Gerry Finley-Day
Gerry Finley-Day (born 1947, Broughty Ferry, Dundee) is a Scottish comics writer, prolific from the 1960s to the 1980s, best known as the creator of "Rogue Trooper".
He began his career at D.C. Thomson & Co., before becoming the editor of IPC Media's girls' title Tammy in 1971, for which he wrote strips such as "Ella on Easy Street" and "The Camp on Candy Island". Tammy's stories were full of cruelty and adversity, based on research showing that girls wanted stories that made them cry.
Finley-Day rose to become deputy managing editor of IPC's girls' comics department, but quit to become a freelance writer. In 1974 he was drafted in by Pat Mills to help develop characters for Battle Picture Weekly, launched the following year, for which he wrote "Rat Pack", "The Sarge", "The Bootneck Boy", "D-Day Dawson", "Return of the Eagle", "Sergeant Without Stripes", "Cold Steele", "Skreamer of the Stukas", "Glory Rider", "Cooley's Gun", "Action Force", and many others. He had a penchant for creating honourable German heroes, including "Fighter from the Sky", "Panzer G-Man", "Commando King", "Sea Wolf", and perhaps the best known, "Hellman of Hammer Force", which started out in Action and transferred to Battle after Action was merged into it. Other strips he wrote for Action include "Green's Grudge War" and "Dredger".