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Christian Comics Pioneers
Years Active in Christian Comics & Cartooning:
The
1960s through 1990
Best, Stan
1923-2002
Bird, Alan
1921-1992
Blocksom, Jim
1930-2017
Butler, Nate
1954-
Carter, Fred
1938-
deVink, Willem
1957-
Ensign, Don
1948-2014
Finley, Tom
1951-
Gregg, Steve
1953-
Hafer, Dick
1937-2003
Hochet, Philippe
1957-
Isáis, Liz
1925-2012
Jenkins, Joe
1951-2006
Jones, Ian
1955-
Julian, Eddie
1912-2005
Laurie, Greg
1952-
Leavell, Billy
1938-
McCollough, Jerry & Faith
1942-
Overbey, Taylor
1955-
Phillips, Jim
1944-
Redondo, Nestor
1928-1995
Skelton, Deryl
1953-
Watters, Bill
1941-
Webb, Kathleen
1956-
Wheeler, Ron
1954-
Wierdsma, Bob
1952-
Yambar, Chris
1961-
Other/Featured


Stan BestBest, Stan
(USA / BRAZIL)

John Stanton Best was born on 3 October 1923 in Los Angeles, CA, USA. He was a missionary for 35 years in the Amazon area of South America. He wrote and published a number of Christian comics tracts such as Londa (1980), The Miracle of Dr. Miller (date unknown), The Last Cup of Coffee (1993), and Poison - A True Story (2002). Primarily he worked with other artists, such as Doug Chafey and Bill Webb, but he sometimes did his own artwork. He also did a cartoon series for Biblical Evangelist magazine. In addition to his cartoons and comics, Best wrote a number of books for young people including some new Sherlock Holmes stories wherein Dr. Watson quotes a Scripture he had heard from "our friend Charlie Spurgeon." All of Best's tracts and books were published by his own company, Discovery Press. Best passed away on 6 October 2002 in Modesto, California, USA.


Alan Bird

Bird, Alan
(UNITED KINGDOM)

Alan Bird was born 30 January 1921. He created, edited, and wrote most of the first 240 issues of PLUS+, which began publication in January 1966 as a children's paper of comic strips, puzzles, stories, and "good news... about the extra life you were meant to have." The paper was produced by Christian Publicity Organisation (CPO). Bird's wife, Freda, served on the Board of another Christian publishing ministry, Challenge Literature Fellowship, from 1991 to 1996. Bird passed away in February of 1992 in Worthing, West Sussex, UK, at age 71. PLUS+ is still in print today and had the longest issue run of any Christian comic paper in the UK, as well as the third longest run of any known Christian comic publication in the world, after David C Cook's PIX in the USA and Tournesol in France.


Jim Blocksom
Blocksom, Jim
(USA / JAPAN)

Born 25 August 1930, James Blocksom was originally from Ohio USA. After the Korean War, while serving as an optometry officer at the airforce headquarters in Tokyo in 1954, Blocksom became a Christian. Returning to America, he began preparations to be a missionary in Japan. He was married to his wife, Barbara, who was also called to missionary work, and graduated from Trinity Seminary College. In 1962 Blocksom and his family returned to Japan to serve the Lord. In 1981 he was led to build a mission to train laymen to do evangelism, plant churches, and produce the literature needed, so he founded International Chapel Ministries (ICM). In addition to writing books, Bible studies, and discipling courses for Japanese readers, Blocksom has also been responsible for a number of trailblazing Christian manga/comic tracts produced in Japan, acting as the writer or publisher. A list of these comic/cartoon art tracts would include True Loves Waits, My Life, and the well-known Grandma tract, all illustrated by Madoka Mako. Blocksom also wrote and illustrated an in-depth article on the use of comics in evangelism for Japan Harvest magazine ("Your Message in 'Manga' Will Get Through!" - Issue No. 4, 1987/88) and wrote This Way to Happiness in 1979, which was illustrated as a cartoon tract by Evan Wilson in 1991. Blocksom continued to work at the production of cartoon tracts, including one on the "know-it-all" fish Kashikoi Sensei, until he suffered several debilitating strokes starting in 2011. Blocksom went home to be with The Lord on 21 June 2017. His wife and some of his children continue in the work of ICM.


Nate Butler

Butler, Nate
(USA)

LNathan Butler was born 1 February 1954 in Meriden, Connecticut USA, a "descendent of early New England Puritans and a number of preachers of the Gospel." His maternal great-grandparents, John Henry and Susan Adeline House, were missionaries in the Balkans and founded the American Farm School in Thessaloniki, Greece. (His great-grandmother even produced a tract for allied soldiers in World War II.) So after a 20 year career working in cartooning and comics (including drawing characters such as The Muppets, Archie & Jughead, Heathcliff, Snuffy Smith, and many others), Butler followed in the footsteps of his ancestors and began packaging Christian comics such as Aida-Zee (1990), Paro-Dee (1993), and Behold 3-D (1996). He also started the Christian Comics Catalog (1993), co-published Christian Comics & Games Magazine (1995), and launched the first Christian comics website, Christian Comics International (1996). These publishing activities led to the founding of COMIX35, an international training ministry which teaches the production and use of comics-style literature for evangelism and discipleship, in 1996. Since that time, seminars and workshops have been held on every continent except Antarctica. Butler lives in Texas USA. He is married, has three daughters, two sons-in-law and two grandsons.


Fred CarterCarter, Fred
(USA)

Frederick E. Carter was born on 22 June 1938. His talented older brother, who died tragically young, was his first and perhaps most influential artistic role model. "I had always wanted to use art in a Christian setting," he said. "At my church one of the fellows had a Chick tract, and I saw it and it impressed me because that's what I always wanted to do." Carter had studied at Chicago’s American Academy of Art, and in early 1972 he sent some samples to Jack Chick. Chick wrote back, and within 3 weeks Carter moved from Illinois, USA, to southern California. Carter’s first tract was “Frame-up”, marking the beginning of an ongoing association with Chick Publications for more than thirty years. In addition to the tracts, Carter drew The Crusaders full-size comic book series from 1974-2016. Sales of Chick's tracts and comic books have reached over 500 million copies worldwide, over half of which were drawn by Carter. In fall, 2003 Chick Publications released Light of the World, a DVD featuring over 300 paintings by Carter. In addition to pastoring a small congregation in southern California, Rev. Carter also illustrated for Urban Ministries in Chicago, Illinois. He went home to be with the Lord on May 9th, 2022.


Willem deVink

deVink, Willem
(NETHERLANDS)

Although raised in an evangelical home, it wasn't until age 13, at youth camp, that Willem deVink made a deep commitment to Christ. He soon began writing Christian comic books, and by 14, his enthusiasm for spiritual things so impressed a teacher that she asked him to teach religion class. Later, deVink joined Young and Free, a Dutch youth ministry with whom he worked for 17 years. He also operated a publishing company and worked as a freelance journalist writing books, magazine features and doing illustrations. Along the way, he was mentored by Brother Andrew, the famous Dutch missionary and founder of Open Doors. DeVink is the writer & illustrator of the Jezus Messias (Jesus Messiah) comic which was published in 1993. As of the year 2015, it had been translated into more than 80 languages and dialects (including Albanian, Arab, English, Farsi, French, Greek, Latvian, Mongolian, Dutch, Nepalese, Russian, Serbian, Spanish, Swahili, Koerdisch-Bahdini, and Turkish.) DeVink also launched Heavenly Quality, a discipleship movement aimed at Christian youth. They hosted annual concerts and put evangelistic materials into the hands of 30% of Dutch school children. His autobiography Getekend: Een persoonlijk verhaal was published in 1999. At Billy Graham's Amsterdam 2000 conference, deVink felt God leading him to join Agape Netherlands, with whom he'd collaborated previously. Two years later, he was asked to become director of the ministry. He is married to wife Marian, a graphic designer who has collaborated with him on much of his work. They are parents of three adult children.


Don EnsignEnsign, Don
(USA)

Donald D. Ensign was known to many as the "Father of Modern Christian Comics Fandom." He was born in 1948 and born again in 1958. After having some of his comics features published in fanzines in the late '60s, Ensign produced his first Christian comic, Tales of Antediluvia, in 1977 in the Campus Crusade print shop where he worked. In 1984 he published Valiant, a Christian comics newsletter/fanzine, that (along with Bob Wierdsma’s publication, Christian Cartoonist and Illustrator), brought together a number of Christian comics fans and creators for the first time. It was produced by the Christian Comic Arts Society (CCAS), which Ensign co-founded. In 1985 he launched Alpha-Omega, the first Christian APA (amateur press association) publication, which is still being published to this day. In 1988 Ensign was part of the publishing team for the Valiant Efforts Christian comics series. He was a panelist on the first two Christian comics panel discussions ever held at the San Diego Comic Con in 1992 and 1995. From 1996-1998 he helped produce the New Creation newsletter on Christian comics. Ensign published an annual "Guide to Christian Comics" from 2004-2008. He continued to represent the CCAS at Comic Cons in Tucson and Phoenix, Arizona USA, up until shortly before he went to be with The Lord on 19 March 2014.


Tom Finley

Finley, Tom
(USA)

Tom Finley was a Southern California "surfer cartoonist" along with Rick Griffin, Rick Bundschuh, Jim Phillips, and others. Finley created two of the earliest Christian graphic novels Diabolus Seeks Revenge and Willard, Master of the Rats, published in 1982 and 1983 by Regal Books / Gospel Light Publications. For a while he was also the Managing Editor of Gospel Light's Youth Department. Often working with Bundschuh, he has illustrated numerous books including Youth Workers Clip Art Book (1984), Hot Buttons: Insight from God's Word on 12 Burning Issues (1986), Ecclesiates: Survival in the 21st Century (1989), The Complete Junior High Bible Study Resource Book (1992), The Daring Plot to Save the World (1997), Kickstarters (1997), and The World Is Not Enough (1999). Currently Finley lives with his wife in Hawaii USA. He maintains the Hershel Snodgrass Comics and CLAMcentral websites and is the Children's Pastor at Kauai Christian Fellowship.


Steve Gregg
Gregg, Steve
(USA)

Born in 1953, Steve Gregg created and produced over 50 Christian comics-style tracts from the 1970s through 1990s for the Good News Underground (G.N.U.), an evangelistic literature ministry in McMinnville, Oregon USA. Among the publications he has written and drawn are Parable (1971), All the King's Horses (1984), The G.N.U. Growth Book (Volume I: "For Fledgling Disciples," 1984) and The G.N.U. Growth Book (Volume II: "A Handbook for Spiritual Warfare," 1991). In 1983 he started the Great Commission School in Oregon USA, which he led for 16 years. The school guided students through the Bible, verse by verse, in nine months. He published a magazine for Christian home-schoolers from 1996 to 1999. Gregg has also been involved in radio broadcasting as a ministry since 1984. In 1997, he started hosting a daily radio program called "The Narrow Path," with a live broadcast daily (weekdays) which can also be heard from the website. Currently Gregg teaches for Youth With A Mission (YWAM) schools internationally and is still head of Good News Underground. Gregg has four adult children and lives with his wife in Southern California USA.


Dick Hafer

Hafer, Dick
(USA)

Richard L. Hafer, who called himself the "Comics Commando," was born on 20 July 1937. He illustrated a number of cartoon tracts, comics, and books on politically conservative and Christian issues. A partial list of his many publications includes Every Family Has One (or) Even a Black Sheep Can Make It, Especially if He's a Rich Black Sheep! (1982), Stop the Gun Collectors (1983), Homosexuality: Legitimate, Alternate Deathstyle (1986), I Know that We're a Throw-Away Society, but This is Ridiculous! (1986), AIDS is Looking for You (with P.A. Brown and the research staff of the Castello Institute of Stafford 1987), Is Politics a Dirty Word or a Sacred Responsibility?: A Handbook for Christian Patriots, 1492-1988 (written by Dale Crowley, Jr., 1987), A Government Carol (1988), Magical Mike: The Real Story of Mike Dukakis (1988),Where Do You Get Off, Calling Me a Sinner? (1988),Who is this Jesus, Anyway? (1988), and Church Chuckles (1995). Some of these later comics were published by Freedomlight Publications as "Maxi-Tracts." Hafer held a number of press awards for editorial cartooning and feature writing. He was awarded the George Washington Medal by the Freedoms Foundation at Valley Forge. Hafer maintained a cartooning studio in Lanham, Maryland, USA, until his death on 5 July 2003.


Philippe Hochet

Hochet, Philippe
(FRANCE)

Philippe Hochet was born on 11 March 1957 in Rennes, France. He is both an artist and scenario writer, and he has created Christian comics for the French magazine Tournesol since 1978. He has also illustrated comic albums published by Ligue pour la Lecture de la Bible including Terres glacées ("Frozen Ground") and Inis: le prix de la paix ("Inis: The Price of Peace"). Hochet became the head of the Tournesol publication team at the end of 2009 following the retirement of Swiss Christian Comics Pioneer Jefko (Jean-Frédéric Kohler).


Liz Isáis

Isáis, Liz
(USA / MEXICO)

Elisabeth Fletcher de Isáis was born 21 July 1925. She was a graduate of Wheaton College in Illinois, USA, where she edited the school newspaper, and of Ohio State University. Mrs. Isáis joined Latin America Mission (called MilaMex in Mexico) in January 1951, and married her husband Juan (who became a well-known Mexican evangelist) in Costa Rica in January 1955. They began working in Mexico in 1964. Starting in 1970, Mrs. Isáis wrote and directed the first Christian foto novela (comics stories created using staged photographs) in Mexico. They were published in Prisma, a magazine she started with her husband. Mrs. Isáis said she produced "about 95%" of the scripts during the nearly 40-year period that these photo comics ran in the magazine. Prisma replaced them with shorter illustrated versions in 2008 or 2009. Mrs. Isáis organized the COMIX35 Christian comics seminars in Mexico in 2001, 2003, and 2005. She was also the editor and author of many other Spanish publications. Mrs. Isáis went to be with The Lord on 6 July 2012 in Mexico City. She was preceded by her husband and 1 of her 4 children.


Jenkins, Joe

Joe Jenkins


(USA)

Joseph N. Jenkins was born on 27 February 1951 in Toledo, Ohio USA. Growing up with an interest in secular comic books and animated cartoons, he moved to New York City in September 1973 to work for DC Comics as a reprint touch-up artist. Several months later an old friend invited him to church where he heard the Gospel message and, on 6 January 1974, Jenkins accepted Jesus Christ as his Lord and personal Saviour. He moved to Chattanooga, Tennessee, in May 1978 to enroll in the Bible College division of Tennessee Temple. Soon afterwards he produced two full-color, cartoon-style Gospel tracts for Baptist International Missions, Inc. ("Man's Most-Asked Question" and "Heaven"). Hundreds of thousands of copies were printed and distributed. While in college he met Sheila Morrison whom he married on 7 June 1980. Subsequently they served the Lord together at Northwest Baptist Church in Toledo, Ohio for several years. In July 1987 they moved to Greenville, South Carolina to work in a children's home ministry. While attending the Old Paths Scripture Press annual banquet in Broomfield, Colorado, in February 1990 Joseph Jenkins met Dr. Wash Pennington, director of the Fellowship Tract League, who thereafter published three of Jenkins' comics tracts ("I'll Do it Later," "Man's Most-Asked Question," and "Absolutely Free"). These were printed and distributed worldwide in the tens of millions in numerous languages. Having suffered from diabetes throughout his life, Jenkins eventually lost most of his vision amid other serious health issues. On 22 June 2006 he went home to be with The Lord, survived by his wife and daughter.


Ian Jones

Jones, Ian
(AUSTRALIA)

Ian Jones was born in 1955 and grew up in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. After graduating from college, he became a primary school teacher in Queensland country schools. He started cartooning at age 22 and, after twelve years as a teacher, he resigned his profession on April Fool's Day in 1986 to begin his cartooning career. Jones created the Pearly Gates comic strip, which featured the "heavenly" characters Peter, Angie, Walter, and Johnny, and became one of the most successful and popular Australian strips. It also appeared in papers in England, Norway and New Zealand and had millions of readers. The strips were collected into two books, Love is a Two-Way Street (1987) and There's One in Every Cloud (1990). Jones is now an associate pastor of a Baptist Church in rural Queensland, focusing the majority of his time on the younger half of the congregation and mentoring those involved in youth work. He is married to wife Robyn and is the father of seven children.


Eddie Julian

Julian, Eddie
(UK)

Edmund "Eddie" C. Julian was born on the 16th of March, 1912 in Richmond, Surrey, UK. During the 1930s he attended Duke Street Baptist Church in Richmond where he received Jesus Christ as his Lord and Saviour. Turning down an opportunity to be part of the family business in Fowey, Cornwall, he went to work in a commercial art studio and took up residence in Barnes, UK. Additionally, he illustrated covers and interior art for CLC (Christian Literature Crusade) booklets such as The City of Palms (1947) and Promised Land (1951). In 1957 he moved his family to Cornwall, settling in Truro. One of his most prolific commercial accounts in the 1950s and 60s was illustrating for School Friend, a girls' magazine with some comics features. For Young Warrior, a weekly Sunday School publication, he drew the story of evangelist C.T. Studd in serialised comics form. In 1973 it was collected and published as the first of several graphic novels for WEC (World Evangelisation for Christ): C.T. Studd: Cricketer and Missionary. Moving to Devoran, he illustrated some volumes related to Cornish life and dialect: How Long is Forever (1980) and The Bouncing Hills (1983). He also drew two more missionary graphic novels for WEC: Going for God: the True Story of Bessie Brierley (1983) and God's Doctor: the True Story of Dr. Stuart Harverson (1984). In 1988 he was commissioned to add colour to a C.T. Studd reprint which was translated into several other languages. In retirement Edmund Julian helped run the Devoran Art Club where he tutored and was honorary president. On the 27th of February, 2005 he went home to be with Christ at age 92.


Greg LaurieLaurie, Greg
(USA)

Greg Laurie was born in 1952 in California USA. While attending Corona Del Mar High School he worked as cartoonist for the school newspaper and had some of his cartoons apppear in Surfer magazine in the late '60s. Laurie began his pastoral ministry at age 19, leading a Bible study of 30 people. That small group became Harvest Christian Fellowship in Riverside, California USA, one of the eight largest churches in America, as well as the third largest in California. In 1972, during the "Jesus Movement" in the USA, Laurie drew several cartoon tracts, including Living Water and Looking at the People, which were published by Maranatha Publications/Maranatha! Evangelical Assoc (These can be seen under "Drawings" on Greg's page.) In 1973 Laurie drew at least one cartoon album cover for Maranatha! Music which featured Mustard Seed Faith and Karen Lafferty for the first time. Inserted in the album jacket was an evangelistic single-sheet comic tract featuring the artwork of Laurie once again, with the song lyrics on the other side. Currently Laurie is the senior pastor of Harvest Christian Fellowship. He and his wife Cathe reside in Southern California USA.


Billy LeavellLeavell, Billy
(USA)

Born in 1938, William Olin Leavell says his lifelong deafness probably led to his love for comics, starting with the newspaper comic strips of his childhood. After receiving Christ as his Savior, Leavell realized the power of the comics medium to reach his deaf peers. He began publishing Light for the Deaf in 1966. It contained a Christian or Bible comic strip by Leavell in almost every issue for 42 years, making it unique among Christian magazines printed for the deaf. Light for the Deaf went "on hiatus" around 2008, but Leavell reports that he continues to prepare comic strips "for the day when it will finally return to active status." Leavell still works as a minister and missionary and is based in Tennessee USA. He and his wife Marilyn have 3 grown children and 8 grandchildren.


Jerry & Faith McColloughMcCollough, Jerry & Faith
(EUROPE / USA)

Jerry and Faith McCollough were both born in 1942. They became missionaries with the Assemblies of God church in 1987 to illustrate textbooks for training pastors and lay persons for the International Correspondence Institute (ICI, now Global University) in Brussels, Belgium. They also illustrated a "Heroes of the Faith" series of Bible story comic books entitled David, Gideon, Esther, and The Christmas Story which were published in 1988, 1989, 1990 by ICI, with scripts by Ron Barefield. These comics were printed in Belgium and the USA and are still in circulation, with well over 100,000 copies distributed in over 27 languages. The McColloughs also lived and worked in Bulgaria, Slovakia and Germany. They wrote and illustrated evangelistic materials, researching the lives of well known national heroes, showing their Christian backgrounds, and weaving the Gospel message into the text. The first of these comic strip books, Cyril & Methodius: Illuminators of the Slavs (about the Christian roots of the Slavic languages) was published in 2001. A second book, Heaven's Forge, for the Czech Republic, was finished shortly before they retired in early 2010. The McColloughs have two children and a grandson and now live back in the USA.


Taylor OverbeyOverbey, Taylor
(USA)

Born in 1955, Taylor Overbey created GLAD - The Christian Humor Magazine in 1982. He published 17 bi-monthly issues for 2,000+ subscribers from 1982-1985, through his company Word Centered Productions, then located in Ohio USA. In addition to his work as publisher of the magazine, Overbey also wrote and drew a number of the features. Teaming with his father James Overbey, he drew Straight White American Male: A Politically Incorrect Survival Guide, published in 1996 by the Southern Publishing Group. Overbey's company still produces Christian products including a childrens' video entitled A Street Called Straight, posters and prints. Overbey is now living in Michigan USA.


Jim PhillipsPhillips, Jim
(USA)

Jim Phillips was born in San Jose, California USA on 24 October 1944, but has lived most of his life in Santa Cruz. Phillips' first published work was in Surfer Quarterly, in 1962, and his surf art has appeared in many surfing publications since. In 1965 and '66 he attended California College of Arts and Crafts, in Oakland. Phillips wrote and illustrated the Eternal Truth comic (sometimes called the "Hitchhiker" comic, because it features an 18-page story by that name) which was published in 1974 by Sonday Funnies. Cartoonist Rick Griffin helped connect Phillips to the publisher of his comic, which was written for the US "street people" of the 1970s. From 1975-1990, Phillips was art director for Santa Cruz Skateboards. He still maintains a website showcasing his rock posters, surf and skateboard art.


Nestor RedondoRedondo, Nestor
(PHILIPPINES / USA)

Nestor Redondo was born in Candon, Ilocos Sur, Philippines in 1928. He began his long and distinguished career drawing Filipino komiks serials, which were written by his brother Virgilio. His biggest success, at that time, came when he illustrated the popular Darna series in the 1950s. Eventually he became the most highly regarded and respected of all Filipino comics illustrators, not only in his own country but the United States as well. Almost every major, successful Filipino comics artist either apprenticed under him or has credited him as their most important influence. In 1969 and 1970 Redondo did a 4-page serial "Mga Kasaysayang Buhat sa Bibliya" ("Tales from the Bible") in each issue of Superyor Komiks Magasin which was produced by his own company, Nestor Redondo Publications. In the 1970s he began to do work for publishers in the USA, rendering titles such as DC Comics' Tarzan, Swamp Thing, Rima the Jungle Girl, and the Pendulum Illustrated Classics. In Christian comics he is perhaps best remembered as the finishing artist of DC's tabloid-size edition The Bible. However Redondo was not yet a committed Christian when he illustrated it. His studio also produced the art for Marx, Lenin, Mao and Christ, published in 1977 by Open Doors Publishers, for which he supplied a painted wraparound cover. That same year he was commissioned to do a large painting for Far East Broadcasting (FEBC). In 1978 he drew a very reverent Ben Hur comic book published by Pendulum Press. Redondo accepted Christ and was born again in May 1982 through the witness of an American missionary from FEBC. In 1985, he started working for Marvel Comics, illustrating Conan and painting covers. Redondo drew Born Again Comics #2 ("Ang Tunay na Kasaysayan ni Fred Galang") a Christian testimony comic about Filipino actor Fred Galang in 1988. He was an inker on the Christian comic book Aida-Zee in 1990 and The Monster, a comic-style tract lettered by his son Ruel, in 1992. At the end of his career Redondo worked as an animation designer for the Marvel Studios in Los Angeles. He passed away in December 1995, leaving behind his wife and several grown children. His final published Christian comics work appeared in Behold 3-D (1996), shortly after his death. Redondo had been working on a new comic book version of Genesis which was never finished. According to his son Ramil, in 2008 the "leading and biggest Philippine TV network ABS-CBN" began airing a TV series based on the comic character "Palos" created by the Redondos.


Deryl Skelton
Skelton, Deryl
(USA)

Born in 1953, Deryl Skelton grew up in Nebraska USA. He declared his faith in Jesus as the Christ and was baptized at age 12. Starting in 1980 (after Skelton approached them about publishing a Christian time-travel comic he had created) Life Messengers of Seattle, Washington USA hired him to convert a number of their traditional text tracts into small comics. Comic tracts he produced at that time included You Will Be There!, The Goblins Will Get You (If You Don't Watch Out), The Captain, and The Lonely Cabin on the Forty Mile, which became the most popular of these adaptations. Currently Skelton is doing murals, scratchboard and children's book illustration, and work for his local church.


Bill WattersWatters, Bill
(NORTHERN IRELAND / USA)


William Stewart Watters was born on 17 April 1941 in Bushmills, County Antrim, Northern Ireland. At age six he moved with his parents to Queens, New York City, USA. That same year, while in Sunday School, he prayed to receive Jesus Christ as his Lord and Saviour, and steadily grew in faith as he learned to read the Bible and to cultivate a life of prayer. After completing high school in 1959, he enlisted in the U.S. Army and served for two years in Darmstadt, Germany. Afterwards, he studied at the Art Students League and the School of Visual Arts in NYC. In 1967 he joined the New York City Police Department, working street assignments for six years, then switching to the police academy for fourteen years as an artist for posters and procedural brochures. Though his interests were in fine art and classic illustration, Watters had befriended some comic book artists who stirred his curiosity about the form. Enjoying the
"Unshackled!" radio testimonies produced by the Pacific Garden Mission in Chicago, Illinois USA, he approached the ministry about creating comics tracts based on them. In 1989 he adapted and drew "The True Story of Jack Martin," followed by "The True Story of Donna Disser" (1992) and "The True Story of John Sanders" (1993). Failing eyesight curtailed further efforts, and two subsequent "Unshackled!" tracts were drawn by other artists. Watters now lives in retirement in southern Florida.


Kathleen WebbWebb, Kathleen
(USA)

Kathleen Webb was born 6 October 1956 in Puyallup, Washington, USA and was born again at the age of five. She says her greatest artistic influences were Charles Schulz, Dan DeCarlo, Al Hartley, Frank Doyle, Hanna-Barbera studios, Dick Giordano, and husband Bill Webb. She sold her first script to Archie Comics in 1985 and continued as a freelancer for that company until 2010. She also pencilled stories in Barbie for Marvel Comics. In Christian comics, Kathleen wrote and drew the "Holly and the Ivy Halls" strip for Focus on the Family's Brio magazine from 1993 to 2004, has illustrated various Sunday School papers for Gospel Light Publications, pencilled pages for comics such as Aida-Zee and Paro-Dee, scripted and pencilled a Pro-Life tract entitled "The Monster," contributed to the Proverbs & Parables anthology, and wrote the Hits & Misses series. A comic strip of her personal testimony appeared in the #1 issue of Christian Comics & Games Magazine and may be viewed online here on this CCI website. She is active in hosting and teaching English to short-stay Japanese students and has eighteen Japanese "daughters" through this work. She collects manga and anime, and says her greatest desire is to see a line of quality Christian comics specifically geared to female readers. Avid cat lovers, she and husband Bill operate BillyKat Productions.


Ron Wheeler

Wheeler, Ron
(USA)

Born in 3 February 1954, Ron Wheeler says he began drawing cartoons "from the moment I could pick up a pencil." He attended the University of Nebraska where he drew a comic strip called Ralph for the school paper which was his first "hit" in comics. Wheeler graduated with a Bachelor of Science Degree, having majored in Business Admin, and landed a great job in a major corporation. However he was fired from this job eventually, and all his efforts to become a professional cartoonist ended in frustration. One night in 1978, at the end of himself and with no place else to turn, he cried out to God and placed his total trust in Jesus Christ. The very next day he secured his first full-time job as a cartoonist. In 1980 he began his well-known Adventures of Jeremiah series, the same year he started his freelance cartooning career, which continues to this day. His company, CartoonWorks, has done artwork for numerous clients including American Tract Society, Baker Book House, Barbour, Cook Communications, Fellowship of Christian Athletes, Focus on the Family, Tyndale House, and many others. In 1983, a collected edition of Wheeler's Adventures of Jeremiah comics first appeared in a vertical magazine format, published by Beacon Hill Press. This same publisher has gone on to release a series of softcover Jeremiah cartoon books including Love & Dating & Other Natural Disasters (1993), Help! I'm Late for School and I Can't Get Up (1994), I Wouldn't Be Tempted if Temptation Wasn't So Tempting (1995), and Let My Words be Sweet and Tender: 'Cause I May have to Eat Them (1996). Wheeler nows works for The Navigators. He is married to Cindy and has three adult children. He and his wife attend Colonial Presbyterian Church (where Wheeler has served as an Elder and as Deacon) in Kansas City, Missouri USA.


Bob WierdsmaWierdsma, Bob
(NETHERLANDS / CANADA)

Bouwe (Bob) Siebe Wierdsma, also known as "Bowie," was born 15 September 1952 in the Netherlands in the province of Friesland and immigrated to Canada with his parents in April 1955. Bob was a 1972 Honours graduate of the Classical Animation program at Sheridan College near Toronto, Ontario. He has published more than 800 cartoons in various small community newspapers and non-profit periodicals in Canada, the USA, the Netherlands, Denmark, and Finland. Beginning in the Spring of 1984, Bob published Christian Cartoonist and Illustrator, a small press publication that (along with Don Ensign's Valiant) helped bring together Christian comics fans and creators. The first issue contained one of the only interviews with Jack Chick ever recorded. From 1990 to 1999 Bob also published Inspirational Comics, a quarterly small press magazine that showcased Christian artists and offered comics reviews and articles.


Chris YambarYambar, Chris
(USA)

Christopher David Yambar was born on 4 July 1961 in Youngstown, Ohio USA. In 1978 a friend gave Chris Yambar a Bible, and he decided to read it cover to cover. It was then that he discovered the Absolute Truth of the Gospels and gave his life over to God. In 1980, Yambar took a position in an inner-city rehabilitation center where he acted as fellowship leader and Program and Outreach Director. During this time Chris began publishing Manna Underground Press (which later changed its name to The Activist - Radical Truth Through Art, Music, and Social Commentary). The Activist had a readership in 18 countries. In 1984 he produced the Rebel Graphics comic, and in 1988-89 he published Safe Comix. Later, in 1994, he produced Substance Quarterly, a "sci-fi/adventure/hero" anthology comic. Yambar has also co-created several character properties such as "Mr. Beat" and "Bambeano Boy." He has worked as a professional comics writer on various mainstream comics titles (for Bongo, Disney, and others) and as a "pop art" painter. In spite of his several secular successes, Yambar points to his relationship with Jesus Christ as the most important factor in his life. He has held a pastoral role for 20+ years in several Christian home churches and community study groups and has helped to plant several churches in Ohio USA.


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Win Mumma

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CHRISTIAN COMICS & CARTOONING PIONEERS (Late 1800s -1950s/60s)

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