Picture of author.

Gaylord DuBois (1899–1993)

Author of The Lone Ranger

94+ Works 492 Members 6 Reviews

About the Author

Image credit: ERBzine

Series

Works by Gaylord DuBois

The Lone Ranger (1936) 93 copies, 1 review
Barry Blake of the Flying Fortress (1943) — Author — 26 copies, 1 review
Korak, Son of Tarzan Archives Volume 1 (2013) 19 copies, 1 review
Stratosphere Jim and His Flying Fortress (1941) 12 copies, 1 review
The Lone Ranger 5 copies
Tarzan (2017) 4 copies
Easy Readings in Spanish (1927) 3 copies
Solomon and Sheba #1070 (Dell Four Color) (1960) — Author — 2 copies
Korak Son of Tarzan #17 (Gold Key/DC) — Author — 2 copies
Korak Son of Tarzan #7 (Gold Key/DC) — Author — 2 copies
Korak Son of Tarzan #8 (Gold Key/DC) — Author — 2 copies
Korak Son of Tarzan #38 (Gold Key/DC) (1964) — Author — 2 copies
Turok Son of Stone (1973) 1 copy

Associated Works

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1899-08-24
Date of death
1993-10-20
Gender
male
Occupations
comic book writer
screenwriter
Nationality
USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

Members

Reviews

8 reviews
Introduced as an infant in the non-Tarzan Burroughs novel [b:The Eternal Lover|15984511|The Eternal Lover|Edgar Rice Burroughs|/assets/nocover/60x80.png|21738879] (1914, between the 2nd and 3rd Tarzan books), John 'Jack' Clayton, the son of Tarzan and Jane, does not play a prominent role until 1915's [b:The Son of Tarzan|589898|The Son of Tarzan (Tarzan, #4)|Edgar Rice Burroughs|http://d202m5krfqbpi5.cloudfront.net/books/1176073415s/589898.jpg|2792098] (the fourth Tarzan), when he adopts the show more name Korak ("Killer" in the language of the Great Apes). Fearing censorship since Tarzan and Jane were never married in the films, the Johnny Weismuller Tarzan movies included an adoptive son called "Boy." When Dell first starting publishing the Tarzan comics in 1947, they kept the pictures name but in Tarzan #139 (December, 1963), Boy asserted his independence and insisted they call him Korak.

January, 1964 saw the premiere of the new ongoing comic Korak, Son of Tarzan. The series ran for 46 issues under the Gold Key banner and then another 13 issues after DC acquired the Tarzan license. Numerous artists drew the series including Dan Spiegle, Frank Thorne, Murphy Anderson, Joe Kubert, and most notably Russ Manning.

Later gaining acclaim as a Tarzan comic and strip artist as well as the creator of the legendary Magnus, Robot Fighter, Manning illustrated the initial 12 issues of the Gaylord Dubois-penned Korak title. With Korak, Son of Tarzan Archives Volume One, Dark Horse collects the first six issues of the enjoyable series.

In his foreword, Steve Rude says this about Manning: "He had an open, uncluttered art style that provided breathing room for your imagination and invited you to relax and prepare for a good time. It would be a challenge to feel any other way, so deliberate was his aim to entertain and make readers feel good." His thoughts also sum up the entirety of this hardcover collection. Behind the unenlightened treatment of tribal people (in the world of Tarzan and Korak, white people are inherently smarter than the apes and the dark "savages" of the continent), these stories are just plain fun. Dubois slow pace and often wacky concepts allow the reader to bask in Manning's simple, clean lines and superior storytelling. The inclusion of Morris Gollub's lush cover paintings further enhance the package.
show less
Some men are born fliers, and Barry Blake is one of them. From the moment he leaves the United States over an adventure-bound course to a South Pacific combat post, he never loses his love for the Sweet Rosy O'Grady or the desire to dish it out in great explosive chunks.
I'm not going to seek any more of this series out, but I enjoyed the story much more than I thought I would. The writing is rather poetic.
moree science fiction than a war story. Heros are inventors not military. Plane created is a mix of airplane, rocket ship, and helicopter

Lists

You May Also Like

Associated Authors

Statistics

Works
94
Also by
1
Members
492
Popularity
#50,225
Rating
4.2
Reviews
6
ISBNs
36

Charts & Graphs