Eagles Over The Western Front Vol.03

£11.99

    Eagles Over The Western Front Vol.3
    Mike Butterworth | Bill Lacey
    Bear Alley Books, 84 pages, Black / White

    The third volume of Eagles Over the Western Front brings the epic story of Harry Hawkes to a dramatic climax. As our new book opens, Harry and his comrades, Entwistle and Pootle, are piloting Sopwith Camels for a squadron on the Western Front in France in 1917.

    Facing them across the ‘line’ is Manfred von Richthofen—the Red Baron—and his infamous ‘Flying Circus’ of German fighter aircraft, the Jagdgeschwader 1 squadron. Richthofen would become the highest scoring ace of the Great War, officially credited with some 80 kills.

    Harry faces danger from both sides of the line. At the squadron’s base there are newcomers like the despicable and arrogant Dave Buller, or Entwistle’s younger brother, Algy, a slacker and a thief. And then there’s Polly, the parrot, who may hold the key to a German offensive…

    What happens when Harry chooses to aid the escape of a German pilot, finds himself chased through the streets of Berlin and lands up in a shell hole in no-man’s land with Crown Prince Wilhelm and the Red Baron, will keep you on the edge of your seat.

    Bear Alley Books is proud to present the concluding volume of Eagles Over the Western Front, the classic story of aerial action set during the days of the R.F.C. Created by Mike Butterworth and Bill Lacey and serialised in the pages of Look and Learn in 1971-73, Eagles ran a magnificent 116 episodes. Now, for the first time in thirty years, the complete story will be available, with two-thirds of the story scanned from surviving original art boards.

    Author Mike Butterworth is better known for writing ‘The Rise and Fall of the Trigan Empire’, but his career began many years before as a scriptwriter and editor for the Amalgamated Press’s Sun, where penned dozens of stories featuring historical characters (Billy the Kid, Dick Turpin, Robin Hood) as well as creating ‘Max Bravo, the Happy Hussar’ and ‘Battler Britton’. For Comet he wrote authentic historical dramas as well as creating the science fiction adventurer ‘Jet-Ace Logan’. Editorially he created the innovative Playhour Pictures, Valentine and the teenage magazine Honey. A prolific novelist, he wrote crime thrillers, bodice-rippers and historicals under a variety of pen-names.

    Bill Lacey’s first strips appeared in 1951, although the best of his early work appeared in the pages of Super Detective Library, where he was the original artist for Rick Random and Blackshirt. Lacey’s work appeared in dozens of comics in the 1950s and 1960s, including Mickey Mouse Weekly, Cowboy Picture Library, Knockout, Express Weekly, Thriller Picture Library, Princess, Film Fun, Valiant, Buster, Tiger and Lion; during this time his strips ranged from adaptations of western novels such as ‘The Covered Wagon’ to weird fantasy classics like ‘Mytek the Mighty’. In the 1970s he drew extensively for Look and Learn and for a number of D. C. Thomson’s boys’ papers, Bullet, Crunch and Buddy. Volume three’s introduction takes a longer look at Lacey’s lengthy career.

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