DARWYN COOKE: The WILL EISNER Stories Every Fan Should Read

The late Darwyn Cooke, whose evocative style recalled the greatest work of the master himself, picked some great Eisner stories for you…

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UPDATED 3/6/24: Will Eisner was born 107 years ago. The late, great Darwyn Cooke discussed what he learned from Eisner’s work and gave us a list of essential stories back in 2014. In what’s become an annual tradition, we present this again, in slightly altered form. Enjoy. — Dan

Darwyn Cooke famously followed in Eisner’s footsteps by bringing The Spirit to modern audiences at DC from 2006 to 2008. He had a lot to say about what it was that Eisner’s body of work taught him as a storyteller — and he’s included a list of tales that every fan should read.

Dan Greenfield: What did you learn from Will Eisner’s work — what gem do you use to this day?

Darwyn Cooke: I think the things I learned are far too numerous and involved for anything less than a book unto itself, but I can certainly touch on what I consider the big-picture things Will’s work taught me.

First: Even if your story is about a toy gun or a crying statue, it is a story about character. It’s about the human condition. If your readers don’t care about your characters, your story will be missing what it needs to fully succeed.

Second: Every panel is a stage you build custom to reflect the very best way to show the reader what you need them to see, and more importantly, feel. You must be tireless in this regard, and no experiment that communicates story visually should be off the table.

Third: Will sort of proved conclusively (at least to me) that there is no school for doing comics that has the full answer. He drew from cinema, literature, real life, theater, and the world’s headlines. Whatever worked best for the story. Bring all your resources to the table.

When you worked on The Spirit, how conscious were you of what had come before and did that force you to change or refine your approach?

I was hyper-aware of what came before, as was my partner J. Bone, but that more or less informed the approach and stayed pretty solid from Day One. Look at the world around me and find an entertaining way to comment on it. Which was what Will did every week for all those years.

What Eisner stories resonate with you the most?

Such a question. With literally hundreds of stories to look at, and such a rich vein of excellent work during the postwar years, I’d simply say the ones that made me feel a familiar and extremely deep emotion through a means I hadn’t seen coming. How’s that for some velvet fog?

Can you name a few Eisner stories that everyone should read?

Sure.

HEARTBREAK — “Gerhard Schnobble”

"Gerhard Schnobble" (September 5, 1948), script and art by Will Eisner

“Gerhard Schnobble” (September 5, 1948), script and art by Will Eisner

SUSPENSE — “Ten Minutes”

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ROMANCE — “Sand Serif” and “Bring In Sand Serif” (It’s a two-parter.)

"Bring in San Saref" (January 15, 1950), script and art by Will Eisner

“Bring in San Saref” (January 15, 1950), script and art by Will Eisner

MATCH MADE IN HEAVEN — Will inked by Wally Wood for The Spirit in Outer Space.

"Mission ... The Moon" (August 3, 1952), script by Jules Feiffer, art by Wally Wood

“Mission … The Moon” (August 3, 1952), script by Jules Feiffer, art by Wally Wood

HYPER-CINEMATIC NOIR LIGHTING AND COMPOSITION — “Who Killed Cox Robin?”

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PLUS!

BADASS ACTION — “Hunt the Octopus”

FOURTH WALL FUN — “Death, Taxes, and the Spirit”

PRECOGNITIVE GLANCE AT A SOCIETAL ILL IN ITS INFANCY — “Fox and Hound”

MORE

— 13 COVERS: A WILL EISNER Birthday Celebration: 2019 Edition. Click here.

— MATT WAGNER Picks His Favorite WILL EISNER Splash Page! Click here.

Author: Dan Greenfield

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4 Comments

  1. Darwyn Cooke’s SPIRIT books are excellent, and his TWILIGHT CHILDREN miniseries with Jaime Hernandez is outstanding!

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    • The Spirit is currently (3/6/17) guest-starring in the Dick Tracy comic strip, in a mega-crossover tale that also features the Dragon Lady from Milton Caniff’s Terry and the Pirates and Oliver “Daddy” Warbucks from Harold Gray’s Little Orphan Annie. The Spirit’s lunar adventure is a touchstone for a B-plot involving Denny and the modern-day version of Tracy’s Moon Maid character (a clone of the original, sort of). Comic-book stalwart Joe Staton has been illustrating the Tracy strip since 2011, and this episode is a lot of fun. R.I.P. Will Eisner and Darwyn Cooke.

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      • I always enjoyed Joe Staton’s style that was slightly different than other Comic Book artists. Just checked out his Dick Tracy and Spirit art …. a great match of artist and subjects.

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