A forgotten gem, this underrated competitor to
Dick Tracy will astound new readers with its innovative style and delight vintage comics fans to no end.
Red Barry was one of the most visually innovative adventure strips of the mid-1930s, combining fluid brushwork and noir shadows (in bold blues and purples) with figures that were constantly in motion, plus a level of violence that brought cries of protest from its syndicate.
Red Barry and
Secret Agent X-9 were King Features' answers to the Tribune Syndicate's popular
Dick Tracy by Chester Gould. While
X-9 continued for decades under hands of various quality,
Red Barry by Will Gould (no relation to Chester) was an auteur's vision that lasted less than four years (primarily because Gould couldn't meet his deadlines). Regardless, it is today considered one of comics history's great unsung masterpieces, one which famed mystery writer Anthony Boucher (
Rocket to the Morgue,
Nine Times Nine) said was "the only detectives strip...worthy of any consideration from my scholarly viewpoint."
This two-volume series reprints the complete dailies and color Sundays.