Billy's Boots

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 Billy Dane feels the power of his magic boots
Billy Dane feels the power of his magic boots

Billy's Boots was a popular British comic strip by writer Fred Baker and artist John Gillatt, later continued by Mike Western. The comic appeared for the first time in the first issue of Scorcher in 1970, and later moved to Tiger when the two comics merged in 1974. In 1985 Tiger in turn merged with Eagle and the strip moved again, however just a year later Billy's adventures relocated once more, this time to Roy of the Rovers, with reprints running in the latter for a number of years until its demise in 1993. The strip also appeared in a number of annuals, including annuals for comics which had themselves ceased publication, and is still fondly remembered by fans of the "golden age" of British boys' comics. [1]

Contents

[edit] Story overview

The moment when Billy found the boots, from the first issue of Scorcher in 1970
The moment when Billy found the boots, from the first issue of Scorcher in 1970

The series concerned Billy Dane, a school-aged aspiring footballer, who was an extremely poor player until he found a pair of old football boots while cleaning his grandmother's loft. The boots, which his grandfather had bought as a souvenir, had once belonged to the famous striker "Dead Shot" Keen. In a manner which was never explained, the boots apparently possess special abilities which turn Billy into a fantastic football player. In addition to giving him the physical skill to score great goals, the boots also grant him the intuition to always be in the right place at the time on the pitch, leading him to feel that they have a "mind of their own".

However, while the strip never bothered to dwell on the perhaps dubious morality of Billy's using the boots (some might argue that their use constituted cheating), there was frequent rumination on whether or not the boots were, in fact, magical - or if they simply gave Billy a psychological boost that allowed him to play to his full potential. He was, however, never seen to play well when he did not have the boots on. Occasionally the boots would "refuse" to work, leaving Billy to try and figure out how to "fix" the problem. In addition, despite the boots' obvious importance, he would lose or have them stolen with alarming regularity.

During the strip's run in Eagle, the football element of the story was downplayed somewhat, focusing instead on Billy's exploits whilst on the run from a council home where he had been placed when his grandmother (with whom he lived) had been taken ill. There would often be no football action for several weeks at a time, which was odd given that the central premise of the strip was football-based. When the strip moved to Roy of the Rovers, football once again became the central element in the strip.

By happy coincidence, Keen was apparently also a skilled cricketer, and in one strip Billy also discovered a pair of his old cricket boots, which had similar effects on his performance on the cricket field during the summer months (when there was no football to depict in the strip).

[edit] Translations

Billy Dane is called

Dead Shot Keen is called

[edit] References

  1. ^ Honeyball, Lee (2003-11-30). The 10 best comic book footballers. Retrieved on 2007-01-19.

[edit] Sources

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