This was almost painful to even cut the first two pages out of. It's so dynamic, and every panel tells part of the story. (65 pages)
Scaredy Dervish runs away, directly into a cop, who he calls a Blue Slave. Cop promptly arrests Dervish.
This is the part where I started to go, "Huh. Amazingly, I think they've got Islam reasonably right here, these are phrases a Muslim might actually say, not comic-opera style stuff...
... seriously, what, people of a different from normal faith being treated with respect?
Okay, well, this is the Golden Age. But still, look at the faces.
Prayer is better than sleep... As-salatu khayrun min an-nawm. Hey, it's the Dawn Prayer.
I was so tempted to delete these panels for space, but the art here, just look at the structure and flow.
Heck, look at the unconventional use of panel space. That's odd for this era.
A not so comic misunderstanding. I've seen this trope before, but it's usually applied to, say, the hero overhearing something and confusion ensues. A third party? Getting complex.
You know, is it me, or does the writing actually degrade during the fight scenes?
Awww. It's National Brotherhood Week.
Seriously, what a kick-ass story. You can see how I had problems trying to figure out what to cut.