Alley Oop has kind of a cult following, with people who are forever seeking a strip here and a strip there to collect. I wish I had more, but at least I do have a few to share. This post starts a partial sequence of 18 strips, starting in the middle of a storyline, missing some here and there, and stopping abruptly. But that doesn't matter to cult followers, and hopefully not to the rest of you either.
I only have time to scan, clean up and post one strip every few days, but maybe that will keep some of you coming back again. And the rest of you . . . well, try to enjoy them anyway.
These strips are dedicated to our friend charlie, who is krazy about komic strips!
I'm calling this arc Princess of Gonwanda Land.
7 comments:
Hi Thom,
Thanks. Seeing this reminds me of reading the Sunday comics, when the newsprint was big, and the ink was messy; also, perfect for silly putty!
I saw Charlie's comments over at Whirled, but still have the problem with posting there. Cancer sucks. My thoughts and good wishes go out to you, Charlie.
Thom, while I don't have any original Alley Oops from the newspapers, I do have some issues of the Funnies from 1936-1938 with reprints that I could rescan and send the Alley Oop pages from if you're looking for some more material. It at least has the virtue of being very, very early reprints!
Eric—
I think that would be great! Thanks!
You all have been so great with your comments & sharing beautiful pages--this illness caught me by surprise as my PSA was just over 1---but I am bouncing back--I am just shy of 91 & doing pretty good--charlie
I'm so glad to hear you're bouncing, charlie. Keep it up!
These late V. T. Hamlin Sundays are lovely! At this time, Hamlin was the last practitioner of old-school graphic wonder in the Sunday comics. All the other old masters had long surrendered to the lifeless grid.
I wish someone would do a book of the ALLEY OOP Sundays of the '50s and '60s. They are a hidden treasure of American newspaper comics.
Thanks for these many fine postings.
Thanks Frank. You bring up a point that I'm going to bring up along the way as well, regarding Hamlin (and Walt Kelly), being the last of the old-school.
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