
followed by a 'turn-of-th-20th-Century- job: [all these pages dated JUNE 11, 1966:

---more railroad rollocking from BOB WEBSTER:

AND LASTLY for today, more colourful capers courtesy of our back-page 'star':

Moderator: AndyB




Thank you for pointing out my error, Kashgar. I really shouldn't write these posts when I'm tired, it just leads to carelessness and the need to apologise. As far as the artists are concerned, I realise you are working from memory, but it might be worth it to both of us if you were to check your research notes, because the artists names that you gave me a few years ago are George Ramsbottom and Douglas Phillips respectively. The heading block for the first 'Raven' series was apparently by James Walker.Kashgar wrote:From memory I'm certain that the first had heading blocks drawn by Calder Jamieson and the second by Jerry Butchart.
Sorry, Kashgar, again!! I now realise that you were referring to the heading blocks in The Victor, not the ones in The Wizard. You carry on, I'm going back to bed.phoenix4ever wrote:I really shouldn't write these posts when I'm tired




Just to put the record straight, Col, as there seems to be some confusion here. The serial The Raven Talks was not repeated in The Victor, either as a text story or a picture strip. The story you are referring to was originally called The Raven Talks Again, which was repeated in text form in The Victor in 1962 under the title The Raven Talks. Kashgar drew my attention earlier on this thread to my error, an inexplicable one because all my notes here state quite clearly that it was a textual repeat.colcool007 wrote:Just to add to Phoenix's post and one amendment. The Raven Talks was actually published in the Victor in 1962 as a text story not as a picture story
Kashgar wrote:BTW 'The Raven Talks Again' was further reprinted as 'The Raven Talks' in text format in the revamped Wizard in 1974 with heading blocks supplied by Ted Rawlings. If I recall it correctly the reason that they never saw fit to reprint the first series, ie the actual series 'The Raven Talks', was because it was mainly concerned with black-marketeering, a topic that its young readers would have known all about in the 1940's but which may have been a bit lost on boys of the 1960's/1970's generation.
The 'Lonely Wood' text series on which the Sparky picture series were based were also reprinted in the text format in the Wizard in 1976 coincidentally.

