Star Hawks

Star Hawks is a comic strip written through April 1979 by Ron Goulart, followed by Archie Goodwin, Roger McKenzie and Roger Stern. Comics veteran Gil Kane provided the artwork, with uncredited help from Ernie Colón and Howard Chaykin. It began on October 3, 1977 and ran through May 2, 1981.

Kane received the National Cartoonist Society Story Comic Strip Award for 1977 for his work on the strip.

Besides scripting the strip Goulart wrote two Star Hawk prose novels: Empire 99 and The Cyborg King.

Publication history
In 1978, shortly after the launch of the strip, Kane recalled its genesis: "I got a call from Ron Goulart, who told me he'd been having some talks with Flash Fairfield, who is the art editor of the comics at [the newspaper syndicate] NEA, and they wanted to see me about going to work on that strip. I met with them at that time. Ron had done about two weeks of material, but it was very far from where we went with it. So we reworked the material, and I'm very strong ... on romance and lyricism, and I started to advance the cause of that kind of material and make it less satirical and more of a classic[-style] adventure strip. [For the hero,] originally I had James Coburn in mind. ... The hero's friend, Chavez, was modeled after a bald-headed Victor McLaglen."

Format
The daily strip was unique in that initially it was two-tier: Each daily was twice as large as the normal daily strip. This format allowed artist Kane great flexibility in layout. However it greatly hampered efforts to sign on papers to carry the strip. It changed to a single tier as of July 30, 1979.

The strip ran daily and Sunday for three and a half years, for a total of 1,252 strips.

Reprints
The strip from the start was run in the Menomonee Falls Gazette. Ace/Tempo published two paperback black and white reprint volumes. Blackthorne Publishing produced four issues in comic book format of black and white reprints. Early issues of Amazing Heroes carried reprints of the strip. In 2004 Hermes Press released the entire run of the strip in a single volume, which has been criticized for poor reproduction of the artwork.