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Will Eisnerbest known for his influential comic book series The Spirit and his groundbreaking graphic novel A Contract with Godbelieved in the teaching power of comics, and from 1951 to 1971 he produced PS magazine for the U.S. Army. This Preventive Maintenance Monthly (called PS because it was a postscript to the standard technical manuals) was aimed at teaching American soldiers everything about weapons safety for vehicles, aircraft, firearms, and electronics. Eisner illustrated these vital lessons in drawings, pinups, step-by-step guides, and comic strips. This collection contains the best of Eisners 227 issues of PS, reproduced in a portable digest format. This relatively unknown work by Eisner is finally exploredthe missing link between his comic books and his later, more mature graphic novel style.Praise for PS Magazine:'For the first time, Will Eisners superlative work for the U.S. Army has been assembled into a single collection. The result shows the artists keen understanding of the educative power of graphic storytelling. From 1951 to 1971, between The Spirit and A Contract with God, Eisner produced PS Magazine for the army in order to teach the common soldier how best to use, maintain, repair, and requisition their equipment. From explaining how to load a truck correctly to why it wont start, Eisner used a combination of humor, sound technical writing, and graphic storytelling to educate the soldiers. His magazines could be found at the front lines, in the officers mess, and in the quarters of senior military officials. It featured a cast of recurring characters like the loveable Joe Dope and the voluptuous Connie Rodd, who headlined featured segments like Joes Dope Sheet and the provocatively named Connie Rodds Briefs. With Eisners wonderful artwork and clarity of style making sometimes difficult concepts easy to understand, its no wonder PS Magazine was so popular with military personnel. A fascinating document for both fans of Eisner and military history buffs.'- Publishers Weekly starred review These amusing yet pragmatic sketches provide a missing-link comics document for fans and demonstrate the same mastery of his craft that marked Eisners better-known works.Booklist An instructional model for todays producers of nonfiction comics, which too often lack such visual traction, this also has appeal for military buffs, vehicle junkies, and Eisner fans. Library Journal The enthusiast whos been nurturing a curiosity about Eisners lost years will find all he needs to know from this beautifully produced little volume. The Comics Journal 'Eisner understood comics' potential for education decades before his peers, and PS magazine was his first laboratory. This thoughtful new collection is an essential addition to the Eisner library.'-Scott McCloud, author of Understanding Comics