c.2017, Fulcrum Publishing
$23.95 ($28.95 Canada)
261 pages

โ€œDraw, Sheriff.โ€

Oh, how you loved to do that. It started with spider-legged people and crooked houses. As you got better, you replicated and created worlds, invented characters, and expanded your tool use. Even today, with sharp pencil or fine pen, you can still make a respectable doodle; in the new book โ€œEncyclopedia of Black Comicsโ€ by Sheena C. Howard, youโ€™ll see how youโ€™re right in โ€˜toon.

One-hundred and four years ago, the country was captivated by a cat and a mouse.

The cat was appropriately called Kat, and he lived with the Dingbat family in the comic strip โ€œKrazy Kat.โ€ His nemesis was Ignatz, and in each episode, Ignatz the mouse threw a brick at Krazy Kat. It was an โ€œincredibly simpleโ€ strip but it became โ€œone of the most respected and influential works in comics historyโ€ฆโ€

The artist was a black man named George Herriman who was the first major cartoonist of color. He would be far from the last.

Today, countless Black cartoonists, inkers, illustrators, and writers toil behind-the-scenes to create comic strips and comic books, as well as TV shows and movies. In this book, Howard celebrates the firsts, the bests, the noteworthy and the historic.

In the early days, for example, many comic writers worked through the Black Press, including Jackie Ormes, โ€œthe first published female African-American cartoonist.โ€ Ormes was the creator of Torchy Brown, a strong Black cartoon woman; and fashionista Ginger, whose little sister Patti-Jo offered wisecracks. In 1947, one of Ormesโ€™ characters was made into an โ€œupscaleโ€ doll; in 2014, Ormes was posthumously indicted into the National Association of Black Journalistsโ€™ Hall of Fame.

The first African-American cartoonist with โ€œtwo nationally syndicated comic stripsโ€ is in this book. Political and social-commentary cartoonists are represented. The first Black woman to own a comic book store is profiled here, as is Americaโ€™s first Black comic book publisher, the โ€œfirst and only Black editor at King Features Syndicate,โ€ an animator and writer whose credits include โ€œThundercats,โ€ a 12-time Pulitzer Prize nominee and many people who use their talents to enhance your favorite superhero comic booksโ€ฆ

In his afterword, comics writer-editor Christopher Priest points out that, to many African-Americans, the Man of Steel isnโ€™t Superman, heโ€™s โ€œSuperWhiteMan.โ€ Thatโ€™s just one reason, as Priest indicates, that a book like this is needed.

The other reasons fill up these pages with a wide range of biographies, achievements, and examples of many cartoonistsโ€™ work, in bite-sized articles that make quick reading. While thereโ€™s a chance that youโ€™ve heard of many of the people included in this book, author Sheena C. Howard didnโ€™t just keep things familiar: she dug back into history for several of her profiles, and she also includes people who are on the periphery of โ€” but important to โ€” todayโ€™s comic book world.

Quick-minded readers may note some absences inside here, but โ€œEncyclopedia of Black Comicsโ€ is a good start for this genre. For those who love the funnies, cartoons, or pen-and-ink art, this book will be a big draw.

This correspondent is a guest contributor to The Washington Informer.

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