and teaching, then you need to read this book. Kubert is about passing on his skills and storytelling as Will Eisner was passionate about sequential art.
Thank you, Mr. Schelly and Mr. Kubert.
Stunning! December 11, 2008
Once upon a time there was a young man named Joseph Kubert who traveled across the ocean to arrive in New York. His father, Jakob, and mother, Etta, encouraged him as a young man in his pursuit of art. With the arrival of Action Comics #1, and the influence of the daily comic strips by Raymond and Foster, he found himself. Joe the young man, had become Joe, the artist.
He arrived at the Harry A Chesler shop, a precoucious 11 year old eager to learn. At $5 a week, he practised and watched the industry grow from the Shops. Growing up as a professional artist while still in school, Joe's early work can be found in books from Fox, Quality, Fawcett, MLJ, and eventually DC comics. His stops at the Demby, Eisner, and finally the DC shop under Shelly Mayer proved valuable.
His age presented no barrier to his development. He learned at the elbows of the early practishoners that included Irv Novick, Tex Blaisdell, Alex Kotzky, Lou Fine, Will Eisner, Nick Cardy, Reed Crandall, Jack Coke, and many other talented individuals. His first published work was for Hollyhoke, a back up story that featured Voltron that Kubert thought stunk. For a young artist of 13, it was the beginning of a long career that still continues today.
"Man of Rock" is an amazing, in depth, passionate, detailed, living chronology of the story of Yosaif Kubert. Schelly discusses his beginings in the Jewish ghetto, and his rise to prominence from janitor to art school owner/director/teacher. The book is addictively fascinating, with each chapter unveiling the genesis of Kubert through his work and interests. It is very fitting that he and his late wife Muriel, created the Kubert School to mentor future artists given his steep learning curve in the shops at the tables of the legends.
Within the pages, Schelly discusses the Sgt Rock, the Green Beret, Tarzan, his graphic novels, his school, his early work at DC with All American, and St John on the 3-D titles. In discussion with Mr Kubert once, he told me that this book was coming out, and that he had no choice but to co-operate as Schelly had talked to all of his friends already! I am glad that he did.
This book is truly amazing. If you can imagine that this man, in his early 80's now, is still creating published material for DC, and teaching, then you need to read this book. As passionate as WIll Eisner was about sequential art, Kubert is about passing on his skills and storytelling.
Thank you Mr Schelly and Mr Kubert.
Tim Lasiuta
www.fantagraphics.com
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