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Ace Mifflin

Created by Ted Slampyak

“Private eyin’s what I do. It’s a dirty job. That’s why I like it.”

He ain’t scuzzy–he’s just drawn that way.

Here’s another private eye spawned during the 1980’s comic book/graphic novel boom/renaissance. In the “jazz age” of 1926 Boston, ALEXANDER C. “ACE” MIFFLIN is a scruffy private detective who appeared in a series of excellent, well-researched adventures in creator Slampyak’s fondly remembered Jazz Age Chronicles, alternating with stories about a hoity-toity Harvard archaeology professor (and Indiana Jones wannabe) Dr. Clifton Jennings.

Ace is no prize — he’s a rude, vulgar, and frequently drunken lout in need of a shave, and is constantly getting his P.I. ticket revoked. He works out of his dump of an office on Boston’s notoriously seedy Scollay Square — when he’s not sleeping one off — and has rarely shown any evidence of professionalism or respect for authority.

Lord knows what his long-suffering sweetie and secretary, Rita Burns, sees in him.

Lord knows what his obligatory long-suffering sweetie and secretary, Rita Burns, sees in him, but it is an intriguing look at a 1920s private eye–meaning he’s not a imagined contemporary of Philip Marlowe, but of The Continental Op and Race Williams.

A great but woefully-neglected series, full of pulpy energy and light-hearted humour, featuring a cheerfully imperfect hero, the series never quite caught on, and it finally petered out in the early 1990s, only to return in 2002, as part of the short-lived subscription-based webcomics anthology Adventure Strips.com, edited by Christopher Mills, co-creator of the online comic Femme Noir and former editor of Noir.  When AdventureStrips crashed and burned, Ace — A persistent little bugger that he is — dusted himself off and soon found a new home — at least for a while — at JazzAgeComics.com, Slampyak’s own site.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Ted Slampyak was born in Philadelphia and is a graduate of Temple University’s Tyler School of Art. Besides creating The Jazz Age Chronicles, and worked until 2010 as the long time artist on the syndicated Little Orphan Annie comic strip. He has also worked on Neil Gaiman’s Mr. Hero from Tekno Comix and contributed to Paradox Press The Big Book of… . The Jazz Age Chronicles was nominated for an Ignatz Award in the category “Outstanding Online Comic,” and was named one of the best webcomics by The Webcomics Examiner.

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Respectfully submitted by Kevin Burton Smith.

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