Frank Godwin (1889–1959)
Author of Wonder Woman: The Golden Age Omnibus Vol. 1
About the Author
Image credit: kleefeldoncomics.com
Series
Works by Frank Godwin
Connie: Catpives of the Space Pirates; and Masters of the Jovian Moons (Pacific Comics Club) (2009) 6 copies
Connie, a Complete Compilation, 1929-1930 (The Hyperion library of classic American comic strips) (1977) 3 copies
Connie 1 : 1934 - 1936 1 copy
Stories the Balloonman Told — Illustrator — 1 copy
Rusty Riley: 1948 Dailies 1 copy
The Best of Rusty Riley 1 copy
Associated Works
King Arthur and His Knights: Based on Morte d’Arthur of Sir Thomas Malory (1927) — Illustrator, some editions — 291 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Godwin, Francis
- Birthdate
- 1889-10-20
- Date of death
- 1959-08-05
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Art Students League, New York City, New York, USA
- Occupations
- illustrator
comic book artist - Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- Washington, D.C., USA
- Places of residence
- Bucks County, Pennsylvania, USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- USA
Members
Reviews
Frank Godwin was the creator of "Connie", "Roy Powers, Eagle Scout" and "Rusty Riley", along with being a prolific and highly regarded illustrator for books and advertisements. For a time he lived with his family in Cuba, becoming close friends with Ernest Hemingway, fleeing the island when Castro's regime took over.
"Rusty Riley" is a boy's adventure strip, with Rusty an orphan who is taken under the wing of a wealthy widower who owns and races thoroughbred horses. Rusty soon becomes a show more valued helper at the stables, a natural with horses, reliable and honest, and a close friend to Patty Miles, his benefactor's daughter. Rusty is of indeterminate age, perhaps just entering his teens, and as yet there is no hint of romance between the two youngsters, just a close wholesome friendship. "Wholesome" is the word for this strip, whose villains even seem to never entertain thoughts of violence, meekly giving up when their nefarious plots against Mr. Miles are exposed (generally with Rusty's help). Frank Godwin wrote the strip himself for a time, eventually hiring writers and focusing completely on the art. The art is what carries this strip; the plots are predictable and pedantic. Godwin's art, lovely with its dense texture and crosshatching, is some of the most gorgeous in comic strips. Still, there are weaknesses. Action scenes (admittedly few and far between) are static, and facial expressions are muted and unchanging. This, and the mediocre plots and writing, make it difficult to engage with the characters, even Rusty himself. Godwin may have been better suited as a children's book illustrator than an adventure strip creator. But this is a long overlooked strip of near unequalled beauty that has been long overdue for the complete run reprint. show less
"Rusty Riley" is a boy's adventure strip, with Rusty an orphan who is taken under the wing of a wealthy widower who owns and races thoroughbred horses. Rusty soon becomes a show more valued helper at the stables, a natural with horses, reliable and honest, and a close friend to Patty Miles, his benefactor's daughter. Rusty is of indeterminate age, perhaps just entering his teens, and as yet there is no hint of romance between the two youngsters, just a close wholesome friendship. "Wholesome" is the word for this strip, whose villains even seem to never entertain thoughts of violence, meekly giving up when their nefarious plots against Mr. Miles are exposed (generally with Rusty's help). Frank Godwin wrote the strip himself for a time, eventually hiring writers and focusing completely on the art. The art is what carries this strip; the plots are predictable and pedantic. Godwin's art, lovely with its dense texture and crosshatching, is some of the most gorgeous in comic strips. Still, there are weaknesses. Action scenes (admittedly few and far between) are static, and facial expressions are muted and unchanging. This, and the mediocre plots and writing, make it difficult to engage with the characters, even Rusty himself. Godwin may have been better suited as a children's book illustrator than an adventure strip creator. But this is a long overlooked strip of near unequalled beauty that has been long overdue for the complete run reprint. show less
"Connie" was a strange little strip, about a Nancy Drewish sort of beautiful single woman who kept getting into scrapes and misadventures with bad guys. The strip was from the 1930's, had fairly outlandish plots and dialogue, and the best part about it was Frank Godwin's stylish artwork.
Lists
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 24
- Also by
- 2
- Members
- 106
- Popularity
- #181,886
- Rating
- 3.8
- Reviews
- 2
- ISBNs
- 10


