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HELPFUL HETTIE SITUATION

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The other day I checked the stats of my blog and was surprised to find that the normal daily rate of 150 – 200 pageviews surged to more than 1,000 for a few days, all at the expense of an old little post on Helpful Hettiethat I did in my COR!! series last year. Turns out the post got a brief mention in THISthread on Gunnerkrigg Court forum. I am not familiar with Gunnerkrigg Court webcomic by Tom Siddell, nor have I ever heard about the project that members of the forum are pursuing, but it looks fun. Frankly, I’ve got no clue what the discussion in the thread is about – I suppose one has to be familiar with the comic to make sense of it.

The strong interest that members of Gunnerkrigg Court forum have shown in the blogpost rightfully described in the thread as “probably not related too much” got me thinking that contemporary British-made comics have quite a large following and aren’t doing as poorly as I thought (albeit the majority of traffic appears to be from the US). Gunnerkrigg Court certainly attracts much more attention than old UK comics, at least those published by IPC and covered on this blog so far…

With nearly 2,000 views, Helpful Hettie is now the most popular post on Kazoop!! and is likely to remain at the top forever because the second most popular post only has just over 500 views. Why the article about the last months of COR!! is the second most popular post here is a mystery to me – I think there are many other strips and posts that deserve more attention :)

THE BASH STREET KIDS LEARN HOW COMICS ARE MADE

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Browsing through the comics that I found waiting for me at the post office upon my return from holidays, I came across this interesting set of the Bash Street Kids in which the class learn how their favourite comic is made. 

It wasn’t uncommon to see comic characters reading their own paper in their strips but a story showing the mechanics of making a comic is a rare treat so I thought you might be interested to see it.

The episode is from THE BEANO No. 2155 cover-dated 5th November, 1983.



Here is the strip in one piece for those of you who prefer to read it that way:


THE BASH STREET KIDS LEARN HOW COMICS ARE MADE. PART TWO

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In his comment to my previous blogpost Peter Grey mentioned two more visits of the Bash Street Kids to THE BEANO offices. Both were reprints from old comics included in the DANDY/Beano Magic Moments book which unfortunately I haven’t got a copy of. Peter kindly sent me photos of the two sets and I checked my collection for the original comics where both stories first appeared but it turns out I haven’t got them either (Peter – the Sutherland set is definitely not from 1961, 1962, 1963 or 1964… It must have appeared later on, or maybe it was in an early Beano Holiday Special). Here is the cover of the book and photos of both reprints.





The search for the two episodes wasn’t in vain because I came across other two interesting sets about the making of comics. The first one comes from THE BEANO No. 1090 (year 1963). The Bash Street Kids visit THE BEANO printing works and cause a full-scale ecological disaster. It’s a lovely episode and even includes a colouring contest. Below is the image of the whole centrespread, followed by cropped panels for easier reading. I will include the other episode in my next blogpost. It is from a 1964 issue and shows how the class went into publishing business. Watch this space :)






THE BASH STREET KIDS MAKE THEIR OWN MAG

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As promised, here is another episode of the Bash Street Kids that deals with the subject of making comics. The class join the publishing industry by producing their own Bash Mag and nearly put the Beano out of business, so the Editor resorts to begging and bribery to persuade the Bash Street Kids to withdraw… The set is from THE BEANO No. 1160 (year 1964).



SHIVER AND SHAKE 1975 HOLIDAY SPECIAL

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The third SHIVER AND SHAKE Holiday Special came out in the Summer of 1975. It cost 25 p and boasted “80 pages of fun for Boys and Ghouls”.

Here is the account of the contents (strips that didn’t appear in Sh&Sh weeklies, annuals and other holiday specials are marked in bold): The Duke’s Spook, Frankie Stein by Bob Nixon, Grimly Feendish(6 reprints from SMASH!), Memory Game, Creepy Car (2 episodes, one looks like Tom Paterson’s work), The Hand,  Horrornation Street by Frank McDiarmid, Evil Eye(Star Guest from Whoopee!), Sweeny Toddler by Leo Baxendale, Shake (4 episodes – 3 by Terry Bave and one by by Mike Lacey), Lolly Pop (2 episodes by Sid Burgon), Scatty Bat (4 reprints from Whizzer and Chips), Wizard Prang and Demon Druid (4 reprints from SMASH!/POW! by Mike Brown), The Desert Fox (2 episodes by Terry Bave), Blunder Puss (2 episodes by Jim Crocker), Tough Nutt and Softy Centre by Norman Mansbridge, The Fixer, Tin Tramp and Tinker (2 episodes in full colour), The Webster by Terry Bave, Sports School by Jim Watson, The Ghost’s Revenge, Buy Buy Birdy by Peter Davidson, The Ghoul Getters, Oswaldby Tomboy artist (Mike Atwell?), Harry’s Haunted House (Guest star from Whizzer and Chips by Les Barton), Frankie Fun, Scream Inn– 4 pages by Brian Walker, Demon Differences puzzle.

The 1975 Holiday Special didn’t follow the structure of the weeklies by pretending to be a two-comics-in-one package so strips from both the spooky Shiverand the more traditional Shakesections of the weekly appeared at random. It was the first Sh&Sh Holiday Special without an adventure ingredient, so no more remakes of Maxwell Hawke from Buster...  Like the weeklies, the magazine included star guest appearances of strips from sister publications, i.e. Evil Eye from Whoopee! (drawn by a substitute amateurish artist) and Harry’s Haunted House from Whizzer and Chips (illustrated by the strip's regular artist Les Barton).

The 1975 edition sported a nice cover by Robert Nixon – the last one that he did and signed for a Sh&Sh Holiday Special. Bob Nixon also contributed a 4-pager of Frankie Stein’s antics at the seaside but the artwork seems rushed and rather basic, which is quite strange because 1975 was the time when he was still doing brilliant detailed sets in WHOOPEE! Here is the opening page of the set from the Special:


Frankie Stein also appeared on Frankie Funpage drawn by I don’t know who: 


This is a Summer Holiday Special, so it is no surprise that holidays on the beach are the dominant theme:

The Ghost's Revenge
Lolly Pop
Tough Nutt and Softy Centre
The Webster
Creepy Car
The Duke's Spook
Lolly Pop
Sports School

One of the two Blunder Puss episodes drops out of the summer context when Puss’ guardian angels suggest this is not the right time to look for butterflies. It looks like the episode was intended for an annual and found itself in the Summer Holiday Special by mistake…


As seen from the account of the contents, the Holiday Special offered no big surprises in terms of who drew what – many sets were by their regular artists (Leo Baxendale on Sweeny Toddler, Terry Bave on the Webster and the Desert Fox, Sid Burgon on Lolly Pop, Jim Watson on Sports School, Jim Crocker on Blunder Puss and Brian Walker on Scream Inn). As usual, some strips were by second-rate ghost artists. Two interesting exceptions were the Horrornation Street by Frank McDiarmid and a Creepy Car set that I think may have been drawn by Tom Paterson. Here are two panels that look like Tom’s artwork to me:


There were three strips that weren’t familiar to readers of the weeklies or earlier editions of Shiver and Shake specials and annuals. Tin Tramp and Tinker was one of those crudely drawn page-fillers that popped up from time to time in IPC publications. For some weird reason, this one was given full-colour privileges:


Ossy was a one-pager about a gluttonous and crafty ostrich:


… and Buy Buy Birdy was another one-off about the World’s most impulsive spender Birdy, illustrated by Peter Davidson. I find the idea quite amusing:



There were two puzzles in the magazine. One was a memory game that consisted of a full-page drawing of SHIVER & SHAKE characters enjoying themselves at the fairground, 20 questions about details of the drawing inviting readers to check their memory (What was the colour of Sweeny’s outfit? How many coconuts were there in the picture?, etc.) and correct answers to the questions tucked away at the bottom of one of the pages. Here is the fairground scene of the feature:


The second one was a spot-the-differences type puzzle – a weak attempt to imitate Ken Reid’s World-Wide Weirdies:


Now for the highlights of the magazine: my personal favourites are the three-pager of Horrornation Street by Frank McDiarmid:


… and the episode of Scream Inn– four pages of excellent artwork by Brian Walker in which Mrs. Grumble, President of the Irate Landladies’ Association, has a go at the million quid. The set really shines and stands out amongst other strips in the Holiday Special:


Reprints of Grimly Feendish and Wizard Prang and Demon Druid from Odham’s Power Comics are also a nice addition to the package. Check out examples of both below. Grimly is probably by Leo Baxendale and Wizards is by Mike Brown (as confirmed by his signature in one of the panels):

1976 SHIVER & SHAKE ANNUAL

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1976 SHIVER AND SHAKE Annual cost 95 p. and was 144 pages thick. Here is the list of strips and features included in the book. Redindicates the strip that wasn’t familiar to readers of Sh&Sh weeklies or earlier annuals and specials.

Spooks and Ladders game; Webster by Terry Bave, (3 episodes, two in full colour), Horrornation Street by Tom Williams (3 episodes, one in full colour); Demon Differences (Spot the difference puzzle featuring the Scream Inn); The Hand (2 episodes by the regular Sh&Sh artist), Grimly Feendish by Tom Paterson (5 episodes); Frankie Stein (a 4-pager by Robert Nixon and one Ken Reid reprint from WHAM!); Ghouldilocks; The Duke’s Spook (4 episodes); Wizard Prang and Demon Druid by Mike Brown (4 reprints from Smash!/Pow!); Scatty Bat (2 reprints from WHIZZER AND CHIPS); The Shiver Givers (two 2-pagers my Mike Lacey); Creepy Car (4 episodes, including two by Frank McDiarmid); Scream Inn (a 4-pager by Brian Walker);  Shake (6 episodes: two in full colour (including a 2-pager) and three in b/w by Mike Lacey, one in b/w by Terry Bave); Moana Lisa (3 episodes, one in full colour and two in b/w by Peter Davidson); The Desert Fox by Terry Bave (4 episodes, two in full colour); Sports School by Jim Watson (4 episodes, two in full colour); Tin Tramp and Tinker (4 episodes, including two in full colour);  Sweeny Toddler by Leo Baxendale (2 episodes); Mirth Shakers gags (2 instalments); Tough Nutt and Softy Centre by Norman Mansbridge; Blunder Puss by Jim Crocker (3 episodes); Lolly Pop by Sid Burgon (2 episodes); The Forest Legion (6 pages in b/w); Astro-Nut(in full colour, by The Forest Legion artist); The Ghost’s Revenge; Ghoul Getters by Bob Nixon (3 pages in full colour); Frankie Stein’s A-Maze-ing Brainmaze by Robert Nixon.

The book followed the structure of the weeklies, i.e. SHAKE was inside SHIVER, framed by blocks of colour pages on both ends. Both sections featured their regular strips, just like in the not-so-distant old days when the comic was up and running. When the Annual came out, the weekly had already bit the dust and any survivors migrated to Whoopee! Check out this panel from the Annual in which Shake fights with some dude over a copy of his new favourite comic: 


1976 SHIVER AND SHAKE was the only Sh&Sh annual with Frankie Stein as the cover star. To me, it is one of the most (if not the most) scrumptious IPC annual covers ever. Frankie Stein also features prominently inside the book: Bob Nixon contributed a 4-page set and Frankie Stein’s A-Maze-ing Brain maze; as a bonus, the annual contains a reprint of one old Frankie Stein episode by Ken Reid from WHAM! No. 81 cover-dated 1st January, 1966. As was the custom, the original one-pager was cropped and re-arranged to fill two pages in the Annual and Micky’s presence was removed (this time it was an easy job because he only appeared in a single panel in the original). Check out the old episode from WHAM! and the reprint from the Annual below and see if you can spot more differences:

From WHAM! No. 81, 1st January, 1966

From SHIVER AND SHAKE 1976 Annual


In the new Frankie Stein episode by Robert Nixon, Prof. Cube tried (and failed) to get rid of his dreaded son by shrinking him to a safe size with a ray-gun. Mr. Nixon also illustrated the episode of Ghoul Getters Ltd. in the Annual. By a strange coincidence, plan “S” that Dad and his lad Arnold put into action this time involved the use of a special monster-shrinking ray gun to shrink the giant polar bear down to normal size. The shrinking ray-gun thing is a bit too repetitive, don’t you think?



The book offers a nice collection of familiar strips by the regular artists from Shiver and Shake weeklies as well as earlier Annuals and Holiday Specials. Terry Bave contributed as many as 15 pages of Webster, The Desert Fox and Shake artw0rk; Mike Lacey drew 10 pages of Shake and The Shiver Givers; Tom Williams’ input was 10 pages of Horrornation Street, Jim Watson illustrated 8 pages of Sports School, Jim Crocker, Peter Davidson and Sid Burgon contributed 6 pages of their regular strips each.

The Forest Legion foiled Boss’ and Butch’s cunning plot once again in a 6-pager illustrated by an artist whose style looks a tiny bit like Alf Saporito's to me, but it's hardly him. Here are two last pages of the set:


Astro-Nut was the only strip in this Annual that readers of Sh&Sh weeklies, specials and annuals hadn’t seen before.Readers of this blog pointed out that Astro-Nut was a reprint of Milkiwayfrom the early years of BUSTER (later reprinted as Monty Muddle in SMASH!). BUSTER index says art was by Nadal / Juan Rafart.


The Shiver Givers appeared twice in the Annual. Below is the masthead of the first set (in which Squelch plays a new disc by Freddie Fang and the Werevolves (remember the character from COR!!?) and the stomping staff members crash through the floor plastering Shiver artists working below), and the last panel of the second one (in which Scream Inn’s Cooky rids the offices of mice with 500 year old Gorganzola), both by Mike Lacey:


Another strip that is well-worth mentioning is Creepy Car, particularly the two nice episodes by the excellent Frank McDiarmid. Here is one:


There are as many as five new Grimly Feendish episodes in the Annual, all are lovely new 2-pagers by Tom Paterson. Here is one:


A Shiver and Shake annual wouldn’t be complete without Scream Inn. In this one Scream Inn features in theDemon Differences puzzle (it is in fact the last panel of the set from the final issue of Shiver and Shake weekly - the French Onion Seller episode, with speech balloons removed):

 

…plus a 4-pager in which an unscrupulous bloke gate-crashes the New Year party at Scream Inn and faces the consequences. As always, Brian Walker’s artwork is a treat to the eye:


1976 SHIVER & SHAKE HOLIDAY SPECIAL

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1976 SHIVER AND SHAKE Holiday Special cost 25 p. and was 64 pages thick. Here’s what was inside. Again, red marks the strips that weren’t familiar to readers of Sh&Sh weeklies, earlier annuals or holiday specials.

Freddie Fang the Werewolf Cub (5 reprints from COR!! including two in full colour); Shiver (2 episodes by Terry Bave, including one in full colour); Ghouldilocks, The Hand; Scatty Bat (4 reprints from WHIZZER AND CHIPS); Frankie Stein by Frank McDiarmid; The Ghost’s Revenge; Shakeby Terry Bave (3 episodes, including two in full colour); Moana Lisa by Alf Saporito; Mirth Shakers (5 pages of gags illustrated by Mike Lacey); Wizard Prang and Demon Druid (4 reprints from SMASH!/POW!); The Desert Fox by Terry Bave; International Streetby Joe Colquhoun; Sports School by Jim Watson; Webster by Terry Bave; Brain Raiders puzzles centrespread; Tough Nutt and Softy Centre by Norman Mansbridge; Fixer by Les Barton; Grimly Feendish (reprint from SMASH!); Blunder Puss by Jim Crocker (signed); Horrornation Street by Tom Williams; Which Witch is Which? by Ken Reid; Ghoul Getters Ltd. by Les Barton; Ring the Changes puzzle by Tom Williams featuring Horrornation Street; The Duke’s Spook.

Terry Bave was the biggest contributor with 9 pages of Shake, Shiver, The Desert Fox and Webster artwork. Here is a large colour panel from one of his Shake sets:


The second largest input was by Mike Lacey who drew the cover and 5 pages of Mirth Shakers gags.

A number of sets were drawn by substitute artists, such as Frank McDiarmid on Frankie Stein:


… Alf Saporito on Moana Lisa:


… and Les Barton on Fixer and Ghoul Getters Ltd.



By this time regular readers of Shiver and Shakeannuals and holiday specials were well familiar with Scatty Bat and Wizard Prang and Demon Druid that were in fact reprints from older comics. In this edition the roster of reprints was supplemented with another feature - Freddie Fang the Werewolf Cub, originally from COR!! I covered the strip last year in my COR!! series, you can read the review HERE. The 5 episodes included in the 1976 Shiver and Shake holiday special were by the brilliant Reg Parlett. The original sets were in black and white but two of the reprints were coloured in. Check out an original and its coloured version side by side. This happens to be the first episode of Freddie Fang from the first issue of COR!!


As can be seen from the list of the strips above, the special had no Scream Inn that was always the feature to look for in Shiver & Shake publications but the two surprise one-offs included in the edition are more than enough to make up for the omission.

The first one is International Street from the hand of Joe Colquhoun. It may very well be a reprint but if it is, I don’t know where from and would be delighted if someone told me the source and whether it was part of a series:

And if you thought International Street was the highlight of the 1976 SHIVER AND SHAKE holiday special, think again because the magazine also included Which Witch is Which?– a two-pager by no less than Mr. Ken Reid. We’ll probably never know if this was a test episode for a series that was never followed up, or perhaps something that Mr. Reid drew for his own enjoyment and the editor though it was too good not to be printed. Either way, it is an excellent set showing the master at his very best… 


1977 SHIVER & SHAKE ANNUAL

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1977 SHIVER AND SHAKE Annual came out in the Summer of 1976. It cost a pound and was 144 pages thick. Here’s what was inside (redmarks the strips that weren’t familiar to readers of SH&Sh weeklies, earlier annuals and holiday specials):

Spot the Spooks puzzle; The Ghost’s Revenge (2 episodes, one in full colour); Ghoul Getters Ltd. (5 episodes, some by Trevor Metcalfe, one in full colour), Scatty Bat (3 reprints from WHIZZER AND CHIPS, one coloured in); Demon Differences (2 spot-the-difference puzzles, one with Scream Inn and the other one – with Horrornation Street gang); Grimly Feendish (3 episodes, possibly reprints from SMASH!), The Hand, Frankie Stein (3 reprints from WHAM!, one coloured-in), Cackles…by Crocker; Horrornation Street (2 episodes by Tom Williams); Creepy Car (2 episodes); Spooky Puzzles by Les Barton, Phanto – The Phantom of the Panto by Alf Saporito; Shake by Mike Lacey (2 episodes in full colour); Sweeny Toddler by Tom Paterson (2 episodes, one in full colour); The Desert Fox (2 episodes by Terry Bave in full colour); Blunder Puss by Jim Crocker in full colour; Tin Tramp and Tinker (4 episodes, two in full colour); Wizard Prang and Demon Druid (4 Mike Brown reprints from SMASH/POW); Sports School by Jim Watson; Tobby’s Timepiece (adventure serial, 15 pages); Lolly Pop (2 episodes by Sid Burgon), Webster (4 episodes by Terry Bave, including one in full colour), The Forest Legion (9 pages); Mirth Shakers (2 pages of gags by Mike Lacey); Tough Nutt and Softy Centre by Norman Mansbridge in full colour; The Duke’s Spook (2 episodes, one in full colour); Scream Inn (a 4-pager by Brian Walker); The Hand; Happy Haunts (2 pages of gags and stuff by Les Barton); Marshy Maze puzzle; The Ghost Train Game by Nick Baker.

The 1977 Annual still followed the format of Sh&Sh weeklies with SHAKE section inserted into SHIVER and separated by blocks of colour pages on both ends.

The distinctive feature of the 1977 Annual was the inclusion of two new stories with quite an impressive page count – one was 8 pages and the other one as many as 15 pages long. 

The first is Phanto the Phantom of the Panto– a comedy tale in which Mr. Knowe Goode, manager of a no-good theatre company, picks an old theatre as the venue for his troupe. Actors disturb the sleep of Phanto the Great Illusionist who starred in the theatre a hundred years ago and is now the resident spook of the dilapidated building. Frustrated, the spook tries his best to disrupt the theatre’s Jack and the Beanstalk performance and take the stage over but the actors outsmart him by sucking him up with a vacuum-cleaner and imprisoning him in a bag that becomes what a magic lamp had once become to a genie… The story was in the spooky SHIVER section of the book.

The second and the longest story was Toby’s Timepiece. It was the adventure ingredient of the package. It looks somewhat dated to me and I suspect it may very well be a reprint. Spread out over 15 pages, it tells a weird and unconvincing tale about the adventures of Toby Todd who separated from his group during the school visit to the ruins of Headingford castle and mysteriously slipped into a time warp. On his way to explore the dungeons Toby has a surprise encounter with a boy dressed in mediaeval clothes. The two start squabbling over a watch that the strange boy drops as he rushes past Tobby. The chain of the watch snaps and they find themselves in mediaeval times where Headingford castle stands intact.

Brutal and sadistic baron makes the two boys wrestle on a greased pole above a snake pit to decide the ownership of the watch. In the midst of the fight the magic timepiece makes the baron vanish, the guards start panicking and the two boys run away. Toby helps the other boy escape from the castle but realises that he must stay behind and try to recover the watch because it is his only way to get back to his time. The baron reappears. It turns out he has just been in the future where he saw Toby’s classmates walking in the ruins of his castle so he concludes that Toby is an enemy spy. The baron is about to smash the timepiece to smithereens when the castle comes under the attack of rebellious peasants led by the escaped boy’s father. The peasants prevail but the Baron takes the other boy hostage and tries to make his escape. Toby saves him once again and the boy returns the favour by giving Toby the watch that he found on the ground.  Toby grabs the timepiece as it is about to vanish and gets transported to a strange world of giant insects where he meets a tall and lean bald bloke with pointed ears who introduces himself as Caal. 

Caal is the true owner of the timepiece (or the time transfer unit as he refers to it). The two team up as they fight monster ants, spiders and beastly beetles. Caal uses the timepiece to take both of them to his time in a distant future and gives the watch to Toby as a gift for saving his life. Toby safely returns to the 20th century and the story comes to a close, but the ending promises more adventures in the future. Let’s wait and see what awaits us in later SHIVER & SHAKE publications. In the meantime, would anyone know who the artist was and whether it was a reprint? The story was in the SHAKE section of the Annual.


Speaking of long stories, the Annual also contains a new 9-pager of The Forest Legion in which the familiar posse of small forest animals foil another criminal plot of two loopy crooks Boss and Butch who print 50 thousand forged fivers in an abandoned hut deep in the woods. The story was illustrated by its regular artist but I am not sure who. Here is how the tale began:


Another new aspect about the book was the inclusion of 4 pages of horror-themed puzzles and gags by Les Barton. Les Barton’s style may have not been perfect for strips like the Fixer or Ghoul Getters Ltd., but it was ideal for the comedy horror genre, as illustrated by numerous brilliant episodes of Fiends and Neighbours in COR!! annuals or the puzzles and gags pages in this Sh&Sh book. Here is an example:


One thing I find odd about the book is the two pages of Cackles by Crocker. The mid-seventies was the time when IPC no longer exercised a strict policy of artists’ anonymity and many artists signed their artwork but the size of Jim Crocker’s logo on this double-pager dwarfs anything I’ve seen in an IPC comic before…


Now let’s take a quick look at some of the good old Shiver and Shake regulars. In the three Grimly Feendish sets the villain tries to steal a valuable football cup from football museum; then he tries to rob the waxworks and in the third episode the police decide that Grimly has got to be caught. I haven’t checked so I can’t be sure but something about the layout (empty spaces in panels, strange cropping, etc.) suggests that all the three sets may be reprinted from SMASH! Here is one:


In the five episodes of Ghoul Getters Ltd. Dad and Archie take care of a haunted tree who hates kids after some carved their initials on it, a haunted blackboard and a haunted hay stack that keeps tickling everyone; they also visit a café run by a ghostly cook, and in one episode a ghost has the upper hand for a change:


It’s Christmas in Horrornation Street and Santa is worried because last year he got it all wrong: he brought a first aid kit to the Mummy who wanted a new suit of bandages, he gave cricket and ping-pong bats to Herr Raisin the vampire who wanted live pet bats, Hoodoo Yoodoo got a spelling book instead of a book of magic spells and Headley Deadly got a manicure set instead of a manacle set of a new light-weight ball and chain. Eager to do better this time, Santa lets them pick their own gifts.

In the second episode of Horrornation Street the Mummy and Headley are not happy with the cold weather so they ask Hoodoo Yoodoo to do something about it. Herr Raisin is the only one who prefers it cold as the grave..

Below is one of the two episodes of Sweeny Toddler. It appears that Tom Paterson had already taken over illustrator’s duties from Leo Baxendale by then:



It looks like none of the regular Frankie Stein artists were available to draw something new for the Annual so the editor included as many as three reprints of Ken Reid’s old Frankie from WHAM! The sets are from WHAM! No. 111 (30th July, 1966), No. 116 (3rd September, 1966) and No. 143 (11th March, 1967). As usual, all original one-pagers were cut up and re-arranged to fill more space in the Annual. The first episode appears to be complete with nothing dropped or altered; the one from issue No. 116 was slightly doctored by cutting out a couple panels. The third episode suffered the most: they added a new masthead (a really ugly one, if you ask me), dropped four panels and had someone colour the rest in. Here is the original from WHAM!


… and here is what became of it in 1977 Sh&Sh Annual:

 

The Annual also includes a bright and cheerful Christmas episode of Scream Inn in which a nice little lady who writes verses for X-mas cards comes to visit. In the end the good-humoured lady doesn’t seem to be too upset that the Innkeeper’s trick prevented her from winning the million quid but the spooks still feel bad about it and decide to make it up to her with a slap-up Christmas dinner. The last panel of the set is probably the nicest in the whole Scream Inn file:


Scream Inn also features in one of the two Demon Differences puzzles in the Annual (Horrornation Street gang star in the other one). The panel used in the puzzle is from Whoopee! dated 6th September, 1976 (the Carpenter episode).

I will sign off with the image of a busy game of The Ghost Train by Nick Baker:



1977 SHIVER & SHAKE HOLIDAY SPECIAL

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The 1977 Sh&Sh Holiday Special cost 30 p. It sported a busy cover by Mike Lacey and was 64 pages thick. Here’s what was inside: Shiver by Terry Bave, Horrornation Street by Tom Williams, The Hand by Les Barton, Mirth Shakers gags (two 2-pagers, some gags signed by Crocker), The Ghost’s Revenge, Grimly Feendish (2 sets, a two-pager signed by Paul Ailey and one reprint from Smash!), Desert Fox (by someone else rather than Terry Bave), The Shake Squad (2 sets,  reprints of The Lion Lotby Leo Baxendale from Lion comic), Freddie Fang the Werewolf Cub(reprints from COR!! comic, two in full colour and two in b/w, all by Reg Parlet), Wizard Prang and Demon Druid (2 reprints from Smash!/Pow! by Mike Brown); Memory Game puzzle by Terry Bave featuring different Shiver and Shake characters, The Duke’s Spook,Sports School by Jim Watson, Scatty Bat (2 reprints from Whizzer and Chips), Lolly Pop by Sid Burgon, Beach Baffler spot-the-difference puzzle by Tom Williams featuring Horrornation Street characters and more, Webster by Terry Bave; Sweeny Toddler centresperead in full colour by Tom Paterson, Spot the Difference puzzle, Toby’s Timepiece (adventure tale, 5 pages), Moana Lisa, Ghouldilocks,  Frankie Stein in “Air Crafty”(4-pager), Fixer, Mirth-Shaking Inventions, Tough Nutt and Softy Centre (a three-pager by Norman Mansbridge), Shakeby Terry Bave.

There was a number of small surprises in the magazine. Paul Ailey illustrated and signed one episode of Grimly Feendish and did quite a good job drawing it, IMHO:

 

As many as three strips – Moana Lisa, Ghouldilocks and Fixer(six pages all together) were drawn by a new artist whose style I haven’t seen in Shiver and Shake before. Was it Barrie Appleby?

Moana Lisa
Ghouldilocks
Fixer

The 4-page set of Frankie Stein (in which Professor Cube tried to sneak off for his holiday while Frankie played with model planes) is by an artist whose name I don’t know:


This Holiday Special includes the second story of Toby’s Timepiece– the adventure tale about a boy who owned an amazing watch which held the secret of time travel. The crazy story of how he came to possess the timepiece had appeared half-a-year ago in 1977 Shiver and Shake annual and I covered it in detail in my previous post HERE. In this one Toby’s class go on a treasure hunt arranged by their teacher but Toby suddenly finds himself in the past and runs into some serious pirates and a real treasure. The trouble with the timepiece is that Toby appears to have no clue how it works – this time its magical powers are activated by an accidental jolt against a rock. One gets an impression that once the magical powers are at work, they can transport Toby anywhere they want in time and space, the clueless boy has no control over them whatsoever. On the other hand, he can easily return to the place and time where he left from. Anything can happen in the bizarrely illogical world of poorly-written children’s mystery adventure comics…

Both instalments of The Shake Squad were reprints from Lion where the single-panel full-pagers were drawn by Leo Baxendale. I haven’t seen originals in Lionbut I doubt if they were in colour. They do look very nice in this Holiday Special. I showed one last year in my London Olympics series HERE, and here is the other one:

 
I will finish this post about 1977 Shiver and Shake Holiday Special with the Memory Game puzzle. Terry Bave drew this large panel with lots of different Shiver and Shake characters. See how many you can recognise:


As an off-topic post scriptum, I will mention that the recently closed Compal auctions offered one Shiver and Shake-related item - the original of the cover illustration for the issue dated 14th September, 1974 (No. 76).  Indian ink on cartridge paper. 17 x 16 ins. ONCE AGAIN, it was incorrectly described as something that Bob Nixon drew for WHOOPEE! in the early 80s.  The buyer paid £72 and I happen to be the unhappy underbidder… Here is the artwork and its printed version:







1978 SHIVER AND SHAKE ANNUAL

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1978 Shiver and Shake Annual was a 144-page book priced one pound.

Contents: Sweeny Toddler (four episodes by Tom Paterson, 3 signed); Ghoul Getters Ltd (two  episodes by Trevor Metcalfe and one by someone else), The Desert Fox (one episode by Terry Bave and one by someone else), Shiver (2 episodes by Terry Bave), Shake (5 episodes by Terry Bave), Scrapper’s Scrapbook (5 reprints of a strip by Leo Baxendale but I don’t know where from), The Hand (two episodes, one by Les Barton and one by someone else), Frankie Stein (three sets - one by Frank McDiarmid and two by someone else, possibly Alf Saporito), Blunder Puss (2 episodes by Jim Crocker), Webster (two episodes – one by Les Barton and one by someone else but not Terry Bave), The Duke’s Spook (2 episodes), The Shake Squad (4 reprints of The Lion Lot by Leo Baxendale from LION comic), Toby’s Timepiece (8-pager, adventure), Sports School (2 episodes by Jim Watson, signed), Horrornation Street (two 3-pagers by Tom Williams), The Ghost’s Revenge (two episodes, most probably by Crocker), Tough Nutt and Softy Centre (two 3-page sets by Norman Mansbridge), Robby Hood and His One Man Band (reprint from COR!! weeklies); Webster, Lolly Pop (three sets, two signed by Les Barton and one drawn by someone else, possibly Arthur Martin), Grimly Feendish (a 4-pager by Paul Ailey); Creepy Car (most probably by Reg Parlet), Scream Inn (reprint of the episode from SHIVER & SHAKE No. 4), ‘Orrible Hole(a strip from WHOOPEE! that hasn’t been seen in Shiver and Shakebefore), The Forest Legion (8 pages), Space Jinx spot-the-difference puzzle; Mirth Shakers (gags, 2 pages by Tony Goffe), Revolt of the Robomen (space adventure by Ron Turner, 6-pages).

This was the first SHIVER AND SHAKE Annual that stopped pretending it was a two-comics-in-one package, and the first without blocks of full-colour pages. That said, the Annual was an “all-colour book” in the tradition of IPC comics of the seventies when all pages were printed in b/w with added red, yellow, orange, green or blue.

Both mascots were on the cover but inside SHAKE outdid SHIVER by good margin: there were as many as five Shake sets as opposed to merely two of Shiver.

Now let us take a look as some of the familiar strips.

Ghoul Getters Ltd rid a quaint English Inn of a spooky highwayman who always scared the tourists away; then they dealt with an interfering spooky fireman and hired him out to a car wash; in the third story they handled a phantom painter who painted in all the wrong places until Ghoul Getters found him the right job painting traffic lane line markings.

There were three new setsof Frankie Stein. In the first one Professor Cube tried to get rid of Frankie with the aid of a radio-controlled robot fly but it accidentally disturbed a bee-hive and the bees turned against the poor Professor. In the second episode Prof. Cube came up with an idea to build a monster wooden puppet and bring it to life with the potion he brought Frankie to life with, hoping that the puppet will then help him get rid of the ‘useless twerp’. Frankie derailed the plan by spilling the potion and bringing furniture and floor boards to life instead. In the third story Prof. Cube pretended to be Santa and sent Frankie off on a rocket-powered armchair by persuading him it was a sledge driven by Rudolph. Frankie ended up in the town shop and picked lots of presents while Prof Cube had to pick the bills for the toys and damages… The first set was by Frank McDiarmid but I don’t know who did the other two, Alf Saporito, perhaps?



Those of you who read the previous two SHIVER AND SHAKE blogposts will remember that I didn’t think much of the adventure tale Toby’s Timepiece. Well, I have to say that the 8-pager in this annual is definitely an improvement because it tells quite an agreeable story. Toby’s magical pocket watch transports him to a distant future in which his house as well as the whole neighbourhood has been enclosed under a dome and become part of the Museum of Ancient Culture. This time Toby helps law-enforcement (securobots) and a vigilant local boy Kyton to catch two crooks who stole some antiques (a kettle and a mixer) from Toby’s house. Toby himself is under suspicion at first but he soon demonstrates his good intentions. By now Toby appears to have learnt to operate the timepiece – he knows he’s got to wind it to put it into action. The only weak point in this particular instalment is that Toby does this without a reason, as if in an urge to get his fix of random time-travelling without a particular aim or purpose. This is how the story began:


The 4 pager about the rottenest crook in the World is in fact two stories connected by the same instrument of crime - a giant bubble that Grimly Feendish blows with the chewing gum he pinched from a bubble gum machine; in the first story Grimly uses the bubble gum bubble in yet another failed attempt to steal money from the bank, and in the second story he uses the bubble to let himself into Lord Moneybag’s party but ends up behind bars, together with all of his aides. Artwork is again by Paul Ailey, I believe:


In the episode of the Forest Legion Boss and Basher are looking for a hidden treasure with a map they stole from the local museum. They come well-prepared but stand no chance against the Forest Legion who outsmart them and pass the treasure to the local forest tramp Smokey Joe so that he can claim a reward for finding it. I would very much like to find out the artist’s name:


The Annual had an unusually large proportion of adventure stories. In addition to 8 pages of the Toby’s Timepiece tale mentioned above, it also contained two adventure stories illustrated by Ron Turner:  16 pages of Robby Hood and His One Man Band (originally from COR!! Nos. 29 – 36; you can read my review of the story in an old blogpost from my COR!! series HERE) and 6 pages of Revolt of the Robomen– most likely new work drawn especially for the Annual (although I remember seeing many such space adventure tales by Ron Turner in the early years of WHIZZER AND CHIPS). Here is the opening page with a splash panel:


Leo Baxendale was represented with 4 pages of The Shake Squad that were reprints of The Lion Lot from LION comic. Each instalment had a headline: The Shake Squad… Really Dig Doing the Garden, …Having a Fair Old Time, …Running Their Indoor Sports, …Driving a Dad with their Zoo. Did the original episodes in LION have these? 


The Annual also has 5 episodes of Scrapper’s Scrapbook that are also reprints of Leo’s illustrations but I don’t know where from, although I am positive I’ve seen them somewhere… Can anyone help please?


Finally, here is Space Jinx– a spot the difference puzzle that looks like a reprint too but I don’t know where from or who the illustrator was:


For dessert, here is one of the four episodes of Sweeny Toddler by Tom Paterson (all were two-pagers):


1978 SHIVER AND SHAKE HOLIDAY SPECIAL

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1978 SHIVER AND SHAKE Holiday Special cost 35 p. and was 64 pages thick.

CONTENTS: Shake(2 episodes by Terry Bave), Horrornation Street (a 3-pager by Tom Williams), Holiday Haunts (gags by Jack Clayton), Creepy Car (by Jim Crocker), Grimly Feendish (a 3-pager by Paul Ailey, signed), The Shake Squad by Leo Baxendale (3 reprints of The Lion Lot from LION comic), Pest of the West (5 reprints from WHAM!), Freddie Fang the Werewolf Cub (4 reprints from COR!! by Reg Parlett), The Desert Fox (a 2-pager in full colour by Terry Bave), Puzzle-Time(by Tony Goffe), The Duke’s Spook, Sports School (by Jim Watson), Lolly Pop (a 3-pager), Bad Penny(2 reprints from SMASH! by Leo Baxendale), Webster, The Ghost Train Game in full colour on the centrespread, Moana Lisa (a new episode by Barrie Applieby), The Haunts of Headless Harry (by Mike Lacey), Frankie Stein (a 3-pager by the artist whose name I don’t know), The Fixer (new episode by Barrie Appleby), Sweeny Toddler (two pages in full colour by Paul Ailey), Tough Nutt and Softy Centre (a 3-pager by Norman Mansbridge), Shivery Puzzles to Shake-Up Those Brains(2 pages of puzzles by Les Barton), Mirth Shakers (two pages of gags by Tony Goffe), Ghouldilocks (2-pager by Barrie Appleby), Shiver (on the back page in full colour by Terry Bave).

Two more reprints were added to the package this time, both from old Power Comics: Pest of the West was from WHAM! and Bad Penny from SMASH! 



Mike Lacey contributed a nice episode of The Haunts of Headless Harry– a strip that had enjoyed a brief run in the revamped SMASH! in the early seventies so I am not sure if it was a reprint or new material:


Speaking of new strips, Barrie Appleby was once again in charge of Moana Lisa, Ghouldilocksand The Fixer. The three-page episode of Frankie Stein was by the same unknown artist who illustrated it in the 1977 Holiday Special. In this edition Professor Cube takes Frankie to the seaside hoping that something dreadful will happen to him there. And happen it does but it’s not Frankie who’s the victim:


Grimly Feendish gets an idea to dress as a dangerous man-eating shark and scare everybody off the beach so that his gang can pinch all the rich pickings left behind by the panicked holiday makers. The plan works well but look what happens as the gang try to make their escape by sea:


The Grimly Feendish set wasn’t Paul Ailey’s only contribution to the 1978 SH&SH Holiday Special. He also illustrated this episode of Sweeny Toddler:



Generally speaking, there is nothing very interesting to note about this edition. It was an unremarkable package with seaside holidays as the dominant theme. One thing that caught my eye is the large number of page-wide last panels that different artists drew in their various strips:

1979 SHIVER & SHAKE ANNUAL

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1979 SHIVER AND SHAKE ANNUAL, price £1.10, 144 pages.

Contents: Sweeny Toddler (2 episodes by Paul Ailey), Ghoul Getters Ltd (2 episodes by Jim Crocker), The Forest Legion (8 pages), Sports School (2 episodes by Jim Watson), Shake (3 episodes by Terry Bave), Quick on the Draw (cowboy gags by Jack Clayton), Telly Titles Quiz, Scrapper’s Scrap Book (4 episodes by Leo Baxendale reprints from LION comic), The Shake Squad (4 reprints of The Lion Lot by Leo Baxendale from LION), Shark Snaps (shark gags by Jim Crocker, signed), Webster (4 two-pagers by Terry Bave and a 4-pager by another artist), Daisy Jones’ Locket, Horrornation Street (one set by Les Barton and a 4-pager by Tom Williams),  Frankie Stein (6 pages by John Geering), The Desert Fox (3 episodes by Terry Bave), The Duke’s Spook (2 episodes), Wizard Demon and Demon Druid in Wiz War (6 reprints from SMASH!/POW!), Scatty Bat (reprint from WHIZZER AND CHIPS), ‘Orrible Hole (Whoopee! strip, 2 two-pagers by Les Barton), Blunder Puss (2 episodes by Jim Crocker), The Ghost’s Revenge (2 episodes by Jim Crocker), Shiver (2 episodes by Terry Bave), Creepy Car (2 episodes by Crocker), Prof. Cube’s Schooldays (a 5-pager by John Geering), The Hand (2 episodes by Crocker), Grimly Feendish (a 4-pager signed by Paul Ailey and a 2-pager by an unidentified artist), Constable Claud and His Magic Machine (a 6-pager by John Geering), Christmas Crackers (X-mas gags by Jack Clayton), Good Deed Charlie (two 2-pagers by Paul Ailey), Animal Antics (animal gags by Jack Clayton),  Toby’s Timepiece (adventure, a 6-pager), Moana Lisa, Popopoly (a dice and counter game), Lolly Pop (a 3-pager by an unidentified artist), Tough Nutt and Softy Centre (a 3-pager by Norman Mansbridge).

Assuming the above illustrator credits are correct, the biggest contributor of new material for this Annual was Jim Crocker with as many as 22 pages.  He was followed closely by Terry Bave (19 pages) and John Geering (17 pages), Paul Ailey also worked hard on this one and drew 12 pages.

In this 1979 SHIVER AND SHAKE ANNUAL The Forest Legion save a boy who is kidnapped and held for ransom by Boss and Butch, resident crooks of the strip. This doesn’t upset the gangsters very much because they already have the ransom money but the smart forest animals outwit the two crooks once again. The illustrator has included his autograph in the last panel. I think it says Mazza, which suggests the artist probably has an Italian connection…


Jack Clayton’s gags were a fresh addition to the package:


I find Jim Crocker’s Shark Snaps rather funny too:


Les Barton was put in charge of two sets of ‘Orrible Hole and one episode of Horrornation Street. I like his take on the strip, although Tom Williams is still my preferred Horrornation Street artist.


Grimly Feendish tries three different plots to pinch a diamond from the jeweller’s. Not only all of them fail but the World’s rottenest crook also sustains a concussion. His symptoms are quite bizarre:  he goes straight, runs all of his aides in and confesses to his own crimes too…


In Toby’s Timepiece, Mother is cooking dinner and Toby is not one of those who’d hang around for two hours doing nothing; time-travel addict that he is, he’d rather put his magical timepiece into action and face the consequences… This time he finds himself in ancient Rome and is forced to fight a trained gladiator. He uses his watch as a pendulum to hypnotise his opponent and is the victor but the Empress wants the timepiece because of its magic hypnotic powers. Then Toby foils an assassination attempt on the Emperor, gets his watch back as a reward and is invited to an imperial banquet as the Empress’ guest of honour. It is not surprising that upon his return to the present he doesn’t want any of the dinner that his Mother has cooked for him.

Now let’s take a look at the three new strips included in the 1979 SHIVER AND SHAKE Annual.

Good Deed Charlie illustrated by Paul Ailey (who mimicked Leo Baxendale and Tom Paterson) is a strip about a boy whose mission in life is to do good deeds for people. Sometimes the people are glad and sometimes they are not, but Charlie’s good intentions are always sincere:


John Geering’s Constable Claud and his Magic Machine tells the story of Constable Claud who is a member of the bike squad but his mind is set on the Wild West rather than police work. A weird-looking repair shop manager casts a few spells on his bike and from now on the machine comes to life whenever Constable Claude gives the McGravel shout. The bike becomes a combination of a machine and a horse, and helps Constable Claud in his police duties.

The third new strip is also by John Geering but it hardly qualifies as completely new because the main character has been around for decades. Prof. Cube’s Schooldaystells us about the childhood of Frankie Stein’s creator and is interesting because it features Professor Cube’s Mom and Dad. I have seen strips involving Prof. Cube’s ancestors and contemporary relatives, but never his parents, so the instalment is quite remarkable in this respect, never mind the quality of the art. The story suggests that Prof. Cube would probably be in as much trouble without having created Frankie because he has always had a knack for destruction and causing havoc with his mad inventions…


Professor Cube’s parents are not the only close family that we meet in this 1979 SHIVER AND SHAKE Annual.  In Frankie Stein, Professor’s sister Mildred has come to stay over Christmas.  She is kindly disposed towards Frankie at first and can’t understand why her brother wants to get rid of him. Before long, she is completely on board with Prof. Cube, devising violent schemes to do away with the ‘big tin twit’. Here is the second part of the two-part instalment from the Annual:

PROF. CUBE'S FAMILY - Part One

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In my previous post I mentioned strips that featured Prof. Cube’s family. I thought it would be refreshing to take a break from the routine of SH&Sh Annuals and Holiday Specials and actually show those strips because the publications they appeared in are quite rare and there is a good chance some of you haven’t seen them.

The first strip in the series of two can be found in the 1975 Frankie Stein Holiday Special and is devoted to Prof. Cube’s ancestors. The lively and dynamic artwork is by the excellent Frank McDiarmid. Come back soon for the second instalment featuring Professor’s aunts, uncles and cousins…


PROF. CUBE'S FAMILY - Part Two

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And now for part two of this short series about Prof. Cube’s relatives. The episode is from  WHOOPEE!  Book of Frankie Stein 1977– the second of the two highly-recommended Frankie Stein Annuals. The illustrator is again Mr. Frank McDiarmid. 


1979 SHIVER AND SHAKE HOLIDAY SPECIAL

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1979 SHIVER AND SHAKE Holiday Special. 40 p., 64 pages.

CONTENTS:  Shiver (2 episodes by Terry Bave), Shake (by Terry Bave), George and His Magic Dragon (by Alan Rogers), Horrornation Street (a 3-pager by Tom Williams), Percy the Peacemaker (2 episodes by an artist whose name I don’t know), It’s a Smile(1/4 page, gags by Artie Jackson), Scream Inn at the Seaside (a 4-pager by Brian Walker), Creepy Car (by Jim Crocker), Sweeny Toddler (by Frank McDiarmid in colour and a 2-pager by Tom Paterson), Freddie Fang the Werewolf Cub (4 episodes, reprints from COR!! by Reg Parlett, one coloured-in), Robby Hood (8 pages by Ron Turner, reprint from COR!!), Webster (2 sets, one by I don’t know who and one by Frank McDiarmid in colour on the back cover), Brain Busters (2 pages of puzzles by Les Barton), The Duke’s Spook (looks like a reprint from an old Shiver and Shake weekly),  Lolly Pop (by Sid Burgon), Frankie Stein in America (3 pages by I don’t know who), Grimly Feendish (one reprint from SMASH!, one 4-pager by I don’t know who, and one episode by Tom Paterson, signed), The Desert Fox (by Frank McDiarmid, in colour), Moana Lisa (by Frank McDiarmid, in colour), It’s A Laugh (1/4 page, gags by Artie Jackson), Ghost Town (by Tom Williams, reprint from WHIZZER AND CHIPS), It’s a Joke (1/5 page, gags by Mike Lacey), Tough Nutt and Softy Centre (3 pages by Norman Mansbridge), Ghouldilocksby Tom Williams, Sports School by I don’t know who.

First, let’s take a look at the new strips and features. Percy the Peacemaker was about a boy who was always trying to help quarrelling parties to resolve their differences but ended up in trouble. I believe this is a reprint and I'd be grateful if someone told me where from. I wonder what the illustrator’s name was? I know I’ve seen a lot of his work in other IPC comics. Here is a page with an example of Percy the Peacemaker, followed by It’s A Smile gags. There were three such gag strips in this Holiday Special, all had a different headline: It’s a Smile, It’s a Joke and It’s a Laugh:


The second new tale was George and His Magic Dragon, illustrated by Alan Rogers:


Horrornation Street are at a holiday camp. They are having fun scaring other holiday makers but suffer a bicycle accident and end up at the camp sick bay:



After a longish break, Scream Inn made a comeback to the pages of SHIVER AND SHAKE Holiday Special with a 4-page story by Brian Walker.  It is quite an unusual instalment because the setting is a sunny beach rather than the gloomy Inn. The episode is entitled Scream Inn at the Seaside and in it the familiar gang of monsters and freaks help a boy win a sand castle competition. This happens to be the last ever instalment of Scream Inn proper because the weekly series ended in WHOOPEE dated 1st October, 1977 to become Spooktacular 7 (which ended on 22nd July, 1978, except for two more stories in WHOOPEE! 1979 and 1980 annuals).

The Holiday Special has three Grimly Feendish tales, all by different artists. One is a reprint from Smash!, one a new 4-pager by an unknown artist (Mike Higgs, perhaps??) in which Grimly uses a magnet as an instrument of crime but the police turn it against him in the end:


… and one by Tom Paterson:


Frank McDiarmid stepped in for the regular artists and illustrated as many as 4 strips: Sweeny Toddler, The Desert Fox, Moana Lisa and Webster, all presented in full colour. Here are two examples:


In the episode of Frankie Stein Prof. Cube takes Frankie on a holiday to the USA – the land of opportunity, in hope of an opportunity to get rid of him. He tries three schemes – pushing Frankie off a skyscraper, sending him to space on board a rocket launched out of the space centre in Florida, and finally abandoning him without food somewhere out in the great Mid-West. During this last adventure the starved Frankie finds himself on a peanut farm and gets to meet no less than Mr. Jimmy Carter, the then President of the US! I believe that’s one of the very few occasions when a contemporary politician was portrayed in a UK children’s comic. In fact, I can’t remember other such examples, except for Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini during WWII, so it’s a very interesting instalment in this regard, never mind some geographical inaccuracies (the landscape of what Prof. Cube refers to as ‘the great Mid-West’ looks a lot more like that of Southwestern USA, and the state of Georgia where Carter’s farm is located is nowhere even close).


Speaking of reprints, the episode of Robby Hood by Ron Turner is in fact a reprint of the first story that originally ran in COR!! comic between 14th November until 12th December, 1970 (issues No. 24 – 28); you can read my account of the story HERE.

Ghost Town must be a reprint from Whizzer and CHIPS.

I will sign off with images of the centerspread that I find quite hilarious. On the page preceding the centerspread we see a crowd of curious citizens flocking to see a Stately Haunted Home:


Turning the page, we see a busy picture of what is taking place inside the mansion:


… and overleaf, terrified folks flee the scene in panic:


I don't know who the artist was but just imagine what a brilliant sequence this would have been, had the illustrator’s duties been given to Brian Walker, Ken Reid, Frank McDiarmid or Tom Williams…




1980 SHIVER & SHAKE ANNUAL

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1980 SHIVER AND SHAKE Annual had a price tag of£1.25 and was 144 pages thick.

Contents: Sweeny Toddler (by Tom Williams), Percy the Peacemaker (5 reprints but I don’t know where from), The Chumpions(4 reprints from COR!!, artwork by Peter Davidson), Toby’s Timepiece (2 stories, 6 pages long each), Horrornation Street (a 3-pager by Tom Williams), Shake (by Terry Bave), Forest Legion (a 6-pager by a new artist), Shiver (2 episodes by Terry Bave), Tough Nutt and Softy Centre (a 3-pager and a 2-pager by Norman Mansbridge), Freddie Fang the Werewolf Cub (6 reprints from COR!!, art by Reg Parlett), Frankie Stein (a 4-pager and a 3-pager by John Geering), The Desert Fox (2 episodes by Terry Bave), Ghoul Getters Ltd (2 episodes by Trevor Metcalfe), Blunder Puss (2 episodes by Jim Crocker), The Haunts of Headless Harry(3 reprints from SMASH!, artwork by Mike Lacey), The Duke’s Spook (2 episodes), The Shake Squad (4 reprints of The Lion Lot from LION comic, artwork by Leo Baxendale), Grimly Feendish (a 7-pager by Paul Ailey), Clever Cloggs (two 4-page quiz-strips by Les Barton), Moana Lisa (by Peter Davidson), The Hand, Lolly Pop (one by Sid Burgon, looks like a reprint, and a 3-pager by Reg Parlett), Wizard Prang and Demon Druid in Wiz War! (3 reprints from SMASH!/POW!), Webster (a 4-pager an unknown artist and a 2-pager by Terry Bave), Doc Hoot (by Alan Rogers), Tommy’s Magic Telescope (a 4-pager by Cliff Brown), Ding Dong Spells – Whacky Witch v. Fairy Godmother (reprint from WHIZZER AND CHIPS), Creepy Car (a 3-pager by Jim Crocker), Moving House (8 pages by Steve Bell), Sports School (a 4-pager by Jim Watson).

Two 'new' old strips were added to the lineup of reprints:  Chumpions was from COR!! (you can read a review in my COR!! series HERE) and Ding Dong Spells – Whacky Witch v. Fairy Godmother from WHIZZER AND CHIPS of the mid-70s.

Paul Ailey contributed a nice Grimly Feendish story in which the rottenest crook in the World devised and implemented a clever and elaborate scheme for pinching customers from the town’s big stores that had a Santa’s grotto at Xmas. First, he made a store owner an offer he couldn’t refuse and took over his business in exchange for an “I.O.U.” note for 10 pounds.

Then he had the Mad Professor build him four radio-controlled robot Santas and put them into work in competitors’ stores so that they would upset all the customers and drive them away, and they would all come to Grimly’s store. Quite a plot, isn’t it? All goes to plan until the robot Santas return to Grimly’s store and irritate a few costumers there. Grimly wants to escape with the cash but the sledge is too heavy for the deer to pull because the four Santas are also there. Grimly gets rid of the excess weight by discarding three of the four robots but the fourth Santa gets upset at the way Grimly has treated his friends so he throws the crook out of the sledge and Grimly lands straight in a cop shop where cops are celebrating Christmas.

There are not one but two stories of Toby’s Timepiece in this Annual. In the first tale (a really messy one, if you ask me) the magic watch transports Toby 50 thousand years into the future where he helps the law catch some wanted criminals, gets rewarded with gold money of the future and makes a narrow escape back to his own time when the law guards realise that Toby himself is wanted for attacking the “law master” (a kind of computer super-judge). In the second story the timepiece takes Toby back to the days of the Wild West where the boy helps the sheriff arrest a gang of bank robbers led by Sheriff’s deputy. In the earlier stories Toby appeared to have learnt to operate the timepiece but in this annual we are told that “Toby never knew when the timepiece was going to work … so he kept it with him all the time, just in case”. If I was in his shoes and had experienced all those weird and dangerous adventures depicted in the earlier annuals and holiday specials, I’d have probably thought twice before carrying it around…

In the two episodes of Frankie Stein Prof. Cube tries to get rid of Frankie by using two new inventions – anti-gravity paint in the first story and vanishing cream in the second. Too bad the vanishing cream also has the effect of making things grow to enormous size which means destruction to Mildew Manor.

The tale of The Forest Legion is illustrated by a new artist, so Mazza’s signature in the last panel of the episode in the previous Annual must have signified his bye-byes. This time the legionnaires foil a kidnap plot, although the Major who is kidnapped was mean to them when they first met him.

In the two stories of Ghoul Getters Ltd Dad and Arnold have to deal with a ghostly court jester and a ghostly damsel in distress. Both spooks are put to a good use in the end:


Enough about those familiar characters, let’s take a look at the new features. Clever Cloggs is quite an innovative blend of a comic strip and different puzzles, here is one of the two instalments by Les Barton that were included in this 1980 SHIVER AND SHAKE Annual:


Doc Hoot starts without much introduction but it looks as if the Doc is yet another adventure-seeking random time-hopper, who travels with the aid of his weird pogo-stick contraption. In this story Doc Hoot helps poor King Richard regain his self-confidence by presenting him with a recording of a lion’s roar. That’s how the king becomes known as the Lionheart… Art by Alan Rogers.

Tommy’s Magical Telescope is about a boy who owns a magic telescope. If Tommy looks at things through one end they get smaller, and if he looks at them through the opposite end, they get bigger.  In this episode Tommy uses the telescope on a practical joker to teach him a thing or two. The set is illustrated by Cliff Brown whose style appears to have changed a great deal since the days of Timothy Tester in WHIZZER AND CHIPS…

Moving House tells the story of the Hardy family (Mom, Dad, Grandpa and three kids – Denise, Sidney and Billy) who have moved into an old house. Denise and Sidney discover a grand-father clock in the attic and fiddle with in without realising that it’s a time-machine. They soon find out that it is, when they are attacked by a mammoth, but the kids are an adventurous type so they continue playing with the dials. The time machine operates in such a way that it transports the entire house, hence the title ‘Moving House’.  The second journey takes the Hardies to the past where the press gang take Dad and Billy for recruits for the Navy. The story has a happy ending but instead of returning to their own time, the Hardies find themselves in the days of industrial revolution. A couple of local kids take Denise and Sidney down to a coalmine where the overseer makes them work hard pushing carts. Next day they are very happy to be back in the twentieth century and come top in history… Nice artwork by Steve Bell...


For dessert, here is a complete episode of Sweeny Toddler by Tom Williams:


1980 SHIVER & SHAKE HOLIDAY SPECIAL

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1980 SHIVER AND SHAKE Holiday Special was the last Sh&Sh Holiday special, it cost 45 p. and had 64 pages.

CONTENTS: Horrornation Street (a 4-pager by Tom Williams), The Chumpions (3 reprints from COR!!, art by Peter Davidson), Lolly Pop (most likely a reprint, artwork by Sid Burgon), Sweeny Toddler (looks like a reprint, art by Leo Baxendale), Percy the Peacemaker (2 reprints), Wizard Prang and Demon Druid in Wiz War (new, a 4-pager, possibly by Martin Baxendale), Sports School (by Jim Watson in full colour, signed), Shiver (by Terry Bave), Shake(by Terry Bave), Freddie Fang the Werewolf Cub (4 reprints from COR!!, including one in full colour on the back page, art by Reg Parlett), Frankie Stein (a 6-pager by Jogn Geering and a 4-pager by Brian Walker), Mirth-Shakes (2 pages of gags), A Fright Seeing Tour of London full-colour poster by Ken Reid, Blunder Puss (by Jim Crocker), Ghoul Getters Ltd (by Russel Brooke, signed), Toby’s Timepiece (a 5-pager), Monstermind puzzles, Ghouldilocks(by Tom Williams in full colour), The Duke’s Spook (by Tom Williams), The Desert Fox (by Terry Bave), Grimly Feendish (2 ½ pages by Paul Ailey and two shorts, possibly reprints), What’s Your Line?(a strip without speech balloons)‘Orrible Hole (by Jim Crocker).

If you get a feeling that you’ve seen the cover of this Holiday Special on another comic, that’s because the idea is borrowed from an old SHIVER AND SHAKE weekly. At least it is not a lazy reprint, besides, Mike Lacey has given it a new seaside holidays twist. Here is the old comic:


Tom Williams illustrated as many as three different strips in this edition. He drew Ghouldilocks 




... and that's in addition to his usual Horrornation Street, in which instead ofgoing to the beach, residents of Horrornation Street have Hoodoo Voodoo (not Yoodoo…) arrange for the beach and the sea to come to them:


I think it is the first time that a new episode of Wizard Prang and Demon Druidwas commissioned after long years of reprints. Would I be right in saying that Mike Brown who was the strip's regular illustrator in POW! and SMASH! is the artist? Here is the first page of the set:


There were two episodes of Frankie Stein in this Holiday Special, each by a different artist. In the set illustrated by John Geering Prof. Cube enters Frankie in the round-the-world yacht race, hoping that he will perish in a storm. It looks like seamen haven’t seen anything as monstrous as Frankie since the days when the Beano’s Jonah roamed the seas twenty years ago... Frankie sets his own boat on fire when he tries to fry himself some sausages, then he scares the crew off a posh yacht and finds himself in the zone of naval war games, sinks an indestructible destroyer, petrifies a vicious-looking killer whale, navigates it to the finish and wins the race. Too bad Prof. Cube has to pay all the damages and they both are sent to jail:


Frankie and Prof. Cube do some extreme driving
on their way to the wedding...
In the second story, the first in a Shiver and Shake Holiday Special or Annual to be illustrated by Brian Walker, Prof. Cube gets an idea to get rid of Frankie by having him marry and move away so he builds a monster bride to suit Frankie’s taste. Prof. Cube runs into a problem when he realizes that she doesn’t fancy Frankie. He adjusts a few screws in her head and programs her to fall in love with the first face she sees. As Prof. Cube’s luck goes, Frankie shows up with a copy of the Evening Post that has a large photo of Prof. Cube on the front page. We’ll never know how the unfortunate inventor got out of this scrape… 


Ghoul Getters Ltd. are called to take care of a ghostly knight who has nabbed a donkey and trampled all the sandcastles on the beach. The two-pager is illustrated and signed by Russel Brooke whose style I find very appealing. Can anyone tell me where I can find more of his art? A quick Google search returned nothing but he is very much my kind of artist…



In Toby’s Timepiece Toby finds himself in the future where he meets a loony scientist and his robot assistants. The scientist believes that his robot medical team will make human doctors out of date because each of his mechanical creations has the knowledge of fifty surgeons built into their circuits. He tries to prove his genius to the authorities by sending his robots to help the crew of a crash-landed spacecraft but it turns out that the robots only care about other robots, not humans. At first the scientist appears to be the usual obsessed villain but surprisingly he goes straight and admits his mistakes. He even gives Toby a new pair of roller skates as an apology and a sign of gratitude for helping him see his erroneous ways.


In the Grimly Feendish episode by Paul Ailey Grimly accidentally finds out that all policemen are on a cop shop outing at the beach and realizes that with no cops in town, he has free hands to commit all the crimes he wants. He uses air balloons in hope to escape abroad with a carful of loot but seagulls disrupt the plan and he lands in the middle of the cop shop outing… The other two Grimly Feendishepisodes have the format of a newspaper strip and may be reprints:


To me, the biggest treat is A Fright Seeing Tour of London full colour poster by Ken Reid featuring some of his very best World-Wide Weirdies from the famous series in WHOOPEE!  By the time the 1980 SHIVER AND SHAKE special came out, the series had already ended, so this is the last non-reprint set of World-Wide Weirdies by Ken Reid. In the Autumn of 2007 the original artwork was offered by Compal Auctions (Indian ink on cartridge paper. 19 x 12 ins), with the winner paying £611.

 
This is where I’ll close the last chapter of SHIVER AND SHAKE Holiday Specials. You can go through the whole SHIVER AND SHAKE specials sequence by clicking HERE or by choosing the SHIVER AND SHAKE Holiday Specials label in the column on the right.



Shiver and Shake series will continue because there is still a good supply of Annuals left :)

1981 SHIVER & SHAKE ANNUAL

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1981 SHIVER AND SHAKE Annual came with a price tag of £ 1,50 and was 128 pages thick.

Contents: Sweeny Toddler (6 sets by Tom Paterson), Webster (3 episodes, probably by Artie Jackson), Lolly Pop (2 sets by Sid Burgon, one reprint and one new), Blunder Puss (by Jim Crocker), TheChumpions (3 reprints from COR!!, art by Peter Davidson), The Ghost’s Revenge (by Jim Crocker), Horrornation Street (a 3-pager by Tom Williams), The Forest Legion (a 6-pager),Ghouldilocks (by Tom Williams),  The Duke’s Spook (by Tom Williams), Shake (by Terry Bave), The Ghoul Guides(2 sets by an unknown artist), Grimly Feendish (a 4-pager by Paul Ailey, signed, and a reprint from SMASH!), Robby Hood (reprint from COR!!, art by Ron Turner), X-word(crossword), Wizard Prang and Demon Druid (2 episodes, possibly  new sets by Mike Brown), Sports School, Ghoul Getters Ltd (by Tom Williams), ‘Orrible Hole (by Les Barton), The Fixer, Shiver and Shake Spot the Difference (2 installments using front covers of old SHIVER AND SHAKE weeklies); Frankie Stein (two reprints from Shiver and Shake weeklies), Dodgem Game, Octopus Maze, Tough Nutt and Softy Centre (a 4-pager and a 2-pager by Norman Mansbridge, possibly reprints), Toby’s Timepiece (7 pages), Moana Lisa (2 sets, including one by Peter Davidson), The Hand (by Tom Williams), The Desert Fox (by Terry Bave), Moving House (7 pages by Steve Bell), Shiver (by Terry Bave).

Tom Williams contributed eleven pages of Horrornation Street, Ghouldilocks, The Duke’s Spook, Ghoul Getters Ltd. and The Hand. I think it is the first time that Tom Williams was asked to draw Ghoul Getters Ltd:



All 6 sets of Sweeny Toddler are by Tom Paterson. They are either reprints of the episodes from WHOOPEE!, or possibly new material drawn especially for this Annual. Here is one:


In the new episode of the Forest Legion Boss and Butch have a clever plan how to sneak into Lord Stately’s home and rob the Lord. The plan involves joining the Lord’s hunting party, bagging a fox and getting invited into the house. Needless to say, the legionnaires derail the plan once again.


The episode of Shake is interesting in the sense that it plays the theme of the old and long-forgotten rivalry between Shiver and Shake. I wonder how many readers of the Annual still remembered the times when the comic was a two-in-one package, like Whizzer and Chips… 


The Ghoul Guides is the only new strip included in this Annual. It tells the adventures of two scout guides who are in fact young witches. In the first tale they try to earn their medical badge and in the second – their needlework badge. Illustrator unknown.


Grimly Feendish thinks of another smart scheme how to rob people’s homes at Christmas: his Carol singers make such a horrid row that Grimly easily sells his soundproof ear-muffs to the annoyed citizens. Now he is free to break into their house as they sleep because they can’t hear anything. On his way out Grimly runs into Father Christmas, accidentally knocks him down and comes up with an idea to rob every house in town disguised as Santa. The tale becomes completely surreal towards the end when it turns out that a lot of the story was in fact Grimly’s dream… or was it not??? Artwork by Paul Ailey.


The second set of Grimly Feendish looks like a reprint. In it the crook takes up collecting stamps and has a go at the famous penny green…

In the episode of Toby’s Timepiece, Toby trips on his long Doctor Who scarf and finds himself centuries back in time where he gets to meet a greedy time-thief – a villainous scientist from the future who has built a time machine to travel back in time and steal treasures from medieval knights. The knights take Toby for the time-thief’s accomplice but the boy returns them their treasure. Furious, the scientist transports Toby with him to his own time in the future where Toby is taken into custody by the scientist’s robots. In a strange and unconvincing twist of the plot Toby persuades the robots that the Professor has to be arrested for possession of unauthorized valuables that are the spoils of his many raids into the past…

The last new strip I would like to cover is the second installment of Moving House by Steve Bell (the first appeared in the 1980 Shiver and Shake Annual). This time the Hardy family start all over again, as if the first episode had never happened – they are still unaware that the old grandfather clock in the attic is in fact a time machine and turning its hands means time-travel, house and all… The family are on their way to the circus, what they don’t realize is that the time machine has transported them to ancient Rome so they find themselves in Circus Maximus where they have a narrow escape from being run over in a horse chariot race. They escape from Circus Maximus to the relative safety of their house but the restless Grandpa turns the hands of the clock once again and the house lands in the Middle Ages where Grandpa is seized by a mean baron. Luckily for him, the same baron later challenges one of the Hardy boys to a joust, and is defeated. The Hardys return back home and reckon that the clock must be some sort of time machine. In the end, they get back to the 20th century just in time for the circus performance…


There are quite a few reprints in the Annual. I’ll mention two: Robby Hood is a reprint of the third story of Robby Hood and His One Man Bandthat ran in COR!! from 13th February until 27th March, 1971 (issue Nos. 37 – 43). You can read my account of the story HERE.

There are two reprints of Frankie Stein from old SHIVER AND SHAKE weeklies:  a 3-page ballet set from SHIVER AND SHAKE No. 51 cover dated February 23rd, 1974, art by Robert Nixon (one of the best sets by Mr. Nixon, IMHO), and a 2 ¾-pager from SHIVER AND SHAKE No. 54 cover-dated March 16th, 1974, art by Frank McDiarmid (an excellent energy-packed episode in which Prof. Cube invents a special high-pitched dog whistle that makes Frankie believe he is a dog). Here are sample pages from the two sets:



Overall, this is quite an unimpressive package to my eye.

HAPPY HALLOWEEN!

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I’ll take a brake from SHIVER AND SHAKE, switch to some gloomy backgrounds and join countless other bloggers in celebrating Halloween with some horror-themed stuff. 

Those of you who are familiar with WHOOPEE! comic must have vivid memories of the monstrous World-Wide Weirdies drawn by Ken Reid from readers’ ideas. Many were funny and witty, quite a few were weird and spooky but some were outright scary, depressing and other-worldly. I bet they caused nightmares to many an innocent mind back in the day. Can you believe these images come from a children’s humour paper?  

HAPPY HALLOWEEN!


1982 SHIVER & SHAKE ANNUAL

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1982 SHIVER AND SHAKE Annual cost 1.95 pounds and was 128 pages thick.

Contents: The Ghost’s Revenge (2 sets, one probably by Trevor Metcalfe and one definitely by Jim Crocker), Webster (4 sets: two by Terry Bave, one by an unknown artist and one possibly by Frank McDiarmid), The Duke’s Spook (2 sets, one by Frank McDiarmid and one by Terry Bave), Ghouldilocks(three episodes: two by Stan McMurtry and one by Tom Williams),  Lolly Pop (5 episodes: 4 by Sid Burgon (including at least one reprint) and one by Frank McDiarmid), Chupmions(3 reprints from COR!!, art by Peter Davidson), Tough Nutt and Softy Centre(3 sets by Norman Mansbridge), Shiver (by Terry Bave), Spot the Difference (3 installments with old Shiver and Shake weekly covers by Mike Lacey), Ghoul Getters Ltd. (by Trevor Metcalfe), Sports School (probably by Trevor Metcalfe), The Desert Fox (2 sets, one by Terry Bave and one by an unknown artist), Sweeny Toddler (three episodes: 1 by Tom Paterson and 2 by Paul Ailey), Moana Lisa (three episodes: 2 by Peter Davidson and 1 by Tom Williams), Frankie Stein (3 episodes: a new 5-page set by Bob Nixon, a new 2-pager by Frank McDiarmid and a reprint an episode by Bob Nixon from an early issue of WHOOPEE!), Grimly Feendish (2 sets: a reprint and one new episode by Paul Ailey), The Hand (by Terry Bave), Toby’s Timepiece (6 pages), Witch Wit (gags), Shake (2 sets, one by Mike Lacey and one by Terry Bave), Wizard Prang and Demon Druid (new by an unknown artist), Elephant Jokes by Shake (gags by Jim Crocker), The Fixer, It’s A Shivery Puzzle for You! (1 page of puzzles by Cliff Brown) Ghost Jokes by Shiver (2 pages of gags), William the Conk (8 pages, reprint from Monster Fun Comic No. 28, art by Leo Baxendale), The Great Emerald Eye of the Great Yellow God Maze! (maze by Cliff Brown), Horrornation Street (by Tom Williams), A Ghastly Ghoulish Picture Crossword!(by Cliff Brown).

It is good to see Terry Bave illustrate Websterafter a longish break. All in all, Terry Bave drew 12 pages for this Annual, including some strips that he hadn’t illustrated before (at least not in the Annuals), such as the Duke’s Spook and the Hand:


Frank McDiarmid also drew two strips that were usually given to other artists to illustrate. He contributed one set of the Duke’s Spook:


...and one set of Lolly Pop:


He is also responsible for one Frankie Stein tale in which Prof. Cube sends Frankie on a ‘package’ holiday packed in a box and loaded onto a submarine; sure enough, Frankie causes a lot of trouble Jonah-style:


The theme of sea adventures also permeates another new Frankie Stein story in this Annual, this one by Bob Nixon whose style has changed a great deal since the days of Shiver and Shake weeklies.


In Wizard Prang and Demon Druid Wizard Prang goes carol singing but Demon Druid isn’t impressed with the racket and changes Wizard Prang into a song-bird and then back into his own self, causing him to fall and hurt himself.  Wizard Prang gets his revenge by turning Demon Druid into Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer. They suffer an accident on their way back to town and Wizard Prang’s magic wand snaps off, so a bit of the spell that he cast on his fellow wizard doesn’t change back, leaving Demon Druid red-nosed for now… Can anyone identify the artist for me please?


There is quite a lot of Lolly Pop in this Annual. In the first set that is definitely a reprint Archie asks Pop for a new sledge because the old tin tray that he uses has seen better days... In the second episode Archie wants to enter for a piano smashing contest with one of Dad’s old pianos. Then Archie gets a piece of a jig-saw puzzle as a Christmas present so he decides to help himself to a little toy at Pop’s factory.  In the fourth episode Pop makes Archie trim the hedge at Lolly Pop Zoo without providing him with proper tools, and finally in the fifth installment Archie asks Pop for a new cricket set, only to hear another NO. Each time Pop’s miserly treatment of his lad turns against him, costing Pop fortunes in the end. Here is one complete episode from the Annual:


In Toby’s Timepiece Toby comes to the town store to exchange his faulty water pistol. Spoilt brat Horace ridicules Toby and shows off his ‘supah dupah’ space suit that his Mater has just bought him. Toby snaps back with a witty comment and upsets Horace’s Mother who assaults him with an umbrella… As Toby races down the stairs, he accidentally activates his magic timepiece and finds himself centuries ahead of his time. In the world of the distant future the society is divided into the haves and the have-nots, or sub-standards, who are kept in a hole awaiting deportation to another planet. Toby is thrown with them and wastes no time in freeing the lot but he is captured by guards who decide to deport him without any delay. They make him put on a space suit and hurtle him into a rocket ship but Toby activates his timepiece and returns to the town store where Horace turns green with envy at the sight of the smashing space suit that Toby is wearing…

Cliff Brown contributed three horror-themed pages of puzzles, crosswords and mazes that I think are really nice. Here are two:



Speaking of puzzles, all three Spot the Difference puzzles in this Annual are in fact old cover illustrations of Shiver and Shake weeklies. Check out a pair side by side:


Badtime Bedtime Books were the highlight of Monster Fun Comic in the seventies and Leo Baxendale’s swan song in comics industry. William the Conk included in this 1982 SHIVER AND SHAKE Annual is a reprint of the BB Book No. 25 from MONSTER FUN COMIC No. 28 cover dated 20th December, 1975 where it appeared in full colour. Below are the opening pages of the reprint from the Annual and the original from MFC:


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