The pin-ups that won the war How Alberto Vargas maintained troop morale Alberto Vargas took over Esquire magazine's monthly pin-up post in late 1940. By 1942, when the U.S. joined the war, he had more than a million ardent enlisted fans who carried his pin-ups in backpacks and duffel bags as reminders of the American girls they'd left behind. When Esquire was charged with obscenity over a particularly spicy pin-up in 1943 the military stepped in to fight for The Varga Girl, declaring her necessary to maintain the morale of young fighting men. Today these wartime pin-ups are the most collectible of Vargas's work. Find them all in this pocket-sized delight.
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NOW IN SPECIAL PAPERBACK EDITION REVISED AND ENLARGED! "My photographs? A studied form of eroticism, a stirring desire for sensuality, bordering on licentiousness. My ambition is to make each image...
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