Michael Fleisher


Michael Lawrence Fleisher was an American writer known for his DC Comics of the 1970s and 1980s, particularly for the characters Spectre and Jonah Hex.

Biography

Early life and career

Fleisher was raised in New York City. His parents divorced when he was four years old, and Fleisher developed the foundation of his later Western writing by spending Saturdays with his visiting father at Western movie double features. "I saw two Westerns every Saturday for years," Fleisher recalled in 2010. "So it wasn't very hard to write at all."
Fleisher wrote three volumes of The Encyclopedia of Comic Books Heroes, doing some research on-site at DC Comics. He started comic book scripting in 1972, co-writing with Lynn Marron the full-issue supernatural story "Death at Castle Dunbar" in DC's Secrets of Sinister House #5. He co-wrote supernatural short stories with Maxene Fabe in DC's House of Mystery, and a solo story in the companion title House of Secrets #111. Collaborating with Russell Carley, who provided art breakdowns for Fleisher's scripts, Fleisher wrote seven stories for those titles and Forbidden Tales of Dark Mansion late in 1973. Fleisher scripted the Steve Ditko–created Shade, the Changing Man series in 1977–1978. Fleisher made several contributions to the Batman mythos in the early 1980s. He reintroduced the Crime Doctor in Detective Comics #494, co-created the Electrocutioner in Batman #331, and wrote the origin of the Penguin in The Best of DC #10.

The Spectre

After becoming, variously, an assistant editor and an associate editor under Joe Orlando on the DC humor series Plop! and the superhero anthology series Adventure Comics, Fleisher, with Carley's script-breakdown assistance, began writing the feature "The Spectre" in the latter title. Beginning with the 12-page "The Wrath of... the Spectre" in issue #431, Fleisher and artist Jim Aparo went on to produce 10 stories of the supernatural avenger through issue #440 that became controversial for what was considered gruesome, albeit bloodless, violence. As comics historian Les Daniels observed, the character, created during the 1940s Golden Age and briefly revived in the late 1960s,

Jonah Hex

Fleisher wrote DC Comics' Jonah Hex character for more than a dozen years, beginning in 1974 in Weird Western Tales, then from 1977 to 1985 in the character's self-titled comic. A sequel series, Hex transported the character into a postapocalyptic setting, making him the lead in a science-fiction feature.

Controversy and later career

Writer Harlan Ellison in a 1979 interview praised Fleisher's comics work, while also describing Fleisher and his work as "crazy", "certifiable", "twisted", "derange-o", "bugfuck", and a "lunatic". He also claimed that a Publishers Weekly review called Fleisher's novel Chasing Hairy "the product of a sick mind", and that Fleisher's Spectre run on Adventure Comics had been discontinued by DC Comics because the company "realized they had turned loose a lunatic on the world." While Ellison stated that some of what he was claiming was said "in some humor", Fleisher, saying his "business reputation has been destroyed" and believing he was falsely portrayed as insane, filed a $2 million libel suit against Ellison, publisher Gary Groth and the magazine in which the interview appeared, The Comics Journal. The case came to court in 1986 and resulted in a verdict for the defendants.
Afterward, Fleisher attended college at Columbia University in New York City, from 1987 to 1991, while also writing for the British comics magazine 2000 AD. Leaving the comics field that year, he moved to Ann Arbor, Michigan for graduate school at the University of Michigan, spending from 1994 to 1996 researching his Ph.D. thesis on commercialized cattle theft in Tanzania while living for two years near Nairobi. He then spent a year in New York writing his dissertation and earned a doctorate in anthropology. After that, he worked as a "freelance anthropological consultant carrying out research assignments for humanitarian organizations in the developing world." Fleisher died from complications of Alzheimer's disease in Beaverton, Oregon on February 2, 2018.

Books

  • The Encyclopedia of Comic Book Heroes Volume One: Batman
  • The Encyclopedia of Comic Book Heroes Volume Two: Wonder Woman
  • The Encyclopedia of Comic Book Heroes Volume Three: Superman
  • Chasing Hairy
  • Kuria Cattle Raiders: Violence and Vigilantism on the Tanzania/Kenya Frontier
  • Shambler: An Insider's Novel of the Comic Book World ,

Comic books

Atlas/Seaboard Comics

  • The Brute #1–2
  • The Grim Ghost #1–2
  • Ironjaw #1–3
  • Morlock 2001 #1–2
  • Weird Suspense featuring The Tarantula #1–2

DC Comics

2000AD

Marvel Comics

Warren Publishing

Collections

  • Wrath of the Spectre collects Adventure Comics #431–440, 200 pages, June 2005,
  • Showcase Presents Jonah Hex Volume 1 includes Weird Western Tales #22–33, 526 pages, November 2005,
  • Essential Spider-Woman
  • * Volume 1 collects Marvel Spotlight #32, Marvel Two-In-One #29–33 and Spider-Woman #1–25, 576 pages, December 2005,
  • * Volume 2 includes Spider-Woman #26–32, 608 pages, July 2007,
  • The Chronicles of Conan
  • * Volume 19: Deathmark and Other Stories collects Conan the Barbarian #150, 200 pages, June 2010,
  • * Volume 20: Night of the Wolf and Other Stories collects Conan the Barbarian #151-159, 200 pages, December 2010,
  • * Volume 21: Blood of the Titan and Other Stories collects Conan the Barbarian #160-162 and 164-167, 200 pages, August 2011,
  • * Volume 22: Reavers in the Borderland and Other Stories collects Conan the Barbarian #168-171 and Annual #9, 232 pages, June 2012,
  • * Volume 28: Blood and Ice and Other Stories collects Conan the Barbarian #223, 224 pages, November 2014,
  • * Volume 29: The Shape in the Shadow and Other Stories collects Conan the Barbarian #225, 224 pages, March 2015,
  • The Steve Ditko Omnibus Volume 1 collects Shade, the Changing Man #1–8 and Cancelled Comic Cavalcade #2, 480 pages, September 2011,
  • The Spectre: The Wrath of the Spectre Omnibus collects Adventure Comics #431-440 and The Brave and the Bold #180, 680 pages, September 2020,