|   "Johnny 
              Marsten" 
              (June 30, 1940) 
            This [...] story 
              shows a rapid maturation of approach and a temporary discarding 
              of the pulpier elements that existed in the earliest Spirit stories 
              for a more sentimental flavor. "Johnny Marsten" (June 30, 1940) 
              is the first story that indicates that Eisner was getting a handle 
              on the approach that would dominate the feature throughout its existence. 
              As an important touchstone for Eisner, "Johnny Marsten" was the 
              result of a maturing creative vision, one that knew readers would 
              get far more from a story containing human emotions than one containing 
              incessantly combative mesomorphs. 
            "I remember this story fondly, because I saw it as 
              a creative risk that really paid off, and in fact led me to do more 
              of this type of thing," Eisner said, noting that few comics heroes 
              of his day, in either books or strips, showed a sensitive side. 
              "There was a tendency to create heroes who never revealed their 
              emotions, if they had any to reveal," Eisner said. "But to me, The 
              Spirit as I conceived him did have an emotional side, and I was 
              just beginning to bring it out with this story." Eisner was willing 
              to take the risk because the story was appearing before a newspaper 
              audience, which was older and generally more wellread than was the 
              typical comicbook audience. "I figured the newspaper reader would 
              tolerate a different approach to a story," Eisner said. "Over the 
              years there had been so many different kinds of comic strips, so 
              many approaches to telling a story, that I thought of this as another 
              experiment with comics. Fortunately, it flew."  
            Eisner' s desire to create a hero who could fight 
              with his head as well as his fists bore fruit in "Johnny Marsten." 
              Demonstrating himself as something of a Renaissance man, The Spirit 
              methodically cleans out gambling rings, breaking banks and skulls. 
              "In my mind, he was a versatile character who was equally adept 
              in any number of situations, and this was another manifestation 
              of that," he said. "I liked the idea of the hero who could walk 
              into a very foreign environment and take command."  
            The conclusion of "Johnny Marsten" is pure Eisner, 
              with the crooks doublecrossing each other all over the place and 
              The Spirit shedding a single tear as he learns of the happy ending. 
              "This story moves fast because I had a lot to put in, and as a result 
              it packs a punch, I think," he said. "On the same page that the 
              criminals get brought to justice, you find out how Johnny' s story 
              ended and you see The Spirit showing his human traits. Working with 
              seven pages demanded this sort of treatment."  
            Artistically, Eisner was still experimenting with 
              the startling viewpoints and panel structures that would underpin 
              his career. On page 3 in the first panel of the middle tier, the 
              gangster car speeds through a distorted arch with the panel borders 
              serving as background design elements. On page 6, Eisner changes 
              perspectives frequently and effectively, contributing to the effect 
              of being in a car-chase. In the first panel, he arranges "windshields" 
              around the target, and in the third panel the cars lurch at each 
              other vertically. "I was trying to disorient the perspectives, because 
              I thought it was a scene that required the reader to feel a little 
              chaos. I don't know if I thought about it in those terms back then 
              or if it just seemed like the 'right thing' to do, but it worked 
              here." 
            "The Black Queen's Army" 
              (July 7, 1940) 
            "The Black Queen's Army" (July 7, 1940) is 
              one of what Eisner considers his early failures. Maybe the plot 
              was too bloated to fit into seven pages; maybe it was too preposterous. 
              Maybe it was The Spirit's autoplane, which was perhaps the apotheosis 
              of Eisner' s fascination with pulp paraphernalia. "The car was silly," 
              Eisner said. "It had no real place in the strip, and I think The 
              Spirit was not too fond of it either; I forced it on him. But at 
              least I didn't force it for too long, and it was soon dropped." 
             
            Eisner said 
              the story showed a young artist ambitiously overreaching, abandoning 
              such niceties as plot. "I was biting off more than I could chew 
              here, but I tried to make it work, that much is clear," he said. 
             
            It's interesting that Eisner brought back the character 
              of the Black Queen, indicating that he intended to weave continuity 
              into the stories. "I wanted to develop characters that readers would 
              remember, so I could bring them back and have the readers already 
              know something about them" he said. "I thought that with a newspaper 
              audience, which is used to following characters in comic strips 
              for years and years, that I would be able to do that. Ultimately, 
              The Spirit was filled with characters who had long histories 
              throughout the feature. The Black Queen is the first of these." 
            "Mr. Midnight" 
              (July 14, 1940) 
            In "Mr. Midnight" (July 14, 1940), Eisner 
              gains a sure footing with a fast-paced tale that puts both The Spirit's 
              brain and brawn through their paces. "This is the way I conceived 
              The Spirit  a man who could think his way to a solution, but 
              who could also get into a free-for-all and prevail," Eisner said. 
              "And I was still emphasizing his ability to take all manner of beatings 
              with no apparent ill effects."  
            Eisner fashioned the Mr. Midnight character as an 
              amalgam of actors John Carradine and John 
              Barrymore, whose work Eisner had enjoyed. The beginning 
              of "Mr. Midnight" cements the relationship between The Spirit and 
              Commissioner Dolan as one of mutual support and friendship. "Later, 
              they kind of had more of an unspoken father-son relationship, but 
              when I was refining the characters' relationships, as I was in this 
              story, it was more of a mutually beneficial relationship, with the 
              fact that they liked each other sort of a bonus," Eisner said.  
            Eisner, 
              who had begun experimenting with a Japanese brush around this time, 
              was still moving his "camera" all over the place to provide an array 
              of angles and perspective distortions. "The brush I was using was 
              slowing me down because I wasn't used to it, but I was really enjoying 
              the art I was producing." Pages 6 and 7 show the frantic pace Eisner 
              was able to achieve through the use of unusual angles and distances; 
              the two pages flow rapidly, abetted by Eisner's spare dialogue. 
              "I knew then that dialogue slowed down the action," he said, commenting 
              on the tendency in superhero comic books to have protracted discourses 
              during supposedly rapid-fire action, two opposing elements.  
            Also worthy of note in "Mr. Midnight" is the use of 
              time, a favorite device of Eisner's. Indeed, the villain's own name 
              signifies time. Page 2 contains the clock face, a visual cue Eisner 
              refined over the years, with perhaps its best known use occurring 
              in "Ten Minutes."  
            "Even though these stories were more intuitive than 
              intellectual, I had worked in the field long enough to know there 
              were certain limitations that had to be overcome on the comic book 
              page, one of them being the illusion of time. How do you slow time 
              down? How do you speed it up? I was trying to answer these questions, 
              and this was one of my experiments." 
            "Eldas Thayer" 
              (July 21, 1940) 
            The Spirit becomes extralegal in "Eldas Thayer" 
              (July 21, 1940). This aspect of the feature became important over 
              the years, as several key stories hinged on Dolan's close association 
              with the vigilante Spirit. Eisner got a lot of mileage 
              over the years out of the fact that his hero wasn't a cop, a continuity 
              thread that was carefully maintained with only a lapse or two, and 
              those happening on someone else's watch. "This made the relationship 
              between Dolan and The Spirit more complicated, which is one of the 
              reasons I liked it," Eisner said.  
            Again in "Eldas Thayer," Eisner mines the pulp aspect 
              of The Spirit that he eventually sloughed off. On page 
              4, The Spirit is shown working in his underground lab, surrounded 
              by all the trappings of a scientist. And speaking of pulp, check 
              out the suicide method that Thayer engineered on page 2  did 
              this guy read too many Rube Goldberg cartoons or 
              what? Eisner knows his criminals  that much is certain from 
              the bombmaking scene on page 7. Such bombs have actually been made 
              and detonated by inmates in the way Eisner describes.  
            This story also shows Eisner's increasing dexterity 
              at combining drama, action, and tongue-in-cheek humor. On page 6, 
              while The Spirit is evading a massive police dragnet, Eisner shows 
              two policemen tackling a decoy Spirit in a purely slapstick sequence, 
              yet one that doesn't disrupt the flow of the scene's action. "I 
              always thought that humor and action weren't mutually exclusive 
              elements, and that humor could be used to leaven many scenes. This 
              is an early manifestation of that belief," he said. "That was one 
              of the great things about The Spirit, and indeed one of 
              the things that convinced me to do it  the opportunity to 
              try many of the things that I wanted. And if something didn't quite 
              work out, as in the Black Queen story, I could always come back 
              strong next week." 
              
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