Wednesday, December 24, 2025

The Christmas Spirit!


The Christmas Spirit is a collection published by Kitchen Sink and gathers up Eisner's holiday tales. The gimmick is that during this singular holiday, The Spirit can take a break as a greater spirit takes over and works its tiny miracles. Eisner began these stories in his very first year on the strip and continued them right up until he was drafted. After his return they began again, creating some of the best stories from the venerated series. Below are the splash pages for the stories in this collection. 










"Joy" was written and illustrated by Will Eisner for the December 21st, 1947 installment of The Spirit Section. By this time, Eisner had produced many "Christmas Spirits" as these stories were dubbed, but this one was different. It's presented as text on single panels. Always an innovator, Eisner's technique here is exquisite and typically the story is full of character and spark. In a mere seven pages Eisner unfolds a modern fable, a tale of child who finds the land of his dreams.


This was the very first Spirit story reprinted by Warren Magazines in Eerie #54. It's a very odd choice, since it's so atypical of a standard Spirit story. Certainly, folks seeing The Spirit for the very first time must've been quite surprised by subsequent tales which hewed closer to standard comics format. Jerry Grandenetti is credited with the backgrounds on this story. Abe Kanegson did the lettering. This version has lush colors by Rich Corben.







"Joy" is just that, a story to fill your heart with the proper seasonal feeling. Merry Christmas to each and every one of you. Thanks for stopping by.

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Tuesday, December 23, 2025

The Spirit Meets The Green Hornet!

(Mike Allred)

The Green Hornet Meets The Spirit from Dynamite Comics is much more fun than I expected. These crossovers can work, or they can become somewhat mechanical. This one by Fred Van Lente and artist Bob Q is a whimsical story which gives a new life to all the characters involved. Set in 1966 obviously, this one gives us an unexpected take on The Spirit in a story which maintains the continuity of the original Will Eisner comic sections. This 2018 comic series is just the right length at five issues, none of the storytelling time is wasted. Not only do we get nods of appreciation to the two major heroes and their allies, we even get an offbeat mention of a certain Fab 4 from a certain "House of Ideas". All of this is in good fun with a delightful blend of humor and action with enough of a mystery to keep the reader engaged throughout. The payoff is worth the trip. 

(Ty Templeton)

(Javier Pulido)





I enjoyed this one in the handy trade edition, though I picked up the individual issues as well. 

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Monday, December 22, 2025

The Dynamite Spirit!


In 2015 Dynamite Comics picked up the rights to produce new Spirit stories. More famous for their unending alternate covers, on this project they restrained themselves in that respect, save for the debut issue. The story which ran in all twelve issues was written by Matt Wagner and drawn by Dan Schade with colors by Brennan Wagner. Covers for the series were produced by Eric Powell, and those are uniformly magnificent. 

(Matt Wagner)

(Alex Ross)

Formally titled Will Eisner's The Spirit, the series returns to the vintage world of the classic series. It opens after two years have passed since The Spirit was last seen. The world has moved on as best it can. Commissioner Dolan is considering retirement, being pushed out by a seedy politician named Weatherby Palmer. Ellen has found romance of a sort with a district attorney named Archibald Shale, and she's found meaning as a member of the city council. Ebony White and Sammy Strunk (Sammy gets a last name at long last) have formed a partnership as detectives and at the end of the debut issue decide it's high time they investigated the disappearance of their friend The Spirit. 






We see The Spirit only in flashback as the detective duo interview past friends and enemies of the missing hero. P'Gell and The Octopus come into the story in fascinating ways as do others. Finally, we discover, at least in part what has become of Central City's defender, but I want to remain relatively mum on those details so as to not spoil it. Suffice it to say that he's come into conflict with a deadly and mysterious enemy named Mikado Vass, also known as the Crimson Tiger. Vass is a villain of such stature that few will even discuss him. Also on hand is a new femme fatale named Sachet Spice, a woman who takes a very special interest in our hero. 








This is as it turns out a very compelling mystery. The creators keep our hero off the board long enough to actually create some real mystery about his whereabouts, and the payoff makes sense. Schade's art becomes increasingly cartoonish, perhaps owing to a style choice or the pressures of production, but it's not as strong at the end as at the beginning, or maybe I just tired of it. 

This has been collected and that would be the ideal way to enjoy this story. I could only get the original issues from back issue vendors as I didn't follow this series when it came out. This one is recommended for Spirit fans, especially the early issues. 

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Sunday, December 21, 2025

The Spirit Archives Volume Twenty-Six!


The twenty-sixty and final volume of DC's Will Eisner's The Spirit Archives features work done by Eisner for the character from the 1950's through his final work on his most famous character in the early 2000's. That quite a range of time, but this volume delivers. This one will read quite quickly because the bulk of the page count is made up of artwork and covers produced by Eisner for Kitchen Sink. The importance of Denis Kitchen and his Kitchen Sink independent underground brand cannot be overstated. Let's take it decade by decade as does the book. 

1950s 

We get two pieces from the 50's, the thumbnails by Jules Feiffer for the story labeled "Outer Space" which tells what happened to the farmer and the alien who kidnapped him in the final published Spirit tale. And we get the typed script for a story about a cigar-smoking villain and his henchmen who try to kidnap Professor Skol and Captain Delf, two of the survivors who traveled to the Moon with The Spirit. 

1960's


This section starts out with a five-page story produced for The New York Herald Tribune Sunday Magazine. In this story The Spirit lives and works in the actual New York City and not its fictional counterpart "Central City". This story sounds very much like a typical Spirit story but deals with the real mayoral race between candidates John Lindsey, Abe Beame, and William F. Buckley. My favorite moment comes when The Spirit tries to recruit Ebony only to find him fifteen years older and working as an executive and having no desire to follow on after his former pal. We even get appearances by Ellen Dolan and an eighty-seven-year-old Eustace Dolan. 



Then we focus on the Harvey Comics reprints from the mid 60's. The superhero boom was beginning, and Harvey was looking for heroes and snatched up The Spirit and cajoled Eisner to do some new stories. In the first issue we get a new version of his origin story and in the second we get an origin story for the archfiend The Octopus. Both issues also feature short two-page efforts called "Spirit Lab" in which a scientist pitches keen gimmicks to enhance The Spirit's crime-fighting skills, but ends up contacting a parody of the UNCLE organization. 

1970's


The 70's begin with The Spirit and Commissioner Dolan making a cameo appearance on a 1972 cover of the underground comic SNARF. This is the first of many appearances The Spirit will make for Kitchen Sink Comics. 



Then in 1973 we get what are called the "Underground Spirits" from Kitchen Sink. In the first of these collections which gather vintage tales we get four new Eisner pages, each a spoof of sorts about changing times and attitudes toward crime. Ebony does an interview with black journalist and attempts to kill the notion that he was demeaned by his role in the stories. In the second issue, Eisner uses his four new pages to give us a stunning P'Gell yarn in which she plays The Spirit as well as her two lovers against one another in a bid for a jewel. 


Then again in 1973 we get "The Invader", a full-color story from Tabloid Press which resulted from a class Eisner taught at the Sheridan College in Canada. This the story of a man from outer space who is the vanguard of an invading force but who finds life difficult on the Earth when he's mugged and then manhandled by various gangs before being saved by The Spirit. 


In 1974 we are treated to The Spirit Coloring Book from Eisner's own Poorhouse Press. This book takes classic Spirit splash pages and offers them up to the reader to color for themselves. I could never do that to a book and have never even thought of doing that to my copy. 


We then are treated to quite a bit of vintage Spirit artwork, including the The Spirit Portfolio plates as well as many pages of pencil drafts for that project. 


One thing not included in this volume are the covers from the Warren run of the series. It's an unfortunate oversight and I cannot fathom aside from page count why they didn't include what are some of Eisner's strongest images of the classic hero. 


But we are treated to ALL of the Kitchen Sink covers beginning with issue seventeen of the series which continued the Warren numbering. This includes a few pages by Eisner and Kitchen. 

1980's


We also get ALL of the covers for The Spirit comics produced by Kitchen Sink both for the magazine and the later comic. 


We also get the pages Eisner created for the "Spirit Jam" issue of the magazine's run in which other creators were invited to create a story. We also get four pages created by both Eisner and Dave Sim for a mash-up of Cerebus the Aardvark and The Spirit. 


Some novelty items like the cover of Will Eisner's 3-D Classics are included. Other bits of artwork that Eisner produced using The Spirit to promote things like conventions and other good causes pop up as well. 

1990's


We are treated to the rest of the Kitchen Sink covers as well as sundry spot art for various events such as the eightieth anniversary of Batman. 

2000's 


We get Will Eisner's final work on The Spirit with a few great illustrations and a story in which The Spirit joins forces with Michael Chabon's The Escapist. This is the final Spirit story produced by Eisner. 


This is an exceedingly fun volume, a proper peek at some of the more obscure Spirit artwork over the decades. There are pieces not included, save for the Warren oversight nothing too significant. And that's a wrap on my year-long look at these archive editions...almost. 


Next time we take a gander at the unofficial twenty-seventh volume of the series which was produced by Dark Horse Comics and gathers together the Will Eisner sanctioned stories by various talents from Kitchen Sink in the late 90's. 

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