Showing posts with label Nathan Hale. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nathan Hale. Show all posts

Friday, March 7, 2025

Nathan Hale's Hazardous Tales: Cold War Correspondent (Family Comic Friday)

Book #11 in the Nathan Hale's Hazardous Tales series goes back to the 1950s, along the 38th parallel. It looks at the beginning of the Korean War through the eyes of female war correspondent Marguerite Higgins. 

The forgotten war which took place from 1950-1953 is a period in American history, as well as personal history that means a ton to me. My grandfather, William Gordon Dillard, fought in that war. He was a soldier in the 7th Infantry at the Chosin Reservoir. During that battle, he was injured, by a mortar round, proclaimed dead and MIA for about 2 weeks. and suffered severe frostbite. Obviously, his survival meant that I'm here today to tell you that story. 

I learned a ton from this book which completely switches gears from the previous 10 volumes and allows Higgins to narrate this hazardous tale. First thing I can say is BOY, did we muck this up! After 5 years of battling Hitler, Mussolini and Hirohito, America was more than ready to stop fighting and I get that. However, the Soviet war machine, despite losing almost 25 million soldiers and civilians in WW2, was more than ready to keep on rolling. And roll, they did! Tank battalions were ordered to clear out the Imperial Japanese occupational force from Korea and they had every intention to keep on rolling all the way from Pyongyang down to Pusan. So we stopped the Russians by putting up a barricade along the 38th parallel cutting off the industrial centers of the North from the fertile farmlands of the South.

From 1946-1950, war between the two halves of Korea looked inevitable. Syngman Rhee, the President of the capitalist backed South Korea, begged the United States for tanks, guns and planes. But because of a fear that by doing so, Rhee would use those weapons to invade the North, we never responded to those requests. So when the Communist backed troops of North Korea crossed the barricades in the Summer of 1950, the South was severely under armed and out-manned.

The key to the North's success were it's tanks: the T-34. It was a Soviet tank known to cut through Nazi lines like a hot knife through butter. When we sent American troops to repel the tanks, our weapons couldn't even put a dent onto the side. That's because America had pretty much paused any legitimate development in our defensive forces. In fact our reinforcements were so poorly trained, we had barbers, cooks and construction workers fighting hand-to-hand combat with literal commandos! And the food, uniforms and munitions were all surplus from World War II!

Our failure to begin the war with properly armed and trained forces as a result, would fuel an arms race that would bankrupt a small nation. In fact, we outspent the Soviet Union, the largest country on the globe at the time, to oblivion, resulting in the it's collapse in 1991. It's another reason we're not on very good terms with China, Cuba and many factions in the Middle East. While I'm more than proud of my grandpa's role in Korea, I'll also be the first to say that we really screwed up during that police action.

Cold War Correspondent marks my completion of having read the entire series. I just didn't do it in order. Thankfully, there's more fun on the horizon. In September of this year, the 13th volume will debut. It's a spooky collection of true tales of terror. I have no idea what to expect. But I can't wait to read it as part of my Halloween reads for 2025.

Great stuff for kids ages 12 and up who love history and graphic novels. Maybe they had a relative who fought in Korea like I did. Though this book stops before the end of 1950, meaning there is still 2 and a half years of war left  untold, this can be a valuable tool to help them understand what it was like for their loved ones who fought along the 38th parallel.

Worth Consuming!

Rating:  9 out of 10 stars.

Saturday, March 23, 2024

Nathan Hale's Hazardous Tales: Above the Trenches



The Eagles, Lions, Chickens, Beavers, Bunnies and Bears are back! Nathan Hale, both the cartoonist and American patriot return to Europe during the early days of the first World War to examine the war front not from the land or seas; but from the sky!

World War I saw its fair share of aces- pilots who scored a confirmed 5 kills or more! The famed Manfred von Richthofen, known amongst his fellow pilots on both sides of the war as the Red Baron, had a record 80 victories in the sky! The pilot in second place behind the Red Baron for confirmed kills had 75 and according to a chart in the back on this book over 60 pilots from France, Britain, Canada and Germany has at least 28 confirmed victories from the years of 1914-1919. The top ace for the United States was Eddie Rickenbacker with 26 aerial wins and he didn't even make the list!

Hale does his best to cover all sides of the battle in air. But in order to keep this historical graphic novel from covering too broad a picture of the war above the trenches, Hale tries to keep the focus on the volunteering American pilots who made up the French squadron called the LaFayette Escadrille, reverently named after another hero who has appeared in a previous volume of Nathan Hale's Hazardous Tales

Next to the first World War I volume, Treaties, Trenches, Mud and Blood, Above the Trenches is the most violent and deadliest recollection of them all. Hale makes an effort to warn readers that alcohol flows freely and cigarettes fill the air with smoke like exhaust from a Fokker DR1. (That's a war plane- not a German cuss word.) Yet there's no trigger warnings about the numerous pilots and their sighters and gunmen who die in horrific ways. Maybe this is just proof that our society is desensitized to violence but whoa unto us if we see an early 1900s Frenchman sipping wine while taking a drag...

Loved this book. Honestly, I didn't want it to end and I feel that considering how much time was spent on the formation of the LaFayette Escadrille compared to how quickly things wrapped up, this book should have been broken up into 2 parts. I guess technically, you could say this volume was part two. But really, we've yet to see America's official entrance into the Great War. Maybe the two Nathan Hale's have plans for a trilogy? I'd be okay with that.

Worth Consuming!

Rating: 8 out of 10 stars.

Friday, March 1, 2024

Nathan Hale's Hazardous Tales: Blades of Freedom (Family Comic Friday)

Nathan Hale makes a long awaited return to my reading list. Both the author and the 18th century historical figure! There's been 3 new releases since I last read and reviewed a volume of Nathan Hale's Hazardous Tales. Despite frequent checks, my local library never seemed to have them. Hopefully it was because kids kept checking them out as the reason for the lack of availability and not because my library is slowly trying to phase these graphic novels out of circulation.

Blades of Freedom is perhaps the most complex complex volume in series since the World War I chronicle titled Treaties, Trenches, Mud and Blood. It's not because of triggering subject matter of slavery. Instead, the story of how America came to make the Louisiana Purchase from France was not a simple pathway of going from point A to Point B. Instead, we have to go way, way back to before the time of the American Revolution when both French and Spanish explorers claimed the region of the Midwest for their prospective nations. Then the region changes hands a few times.

Soon the story tightens up to focus on France's colonization of Saint Domingue as well as the rebellions in France. On the French colony, the black slaves forced to produce the valuable commodities of sugar and coffee are beginning to shake off the yolk of oppression. In France, a young soldier by the name of Napoleon is rising through the ranks of the French army thanks to how he's been handling the peasant uprisings. Add in the role of the mosquito in the spread of yellow fever, wars with England and Spain, the fusion of African gods with Catholicism into a religion called 'Voodue' and the creation of poisons from native plants in the Caribbean, all resulting in the largest and most deadly slave revolt to result in freedom and you have a myriad of reasons both for why France had to sell the Louisiana territory to the United States and how the nation of Haiti came to be.

There's a lot more to it, of course. But unlike Major Impossible which tells of John Wesley Powell's expedition of the Colorado River or the siege of the Alamo in Alamo All-Stars, this story isn't so linear or cut and dry. This is definitely an aspect of the Louisiana Purchase that they don't teach in high school. This book sure had a slow start that I wasn't sure where it was, what with the introduction of the talking mosquito. But that second half went by super fast and was mega exciting!

I have a feeling this isn't the last time we'll see the likes of Ol' Bonaparte. I wouldn't have a problem with that. Not at all.

Glad to be back in touch with such a fantastic series! It continues to tell the darker sides of world history. But with depictions of war, the wasting effects of yellow fever and lots of man's inhumanity against man, this is an intense read not for all ages. Amazon recommends it for ages 9-12. I'd up it to ages 12-15.

Worth Consuming!

Rating: 8 out of 10 stars.

Friday, January 10, 2020

Major Impossible: Nathan Hale's Hazardous Tales Volume 9 (Family Comic Friday)

Family Comic Friday examines another of Nathan Hale's Hazardous Tales! Meet John Wesley Powell: Union Army Officer, Civil War hero, and rugged explorer of the dangerous Colorado river! And he did all of this with only 1 arm! This is Major Impossible!

Major Impossible (Nathan Hale's Hazardous Tales #9)
Written and illustrated by Nathan Hale
Published by Harry N. Abrams
Pages: 128
Retail: $13.99


Revolutionary War hero Nathan Hale continues his bloody and gruesome tales of terror from the annals of history! In this edition, Hale crafts a two-era story of one John Wesley Powell. The son of abolitionists, Powell gets his chance to fight against slavery when his joins the Union Army at the beginning of the Civil War. Powell's love of military strategy and history make him an ideal candidate for command which results in the loss of his right arm!

For most, the loss of a limb would mean the end of one's Army career. But for Powell, it only sparks a flame deep within the soldier's soul for more action and adventure. Powell will spend the remaining 2 years of the war as a Major, leading his troops in some of the most deadly fighting in the Civil War. But once peace is declared- that's not the end of John Wesley Powell's thirst for adventure.

4 years after the war between the states, Powell mounts a 10 man expedition through the unexplored portions of the Colorado River. Powell's trek will take several boats through class 4 and 5 rapids. Along the way, the explorers will lose supplies, transportation and lives as only 6 men return to civilization!

Major Impossible is perhaps the most different volume of this fan favorite series. For one, a new character from the Colonial Era is introduced while one of the more established characters has a more diminished role. Then we have the frequent time jumps from John Wesley Powell's Civil War career and his post-Army career expedition. Hale's stories often span the decades but they usually go in progression from earliest to later events.

Though this was a much different Hazardous Tale, I very much enjoyed this book. And kids aged 8-12 will too!

The part of Powell's amputation might be a little intense. Plus, there's one scene that involved a little bit of rear-end nudity. The incident is funny but might be considered a little risque. Such an occurrence has never been in any of the other books. So that was certainly different.

With the exception of the nude scene, this is one of the more tamer volumes in the Nathan Hale series. That's okay as I thoroughly enjoyed it. I just hope that we'll have more Hazardous Tales on the horizon sometime soon!

Major Impossible debuted in print and digital formats on December 3, 2019. A second print edition will be released on January 15, 2019.

Worth Consuming!

Rating: 8 out of 10 stars.

Monday, January 14, 2019

Nathan Hale's Hazardous Tales: Raid of No Return


The opening salvos of the Pacific Theater are explored in this World War II themed edition of Nathan Hale's Hazardous Tales. 

I love these books. They really explore aspects of American and World history that I thought I knew. And boy was I so wrong! 

With stunning aerial pictures of the attack on Pearl Harbor and the progression of both the Japanese and American naval fleets in the Pacific Ocean, this is the best rendered book of the entire series. 

Another key to this book being so good is that it's inspired me to want to read more. I knew very little of Jimmy Doolittle's raid of Tokyo. The stunt flyer turned colonel helped to inspire the American people to join the war effort with only 16 bombers! By deciding to focus on each plane individually, the author really personalized this small part of American history and I want to learn more!

Also, thanks to a great bibliography in the back of the book, I've got several other WWII books on my to-read list!

A must read for youngsters interested in the second world war. There is some mild swears in this book. And since it's a book about war, there will be some violence and death. What, did you expect the author to have everyone licked upon by kittens?

Recommended for ages 8-12. though I think readers as old as 14 might truly enjoy this book.

Worth Consuming!

Rating: 10 out of 10 stars.

Sunday, January 13, 2019

Nathan Hale's Hazardous Tales: Lafayette!


Doomed patriot Nathan Hale foretells his captors of future events in the Revolutionary War in the latest  volume of Nathan Hale's Hazardous Tales. 

I really thought that I knew about the War of Independence. Boy, was I wrong at that! I especially did not know how much of an impact the French officer, Lafayette had on the American's ability to fight, defend and ultimately defeat the British. 

These stories aren't what one would consider 'safe'. There's murders and wars and treachery and dysentery and body fluids galore. But with this story involving the French, there's also a level of bawdiness. Parents, be ready to answer the question of 'what is a brothel?' Plus, there's the whole instance of a 16 year old Lafayette being forced to marry a 14 year old aristocrat.  

This book is aimed at those aged 8-12 and when it comes to real-life instances such as The War of Independence, a certain level of violence is allowed. But when it comes to sexual situations, it's always a tricky realm. Some parents are more willing to discuss human sexuality with their children; some are extremely puritanical. 

Perhaps the most mature of the Nathan Hale's Hazardous Tales. But entertaining and educational none-the-less. A real eye-opening tale about the origin of our nation from the perspective of the French.

Worth Consuming!

Rating: 8 out of 10 stars.

Friday, July 1, 2016

Comics Squad #2: Lunch! (Family Comics Friday)

   From the editing team that brought you 'Comics Squad: Recess" comes an all-new treasury of comics devoted to the second most popular class at school- LUNCH! Fan favs such as Babymouse, Lunch Lady, and the Peanuts gang return from book one to in this very fun collection.

   Of the eight stories contained in this anthology, seven were really good. My favorite was, of course, the Nathan Hale's Hazardous Tales adventure. I just am in love with that series.

   Here, captured spy Nathan Hale recounts a short story set during the second world war. When an American naval ship runs afoul of a giant Japanese destroyer, they set out to sink the Imperial monster or be sunk themselves. As the battle rages in the Pacific, the American ship runs out of ammo, that is until someone gets the idea to start shooting bombs made of potatoes and other items from the galley. It's an all-true account of a food fight that helped save the free world!!!

  Other really great stories in this collection involves the secret origin of Lunch Lady when she was a bullied child and Sara Varon's 'Worst Day Ever' about two rivals becoming friends thanks to lunchtime science experiments. Another great tale is titled Cave Soup. This yarn by Jedi Academy creator Jeffrey Brown involves two pairs of Neanderthal children. The older pair keep pushing off their chores on the younger while they goof around. But the younger cave-kids are one step ahead of their older siblings and are determined to make sure the big brother and big sister have to clean up.

    The Case of the Missing Science Project by Meanwhile's Jason Shiga was my least favorite story. This choose-your-own-adventure type story should've been one of the best stories in this book but the idea just didn't translate very well in the graphic novel medium. Originally, a CYOA story has you given a series of options to choose from and then you flip to the corresponding page number. While a few page numbers are given in Shiga's story, most of your choices require you to follow a snaking series of arrows that often get a little confusing to follow. I did enjoy many of the bizarre ways that the hero of the Missing Science Project met his fate. Those crazy ending were part of what made those CYOA books so fun to read.

   Despite this one disappointing story- this was a fun read that any school aged child 13 and under should enjoy.

   Worth Consuming

   Rating: 8 out of 10 stars.

Friday, April 29, 2016

Nathan Hale's Hazardous Tales: Treaties, Trenches, Mud, and Blood (Family Comic Friday)


 
  Folks, I promise, this is the last Nathan Hale's Hazardous Tales that I will be reviewing for a while. But I saved the best for last! Treaties, Trenches, Mud, and Blood recounts the very complicated history of World War I.

   I have to say, it took a history major in college like myself having to read a child's graphic novel to finally understand what was behind the Great War! And I am not the only one who doesn't know why it started. (Why even Rachel and Pheobe on FRIENDS once agreed that Mexico were the baddies in the War to End All Wars!)

    Yes, everyone to some degree can say that the assassination of Archduke Ferdinand of Austria was the lynchpin that set the whole thing off. But why was that guy's death was so gosh darn important to start the biggest war in world history up that that point? Author Nathan Hale and his cartoon counterpart, the American patriot Nathan Hale cleared that up for me and what a way did he do it!

   In a visual medium like a graphic novel, it's nearly impossible to draft such a story for young readers to be able to understand. Some battles of World War I had armies from dozens of nations fighting at the same time, wearing the same looking uniforms. In able to help the reader keep these nation's straight, Hale adopted the use of an animal for each party. For example, the British were represented by bulldogs while the Germans were falcons or hawks, a national symbol for both. It was pretty clever and I applaud Hale for doing it.

   Even though Hale used funny animals to tell this tale, he didn't make light of the situation. In fact, he even goes so far as to have the narrator of the story point out that this is such a serious and important moment in world history, that it wouldn't be prudent to use such devices. But, the often confused Executioner character in this series points out the importance in keeping each army noticeable with using a symbol of national pride to keep each party from being confused with another. It's a rather brilliant idea.

    I love this series. I learn so very much and I am rather thoroughly entertaining by this series. Getting to read 3 books in this series in a row has been a fun little binge read. But I too, like the Executioner character must be reminded that the events in these books are about serious, oft too tragic events. But there's nothing wrong with making learning fun again.

    I've been taking an online class on teaching methods and this week we've been learning about critical thinking and ways to incorporate elements that with allow a student to be able to expand their thought processes. This book, though a little cartoony and a tiny bit silly, is an excellent tool that will help readers of all ages think about the major players of the first world war, why it started, and the horrors of war itself. In the back of each of the book is a list of suggested further reads (that are also age appropriate!) If your child has any interest in further learning about any of the subjects in covered in the Hazardous Tales, be sure to check those other books out!

   Worth Consuming

   Rating: 10 out of 10 stars.

Friday, April 22, 2016

Nathan Hale's Hazardous Tales: The Underground Abductor (Family Comic Friday)

 Cover art)

Friday, April 15, 2016

Nathan Hale's Hazardous Tales: Alamo All-Stars (Family Comic Friday)

Patriot Nathan Hale takes his captors back through his magic history book on another adventure through time. Joining him this time around is his Mexican counterpart Vincente Guerrero and a trio of guards to give a comprehensive account of the battle of the Alamo and the struggle for Texas Independence. Like the book’s title suggests, the cast of players is an all-star lineup of Old West history including Stephen F. Austin, Sam Houston, Davy Crockett, and that untamed wild man Jim Bowie.

   I wish there was something like Nathan Hale's Hazardous Tales when I was growing up. This series is funny, exciting, and just a little bit dangerous. But above all, these books are informative. What I thought I knew about the Alamo compared to what I discovered reading this graphic novel couldn't have filled a thimble respectively.

Though this book is about a terrible tragedy and lots of people die, it's not gory or overly graphic. There are a few swears, mostly mild and used in reference to quotes taken from actual documents- but they're there. Recommended for kids 10 and up. But this isn't a series just for kids. NHHT has a grown up following of readers as well like me.

   Alamo All-Stars was published just this year. So hopefully, there will be further adventures hosted by Nathan Hale ( and his squad of research babies) on the horizon. I vote for a book on the Titanic, Al Capone, and the Gunfight at the OK Corral as possible ideas to be explored next.

Worth Consuming

Rating:  10 out of 10 stars.

Friday, August 14, 2015

Nathan Hale's Hazardous Tales (Volume 2): Big Bad Ironclad! (Family Comic Friday)


Nathan Hale's Hazardous Tales #HB vol 2
A time travelling story with a twist. The narrator, historic figure Nathan Hale, can see into the future. This helps him out greatly, as it’s keeping his executioner and captor entertained.

In this volume, Hale foretells what will happen when iron clad ships come to blows during the Civil War. The Monitor and Merrimack (Or Virginia, depending of if you are a Rebel) have an exciting history.

Even though this is a book geared towards kids, it’s very informative. Personally, I learned lots. Yes, there are tons of goofy jokes, like drawing an actual fox for a character whose last name is Fox and drawing a character nicknamed Sharkface with shark teeth.

Parents will love this book and kids should too! It has the very cool mix of entertainment and learning that’s not been seen since SchoolHouse Rocks! Bravo!

Worth Consuming.

  Rating: 10 out of 10 stars.

Tuesday, June 17, 2014

Nathan Hale's Hazardous Tales: Donner Dinner Party


In this edition of Nathan Hale’s Hazardous Tales, the patriot cum martyr regales his captors with the gruesome story of the Donner Party. From the beginning of their wagon train in Illinois to meeting up with a trail master in Independence Missouri through the barren salt flats of Utah till their ultimate perilous stop in the wilds of California, every tragic episode is told in horrible detail. There’s murder, death, cannibalism, betrayal, and stupidity- AND it’s all true!

The book is geared for ages 8-12 but the subject matter may actually up the reading level to 11 and up. Once again, many of the references in this book’s bibliography are from adult text books. What gears this book for kids is the silly jokes and goofy nature of some of the characters. For example, the patriarch of the Reed family is shown as a buffoon who likes to name places after himself and sing songs of how he slew a buffalo. The author, whose name actually is Nathan Hale, admits in the afterword to using some poetic license to lighten the tone of this history lesson.
    I love these stories- juvenile or not. There’s looks of facts mixed in with the fictional goofiness and the author is very careful to let readers know at books end what stuff was real and what was fictionalized. There’s another volume due out soon- if not already and I can’t wait for it to come out.
Once again, thank you Orange County (NC) Public Library for carrying another great series of graphic novels that I otherwise would’ve overlooked if you didn’t obtain them for readers like me.
Worth Consuming.
Rating: 10 out of 10 stars.


 

Monday, June 16, 2014

Nathan Hale's Hazardous Tales: One Dead Spy


 This is the first book in the series, but it’s not the first book I’ve read from it. NHHT, as the author commonly refers to this series, stars Nathan Hale as the narrator. Just before he is to be hung during the Revolutionary War, Hale was given the ability to see all of American History (as his last words have earned him a place in the history books.) His execution by hangman and a British officer is stayed as long as he regales them with stories.
Up ‘first’ is the story of how Nathan Hale joined the revolution up to his capture as a spy. NHHT’s are my kind of comics. As a former educator and a history major, I am a big supporter of medias that make learning fun. I think it’s because I was such a fan of Schoolhouse Rock as a child. But let’s be honest- what’s more fun to learn: the memorization of the periodic table or to have a band like the Ramones belt out a turn helping you to remember the atomic weight of boron?
Sure, this series is geared for ages 10-14. But that doesn’t mean I didn’t learn anything from this book. For example, I didn’t know that Hale has a mole on his neck and it was considered such a bad luck charm that fellow school children teased him that he’d be hung by the neck by a noose. That’s a very interesting fact- but not something a 6-year old should probably be learning. Also just about every book in the bibliography used for research are geared for adults. Thus, I think I’ve proven that Nathan Hale’s Hazardous Tales offers something for everyone!
A fantastic series that I just can’t wait until I get my hands on the next one.
Worth Consuming.
Rating: 10 out of 10 stars.