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OtherEric

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Posts posted by OtherEric

  1. And #4

     

    [Bugs_Bunny_Halloween_4a_zpskih9tea2.jpg

     

    Bugs_Bunny_Halloween_4b_zpsvaaxa2jl.jpg

     

    It's not like any of the Bugs Bunny Dell Giants are particularly hard to find, but I would say the Halloween issues are a bit scarcer than the others. I wonder if they had a shorter shelf life before being pushed out by the Christmas Giants?

     

    Probably with Thanksgiving hot on the heels of this holiday and kids still in school,it doesn't seem like the timing would be as good as the Christmas and summer vacation Giants. I don't recall the Disney gang doing Halloween specials although Huey Dewey and Louie did Back to School Giants (small consolation when that when came out!) it seems like the Western gang had a pretty consistent strategy in the fifties. I wonder why Bugs got Halloween?

    Maybe because the Looney Tunes were more 'wascally' than the Disney gang Dell thought Halloween was a better fit? Or maybe Disney opposed?

     

    Really not sure. Instead of a 5th Halloween issue, they did the County Fair giant instead; which they got on sale a bit earlier than the Halloween issues. I'm guessing they wanted to at least try a Halloween Giant, and they had more obvious candidates for Disney giants, so they went with Bugs, who had somewhat less obvious excuses for giants.

     

    Sigh. I wonder which box has my handful of Disney Giants right now...

  2. Any boardies plan on attending Pulp AdventureCon this Saturday in Bordentown, NJ? I've gone the last couple of years and found some really great books there. This year I've decided to set up a table, so I'll be bringing lots of cool pulps for sale. If you go, stop by and say Hi!

     

    Pulp AdventureCon

     

    Sadly, I'm off on the other side of the country. I did see some nice pulps at Jet City Comic Show in Tacoma, WA last year; and that's where I'll be this Saturday. Good luck at the show!

  3. I said I would post these a few days ago, then never got around to it. Still, I figure I'm in time for the holiday:

     

    #1

     

    Bugs_Bunny_Halloween_1a_zpszlxmzwfc.jpg

     

    Bugs_Bunny_Halloween_1b_zpsqxe7c4y5.jpg

    And there's Daffy (on the back cover!!). He got no love on the group books back then. Nice of you to post the back covers along with the fronts :applause:

     

    Daffy was bizarrely underused in the Looney Tunes books other than his own title, for some reason. And happy to post both sides. Now if I can just track down the 3 Bugs giants where I've got the **** ad version instead of the good one...

  4. And #4

     

    [Bugs_Bunny_Halloween_4a_zpskih9tea2.jpg

     

    Bugs_Bunny_Halloween_4b_zpsvaaxa2jl.jpg

     

    It's not like any of the Bugs Bunny Dell Giants are particularly hard to find, but I would say the Halloween issues are a bit scarcer than the others. I wonder if they had a shorter shelf life before being pushed out by the Christmas Giants?

  5. After this I looked at a Silly Symphony. Oddly you never came across these in the flea market scrounges. I'm not sure why; maybe they didn't sell too well.

     

    I should dig up the one Silly Symphony giant I have, I want to say I paid $5 for it a decade or so ago.

     

    At a flea market. :cool:

  6. Mad paperbacks though seem to be even tougher to find than Madmagazines in identical condition. Of course a lot of the Mad paperbacks were bought by kids as well, and paperbacks stand up to reading even worse than magazines,

     

    I wouldn't know, other than the comic issues of MAD I tend to just pick up the paperbacks or magazines at random when I spot them cheap. I would agree that the Mad paperbacks tend to be a bit scarcer than I would expect given how common they were back in the 70's and early 80's.

     

    What about the men's sweat magazines from the fifties and sixties though? They're not at all common.

     

    (shrug)

     

    A field almost totally outside my range of expertise, I'm afraid. Other than a copy of the Feb. 1961 issue of Bluebook for Men, which I grabbed for the John D. MacDonald story, I don't have any that even remotely qualify. Even that issue is a borderline case.

     

  7. It's quite simply because the comics were the kid stuff. Kids didn't buy pulps and paperbacks. Therefore it's the comics that elicit warm feelings of nostalgia decades down the road. Ergo it's the comics that have become the sought after collectibles.

     

    :)

     

    I also suspect the survival ratio of paperbacks is 10-100x the survival rate of comics, because as you say adults bought them. (Although I'm sure kids also bought pulps and paperbacks, they were not the primary market for them.) So, even if they were viewed as more disposable than, say, hardbacks, they were much less likely to be abused or casually dumped. If I wanted a copy of Ace Double D-15 in a hurry, I could get one today for under $500; and it's a strong candidate for the most desirable Paperback out there.

     

    Pulps, I think, are soft in the marketplace right now because a lot of collections are turning up as the collectors pass away. I've seen more pulps the past decade than I ever did the 20 years previously. Pulps also seem to have survived the paper drives far better than comics; just based on what I see show up it seems people started seriously collecting them in the late 30's- early 40's, and issues from that time forward are fairly easy to locate for the most part. (As always, there are notable exceptions.)

  8. The first issue of Pogo's own title comes next. (I would rank the Albert & Pogo Four Color higher, but this is the wrong thread for it:)

     

    Pogo_01_zpsdmod596d.jpg

     

    The amazing, all-Kelly Fairy Tale Parade is next to the top of the list:

     

    FTP_1.jpg

     

    But the top spot has to go to Pogo Possum's first appearance anywhere:

     

    Animal_01_zpspjhd3t3q.jpg

     

    Are there any other Kelly first issues for Dell (not counting Four Colors or just covers) I'm missing on the list? Adventures of Peter Wheat wouldn't count, since it was produced for Western but not actually for Dell. And anybody want to argue the order?

  9. So, here's one of the 3 Animal Comics without Kelly art- and one of the nicest GA books I own:

     

    Animal_04_zpsee37c216.jpg

     

    Mmmmmm. Love me some Walt Kelly too though!

     

    10-06-201245036PM.jpg

     

    :)

     

    OK, we've clearly decided we're all going to go ahead and post Kelly books here despite having the other thread. I'm good with that, as I'm a crazy huge Kelly fan.

     

    So, what order would the other Kelly fans prioritize the first issues Kelly did for Dell? (Skipping the Four Color issues for this thread, of course.)

     

    I'm also not even counting the Pogo Parade Giant, since that's all reprints.

     

    Raggedy Ann and Andy is easily the low book on the list, for me. Still nice. And it gets trickier fast.

     

    Raggedy_Anne_and_Andy_01_zpsbsffo2hk.jpg

     

    Our Gang would be next. I know, I really need to upgrade even by my standards, but I got a lot of 1-5 for $40, and it will do until the right copy of OG 1 shows.

     

    OG_01_zpsff519960.jpg