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Will Eisner

William Erwin Eisner (March 6, 1917 – January 3, 2005) was an American cartoonist, writer, and entrepreneur. He was one of the earliest cartoonists to work in the American comic book industry, and his series The Spirit (1940–1952) was noted for its experiments in content and form. In 1978, he popularized the term "graphic novel" with the publication of his book A Contract with God. He was an early contributor to formal comics studies with his book Comics and Sequential Art (1985). The Eisner Award was named in his honor and is given to recognize achievements each year in the comics medium; he was one of the three inaugural inductees to the Will Eisner Comic Book Hall of Fame.

Will Eisner
Eisner in 2004
BornWilliam Erwin Eisner
(1917-03-06)March 6, 1917
New York City, US
DiedJanuary 3, 2005(2005-01-03) (aged 87)
Lauderdale Lakes, Florida, US
Area(s)Cartoonist, Publisher
Pseudonym(s)William Erwin Maxwell[1]
Notable works
www.willeisner.com

1917–1936: Early life

Family background

Eisner's father, Shmuel "Samuel" Eisner, was born March 6, 1886, in Kolomyia, Austria-Hungary (present-day Ukraine), and was one of eleven children. He aspired to be an artist, and as a teenager painted murals for rich patrons and Catholic churches in Vienna. To avoid conscription in the army, he moved to New York before the outbreak of World War I.[2] There he found getting work difficult, as his English skills were poor.[3] He made what living he could painting backdrops for vaudeville and the Jewish theater.[4]

Eisner's mother, Fannie Ingber, was born to Jewish parents from Romania on April 25, 1891, on a ship bound for the US. Her mother died on her tenth birthday and was quickly followed by her father. An older stepsister thereafter raised her and kept her so busy with chores that she had little time for socializing or schooling; she did what she could later in life to keep knowledge of her illiteracy from her children.[4]

Shmuel and Fannie, who were distant relatives, met through family members.[5] They had three children: son Will Erwin, born on his father's birthday in 1917; son Julian, born February 3, 1921; and daughter Rhoda, born November 2, 1929.[6]

Early life

 
Wow, What a Magazine! No. 3 (Sept. 1936): Cover art by a teenage Eisner.

Eisner was born in Brooklyn. He grew up poor, and the family moved frequently.[6] Young Eisner often got into physical confrontations when subjected to antisemitism from his schoolmates.[7] His family were not orthodox followers of Judaism; Eisner himself, while he prided his cultural background, turned against the religion when his family was denied entry to a synagogue over lack of money for admission.[8]

Young Eisner was tall and of sturdy build, but lacked athletic skills.[9] He was a voracious consumer of pulp magazines and film, including avant-garde films such as those by Man Ray.[10] To his mother's disappointment, Eisner had his father's interest in art, and his father encouraged him by buying him art supplies.[9]

Eisner's mother frequently berated his father for not providing the family a better income, as he went from one job to another. Without success he also tried his hand at such ventures as a furniture retailer and a coat factory.[11] The family situation was especially dire following the Wall Street Crash of 1929 that marked the beginning of the Great Depression.[12] In 1930, the situation was so desperate that Eisner's mother demanded that he, at thirteen, find some way to contribute to the family's income. He entered working life selling newspapers on street corners, a competitive job where the toughest boys fought for the best locations.[13]

Eisner attended DeWitt Clinton High School. With influences that included the early 20th-century commercial artist J. C. Leyendecker,[14] he drew for the school newspaper (The Clintonian), the literary magazine (The Magpie) and the yearbook, and did stage design, leading him to consider doing that kind of work for theater. Upon graduation, he studied under Canadian artist George Brandt Bridgman for a year at the Art Students League of New York. Contacts made there led to a position as an advertising writer-cartoonist for the New York American newspaper. Eisner also drew $10-a-page illustrations for pulp magazines, including Western Sheriffs and Outlaws.

In 1936, high-school friend and fellow cartoonist Bob Kane, of future Batman fame, suggested that the 19-year-old Eisner try selling cartoons to the new comic book Wow, What A Magazine! "Comic books" at the time were tabloid-sized collections of comic strip reprints in color. By 1935, they had begun to include occasional new comic strip-like material. Wow editor Jerry Iger bought an Eisner adventure strip called Captain Scott Dalton, an H. Rider Haggard-styled hero who traveled the world after rare artifacts. Eisner subsequently wrote and drew the pirate strip "The Flame" and the secret agent strip "Harry Karry" for Wow as well.

Eisner said that on one occasion a man whom Eisner described as "a mob type straight out of Damon Runyon, complete with pinkie ring, broken nose, black shirt, and white tie, who claimed to have "exclusive distribution rights for all Brooklyn" asked Eisner to draw Tijuana bibles for $3 a page. Eisner said that he declined the offer; he described the decision as "one of the most difficult moral decisions of my life".[15]

1936–1941: Comics industry and The Spirit

Eisner & Iger

Wow lasted four issues (cover-dated July–September and November 1936). After it ended, Eisner and Iger worked together producing and selling original comics material, anticipating that the well of available reprints would soon run dry, though their accounts of how their partnership was founded differ. One of the first such comic-book "packagers", their partnership was an immediate success, and the two soon had a stable of comics creators supplying work to Fox Comics, Fiction House, Quality Comics (for whom Eisner co-created such characters as Doll Man and Blackhawk), and others. Turning a profit of $1.50 a page, Eisner claimed that he "got very rich before I was 22,"[16] later detailing that in Depression-era 1939 alone, he and Iger "had split $25,000 between us",[17] a considerable amount for the time.

Among the studio's products was a self-syndicated Sunday comic strip, Hawks of the Sea, that initially reprinted Eisner's old strip Wow, What A Magazine! feature "The Flame" and then continued it with new material.[18] Eisner's original work even crossed the Atlantic, with Eisner drawing the new cover of the October 16, 1937, issue of Boardman Books' comic-strip reprint tabloid Okay Comics Weekly.[19]

In 1939, Eisner was commissioned to create Wonder Man for Victor Fox, an accountant who had previously worked at DC Comics and was becoming a comic book publisher himself. Following Fox's instructions to create a Superman-type character, and using the pen name Willis, Eisner wrote and drew the first issue of Wonder Comics. Eisner said in interviews throughout his later life that he had protested the derivative nature of the character and story, and that when subpoenaed after National Periodical Publications, the company that would evolve into DC Comics, sued Fox, alleging Wonder Man was an illegal copy of Superman, Eisner testified that this was so, undermining Fox's case;[20] Eisner even depicts himself doing so in his semi-autobiographical graphic novel The Dreamer.[21] However, a transcript of the proceeding, uncovered by comics historian Ken Quattro in 2010, indicates Eisner in fact supported Fox and claimed Wonder Man as an original Eisner creation.[22]

The Spirit

 
Eisner's cover for The Spirit, Oct 6, 1946.

In "late '39, just before Christmas time," Eisner recalled in 1979,[23] Quality Comics publisher Everett M. "Busy" Arnold "came to me and said that the Sunday newspapers were looking for a way of getting into this comic book boom," In a 2004 interview,[24] he elaborated on that meeting:

"Busy" invited me up for lunch one day and introduced me to Henry Martin [sales manager of The Des Moines Register and Tribune Syndicate, who] said, "The newspapers in this country, particularly the Sunday papers, are looking to compete with comics books, and they would like to get a comic-book insert into the newspapers." ... Martin asked if I could do it. ... It meant that I'd have to leave Eisner & Iger [which] was making money; we were very profitable at that time and things were going very well. A hard decision. Anyway, I agreed to do the Sunday comic book and we started discussing the deal [which] was that we'd be partners in the 'Comic Book Section,' as they called it at that time. And also, I would produce two other magazines in partnership with Arnold.

Eisner negotiated an agreement with the syndicate in which Arnold would copyright The Spirit, but "[w]ritten down in the contract I had with 'Busy' Arnold —and this contract exists today as the basis for my copyright ownership—Arnold agreed that it was my property. They agreed that if we had a split-up in any way, the property would revert to me on that day that happened. My attorney went to 'Busy' Arnold and his family, and they all signed a release agreeing that they would not pursue the question of ownership".[24] This would include the eventual backup features "Mr. Mystic" and "Lady Luck".

Selling his share of their firm to Iger, who would continue to package comics as the S.M. Iger Studio and as Phoenix Features through 1955, for $20,000,[25] Eisner left to create The Spirit. "They gave me an adult audience", Eisner said in 1997, "and I wanted to write better things than superheroes. Comic books were a ghetto. I sold my part of the enterprise to my associate and then began The Spirit. They wanted an heroic character, a costumed character. They asked me if he'd have a costume. And I put a mask on him and said, 'Yes, he has a costume!'"[26]

The Spirit, an initially eight- and later seven-page urban-crimefighter series, ran with the initial backup features "Mr. Mystic" and "Lady Luck" in a 16-page Sunday supplement (colloquially called "The Spirit Section") that was eventually distributed in 20 newspapers with a combined circulation of as many as five million copies.[27] It premiered June 2, 1940, and continued through 1952.[28] Eisner has cited the Spirit story "Gerhard Shnobble" as a particular favorite, as it was one of his first attempts at injecting his personal point of view into the series.[29]

1942–1970s: Military publications, The Spirit, and new endeavors

World War II and Joe Dope

 
Premiere issue of the U.S. Army publication PS (June 1951), designed to be a "postscript" to related publications. Art by Eisner.

Eisner was drafted into the U.S. Army in "late '41, early '42"[30] and then "had about another half-year which the government gave me to clean up my affairs before going off" to fight in World War II.[31] He was assigned to the camp newspaper at Aberdeen Proving Ground, where "there was also a big training program there, so I got involved in the use of comics for training. ... I finally became a warrant officer, which involved taking a test – that way you didn't have to go through Officer Candidate School."[30]

En route to Washington, D.C., he stopped at the Holabird Ordnance Depot in Baltimore, where a mimeographed publication titled Army Motors was put together. "Together with the people there ... I helped develop its format. I began doing cartoons – and we began fashioning a magazine that had the ability to talk to the G.I.s in their language. So I began to use comics as a teaching tool, and when I got to Washington, they assigned me to the business of teaching – or selling – preventive maintenance."[32]

Eisner then created the educational comic strip and titular character Joe Dope for Army Motors, and spent four years working in The Pentagon editing the ordnance magazine Firepower and doing "all the general illustrations – that is, cartoons" for Army Motors. He continued to work on that and its 1950 successor magazine, PS, The Preventive Maintenance Monthly, until 1971.[32] Eisner also illustrated an official Army pamphlet in 1968 and 1969 called The M16A1 Rifle specifically for troops in Vietnam to help minimize the M16 rifle's notorious early reliability problems with proper maintenance. Eisner's style helped to popularize these officially-distributed works in order to better educate soldiers on equipment maintenance.[33][34]

While Eisner's later graphic novels were entirely his own work, he had a studio working under his supervision on The Spirit. In particular, letterer Abe Kanegson came up with the distinctive lettering style which Eisner himself would later imitate in his book-length works, and Kanegson would often rewrite Eisner's dialogue.[35]

Eisner's most trusted assistant on The Spirit, however, was Jules Feiffer, later a renowned cartoonist, playwright and screenwriter in his own right. Eisner later said of their memories of their working methods on the feature, "You should hear me and Jules Feiffer going at it in a room. 'No, you designed the splash page for this one, then you wrote the ending – I came up with the idea for the story, and you did it up to this point, then I did the next page and this sequence here and...' And I'll be swearing up and down that 'he' wrote the ending on that one. We never agree."[35]

So trusted were Eisner's assistants that Eisner allowed them to "ghost" The Spirit from the time that he was drafted into the U.S. Army in 1942 until his return to civilian life in 1945. The primary wartime artists were the uncredited Lou Fine and Jack Cole, with future Kid Colt, Outlaw artist Jack Keller drawing backgrounds. Ghost writers included Manly Wade Wellman and William Woolfolk. The wartime ghosted stories have been reprinted in DC Comics' hardcover collections The Spirit Archives Vols. 5 to 11 (2001–2003), spanning July 1942 to December 1945.

Post-war comics

On Eisner's return from service and resumption of his role in the studio, he created the bulk of the Spirit stories on which his reputation was solidified. The post-war years also saw him attempt to launch the comic-strip/comic-book series Baseball, John Law, Kewpies, and Nubbin the Shoeshine Boy; none succeeded, but some material was recycled into The Spirit.[36]

The Spirit ceased publishing in 1952. During the 1960s and 1970s, various publishers reprinted the adventures, often with covers by Eisner and with a few new stories from him.

American Visuals Corporation

During his World War II military service, Eisner had introduced the use of comics for training personnel in the publication Army Motors, for which he created the cautionary bumbling soldier Joe Dope, who illustrated various methods of preventive maintenance of various military equipment and weapons. In 1948, while continuing to do The Spirit and seeing television and other post-war trends eat away at the readership base of newspapers, he formed the American Visuals Corporation in order to produce instructional materials for the government, related agencies, and businesses.[37]

One of his longest-running jobs was PS, The Preventive Maintenance Monthly, a digest sized magazine with comic book elements that he started for the Army in 1951 and continued to work on until the 1970s with Klaus Nordling, Mike Ploog, and other artists. In addition, Eisner produced other military publications such as the graphic manual in 1969, The M-16A1 Rifle: Operation and Preventative Maintenance, which was distributed along with cleaning kits to address serious reliability concerns with the M16 Rifle during the Vietnam War.[37]

Other clients of his Connecticut-based company included RCA Records, the Baltimore Colts football team, and New York Telephone.

1970s–2005: Godfather of the graphic novel

Graphic novels

Eisner credited the 1971 Comic Art Convention (CAC) for his return to comics. In a 1983 interview with CAC organizer Phil Seuling, he said, "I came back into the field because of you. I remember you calling me in New London, where I was sitting there as chairman of the board of Croft Publishing Co. My secretary said, 'There's a Mr. Seuling on the phone and he's talking about a comics convention. What is that?' She said, 'I didn't know you were a cartoonist, Mr. Eisner.' 'Oh, yes,' I said, 'secretly; I'm a closet cartoonist.' I came down and was stunned at the existence of the whole world. ... That was a world that I had left, and I found it very exciting, very stimulating".[38]

Eisner later elaborated about meeting underground comics creators and publishers, including Denis Kitchen:

I went down to the convention, which was being held in one of the hotels in New York, and there was a group of guys with long hair and scraggly beards, who had been turning out what spun as literature, really popular 'gutter' literature if you will, but pure literature. And they were taking on illegal [sic] subject matter that no comics had ever dealt with before. ... I came away from that recognizing that a revolution had occurred then, a turning point in the history of this medium. ... I reasoned that the 13-year-old kids that I'd been writing to back in the 1940s were no longer 13-year-old kids, they were now 30, 40 years old. They would want something more than two heroes, two supermen, crashing against each other. I began working on a book that dealt with a subject that I felt had never been tried by comics before, and that was man's relationship with God. That was the book A Contract with God....[39]

 
Trade paperback edition of A Contract with God; the concurrent 1,500-copy hardcover release did not use the term "graphic novel" on its cover.

In the late 1970s, Eisner turned his attention to longer storytelling forms. A Contract with God: and Other Tenement Stories (Baronet Books, October 1978) is an early example of an American graphic novel, combining thematically linked short stories into a single square-bound volume. Eisner continued with a string of graphic novels that tell the history of New York's immigrant communities, particularly Jews, including The Building, A Life Force, Dropsie Avenue and To the Heart of the Storm. He continued producing new books into his seventies and eighties, at an average rate of nearly one a year. Each of these books was done twice – once as a rough version to show editor Dave Schreiner, then as a second, finished version incorporating suggested changes.[40]

Some of his last work was the retelling in sequential art of novels and myths, including Moby-Dick. In 2002, at the age of 85, he published Sundiata, based on the part-historical, part-mythical stories of a West African king, "The Lion of Mali". Fagin the Jew is an account of the life of Dickens's character Fagin, in which Eisner tries to get past the stereotyped portrait of Fagin in Oliver Twist.

His last graphic novel, The Plot: The Secret Story of The Protocols of the Elders of Zion, an account of the making, and refutation, of the anti-semitic hoax The Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion, was completed shortly before his death and published in 2005.

In 2008, Will Eisner's The Spirit: A Pop-Up Graphic Novel was published, with Bruce Foster as paper engineer.[41]

Teaching

In his later years especially, Eisner was a frequent lecturer about the craft and uses of sequential art. He taught at the School of Visual Arts in New York City, where he published Will Eisner's Gallery, a collection of work by his students[42] and wrote two books based on these lectures, Comics and Sequential Art and Graphic Storytelling and Visual Narrative, which are widely used by students of cartooning. In 2002, Eisner participated in the Will Eisner Symposium of the 2002 University of Florida Conference on Comics and Graphic Novels.[43]

Death

Eisner died January 3, 2005, in Lauderdale Lakes, Florida, of complications from a quadruple bypass surgery performed December 22, 2004.[44][45] DC Comics held a memorial service in Manhattan's Lower East Side, a neighborhood Eisner often visited in his work, at the Angel Orensanz Foundation on Norfolk Street.[46]

Eisner was survived by his wife, Ann Weingarten Eisner, and their son, John.[47][48][49] In the introduction to the 2001 reissue of A Contract with God, Eisner revealed that the inspiration for the title story grew out of the 1970 death of his leukemia-stricken teenaged daughter, Alice, next to whom he is buried. Until then, only Eisner's closest friends were aware of his daughter's life and death.

Awards and honors

Eisner has been recognized for his work with the National Cartoonists Society Comic Book Award for 1967, 1968, 1969, 1987 and 1988, as well as its Story Comic Book Award in 1979,[50] and its Reuben Award in 1998. In 1975, he was awarded the Inkpot Award and the second Grand Prix de la ville d'Angoulême.[51]

He was inducted into the Academy of Comic Book Arts Hall of Fame in 1971, and the Jack Kirby Hall of Fame in 1987. The following year, the Will Eisner Comic Industry Awards were established in his honor. In 2015, Eisner was posthumously elected to the Society of Illustrators Hall of Fame.[52]

Comics by Will Eisner are archived in the James Branch Cabell Library of Virginia Commonwealth University.[53] VCU's James Branch Cabell Library has served as the repository for the Will Eisner Comic Industry Awards since 2005. Each year following Comic-Con, nominated and award-winning titles are donated to the library's Special Collections and Archives and made available to researchers and visitors. Approximately 1,000 comic books, graphic novels, archival editions, scholarly titles, and journals are included in the VCU library's expansive Comic Arts Collection.[54]

On the 94th anniversary of Eisner's birth, in 2011, Google used an image featuring the Spirit as its logo.[55][56]

With Jack Kirby, Robert Crumb, Harvey Kurtzman, Gary Panter, and Chris Ware, Eisner was among the artists honored in the exhibition "Masters of American Comics" at the Jewish Museum in New York City, from September 16, 2006, to January 28, 2007.[57][58] In honor of Eisner's centennial in 2017, Denis Kitchen and John Lind co-curated the largest retrospective exhibitions of Will Eisner's original artwork, shown simultaneously at The Society of Illustrators in New York City and Le Musée de la Bande Dessinée in Angoulême, France. Both exhibitions were titled Will Eisner Centennial Celebration and collectively over 400 original pieces were included.[59] A catalogue of the same name was released by Dark Horse Books and nominated for multiple Eisner Awards in 2018.[60]

Original books

References

  1. ^ As co-creator of Doll Man.
  2. ^ Schumacher 2010, p. 2.
  3. ^ Schumacher 2010, pp. 2–3.
  4. ^ a b Schumacher 2010, p. 3.
  5. ^ Schumacher 2010, pp. 3–4.
  6. ^ a b Schumacher 2010, p. 4.
  7. ^ Schumacher 2010, p. 6.
  8. ^ Schumacher 2010, pp. 7–8.
  9. ^ a b Schumacher 2010, p. 10.
  10. ^ Schumacher 2010, pp. 8–9.
  11. ^ Schumacher 2010, p. 5.
  12. ^ Schumacher 2010, p. 11.
  13. ^ Schumacher 2010, p. 12.
  14. ^ Lovece, Frank (1974). Maple Leaf Publications, Paul Kowtiuk (ed.). "Cons: New York 1974!". The Journal Summer Special. Essex, ON.
  15. ^ Spiegelman, Art. "Tijuana Bibles", Salon.com, August 19, 1997. p. 2 June 29, 2011, at the Wayback Machine. and . Retrieved on February 24, 2009.
  16. ^ Mercer, Marilyn, "The Only Real Middle-Class Crimefighter," New York (Sunday supplement, New York Herald Tribune), January 9, 1966; reprinted Alter Ego No. 48, May 2005
  17. ^ Heintjes, Tom, The Spirit: The Origin Years #3 (Kitchen Sink Press, September 1992)
  18. ^ Hawks of the Sea at Don Markstein's Toonopedia. Archived from the original on March 15, 2012.
  19. ^ Dowell, Gary; Holman, Greg (2008). Halperin, James (ed.). Heritage Comics and Comic Art Signature Auction #828. Heritage Capital Corporation. p. 84. ISBN 978-1599672489.
  20. ^ Andelman, Bob. Will Eisner: A Spirited Life (M Press: Milwaukie, Oregon, 2005) ISBN 978-1-59582-011-2, pp. 44–45
  21. ^ The Dreamer: A Graphic Novella Set During the Dawn of Comic Books (DC Comics : New York City, 1986 edition) ISBN 978-1-56389-678-1. Reissued by W. W. Norton & Company : New York City, London, 2008. ISBN 978-0-393-32808-0, p. 42
  22. ^ Quattro, Ken. "DC vs. Victor Fox: The Testimony of Will Eisner", The Comics Detective, July 1, 2010..
  23. ^ "Art & Commerce: An Oral Reminiscence by Will Eisner." Panels #1 (Summer 1979), pp. 5–21, quoted in Quattro, Ken (2003). "Rare Eisner: Making of a Genius". Comicartville Library. from the original on December 18, 2003.
  24. ^ a b Will Eisner interview, Alter Ego No. 48 (May 2005), p. 10
  25. ^ Kitchen, Denis. "Annotations to The Dreamer, in Eisner, Will, The Dreamer (W.W. Norton & Company, New York, 2008), p. 52. ISBN 978-0-393-32808-0
  26. ^ Will Eisner interview, Jack Kirby Collector #16 (June 1997)
  27. ^ Eisner, The Dreamer, "About the Author", p. 55
  28. ^ "GCD :: Series :: The Spirit".
  29. ^ "Eisner Wide Open". Hogan's Alley.
  30. ^ a b "Will Eisner Interview", The Comics Journal No. 46 (May 1979), p. 45. Interview conducted October 13 and 17, 1978
  31. ^ Eisner interview, The Comics Journal No. 46, p. 37
  32. ^ a b Eisner interview, The Comics Journal No. 46, pp. 45–46
  33. ^ United States Department of the Army; Robert A. Sadowski (2013). The M16A1 Rifle: Operation and Preventive Maintenance. Skyhorse Publishing. ISBN 9781616088644. Retrieved July 13, 2014.
  34. ^ Mertes, Micah (November 5, 2011). "UNL professor's new book explores the weird world of government comics". Lincoln Journal Star. Will Eisner should be credited for using sequences of cartoon images to teach people how to do things, rather than merely as a way to dramatize a story or illustrate text. One of the last military projects he worked on dealt with the use and care of the problematic M16 rifle. The weapon was issued in the mid-'60s to great fanfare but soon developed a reputation for unreliability. Full of double entendres, Operation and Preventive Maintenance The M16A1 Rifle is a classic example of Eisner's incredible ability to combine effectively informational/instructional design with graphic design.
  35. ^ a b Sim, Dave, "My Dinner With Will & Other Stories," Following Cerebus No. 4 (May 2005)
  36. ^ Andelman, pp. 139-41.
  37. ^ a b Schumacher 2010.
  38. ^ Groth, Gary (May 2005). . The Comics Journal. No. 267. Archived from the original on March 20, 2011.
  39. ^ "Transcript, Will Eisner's keynote address, Will Eisner Symposium". The 2002 University of Florida Conference on Comics and Graphic Novels.
  40. ^ Sim, Dave, "Advice & Consent: The Editing of Graphic Novels" (panel discussion with Eisner and Chester Brown) and Frank Miller interview, both Following Cerebus No. 5 (August 2005).
  41. ^ MacDonald, Heidi (October 20, 2008). "When the Gift is a Graphic Novel". PublishersWeekly.com. Retrieved December 18, 2016.
  42. ^ Levitz, Paul (2015). Will Eisner : champion of the graphic novel. New York: Abrams. ISBN 9781613128640. OCLC 930648436.
  43. ^ Eisner, Will. "Keynote Address from the 2002 'Will Eisner Symposium'", ImageTexT, vol. 1, No. 1 (2004). University of Florida Department of English. Retrieved 2011-02-02. .
  44. ^ . Scoop.diamondgalleries.com. Archived from the original on April 18, 2005. Retrieved February 2, 2011.
  45. ^ "Will Eisner (1917–2005)", SF&F Publishing News, Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America, January 4, 2005. Retrieved 2011-02-02 .
  46. ^ , "Scoop" (column), Gemstone Publishing, Inc. / Diamond International Galleries, March 19, 2005. Retrieved 2011-02-02..
  47. ^ Gravett, Paul. "Obituary: Will Eisner: He pioneered American comic books, and established the graphic novel as a literary genre", The Guardian, January 8, 2005. .
  48. ^ Boxer, Sarah. "Will Eisner, a Pioneer of Comic Books, Dies at 87", The New York Times, January 5, 2005..
  49. ^ Obituaries: Will Eisner, The Daily Telegraph, January 6, 2005..
  50. ^ "Division Awards Comic Books". National Cartoonists Society. 2013. from the original on January 21, 2013. Retrieved December 16, 2013.
  51. ^ "Inkpot Award". December 6, 2012.
  52. ^ "2015 Hall of Fame Inductee: Will Eisner". Society of Illustrators. from the original on May 6, 2017. Retrieved May 23, 2018.
  53. ^ "2017 News | Will Eisner Week". VCU Libraries. Retrieved March 29, 2017.
  54. ^ "The Eisner Awards: the Oscars of the Comics Industry · VCU Libraries Gallery". gallery.library.vcu.edu. Retrieved March 29, 2017.
  55. ^ Seifert, Mark. "Google Celebrates Will Eisner's 94th Birthday with the Spirit Google Logo", BleedingCool.com, March 6, 2011..
  56. ^ Archive of Google March 6, 2011, main page April 11, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
  57. ^ . The Jewish Museum. Archived from the original on May 11, 2011. Retrieved August 10, 2010.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link). .
  58. ^ Kimmelman, Michael. "See You in the Funny Papers"(art review), The New York Times, October 13, 2006..
  59. ^ "Society of Illustrators |". www.societyillustrators.org. Retrieved May 23, 2018.
  60. ^ Brown, Tracy (April 27, 2018). "'My Favorite Thing Is Monsters' and 'Monstress' lead 2018 Eisner Awards nominations". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved May 23, 2018.

Works cited

Further reading

  • Feiffer, Jules, The Great Comic-Book Heroes, ISBN 1-56097-501-6.
  • Jones, Gerard, Men of Tomorrow ISBN 0-434-01402-8.
  • Steranko, Jim, The Steranko History of Comics 2 (Supergraphics, 1972).
  • The Spirit at Don Markstein's Toonopedia. Archived from the original on August 8, 2017.
  • Fitzgerald, Paul E. "Every Picture Tells A Story: His Pen and Wit Sharper Than Ever, Graphic Novelist Will Eisner Takes On Religious Intolerance", The Washington Post, June 3, 2004. October 20, 2012, at the Wayback Machine.
  • Robinson, Tasha. "Interview: Will Eisner", The A.V. Club / The Onion, September 27, 2000. .
  • Jacks, Brian. "Veterans Day Exclusive: 'The Spirit' Creator Will Eisner's Wartime Memories", MTV.com, November 11, 2000. July 27, 2011, at the Wayback Machine.
  • Benton, John (May 2005). "Will Eisner: Having Something to Say". The Comics Journal (267). from the original on March 18, 2011. Archive of at the Wayback Machine (archived April 29, 2008). Interview conducted September 10, 1968; originally published in Witzend No. 6 (Spring 1969).
  • "Interview with Jerry Iger", Cubic Zirconia Reader, 1985. WebCitation archive
  • Vaughn, Susan (January 7, 2001). "Making It: A Pioneering Spirit in Pen and Ink – Graphic Novel's Father Has Been Innovator in Comics Since the '30s". Los Angeles Times. from the original on October 7, 2016. Retrieved October 7, 2016.

External links

  • at WebCite (webcitation.org)
  • Will Eisner at Curlie
  • Will Eisner at IMDb
  • at the Comic Book DB (archived from the original)
  • Will Eisner at Library of Congress, with 98 library catalog records
  • The Ohio State University Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum: Will Eisner Collection Guide (primary source material)
  • Villain Paper "Fiction House The Spirit"

will, eisner, william, erwin, eisner, march, 1917, january, 2005, american, cartoonist, writer, entrepreneur, earliest, cartoonists, work, american, comic, book, industry, series, spirit, 1940, 1952, noted, experiments, content, form, 1978, popularized, term, . William Erwin Eisner March 6 1917 January 3 2005 was an American cartoonist writer and entrepreneur He was one of the earliest cartoonists to work in the American comic book industry and his series The Spirit 1940 1952 was noted for its experiments in content and form In 1978 he popularized the term graphic novel with the publication of his book A Contract with God He was an early contributor to formal comics studies with his book Comics and Sequential Art 1985 The Eisner Award was named in his honor and is given to recognize achievements each year in the comics medium he was one of the three inaugural inductees to the Will Eisner Comic Book Hall of Fame Will EisnerEisner in 2004BornWilliam Erwin Eisner 1917 03 06 March 6 1917New York City USDiedJanuary 3 2005 2005 01 03 aged 87 Lauderdale Lakes Florida USArea s Cartoonist PublisherPseudonym s William Erwin Maxwell 1 Notable worksThe Spirit A Contract with God Comics and Sequential Artwww willeisner com Contents 1 1917 1936 Early life 1 1 Family background 1 2 Early life 2 1936 1941 Comics industry and The Spirit 2 1 Eisner amp Iger 2 2 The Spirit 3 1942 1970s Military publications The Spirit and new endeavors 3 1 World War II and Joe Dope 3 2 Post war comics 3 3 American Visuals Corporation 4 1970s 2005 Godfather of the graphic novel 4 1 Graphic novels 4 2 Teaching 5 Death 6 Awards and honors 7 Original books 8 References 8 1 Works cited 9 Further reading 10 External links1917 1936 Early life EditFamily background Edit Eisner s father Shmuel Samuel Eisner was born March 6 1886 in Kolomyia Austria Hungary present day Ukraine and was one of eleven children He aspired to be an artist and as a teenager painted murals for rich patrons and Catholic churches in Vienna To avoid conscription in the army he moved to New York before the outbreak of World War I 2 There he found getting work difficult as his English skills were poor 3 He made what living he could painting backdrops for vaudeville and the Jewish theater 4 Eisner s mother Fannie Ingber was born to Jewish parents from Romania on April 25 1891 on a ship bound for the US Her mother died on her tenth birthday and was quickly followed by her father An older stepsister thereafter raised her and kept her so busy with chores that she had little time for socializing or schooling she did what she could later in life to keep knowledge of her illiteracy from her children 4 Shmuel and Fannie who were distant relatives met through family members 5 They had three children son Will Erwin born on his father s birthday in 1917 son Julian born February 3 1921 and daughter Rhoda born November 2 1929 6 Early life Edit Wow What a Magazine No 3 Sept 1936 Cover art by a teenage Eisner Eisner was born in Brooklyn He grew up poor and the family moved frequently 6 Young Eisner often got into physical confrontations when subjected to antisemitism from his schoolmates 7 His family were not orthodox followers of Judaism Eisner himself while he prided his cultural background turned against the religion when his family was denied entry to a synagogue over lack of money for admission 8 Young Eisner was tall and of sturdy build but lacked athletic skills 9 He was a voracious consumer of pulp magazines and film including avant garde films such as those by Man Ray 10 To his mother s disappointment Eisner had his father s interest in art and his father encouraged him by buying him art supplies 9 Eisner s mother frequently berated his father for not providing the family a better income as he went from one job to another Without success he also tried his hand at such ventures as a furniture retailer and a coat factory 11 The family situation was especially dire following the Wall Street Crash of 1929 that marked the beginning of the Great Depression 12 In 1930 the situation was so desperate that Eisner s mother demanded that he at thirteen find some way to contribute to the family s income He entered working life selling newspapers on street corners a competitive job where the toughest boys fought for the best locations 13 Eisner attended DeWitt Clinton High School With influences that included the early 20th century commercial artist J C Leyendecker 14 he drew for the school newspaper The Clintonian the literary magazine The Magpie and the yearbook and did stage design leading him to consider doing that kind of work for theater Upon graduation he studied under Canadian artist George Brandt Bridgman for a year at the Art Students League of New York Contacts made there led to a position as an advertising writer cartoonist for the New York American newspaper Eisner also drew 10 a page illustrations for pulp magazines including Western Sheriffs and Outlaws In 1936 high school friend and fellow cartoonist Bob Kane of future Batman fame suggested that the 19 year old Eisner try selling cartoons to the new comic book Wow What A Magazine Comic books at the time were tabloid sized collections of comic strip reprints in color By 1935 they had begun to include occasional new comic strip like material Wow editor Jerry Iger bought an Eisner adventure strip called Captain Scott Dalton an H Rider Haggard styled hero who traveled the world after rare artifacts Eisner subsequently wrote and drew the pirate strip The Flame and the secret agent strip Harry Karry for Wow as well Eisner said that on one occasion a man whom Eisner described as a mob type straight out of Damon Runyon complete with pinkie ring broken nose black shirt and white tie who claimed to have exclusive distribution rights for all Brooklyn asked Eisner to draw Tijuana bibles for 3 a page Eisner said that he declined the offer he described the decision as one of the most difficult moral decisions of my life 15 1936 1941 Comics industry and The Spirit EditEisner amp Iger Edit Main article Eisner amp Iger Wow lasted four issues cover dated July September and November 1936 After it ended Eisner and Iger worked together producing and selling original comics material anticipating that the well of available reprints would soon run dry though their accounts of how their partnership was founded differ One of the first such comic book packagers their partnership was an immediate success and the two soon had a stable of comics creators supplying work to Fox Comics Fiction House Quality Comics for whom Eisner co created such characters as Doll Man and Blackhawk and others Turning a profit of 1 50 a page Eisner claimed that he got very rich before I was 22 16 later detailing that in Depression era 1939 alone he and Iger had split 25 000 between us 17 a considerable amount for the time Among the studio s products was a self syndicated Sunday comic strip Hawks of the Sea that initially reprinted Eisner s old strip Wow What A Magazine feature The Flame and then continued it with new material 18 Eisner s original work even crossed the Atlantic with Eisner drawing the new cover of the October 16 1937 issue of Boardman Books comic strip reprint tabloid Okay Comics Weekly 19 In 1939 Eisner was commissioned to create Wonder Man for Victor Fox an accountant who had previously worked at DC Comics and was becoming a comic book publisher himself Following Fox s instructions to create a Superman type character and using the pen name Willis Eisner wrote and drew the first issue of Wonder Comics Eisner said in interviews throughout his later life that he had protested the derivative nature of the character and story and that when subpoenaed after National Periodical Publications the company that would evolve into DC Comics sued Fox alleging Wonder Man was an illegal copy of Superman Eisner testified that this was so undermining Fox s case 20 Eisner even depicts himself doing so in his semi autobiographical graphic novel The Dreamer 21 However a transcript of the proceeding uncovered by comics historian Ken Quattro in 2010 indicates Eisner in fact supported Fox and claimed Wonder Man as an original Eisner creation 22 The Spirit Edit Main article The Spirit Eisner s cover for The Spirit Oct 6 1946 In late 39 just before Christmas time Eisner recalled in 1979 23 Quality Comics publisher Everett M Busy Arnold came to me and said that the Sunday newspapers were looking for a way of getting into this comic book boom In a 2004 interview 24 he elaborated on that meeting Busy invited me up for lunch one day and introduced me to Henry Martin sales manager of The Des Moines Register and Tribune Syndicate who said The newspapers in this country particularly the Sunday papers are looking to compete with comics books and they would like to get a comic book insert into the newspapers Martin asked if I could do it It meant that I d have to leave Eisner amp Iger which was making money we were very profitable at that time and things were going very well A hard decision Anyway I agreed to do the Sunday comic book and we started discussing the deal which was that we d be partners in the Comic Book Section as they called it at that time And also I would produce two other magazines in partnership with Arnold Eisner negotiated an agreement with the syndicate in which Arnold would copyright The Spirit but w ritten down in the contract I had with Busy Arnold and this contract exists today as the basis for my copyright ownership Arnold agreed that it was my property They agreed that if we had a split up in any way the property would revert to me on that day that happened My attorney went to Busy Arnold and his family and they all signed a release agreeing that they would not pursue the question of ownership 24 This would include the eventual backup features Mr Mystic and Lady Luck Selling his share of their firm to Iger who would continue to package comics as the S M Iger Studio and as Phoenix Features through 1955 for 20 000 25 Eisner left to create The Spirit They gave me an adult audience Eisner said in 1997 and I wanted to write better things than superheroes Comic books were a ghetto I sold my part of the enterprise to my associate and then began The Spirit They wanted an heroic character a costumed character They asked me if he d have a costume And I put a mask on him and said Yes he has a costume 26 The Spirit an initially eight and later seven page urban crimefighter series ran with the initial backup features Mr Mystic and Lady Luck in a 16 page Sunday supplement colloquially called The Spirit Section that was eventually distributed in 20 newspapers with a combined circulation of as many as five million copies 27 It premiered June 2 1940 and continued through 1952 28 Eisner has cited the Spirit story Gerhard Shnobble as a particular favorite as it was one of his first attempts at injecting his personal point of view into the series 29 1942 1970s Military publications The Spirit and new endeavors EditWorld War II and Joe Dope Edit Premiere issue of the U S Army publication PS June 1951 designed to be a postscript to related publications Art by Eisner Eisner was drafted into the U S Army in late 41 early 42 30 and then had about another half year which the government gave me to clean up my affairs before going off to fight in World War II 31 He was assigned to the camp newspaper at Aberdeen Proving Ground where there was also a big training program there so I got involved in the use of comics for training I finally became a warrant officer which involved taking a test that way you didn t have to go through Officer Candidate School 30 En route to Washington D C he stopped at the Holabird Ordnance Depot in Baltimore where a mimeographed publication titled Army Motors was put together Together with the people there I helped develop its format I began doing cartoons and we began fashioning a magazine that had the ability to talk to the G I s in their language So I began to use comics as a teaching tool and when I got to Washington they assigned me to the business of teaching or selling preventive maintenance 32 Eisner then created the educational comic strip and titular character Joe Dope for Army Motors and spent four years working in The Pentagon editing the ordnance magazine Firepower and doing all the general illustrations that is cartoons for Army Motors He continued to work on that and its 1950 successor magazine PS The Preventive Maintenance Monthly until 1971 32 Eisner also illustrated an official Army pamphlet in 1968 and 1969 called The M16A1 Rifle specifically for troops in Vietnam to help minimize the M16 rifle s notorious early reliability problems with proper maintenance Eisner s style helped to popularize these officially distributed works in order to better educate soldiers on equipment maintenance 33 34 While Eisner s later graphic novels were entirely his own work he had a studio working under his supervision on The Spirit In particular letterer Abe Kanegson came up with the distinctive lettering style which Eisner himself would later imitate in his book length works and Kanegson would often rewrite Eisner s dialogue 35 Eisner s most trusted assistant on The Spirit however was Jules Feiffer later a renowned cartoonist playwright and screenwriter in his own right Eisner later said of their memories of their working methods on the feature You should hear me and Jules Feiffer going at it in a room No you designed the splash page for this one then you wrote the ending I came up with the idea for the story and you did it up to this point then I did the next page and this sequence here and And I ll be swearing up and down that he wrote the ending on that one We never agree 35 So trusted were Eisner s assistants that Eisner allowed them to ghost The Spirit from the time that he was drafted into the U S Army in 1942 until his return to civilian life in 1945 The primary wartime artists were the uncredited Lou Fine and Jack Cole with future Kid Colt Outlaw artist Jack Keller drawing backgrounds Ghost writers included Manly Wade Wellman and William Woolfolk The wartime ghosted stories have been reprinted in DC Comics hardcover collections The Spirit Archives Vols 5 to 11 2001 2003 spanning July 1942 to December 1945 Post war comics Edit On Eisner s return from service and resumption of his role in the studio he created the bulk of the Spirit stories on which his reputation was solidified The post war years also saw him attempt to launch the comic strip comic book series Baseball John Law Kewpies and Nubbin the Shoeshine Boy none succeeded but some material was recycled into The Spirit 36 The Spirit ceased publishing in 1952 During the 1960s and 1970s various publishers reprinted the adventures often with covers by Eisner and with a few new stories from him American Visuals Corporation Edit During his World War II military service Eisner had introduced the use of comics for training personnel in the publication Army Motors for which he created the cautionary bumbling soldier Joe Dope who illustrated various methods of preventive maintenance of various military equipment and weapons In 1948 while continuing to do The Spirit and seeing television and other post war trends eat away at the readership base of newspapers he formed the American Visuals Corporation in order to produce instructional materials for the government related agencies and businesses 37 One of his longest running jobs was PS The Preventive Maintenance Monthly a digest sized magazine with comic book elements that he started for the Army in 1951 and continued to work on until the 1970s with Klaus Nordling Mike Ploog and other artists In addition Eisner produced other military publications such as the graphic manual in 1969 The M 16A1 Rifle Operation and Preventative Maintenance which was distributed along with cleaning kits to address serious reliability concerns with the M16 Rifle during the Vietnam War 37 Other clients of his Connecticut based company included RCA Records the Baltimore Colts football team and New York Telephone 1970s 2005 Godfather of the graphic novel EditGraphic novels Edit Eisner credited the 1971 Comic Art Convention CAC for his return to comics In a 1983 interview with CAC organizer Phil Seuling he said I came back into the field because of you I remember you calling me in New London where I was sitting there as chairman of the board of Croft Publishing Co My secretary said There s a Mr Seuling on the phone and he s talking about a comics convention What is that She said I didn t know you were a cartoonist Mr Eisner Oh yes I said secretly I m a closet cartoonist I came down and was stunned at the existence of the whole world That was a world that I had left and I found it very exciting very stimulating 38 Eisner later elaborated about meeting underground comics creators and publishers including Denis Kitchen I went down to the convention which was being held in one of the hotels in New York and there was a group of guys with long hair and scraggly beards who had been turning out what spun as literature really popular gutter literature if you will but pure literature And they were taking on illegal sic subject matter that no comics had ever dealt with before I came away from that recognizing that a revolution had occurred then a turning point in the history of this medium I reasoned that the 13 year old kids that I d been writing to back in the 1940s were no longer 13 year old kids they were now 30 40 years old They would want something more than two heroes two supermen crashing against each other I began working on a book that dealt with a subject that I felt had never been tried by comics before and that was man s relationship with God That was the book A Contract with God 39 Trade paperback edition of A Contract with God the concurrent 1 500 copy hardcover release did not use the term graphic novel on its cover In the late 1970s Eisner turned his attention to longer storytelling forms A Contract with God and Other Tenement Stories Baronet Books October 1978 is an early example of an American graphic novel combining thematically linked short stories into a single square bound volume Eisner continued with a string of graphic novels that tell the history of New York s immigrant communities particularly Jews including The Building A Life Force Dropsie Avenue and To the Heart of the Storm He continued producing new books into his seventies and eighties at an average rate of nearly one a year Each of these books was done twice once as a rough version to show editor Dave Schreiner then as a second finished version incorporating suggested changes 40 Some of his last work was the retelling in sequential art of novels and myths including Moby Dick In 2002 at the age of 85 he published Sundiata based on the part historical part mythical stories of a West African king The Lion of Mali Fagin the Jew is an account of the life of Dickens s character Fagin in which Eisner tries to get past the stereotyped portrait of Fagin in Oliver Twist His last graphic novel The Plot The Secret Story of The Protocols of the Elders of Zion an account of the making and refutation of the anti semitic hoax The Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion was completed shortly before his death and published in 2005 In 2008 Will Eisner s The Spirit A Pop Up Graphic Novel was published with Bruce Foster as paper engineer 41 Teaching Edit In his later years especially Eisner was a frequent lecturer about the craft and uses of sequential art He taught at the School of Visual Arts in New York City where he published Will Eisner s Gallery a collection of work by his students 42 and wrote two books based on these lectures Comics and Sequential Art and Graphic Storytelling and Visual Narrative which are widely used by students of cartooning In 2002 Eisner participated in the Will Eisner Symposium of the 2002 University of Florida Conference on Comics and Graphic Novels 43 Death EditEisner died January 3 2005 in Lauderdale Lakes Florida of complications from a quadruple bypass surgery performed December 22 2004 44 45 DC Comics held a memorial service in Manhattan s Lower East Side a neighborhood Eisner often visited in his work at the Angel Orensanz Foundation on Norfolk Street 46 Eisner was survived by his wife Ann Weingarten Eisner and their son John 47 48 49 In the introduction to the 2001 reissue of A Contract with God Eisner revealed that the inspiration for the title story grew out of the 1970 death of his leukemia stricken teenaged daughter Alice next to whom he is buried Until then only Eisner s closest friends were aware of his daughter s life and death Awards and honors EditEisner has been recognized for his work with the National Cartoonists Society Comic Book Award for 1967 1968 1969 1987 and 1988 as well as its Story Comic Book Award in 1979 50 and its Reuben Award in 1998 In 1975 he was awarded the Inkpot Award and the second Grand Prix de la ville d Angouleme 51 He was inducted into the Academy of Comic Book Arts Hall of Fame in 1971 and the Jack Kirby Hall of Fame in 1987 The following year the Will Eisner Comic Industry Awards were established in his honor In 2015 Eisner was posthumously elected to the Society of Illustrators Hall of Fame 52 Comics by Will Eisner are archived in the James Branch Cabell Library of Virginia Commonwealth University 53 VCU s James Branch Cabell Library has served as the repository for the Will Eisner Comic Industry Awards since 2005 Each year following Comic Con nominated and award winning titles are donated to the library s Special Collections and Archives and made available to researchers and visitors Approximately 1 000 comic books graphic novels archival editions scholarly titles and journals are included in the VCU library s expansive Comic Arts Collection 54 On the 94th anniversary of Eisner s birth in 2011 Google used an image featuring the Spirit as its logo 55 56 With Jack Kirby Robert Crumb Harvey Kurtzman Gary Panter and Chris Ware Eisner was among the artists honored in the exhibition Masters of American Comics at the Jewish Museum in New York City from September 16 2006 to January 28 2007 57 58 In honor of Eisner s centennial in 2017 Denis Kitchen and John Lind co curated the largest retrospective exhibitions of Will Eisner s original artwork shown simultaneously at The Society of Illustrators in New York City and Le Musee de la Bande Dessinee in Angouleme France Both exhibitions were titled Will Eisner Centennial Celebration and collectively over 400 original pieces were included 59 A catalogue of the same name was released by Dark Horse Books and nominated for multiple Eisner Awards in 2018 60 Original books EditOdd Facts Tempo Star Books 1975 ISBN 0 441 60918 X A Contract with God Baronet Books 1978 ISBN 0 89437 035 9 DC Comics reissue ISBN 1 56389 674 5 Eisner Will 1983 Life on Another Planet ISBN 0 87816 370 0 Eisner Will 1985 Comics and Sequential Art ISBN 0 9614728 0 4 Eisner Will 1986 New York The Big City softcover ed ISBN 0 87816 020 5 Hardcover reprint 2000 ISBN 1 56389 682 6 Eisner Will 1986 The Dreamer ISBN 1 56389 678 8 Eisner Will 1987 The Building ISBN 0 87816 024 8 Eisner Will 1988 A Life Force ISBN 0 87816 038 8 Art of Will Eisner 2nd ed Kitchen Sink 1989 ISBN 0 87816 076 0 Eisner Will 1991 To the Heart of the Storm ISBN 1 56389 679 6 Eisner Will 1991 The Will Eisner Reader ISBN 0 87816 129 5 Eisner Will 1993 Invisible People ISBN 0 87816 208 9 Eisner Will 1995 Dropsie Avenue ISBN 0 87816 348 4 Will Eisner Sketchbook softcover ed Kitchen Sink 1995 ISBN 0 87816 399 9 Hardcover edition ISBN 0 87816 400 6 Eisner Will 1996 Graphic Storytelling and Visual Narrative ISBN 0 9614728 3 9 Grimm Jacob Grimm Wilhelm 1996 The Princess and the Frog ISBN 1 56163 244 9 Eisner Will 1998 A Family Matter ISBN 0 87816 621 1 Eisner Will 2000 Last Day in Vietnam ISBN 1 56971 500 9 Eisner Will Saavedra Miguel de Cervantes 2000 The Last Knight ISBN 1 56163 251 1 Eisner Will 2000 Minor Miracles ISBN 1 56389 751 2 Will Eisner s Shop Talk Dark Horse Comics 2001 ISBN 1 56971 536 X Eisner Will 2002 The Name of the Game ISBN 1 56389 865 9 Eisner Will 2003 Fagin the Jew ISBN 0 385 51009 8 The Name of the Game 2003 ISBN 1 56389 869 1 Will Eisner s John Law Dead Man Walking softcover ed IDW 2004 ISBN 1 932382 27 5 Hardcover edition ISBN 1 932382 83 6 The Plot The Secret Story of The Protocols of the Elders of Zion WW Norton 2005 ISBN 0 393 06045 4 References Edit As co creator of Doll Man Schumacher 2010 p 2 Schumacher 2010 pp 2 3 a b Schumacher 2010 p 3 Schumacher 2010 pp 3 4 a b Schumacher 2010 p 4 Schumacher 2010 p 6 Schumacher 2010 pp 7 8 a b Schumacher 2010 p 10 Schumacher 2010 pp 8 9 Schumacher 2010 p 5 Schumacher 2010 p 11 Schumacher 2010 p 12 Lovece Frank 1974 Maple Leaf Publications Paul Kowtiuk ed Cons New York 1974 The Journal Summer Special Essex ON Spiegelman Art Tijuana Bibles Salon com August 19 1997 p 2 Archived June 29 2011 at the Wayback Machine WebCitation archive main page and p 2 Retrieved on February 24 2009 Mercer Marilyn The Only Real Middle Class Crimefighter New York Sunday supplement New York Herald Tribune January 9 1966 reprinted Alter Ego No 48 May 2005 Heintjes Tom The Spirit The Origin Years 3 Kitchen Sink Press September 1992 Hawks of the Sea at Don Markstein s Toonopedia Archived from the original on March 15 2012 Dowell Gary Holman Greg 2008 Halperin James ed Heritage Comics and Comic Art Signature Auction 828 Heritage Capital Corporation p 84 ISBN 978 1599672489 Andelman Bob Will Eisner A Spirited Life M Press Milwaukie Oregon 2005 ISBN 978 1 59582 011 2 pp 44 45 The Dreamer A Graphic Novella Set During the Dawn of Comic Books DC Comics New York City 1986 edition ISBN 978 1 56389 678 1 Reissued by W W Norton amp Company New York City London 2008 ISBN 978 0 393 32808 0 p 42 Quattro Ken DC vs Victor Fox The Testimony of Will Eisner The Comics Detective July 1 2010 Art amp Commerce An Oral Reminiscence by Will Eisner Panels 1 Summer 1979 pp 5 21 quoted in Quattro Ken 2003 Rare Eisner Making of a Genius Comicartville Library Archived from the original on December 18 2003 a b Will Eisner interview Alter Ego No 48 May 2005 p 10 Kitchen Denis Annotations to The Dreamer in Eisner Will The Dreamer W W Norton amp Company New York 2008 p 52 ISBN 978 0 393 32808 0 Will Eisner interview Jack Kirby Collector 16 June 1997 Eisner The Dreamer About the Author p 55 GCD Series The Spirit Eisner Wide Open Hogan s Alley a b Will Eisner Interview The Comics Journal No 46 May 1979 p 45 Interview conducted October 13 and 17 1978 Eisner interview The Comics Journal No 46 p 37 a b Eisner interview The Comics Journal No 46 pp 45 46 United States Department of the Army Robert A Sadowski 2013 The M16A1 Rifle Operation and Preventive Maintenance Skyhorse Publishing ISBN 9781616088644 Retrieved July 13 2014 Mertes Micah November 5 2011 UNL professor s new book explores the weird world of government comics Lincoln Journal Star Will Eisner should be credited for using sequences of cartoon images to teach people how to do things rather than merely as a way to dramatize a story or illustrate text One of the last military projects he worked on dealt with the use and care of the problematic M16 rifle The weapon was issued in the mid 60s to great fanfare but soon developed a reputation for unreliability Full of double entendres Operation and Preventive Maintenance The M16A1 Rifle is a classic example of Eisner s incredible ability to combine effectively informational instructional design with graphic design a b Sim Dave My Dinner With Will amp Other Stories Following Cerebus No 4 May 2005 Andelman pp 139 41 a b Schumacher 2010 Groth Gary May 2005 Will Eisner Chairman of the Board The Comics Journal No 267 Archived from the original on March 20 2011 Transcript Will Eisner s keynote address Will Eisner Symposium The 2002 University of Florida Conference on Comics and Graphic Novels Sim Dave Advice amp Consent The Editing of Graphic Novels panel discussion with Eisner and Chester Brown and Frank Miller interview both Following Cerebus No 5 August 2005 MacDonald Heidi October 20 2008 When the Gift is a Graphic Novel PublishersWeekly com Retrieved December 18 2016 Levitz Paul 2015 Will Eisner champion of the graphic novel New York Abrams ISBN 9781613128640 OCLC 930648436 Eisner Will Keynote Address from the 2002 Will Eisner Symposium ImageTexT vol 1 No 1 2004 University of Florida Department of English Retrieved 2011 02 02 WebCitation archive Gemstone Publishing Industry News January 7 2005 In Memoriam Will Eisner Scoop diamondgalleries com Archived from the original on April 18 2005 Retrieved February 2 2011 Will Eisner 1917 2005 SF amp F Publishing News Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America January 4 2005 Retrieved 2011 02 02 WebCitation archive DC Comics Celebrates Will Eisner Scoop column Gemstone Publishing Inc Diamond International Galleries March 19 2005 Retrieved 2011 02 02 Gravett Paul Obituary Will Eisner He pioneered American comic books and established the graphic novel as a literary genre The Guardian January 8 2005 WebCitation archive Boxer Sarah Will Eisner a Pioneer of Comic Books Dies at 87 The New York Times January 5 2005 Obituaries Will Eisner The Daily Telegraph January 6 2005 Division Awards Comic Books National Cartoonists Society 2013 Archived from the original on January 21 2013 Retrieved December 16 2013 Inkpot Award December 6 2012 2015 Hall of Fame Inductee Will Eisner Society of Illustrators Archived from the original on May 6 2017 Retrieved May 23 2018 2017 News Will Eisner Week VCU Libraries Retrieved March 29 2017 The Eisner Awards the Oscars of the Comics Industry VCU Libraries Gallery gallery library vcu edu Retrieved March 29 2017 Seifert Mark Google Celebrates Will Eisner s 94th Birthday with the Spirit Google Logo BleedingCool com March 6 2011 Archive of Google March 6 2011 main page Archived April 11 2016 at the Wayback Machine Exhibitions Masters of American Comics The Jewish Museum Archived from the original on May 11 2011 Retrieved August 10 2010 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Kimmelman Michael See You in the Funny Papers art review The New York Times October 13 2006 Society of Illustrators www societyillustrators org Retrieved May 23 2018 Brown Tracy April 27 2018 My Favorite Thing Is Monsters and Monstress lead 2018 Eisner Awards nominations Los Angeles Times Retrieved May 23 2018 Works cited Edit Schumacher Michael 2010 Will Eisner A Dreamer s Life in Comics Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 1 60819 524 4 Further reading EditFeiffer Jules The Great Comic Book Heroes ISBN 1 56097 501 6 Jones Gerard Men of Tomorrow ISBN 0 434 01402 8 Steranko Jim The Steranko History of Comics 2 Supergraphics 1972 The Spirit at Don Markstein s Toonopedia Archived from the original on August 8 2017 Fitzgerald Paul E Every Picture Tells A Story His Pen and Wit Sharper Than Ever Graphic Novelist Will Eisner Takes On Religious Intolerance The Washington Post June 3 2004 Archived October 20 2012 at the Wayback Machine Robinson Tasha Interview Will Eisner The A V Club The Onion September 27 2000 WebCitation archive Jacks Brian Veterans Day Exclusive The Spirit Creator Will Eisner s Wartime Memories MTV com November 11 2000 Archived July 27 2011 at the Wayback Machine Benton John May 2005 Will Eisner Having Something to Say The Comics Journal 267 Archived from the original on March 18 2011 Archive of material trimmed from print magazine interview at the Wayback Machine archived April 29 2008 Interview conducted September 10 1968 originally published in Witzend No 6 Spring 1969 Interview with Jerry Iger Cubic Zirconia Reader 1985 WebCitation archive Vaughn Susan January 7 2001 Making It A Pioneering Spirit in Pen and Ink Graphic Novel s Father Has Been Innovator in Comics Since the 30s Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on October 7 2016 Retrieved October 7 2016 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Will Eisner Wikimedia Commons has media related to Will Eisner WillEisner com archived 2011 03 19 at WebCite webcitation org Will Eisner at Curlie Will Eisner at IMDb Will Eisner at the Comic Book DB archived from the original Will Eisner at Library of Congress with 98 library catalog records The Ohio State University Billy Ireland Cartoon Library amp Museum Will Eisner Collection Guide primary source material Villain Paper Fiction House The Spirit Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Will Eisner amp oldid 1148341146, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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