FEAST YOUR EYES :: COMIC STRIP COLLECTIONS

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Is Peanuts the greatest comic strip of all time? It is hard to say for certain since there have been so many classics that have run throughout our lifetimes and and the lifetimes of our parents (and grandparents) before us. Calvin and Hobbes, Pogo, Popeye and Wash Tubbs/Captain Easy immediately come to mind. They are all masterpieces of the comic strip form–timeless, inspiring and entertaining…but do any of these (along with dozens I neglected to mention) have the true emotional pull and the personal connection we have all felt at one time with Charles Schulz masterpiece featuring Charlie Brown and the gang? Is there any visual ICON from the past 50 years more universally familiar than Snoopy?

Just a reminder that the next Heroes Discussion Group will take place on Saturday September 1st at 1:00pm. We will be discussing the Pulitzer Prize winning graphic novel MAUS by art spiegelman.
A few quick thoughts upon a second reading.
A couple of things I’d like to discuss with the group:
The use of the multiple narrators. Is this the story of a survivor or the story of someone growing up with a survivor? Is this truly a biography? I don’t believe this is picking nits–we are affected by the way the story is told to us. This is a topic that needs to be examined.
AND


ANDY’S PICK :: CAPTAIN EASY HC VOL 03 SOLDIER OF FORTUNE: This is the third of a projected 4 Volume Set that collects all the Classic Captain Easy Sunday pages from the 30s and 40s; written and drawn by Roy Crane–one of the true masters and innovators of the comic form. Few artists had the artistic and storytelling chops to take maximum advantage of the full size Sunday comic page and even fewer artists could successfully combine realistic backgrounds with big foot cartoony figures to make some of the most exciting adventure comics of all time. The stories leap off every page, the chases last for weeks on end, the punches lift the fighters right off the floor, and the reader never wants the action to end and it never does because every week is a cliff hanger. Sure, there are a lot of classic reprints available, but the Captain Easy Sundays is in the small handful of required reading. No collection of Comic Art (with a capital ‘A’) is complete without it.




ANDY’S PICK :: ESSENTIAL WARLOCK VOLUME 1: Now available in one inexpensive edition– one of the greatest extended comic book stories of the 1970s. It’s Jim Starlin’s triumphant run as the writer/artist for Adam Warlock from Strange Tales, Warlock and two of the most famous annuals in the history of Marveldom: Avengers Annual #7 (Nov. 1977) and Marvel Two-in-One Annual #2. The original issues cost a ton; the hard cover Marvel Masterworks cost a ton. This complete run along with 15 additional issues in beautiful black and white costs only 19.95. You owe it to yourself to read this book!


Important disclaimer: I am not an employee of IDW Publishing and I am not paid for my contributions to Heroesonline. So, bottom line: there is no bottom line, I do not get any money from extra copies of The Score that are sold thanks to a rave review. Here is another Bottom Line: If you are a fan of Crime Drama or Crime Fiction or Film Noir you must read Darwyn Cooke’s adaptations of Richard Stark’s Parker novels. The first two, The Hunter and The Outfit were outstanding, I didn’t think they could get any better, and boy oh boy, am I excited to tell you that I could not have been more wrong!
