I love serials!

Yes, I do. Maybe that's why BC is home to so many of them and such good ones. Who doesn't want their daily or weekly dose of their favorite serial? Well...

I think that's why there aren't many young comic book fans now. It's all continued stories, months long story arcs that go across three or six or twenty different titles. Comics are aimed at adults now and not at kids who can't control whether they get the next issue reliably. I used to walk eight miles from our house on the edge of the desert to get the new comics that came out on Thursday, then I'd get a ride home with my dad. Yes, that's right, I would walk eight miles for an issue of Jimmy Olsen. :)

But comics back then had three or more stories in each issue, mostly complete. Action Comics featured Superman in the first story, 10 or 12 pages and it was a complete story. The first back-up was probably Tommy Tomorrow, six or eight pages complete story, about a spaceman who wore a cute purple jumpsuit with short pants. LOL. And the second backup, eight or ten pages, was Congo Bill who looked like Errol Flynn. The Congo Bill strip was a rarity in that it was sometimes a continued story from one issue to the next, but usually not more than two issues long.

Besides the features, there were featurettes, one-half, one or two page stories, usually humorous, featuring Super-Turtle, or Harold Teen, or a sad sack hobo whose name I don't remember. And a one or two page text story. In Action, this was usually Robin Hood or Hercules or even Joshua from the Bible. Postal regulations required magazines to have at least one page of mostly text. That left two to four pages for ads, besides the inside and back covers.

The ads were for things like bicycles, cap pistols, army men, sea monkeys, bb-guns, or recruiting ads for things like selling Cloverleaf Salve or Grit Magazine door to door. One of the ads was almost sure to be for the famous Charles Atlas exercise book with the little cartoon about the 97 pound weakling. :) Another page would be full of little tiny ads, 30 or 40 of them on the page. These might be for things like X-Ray Specs or back issue comic books or high heel boots. (!)

Okay, that was a bit off the point, but much as I love good serials, good stand alone stories are good, too. And just because there is a continuing character does not mean that stories cannot be standalone. One problem is that I don't have a way here to mark standalone stories featuring a continuing character as different from serials or solos.

So, I'm asking you writers out there to make a note in the Other Keywords field if a series story is a complete in one episode story. That will help some of our readers maybe get into the more addictive serial stuff. LOL.

Hugs,
Erin

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