Earl H. Norem[1] (April 17, 1923 – June 19, 2015), who signed his work simply Norem, was an American artist primarily known for his painted covers for men's-adventure magazines published by Martin Goodman's Magazine Management Company and for Goodman's line of black-and-white comics magazines affiliated with his Marvel Comics division. Over his long career, Norem also illustrated covers for novels and gaming books, as well as movie posters, baseball programs, and trading cards.
Early life
Norem was born on April 17, 1923.[1][2] He saw military action in World War II with the 85th Regiment of the 10th Mountain Division. He trained in Colorado and Texas, and fought the Germans in the Northern Apennine Mountains of Italy. By age 20, Norem was a squad leader and staff sergeant who in the Italian Campaign fought alongside famed skier Torger Tokle, whom he had seen ski jumping at Bear Mountain, New York, when Norem was 12. After Tokle was killed in action on March 3, 1945, Norem was one of the men assigned to retrieve his body from the mountain. Norem himself later was wounded going into the Po Valley, ending his military stint.[1][3]
Upon returning to the US, Norem embarked on an illustration career.
Norem throughout the 1950s and 1960s worked extensively for men's adventure magazines, producing covers and interior-art spreads. In addition, he produced illustrations for such magazines such as Reader's Digest, Field and Stream, Ski, Real West, and Discover.
His Transformers work consisted of four Marvel Big Looker storybooks (published 1984–1986), some of which were later adapted into "read along" storybooks: Battle for Cybertron, The Great Car Rally, Car Show Blow Up, and The Story of Wheelie, The Wild Boy of Quintesson
Norem also provided art for several scary stories featured in Scholastic's Thrills & Chills magazine for young readers, which ran from 1994 to 1996.
In 2013, he had contributed paintings to the company's "Mars Attacks: Invasion" card set.[4] At the time of his death, he was working on a trading card assignment for Topps' Mars Attacks franchise,[5] presumably the "Mars Attacks" Occupation" set being produced in 2015.[6]
Norem favored painting in acrylics.[1] Suffering from arthritis, he had retired as of 2005, only painting for his own amusement and for his grandchildren. He said in a 2005 interview, "All the contacts that I had in the commercial art field are either retired or dead, and the younger art buyers don't want anything to do with an 81-year-old artist."[1]
According to posts on Facebook accounts attributed to Norem family-members, the artist died in Danbury, Connecticut[7] on June 19, 2015, shortly after undergoing surgery. His family announced the news on Norem's Facebook fan page.[5][8]
^ ab"Hello everyone, ... I am Earl Norem's Grandson". Michael Andre Cappiello on Facebook. June 20, 2015. Retrieved June 21, 2015. Friday, June 19th my grandfather passed away, he was 92 years old. Pop was currently working on a trading card job for Mars Attacks.