From Booklist
When "Dick Tracy" creator Chester Gould retired in 1978 after drawing the comic strip for 46 years, Collins was the logical choice to replace him. The successful crime-fiction writer was also an experienced comics scripter and a Tracy fan. Upon assuming command, Collins immediately jettisoned the science-fiction trappings that had infected the strip in Gould's last years and revived classic characters from its heyday as well as introducing new ones, such as Angeltop, daughter of vintage villain Flattop, who fit with Gould's most famous creations. Modern sensibilities precluded reviving the violence and grotesquerie that were Gould hallmarks, so Collins instead injected fast-paced plotting and a new topicality. In another change for the better, longtime Gould assistant Rick Fletcher took over the artwork, bringing a contemporary look while remaining faithful to Gould's classic designs and compositions. Fletcher died in 1983, and Collins left the strip a decade later, after which "Tracy" reverted to mediocrity. Its temporary revivification can be savored again in this volume and the future collections Checker promises.
Gordon FlaggCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Review
...intricate, innovative, and entertaining plots, characterization and dialog. Dick Tracy: The Collins Casefiles is highly recommended. --
Michael Vance, Suspended Animation, May 28, 2004...intricate, innovative, and entertaining plots, characterization and dialog. Dick Tracy: The Collins Casefiles is highly recommended. Michael Vance --Suspended Animation
Dick Tracy really is the man. I don't mean was the man, I mean he is the man. Mark Rollins --Associated Content
Ultimately, it's just great to have these serials collected in a convenient bookshelf format, and they make a fine accompaniment to IDW's reprint collections of the original Chester Gould strips. Christopher Mills --Gun in the Gutters
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