in house dollar bill thumbnail
In-House Image
 Total: 42,778 books
 New: 212 books




Index Card
« prev

Animal Comics 11

next »
Title
Animal Comics
Date | Number: 11 | Lang: English (en)
Uploaded  by OtherEric
Filesize 16.87mb consisting of 52 pages | Format: EBook
File nameAnimal_Comics_011.cbz
Downloads
161 and 11899 views
    To download files please Log in or Register
Rating
 6.5/10 (2 votes)
CommentsYou must be logged on to make a comment!
NotesThere is more information about this book at the bottom of the page
Large Thumbnail For Animal Comics 11
You are WELCOME to enjoy our site & read ALL our books online. But to download & join our forum please create a FREE account or login
Prev  (13 of 33) Next
Comic Book Cover For Animal Comics 11
Prev
Animal Comics 11 (13 of 33)
Next
Comic Book Plus In-House Image
Additional Information
 
PublicationOctober-November 1944 | Price: 0.10 USD | Pages: 1 | Frequency: Bi-Monthly
 
ContentGenre: Anthropomorphic-funny Animals | Characters: Uncle Wiggily; Albert the Alligator
 
Text StoryRunaway Reddy (1 page)
SynopsisA wayward chick provokes a grasshopper, gets lost in the tall grass, is alone and afraid, and cries out. Mama comes and saves him. He expresses heartfelt contrition and repentance.
CreditsScript: Gaylord Du Bois | Pencils: Walt Kelly | Inks: Walt Kelly
ContentGenre: Animal; Children | Characters: Reddy (the baby chick); Mrs. Mama Hen; Grasshopper
NotesOn inside front back cover in black, white and red. Writer credit per Du Bois Account Books. Du Bois, a fundamentalist lay preacher, tells here a most basic animal fable of a child seized by fear that, sans sermon or evangelism, manages to echo both Jesus's parable of the prodigal son who returns to the fold contrite and repentant, and Jesus's likening himself to a mother hen who longs to gather her chicks under her wing.
 
Comic StoryUncle Wiggily's Adventure-filled Day (12 pages)
SynopsisWiggily saves Prickly from a bear-trap. Prickly saves him from Growler's stew-pot. They dine on Wiggily's cherry pie at toadstool table. A quill-prick prompts stalk-growth, lifting Wiggily aloft to feed pie to crying Baby Birdies. Prickly exits, toadstool-stalk recedes, stranding Wiggily aloft. Mrs Bird returns from grocer's, tows Wiggily off in her balloon-risen basket, joined by Buggsey. Bad Foxes hurl rocks. Sending Mrs Bird away to safety, Wiggily and Buggsey return fire with cherry pies. How now to land? A pin-prick by Buggsey, the balloon deflates, landing Wiggily right back home.
ContentGenre: Anthropomorphic-funny Animals | Characters: Uncle Wiggily Longears; Nurse Jane Fuzzy Wuzzy; Prickly Porcupine; Growler Bear; Baby Birdies 1&2; Mrs. Mama Bird; Buggsey Bug; Two Bad Foxes
NotesCopyright 1944 Howard R. Garis. Gaylord Du Bois writer credit per Gaylord Du Bois, page 4, Gaylord Du Bois's Account Books Sorted by Title compiled from the original account books by Randall W. Scott (Michigan State University Libraries 1985) 203 leaves ; 28 cm. -- Photocopy of computer printout. -- Call no.: PN6727.D77 A2S35 1985, which states: "Uncle Wiggly. 12p. For Animal Comics #12. Paid Jan. 21, 1944." Hubbell R. McBride art credit per Michael Barrier, page 71, "Funnybooks" (UCPress 2015), which states, "The 'Uncle Wiggly' stories were drawn by Hubbell R. McBride, who was, like his Western colleagues Arthur Jameson and George Kerr, a veteran illustrator---in McBride's case, of Liberty magazine's covers." The narrative sequences: Begin / Episode / Interlude / Episode / Interlude / Episode / End. Du Bois themes are: Friendship (making friends by being a friend through doing acts of mercy or charity); and Brains Over Brawn (overcome threats and obstacles by using wits and getting help from friends, and Providence). Each episode follows a single pattern. • 1) Wiggily does an act of mercy, or, charity. • 2) A predicament grows from that act. • 3) The friend made by the act of kindness helps deliver Wiggily from the predicament.
 
SynopsisBertha become the world's heavyweight wrestling champ.
ContentGenre: Anthropomorphic-funny Animals | Characters: Hector the Henpecked Rooster; Mrs. Bertha Henpeck; Herman
NotesCopr. 1944 by Famous Studios.
 
CreditsScript: Walt Kelly | Pencils: Walt Kelly | Inks: Walt Kelly
ContentGenre: Anthropomorphic-funny Animals | Characters: Albert; Pogo; Bumbazine; Mr. Bug; Mr. Fox
 
ContentGenre: Anthropomorphic-funny Animals | Characters: Cilly Goose; Dickie Goose
NotesCopr. 1944 by Famous Studios.
 
SynopsisThe Wolf tries to eat Blackie and his brothers while they are swimming at the beach.
ContentGenre: Anthropomorphic-funny Animals | Characters: Blackie; The Wolf; Mayor Scallop
NotesCopr. 1944 by Famous Studios.
 
Comic StoryA Cure for Foolishness (6 pages)
SynopsisEddie rebels against nature, wants hair like a lion, not bald as an elephant. Dr Stork humors him, applying seeded moss, and water it. Eddie loves his grassy head. Forest animals flee in terror. Maisie munches his mane. Mom is pleased.
ContentGenre: Anthropomorphic-funny Animals | Characters: Eddie Elephant [E.E.]; Little Brown Bear [L.B.]; Maisie Moocow [M.M.]; Mrs. Elephant; Dr. Stork; talking squirrels (and other forest creatures: deer, owl, cardinal, frog, sparrows, rabbit)
NotesCopr. 1944 by Johnny Gruelle Co. Writer credit per Du Bois Account Books. Written as 8p. The number of panels per page (7,8) suggests the cut to 6p. was accomplished without panel loss.
 
Text StoryThe Winning Bounce (1 page)
SynopsisGary is the faster runner, but Bouncer jumps on his back and stays there, tells himself he's just learned that being the fastest thinker is best.
CreditsScript: Gaylord Du Bois | Pencils: Walt Kelly | Inks: Walt Kelly | Letters: typeset
ContentGenre: Animal | Characters: Bouncer Bunny; Gary Greyhound
NotesOn inside back cover in black, white and red. Writer credit per Du Bois Account Books.
 
ContentGenre: Anthropomorphic-funny Animals
NotesBack cover.
 
The data in the additional content section is courtesy of the Grand Comics Database under a Creative Commons Attribution License. More details about this comic may be available in their page here
Comic Book Plus In-House Image
Mission and Disclaimer: The mission of Comic Book Plus is to present completely free of charge, and to the widest possible audience, popular cultural works of the past. These records are offered as a contribution to education and lifelong learning. They are historical documents reflecting the attitudes, perspectives, and beliefs of different times. We at Comic Book Plus do not endorse the views expressed in these, which may contain content offensive to modern users.

We aim to house only content in the Public Domain. If you suspect that any of our material may be infringing copyright, then please use our contact page to let us know. So we can investigate further.