Paul S. Newman was born on April 29, 1924, and spent more than five decades as one of the most productive writers in American comics history, until his death on May 30, 1999. His output was so staggering that the Guinness Book of World Records recognized him as the most prolific comic-book writer ever, with over 4,100 published stories amounting to roughly 36,000 pages across a career stretching from the 1940s through the 1990s.
Newman worked across a remarkably broad range of genres and titles. He contributed extensively to Dell's catch-all anthology Four Color, and built long runs on westerns such as The Lone Ranger and Gunsmoke, alongside war title Combat and the curiosity-driven Ripley's Believe It or Not!. His most sustained and celebrated assignment, however, was Turok, Son of Stone, the adventure series following a Native American hunter stranded in a hidden valley of dinosaurs, which Newman scripted for an unbroken stretch of 26 years.
That kind of longevity on a single title points to his particular strength: a steady, dependable storytelling craft that kept readers engaged across hundreds of issues without the benefit of a single high-profile artistic collaborator or a defining stylistic revolution. Newman's legacy rests squarely on sheer consistency and volume — a quiet but genuinely remarkable achievement in the history of the American comic book.