Joel Beck's Comics And Stories
from comixjoint:Joel Beck's Comics and Stories compiles most of the stories from three of the earliest comic books in underground history: Lenny of Laredo (1965), The Profit (1966), and Marching Marvin, the Red Watcher!
(1966). As these books are relatively rare and quite expensive, it's
nice to have an affordable comic that gathers the best of Joel Beck's
pioneering books in one publication.
Joel Beck grew up in a small town north of Oakland,
California, his childhood marred by a battle with spinal meningitis. As a
young boy, he was bedridden for three years, during which he was
constantly drawing and cartooning. Beck never graduated from high
school, but as a teenager in the early '60s his cartoons were published
in the University of California campus newspaper, The Pelican. In 1965, he produced Lenny of Laredo,
which went through three small printings within a year (the last by
The Print Mint; Don Schenker's first comic book job). That same year,
Beck was chosen by a national panel of humor magazine editors as the Top
College Cartoonist (ironic for a high-school dropout), which Beck
proudly trumpeted on the cover of his 1966 comic book, The Profit.
After producing Marching Marvin at the end of 1966, Beck wasn't heavily involved in the post-Zap Comix frenzy of the late '60s, but he contributed to a number of underground anthologies throughout the '70s, including San Francisco Comic Book, Yellow Dog, and Snarf. He was spotlighted in Ban Zai!, a terrific 1973 Kitchen Sink comic book that also featured Kim Deitch and Roger Brand.
Kitchen Sink printed 10,000 copies of Joel Beck's Comics and Stories
in 1977, providing renewed exposure to Beck's groundbreaking work from
the mid '60s. The comic leads off with a funny cartoon on the inside
front cover, "So You Want to Become an Underground Cartoonist!?" that
was drawn specifically for this book, as was the three-pager that
follows, "The Truth About Smokey the Bear!" In "The Truth," Beck reveals
Smokey's degenerate behavior as a young cub and a teenager, running
amok until he sets fire to the forest, killing hundreds of animals. His
subsequent despair leads to an attempted suicide, but God intervenes,
commands him to become a guardian of the forest, and the legend of
Smokey the Bear is born. In the last three panels, Beck attempts to
inject religious mockery into the story, but it's too little, too late
for the taunting to inflict any damage. I understand that Beck's tongue
is always firmly in his cheek, but at some point ya gotta tip your hand
or we're gonna think your telling real fairy tales.
The rest of the book is comprised of the stories from
the aforementioned mid '60s comic books, beginning with "Lenny of
Laredo," a thinly veiled satire of foul-mouthed comedian Lenny Bruce. We
provide a full review of Lenny of Laredo on this site.
The next story is "The Profit," which is from the comic book of the same name. We also provide a full review of The Profit on this site.
Joel Beck's Comics and Stories concludes with
an often hilarious satire on morality and marketing entitled "Marching
Marvin, The Red Watcher!" You betcha, we also provide a full review of Marching Marvin on this site.
Joel Beck's Comics and Stories is a great comic
book that offers some of Beck's most insightful and funny work, made
all the more remarkable when you realize he produced all three of these
stories before he was 24 years old. His ink and brush work is very
assured for such a young man, and combined with his irreverent sense of
humor he seems like the type of cartoonist who would've fit right in
with Mad magazine in the '60s and '70s. Except even Bill Gaines
would not (and could not) have published stories with as much
wickedness as Beck imbues in these comics. Oh sure, it's all tame by
today's standards, but not back in 1966.
After 15 years of producing some of the best comics
ever, Beck's productivity dropped significantly in the '80s and '90s as
he suffered bouts with alcoholism and homelessness. Though his comic
work slowed to a crawl, he was also an accomplished fine artist and
produced many drawings and paintings in the last two decades of his
life, including commissioned works for friends and collectors. Beck
passed away in 1999 at the age of 56 due to complications from
alcoholism and tuberculosis. Joel
Beck is one of the often-overloooked forefathers of the
underground revolution, but his comics are still incisive and relevant
to a broad range of today's social issues.
physical copy
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