FACTOID # 94: In pure number terms, more crimes are committed in America than in any other nation. The same goes for burglaries, car thefts, rapes and assaults.
 
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Encyclopedia > Joe Gill

Joe Gill was a writer who worked in the comics industry. In recognition of his work, he was nominated for the Shazam Award for Best Writer (Humor Division) in 1974.


References

  • Comic Book Awards Almanac

  Results from FactBites:
 
The Charlton Empire - Comic Book Artist #9 - TwoMorrows Publishing (6100 words)
The primary writer of virtually all the Charlton books was Joe Gill, ever-present at his desk with typewriter, who is arguably the most prolific writer in the history of comics, producing as much as 100 pages in scripts a week, stories often as pedestrian as the artwork.
Joe Gill was actually introduced to the world of comics writing by his brother, Ray Gill, and his good friend, and one of the legendary crime novelists of the 20th century, Mickey Spillane.
According to Gill, Goldman was angry to the point of wanting to attack Eichmann: "I wrote something that told the story of Eichmann, and what a murderer he was, and it was on the front cover [of the magazine]," Gill said.
NASH BRIDGES: "Missing Key" Synopsis (560 words)
Gill terrorizes Joe further by planting a bomb in his exercise cycle, but Joe knows nothing about the key.
Joe is caught in the explosion, and Joe thinks Nash has been blown up.
Peck and Gill are having an affair, and Nash threatens to tell her husband.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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