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2011 Eisner Award Nominee: Best Penciller/Inker or Penciller/Inker Team — Stephen DeStefano
Listed as a favorite comic of 2010 by Jamie S. Rich in a survey of comics creators at Robot 6
“I was fifteen in 1942, and I was five foot three, which is the tallest I ever
was. I had jet black hair and a smile as big as day.”
Readers and moviegoers have read and seen many growing-up-in-the-bigcity-
then-being-drafted-into-World-War-II tales, both real and fictional, but
none with the visual pizzazz and feisty humor of Lucky in Love.
Co-created by George L. Chieffet (script) and veteran cartoonist and animator
Stephen DeStefano (plot and art), Lucky in Love is almost the flipside to
dramatic works on the same theme such as Alan’s War and You’ll Never Know. Elegantly drawn in a supremely confident,
lively, cartoony black-and-white style that recalls Milt Gross as well as classic Disney animation and comics, Lucky in Love is a unique coming-of-age story that follows its lovable eponymous hero Lucky Testatuda from his rascally teen
years in Hoboken, New Jersey’s Little Italy to his induction into the air force and subsequent wartime experiences.
Lucky in Love shows what happens when a feisty young man merges his erotic fantasies with 1940s film myths:
Moving from the ’40s to present day (from which an aged, present-day Lucky looks back on his life), the book contrasts
Lucky’s vivid fantasy life with the darker reality of World War II (including a masterful set-piece sequence that echoes
Harvey Kurtzman’s classic EC war comics) as well as his first fumbling, cash-on-the-barrelhead sexual experiences. Ultimately
the poignant discoveries Lucky makes on his way to adulthood bestow upon him a very different kind of heroism
than that of which he had dreamed...
The second and concluding volume, Lucky in Love: Lucky for Life will be released in 2013.
“We’re all lucky when Stephen DeStefano draws comics. With scriptwriter George Chieffet, he’s produced his
sharpest, most poignant work. DeStefano’s agile cartooning evokes the seeming simplicity of an earlier time, yet
Lucky reads like the story that was really going on behind the heroism and glamour of the ‘golden age’ strips.”
— David Mazzucchelli
Animated Teaser Trailer by Stephen DeStefano, Miguel Martinez-Joffre & Carly Monardo:
"DeStefano works in a sort of big-shoed, jaunty cartoon classicism that merrily channels Milt
Gross here and Popeye there... Teetering perilously close to becoming a no-good lush by the end, Lucky is
nevertheless an endearing and petty hero, full of swagger and stumble but with one hell of a glint in his
eye."
— Ian Chipman, Booklist