There is no other anthology on the subject on the market that is at once this colourful, large in format, or lengthy - or provides a pop-culture perspective by an authority. This is a big, thick book with more than 250 illustrations comprised of great vintage covers, a selection of juicy stories reproduced in full, advice columns, and advertising. Its graphic, eye-catching package - which will include a heavy red card stock bellyband with a die-cut heart-shaped frame - will emphasize the book's collectibility as well as its irresistible gift appropriateness. This book is a valentine to the era. It will be of interest to comics and graphic novel fans, those with an interest in nostalgia, and the chick-lit audience, too. This book is also a real standout in the genre. There are a couple collections that use the original strips from the era, replacing the old dialogue with contemporary dialogue that mocks the original scenarios ("Truer than True Romance"; "Romance Without Tears"); a thin collection issued by Marvel that reprints a select number of strips without any commentary at all ("Marvel Romance"); a collection of romance novel covers ("The Look of Love"); and a book dedicated to a specific romance comic ("Confessions, Romances, Secrets and Temptations: Archer St. John and the St. John Romance Comics"). Chronicle also published "From Girls to Grrrlz: A History of Female Comics From Teens to Zines", but this is a history of girl comics.
Michael Barson is the author of more than a dozen books celebrating popular culture, and his work has also appeared in the pages of Entertainment Weekly, Premiere, American Film, and AMC Magazine, among other publications. His books and postcard anthologies include Lost, Lonely & Vicious; Born to Be Bad; Teenage Confidential; True West; and Red Scared! A book publicist for various major houses since 1984, he is the codirector of publicity for Putnam and Riverhead Books, where he has worked for 15 years. He lives in suburban New Jersey with his wife of 24 years, who hasn’t stopped weeping since tying the knot. They have three boys, none of whom know anything worthwhile about either love or romance.