When Frank Johnson, an itinerant musician and shipping clerk, died in
1979, he left behind a startling discovery: more than 2,300 notebook
pages of comics and 131 unbound drawings, among them a massive,
continuous story line beginning in the earliest surviving notebook dated
1928 -- before the existence of comic books! -- and following the
exploits of his own cast of characters across 50 years until Johnson
passed away. During this lifelong project, Johnson invented in private
many of the conventions and tropes that define comics storytelling,
effectively enacting an alternative secret history of the comics medium.
This debut publication of Johnson's work is the first of two 600+ page
volumes that will collect the best 1200 pages of his comics, including
Wally's Gang, his 50-year magnum opus chronicling the humorous,
cliff-hanging adventures of a group of bachelor friends; The Bowser
Boys, a seamy, darkly slapstick depiction of bohemian street life that
could be considered the first underground comic series; and, coming in
Volume 2, Juke Boys, absurd, self-reflexive graphic experimentation.
Curator and historian Chris Byrne and fine artist and graphic novelist
Keith Mayerson have brought this astounding work into the light of day
and provide historical background and analysis.