The full title of the book is ''Harvey Kurtzman's Jungle Book: Or, Up from the Apes! (and Right Back Down)—In Which Are Described in Words and Pictures Businessmen, Private Eyes, Cowboys, and Other Heros All Exhibiting the Progress of Man from the Darkness of the Cave into the Light of Civilization by Means of Television, Wide Screen Movies, the Stone Axe, and Other Useful Arts
. At 140 pages, Jungle Book'' is Kurtzman's longest solo work. Freed from the length constraints of magazine pieces, Kurtzman was able to make inventive use of page and panel rhythms. According to critic and publisher
Kim Thompson, his satire never had "more pitiless a bite" at any other time in his career. Kurtzman had aimed his
Mad stories at an adolescent audience; his targeting
Jungle Book at an adult audience was uncommon in American comics. Four stories make up the book:
"Thelonius Violence, Like Private Eye" Thelonius Violence speaks in jazz slang while surrounded by beautiful women and jazz background music, which was a parody of the jazz-choreographed fight scenes in the
Peter Gunn television series. Violence's job is to protect a young, vapid woman named Lolita Nabokov who is being blackmailed over her
exam cheating. Violence suffers the onslaughts of a thug who attempts to keep him away from the young woman, but in the end it is revealed that the thug and Violence are partners in her extortion. In his parody, Kurtzman retained little from the original
Peter Gunn aside from the main character. Kurtzman stated he "was trying to get ... that
Henry Mancini feel to the story". "Thelonius Violence" appears first in the book, but was one of the last stories to be completed. It remained a favorite of Kurtzman's, as he "had
control of this story. The action and line are good. It took time and practice and effort to get it, but it's there."
"The Organization Man in the Gray Flannel Executive Suit" Goodman Beaver is an editor hired by Schlock Publications Inc. During his time there, he loses his youthful idealism and succumbs to the corruption he finds in the publishing world. Goodman finds himself sexually harassing the secretaries, just as the other cynical executives at Schlock do, and ends up stealing from the company. Goodman Beaver was a stand-in for Kurtzman himself in this semi-autobiographical tale. At this point in his career, Kurtzman had had several negative experiences with publishers, and he used this story to satirize the corrupting influence of capitalism and power. Kurtzman's memories of his time at
Timely Comics were a strong influence on the Schlock Publications he portrayed; Timely publisher
Martin Goodman was Kurtzman's model for the publisher in the story. Kurtzman also used
Burt Lancaster as his model for the editor of the men's magazine in the story, and
Hugh Hefner was his model for the editor of the "girlie" magazine. As Goodman Beaver did in the story, early in his career Kurtzman worked making crossword puzzles for Goodman. The title is an amalgamation of three bestselling 1950s novels:
Executive Suite (1952) by
Cameron Hawley,
The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit (1955) by
Sloan Wilson, and
The Organization Man (1956) by
William H. Whyte.
"Compulsion on the Range" "Compulsion on the Range" is a satire that blends
Westerns and
Freudian pop psychology. In the 1950s, a trend of "adult" Westerns appeared in which characters were given psychological backgrounds to explain their motivations, as in
The Left Handed Gun, in which an angst-ridden
Billy the Kid gets his revenge after losing his father figure. In "Compulsion", a psychologist tries to work out why Marshall Matt Dolin (a parody of
James Arness as
Marshal Matt Dillon from the popular
Gunsmoke TV show) insists on trying to outshoot Johnny Ringding, chasing him across the West. "Compulsion" was the third story in the book, but the first to be drawn, and was Kurtzman's least favorite, as he thought he had yet to perfect the style he had developed for the book. The story recycled ideas from a Kurtzman strip called "Endings to End the Fast Draw" that
TV Guide had rejected in 1958.
"Decadence Degenerated" in the way Kurtzman experimented with formalities such as the portrayal of motion One of Kurtzman's favorites, "Decadence Degenerated" is set in a town in the
Deep South called Rottenville, where nothing happens until local beauty Honey Lou is found murdered. A quiet
bookworm named Mednick is
lynched for the murder because, as one of the yokels declares, "You
cain not truss a man who
reads!" The town sheriff overlooks the lynching, despite the presence of a "Northern" reporter—actually from the northern part of the state. At the time the story appeared, Hollywood was releasing adaptations of works set in the South by writers such as
Tennessee Williams and
William Faulkner. Kurtzman said his inspiration came from his memories of
Paris, Texas, where he was stationed during
World War II. He learned the
Southern drawl used in the story from what he heard at
United Service Organizations (USO) dances. He recalled, "I just wanted a parody of that town. I worked from memory." The scene in which the unemployed townsmen mentally undress Honey Lou affected
Art Spiegelman, who saw the possibilities of the comics medium in the formalities of the scene's portrayal of motion. ==Style and themes==