Mike Butterworth
Mike Butterworth | |
---|---|
Born |
John Michael Butterworth 10 January 1924 Nottingham, Nottinghamshire, England |
Died | 4 October 1986 62) | (aged
Nationality | British |
Area(s) | Writer |
Pseudonym(s) | Carola Salisbury |
John Michael "Mike" Butterworth (10 January 1924 – 4 October 1986) was a British comic book writer, best known for his comic strip The Rise and Fall of the Trigan Empire in the British weeklies Ranger and Look and Learn.[1] He is not related to the novelist Michael Butterworth, author of the Hawklords series and the Space: 1999 novelizations.
Life
Butterworth trained as an artist at Camberwell College of Arts and worked briefly as a tutor in drawing at Nottingham College of Art.[2] After briefly working as a salesman, he joined the Amalgamated Press (later renamed Fleetway Publications) after submitting samples of artwork to them. Although these were turned down, he tried again, submitting a script for a sea-going adventure strip. This was accepted and Butterworth was hired as a scriptwriter, at first working primarily Western strips featuring Billy the Kid and Buffalo Bill. His interest in history (particularly naval history) led him to pen many historical comic strips for The Comet and Sun, including the Napoleonic era adventures of Max Bravo, the Happy Hussar and World War II air-ace Battler Britton.
Aside from his writing, Butterworth was a gifted editor and created a number of new papers for the firm including Playhour Pictures (soon after abbreviated to Playhour), Valentine and the teenage girls' magazine Honey.
In 1965, he became one of the main script writers for Ranger where he penned the sprawling science-fantasy The Rise and Fall of the Trigan Empire which remains one of the most popular boys' adventure strips published in the UK to this day.
Butterworth left Fleetway Publications and turned freelance. His first novel, The Soundless Scream, appeared in 1967 followed over the next few years by a number of well-received crime novels which appeared under his full name, which has led to some confusion between his work and that of Science fiction writer and Savoy Books publisher Michael Butterworth. Butterworth also turned his hand to Gothic romance novels under the pen-name Carola Salisbury.
He died at the age of 62.
Books
- The Soundless Scream (1967)
- Walk Softly in Fear (1968)
- Vanishing Act (1970)
- Flowers for a Dead Witch (1971)
- The Black Look (1972)
- Villa on the Shore (1973)
- The Man in the Sopwith Camel (1974)
- Remains to be Seen (1976)
- Festival (1976)
- X Marks the Spot (1978)
- The Man Who Broke the Bank of Monte Carlo (1983)
- A Virgin on the Rocks (1985)
- The Five Million Dollar Prince (1986)
Novels as Carola Salisbury
- The Pride of the Trevallions (1975; also published as Mallion's Pride)
- Dark Inheritance (1975)
- Dolphin Summer (1976)
- The Winter Bride (1978)
- The Shadowed Spring (1980)
- Count Vronsky's Daughter (1981)
- An Autumn in Araby (1983)
- Daisy Friday (1984)
- A Certain Splendour (1985)
- The Woman in Grey (1987)
References
- ↑ Nolen-Weathington, Eric (ed.). Modern Masters: Alan Davis. TwoMorrows Publishing.
- ↑ Mike Butterworth (comic artists & creators), www.comicvine.com