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The great comic book heroes 1965
The great comic book heroes 1965









the great comic book heroes 1965

"The Funny Papers" by the Editors of Fortune MagazineĪ very early profile of the marketing value of comic strips and their characters. I think they're important because of the financial and graphic arts realms they're geared to, and indicate that perhaps comics were not as overlooked a craft back then as I had always thought.

the great comic book heroes 1965

Right: "The Comics" 1949īut I've got three tasty magazine articles to add to this list of profiles that are not often mentioned when discussing comic strip and comic book history. Right: "The Great Comic Book Heroes" 1965

the great comic book heroes 1965

Left: "The Funnies: An American Idiom" 1963. We'd have to wait until the early-mid 1960s (probably starting with White & Abel's "The Funnies: An American Idiom" in 1963) to see any influx of titles. The first book of ANY kind I ever specifically asked for was "The Great Comic Book Heroes" by Jules Feiffer (1965) and I still covet my original copy! Through the years I've added whatever I could find about comics to my library, but it seems that other than a few published works like "Comics and Their Creators" by Martin Sheridan (1942), "The Comics" by Coulton Waugh (1949), and the infamous "critique" of comic books, "Seduction of the Innocent" by Fredric Wertham (1954), there were very few mainstream works published that were exclusively dedicated to the comics industry. Having been a big fan of comic books since I was a little kid, any books written about them and the industry itself has always grabbed my attention.











The great comic book heroes 1965