I wasn't sure if I should comment on the 2 American titles as I didn't want to offend Robb.
Christmas Carol is excellent and, once again I really enjoyed this version. Beautifully drawn.
But the other 2? Either it's my lack of a sense of humour or there is something awful with these books.
For once I girded my loins and made a major attempt to read them. I got half way through Santa's Christmas before I gave up the will to live.
The Walt Kelly book is nice to look at in places but I've never got why he's so popular.
Sorry.
No offence taken. The Walt Kelly work is good quality artwork, and a mixture of centuries old nursery rhymes, and Kelly trying to mimic that style of writing, whether prose or poetry. It was always for little children, and dissidents poking fun at the royal personages they did not like, and the notorious nobility they despised, hidden in the guise of children's fare.
The Standard Comics' so-called Christmas annual is full of nonsensical stories, "written" without thought in a half hour or less, just to make money as quickly as possible, sold to a publisher who thought the kids wouldn't know the difference, and artwork done very quickly, by both high-quality and mediocre artists, who were just drawing for quick money and didn't care about the quality of their work.
I just threw the Standard so-called "Annual" in because it was based on a request for special Christmas books, and I wanted to represent the Funny Animal genre, and it was a quite rare type of issue for that genre being PD now, and also not being just a collection of reprint stories by that publisher, with a Christmas-themed cover slapped on. The big, animation studio/multi-media partnerships like Warner Brothers/Schlesinger, MGM/Hanna-Barbera, Walter Lantz/Universal, and Disney/RKO had the animated films' recognition levels to have a significantly larger magnitude of difference to be able to afford to have their own large staffs of comic book artists, generally at higher pay than those of the small, independent comic book companies, and more importantly, their production franchises or in-house editorship departments did not need to scrimp on costs of operations as much as the tiny comic book publishers. So they could afford to have larger editorial staffs and higher standards of product acceptance from their production staffs, whether from in house departments or the largest subcontracting franchises like Western Publishing. So, companies like Ned Pines' Nedor and Standard Comics didn't bother to spend extra money creating special annual giant comics editions. Almost all their few funny animal giant books were not tied to holidays or special themes, and simply regularly cranked-out short stories slapped together in books of a much greater size, with a special new cover. This particular 1952 book was an attempt by Standard, to cash in on Disney's and Warner Brothers' recent (1950 and 1951) success at selling record-breaking numbers of giant Christmas-themed comic books for the first time. As a few of you noted, Robert Farrell's "Billy Bunny's Christmas Frolics", from 1952, was another, concoction of non-Christmas stories (all reprints), with a Christmas-themed cover slapped on. At least, Ziff-Davis' "Santa Claus Parade" and "Christmas Carnival" in 1951 and 1952, also attempting to jump on Disney's bandwagon, contained Christmas-based stories, specially produced for their books.
I included this mainly for its historical interest for that genre. It had some stories drawn by superior artists like Lynn Karp and Jack Bradbury, but their artwork in this book is mediocre, at best. Their work for Ben Sangor's Studio from 1941-1948 was top notch, and much more realistic, and they had teamed with the highest quality funny animal story writers. In late 1948, Ben Sangor stopped producing for outside publishers, cut down his staff, as several of them started working directly for DC's Funny Animal Department, on the titles for whom they worked for Sangor, and the remainder worked directly for Sangor's Creston/AGC Titles (Giggle, Ha Ha, Funny Films) or directly for his nephew, Ned Pines' titles (Coo Coo, Goofy, Barnyard, Happy, Dizzy Duck, SuperMouse, Buster Bunny, Sniffy The Pup, and Spunky).
The quality of their artwork dropped precipitously once they were working directly for Pines.
Unfortunately, there were really no non-Western Publishing-produced special Christmas Funny Animal issues that were very memorable, that are currently PD. But, I wanted to represent them, nevertheless. I suppose that at least some of you enjoy looking at the Walt Kelly book.