NERO WOLFE Comic Strip - Weeks 3 & 4 (1956)
If you missed the first two weeks, they're HERE. Continued next Saturday.Â
View ArticleELMO: An American Experiment by Cecil Jensen (and Frank M. Young)
Ready to get your CRAZY on? Welcome to the wacky world of Elmo.Comic strip historian Frank M. Young has painstakingly restored this short-lived and long-forgotten strip, sharing the madness with...
View ArticleTHE LITTLE BIG HORN Rides Again (1949)
Sure to fire the ire of those two crusty Owlhoots Calamitous Cap'n Bob and Buffalo Goble, here's another pop culture rendition of what went down on the Greasy Grass back in 1876. Blame this one Western...
View ArticleSTRAIGHT AS AN ARROW!
We celebrated a little cowboy history a few weeks back. Now, ripped from the pages of Black Diamond Western, here's equal time for fans of Mr. Lo.
View ArticleForgotten Books: THE BIGGER THEY COME by A.A. Fair (You-Know-Who) (1939)
A review of a later book in this series by Dale Goble (who writes way more entertaining reviews than me) reminded me I'd never met Donald Lam and Bertha Cool. As you may know, I am not averse to the...
View ArticleCrime Does NOT Pay for LUCKY LUCIANO (1943)
Here's a cautionary tale from the Grandaddy of all Crime comics. This one's from issue 26 (actually the 5th issue), dated May 1943, and uploaded to comicbookplus by "movielover." Pay close attention!...
View ArticleLawrence Welk plays the last of his TV WESTERN THEME SONGS (1958)
Here you go - the last four tracks of this classic LP. Bust out the champagne and cock an ear, buckaroos.
View ArticleRidin' with HOPALONG CASSIDY (1950)
This strip ran in the black and white pages of the Sunday San Francisco Examiner for eight months before moving into the color comic section in January 1951. Was it designed that way? Did it run like...
View ArticleNERO WOLFE Comic Strip - Weeks 7 & 8 (1957)
Weeks 1 & 2 are HERE.Weeks 3 & 4 HERE.Weeks 5 & 6 HERE. Continued next Saturday . . .Â
View ArticleDAVY CROCKETT: "Ringtalied Roarer of the Wilderness" (1951)
Another adventure ripped from the pages of history, as seen in the 1951 Avon one-shot Davy Crockett. Thanks to fan777 for shooting it to comicbookplus.
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