This is obviously by Joe Shuster, who collaborated on Superman. Shuster illustrated some spanking erotica and worked spanking into a number of Superman stories.
Yes, it’s Joe Shuster, who with his eyesight failing (it had always been bad) in the years after he and Jerry Siegel lost their lawsuit against Harry Donenfield over the rights to Superman had fallen upon very hard times. Craig Yoe identified it as Shuster a few years ago. No one knows exactly what Shuster was doing during this time, although he did sell a few cartoons to Humorama (including two spanking-themed ones) in 1960.
Many questions have been raised about Nights of Horror; the only answers we have are from the printer, Eugene Maletta, the “Mal” of Malcla publishing (Clancy, the “cla” of Malcla, remains an enigma, and apparently he was the driving force in the partnership and probably recruited Shuster to the project).
Some further information may be found in Yoe’s book Secret Identiry and on the CSR page Strange Loves of Alice.
"...the girls are prepared in the reformatory’s punishment room, naked, lying on their backs on special benches, bound with their legs spread above their heads, shamefully showing the two holes usually hidden..."
Another one with a nice bum but a rather implausible bosom as it would hang down more vertically.
I never do art criticism because my own stuff looks like stick figures from kindergarten where you can’t tell the people from the flowers.
This is obviously by Joe Shuster, who collaborated on Superman. Shuster illustrated some spanking erotica and worked spanking into a number of Superman stories.
It does certainly have the Shuster look, I won’t argue with that much.
Yes, it’s Joe Shuster, who with his eyesight failing (it had always been bad) in the years after he and Jerry Siegel lost their lawsuit against Harry Donenfield over the rights to Superman had fallen upon very hard times. Craig Yoe identified it as Shuster a few years ago. No one knows exactly what Shuster was doing during this time, although he did sell a few cartoons to Humorama (including two spanking-themed ones) in 1960.
Many questions have been raised about Nights of Horror; the only answers we have are from the printer, Eugene Maletta, the “Mal” of Malcla publishing (Clancy, the “cla” of Malcla, remains an enigma, and apparently he was the driving force in the partnership and probably recruited Shuster to the project).
Some further information may be found in Yoe’s book Secret Identiry and on the CSR page Strange Loves of Alice.
As always, you are a wild man and fount of detail on these matters. Thanks!