| 1. Krazy and Ignatz 1916-1918 (Krazy & Ignatz) | |
By: George Herriman Publisher: Fantagraphics Books February 14, 2010
More Comics By: George Herriman
|  Details »
|
| 2. Krazy And Ignatz 1919-1921: A Kind, Benevolent And Amiable Brick (Krazy & Ignatz) | |
By: George Herriman By: George Herriman Publisher: Fantagraphics Books August 24, 2010
More Comics By: George Herriman
|  Details »
|
| 3. Krazy & Ignatz In Tiger Tea | |
By: George Herriman Publisher: Idea & Design Works Llc August 24, 2010
More Comics By: George Herriman
|  Details »
|
| 4. Krazy & Ignatz 1925-1926: "There is a Heppy Land Furfur A-waay" (Krazy Kat) | 
|
By: George Herriman Publisher: Fantagraphics Books 2002-04
Herriman finds his metier. Krazy waxes eloquent. Ignatz waxes his brick. Offica Pup keeps the peace... more
More Comics By: George Herriman
|  Details »
|
| 5. Krazy & Ignatz 1935-1936: "A Wild Warmth of Chromatic Gravy" (Krazy Kat) | 
|
By: George Herriman, Bill Blackbeard, Chris Ware Publisher: Fantagraphics Books October 31, 2005
Krazy and Ignatz are unique in the history of the comics and highlight the Golden Age when "Little Nemo," "Maggie and Jiggs," and "The Yellow Kid" were right up there with this strip, George Harriman's salute to wit, whimsy, and the English language. Did I mention Jewish and Italian dialects from New York City? Anyhow, language and imagination all worked together in a desert landscape with Turner skies... more
More Comics By: George Herriman, Bill Blackbeard, Chris Ware
|  Details »
|
| 6. Krazy & Ignatz 1937-1938: Shifting Sands Dusts Its Cheeks in Powdered Beauty (Krazy Kat) | 
|
By: George Herriman Publisher: Fantagraphics Books May 31, 2006
Over the recent years, I have become a fan of "old-time" comic strips, those that were published in the first half of the 1900s. In that era, the newspaper comics were a far different medium than nowadays. While I am sure there are plenty of forgotten, forgettable strips from that era, on the whole, the comics were treated as a respectable part of the newspaper and in an age when cities often had... more
More Comics By: George Herriman
|  Details »
|
| 7. Krazy and Ignatz, 1943-1944: "He Nods in Quiescent Siesta" (Krazy Kat) | 
|
By: George Herriman Publisher: Fantagraphics Books October 08, 2008
With this volume, Herriman's great comic-strip opus (the full-page version of it, anyway) grinds to a somewhat weary, but nonetheless ingenious-to-the-end, halt. Herriman died of a liver ailment in April 1944, and the final full-page strip (the original of which I've seen in Geppi's Entertainment Museum in Baltimore) appeared on June 25 of that same year. As Bill Blackbeard points out in a brief foreword... more
More Comics By: George Herriman
|  Details »
|
| 8. Peregrinating the Highway of Dreams: the kompleat public domain Krazy Kat sunday strips 1916 - 1922 | 
|
By: George Herriman Publisher: lulu.com August 27, 2009
A nice, big collection of Herriman's earliest (and in my opinion, best) Krazy Kat Sunday strips. It's nice to have all these strips together in one place. My congratulations to the self-publisher who put the book together (it is also available as a download from [...]). However, the book looks like it's been scanned. Lines and blacks which should be dark and strong are reproduced often as a series... more
More Comics By: George Herriman
|  Details »
|
| 9. Krazy & Ignatz 1927-1928: "Love Letters in Ancient Brick" (Krazy Kat) | 
|
By: George Herriman, Chris Ware, Bill Blackbeard Publisher: Fantagraphics Books 2002-12
The best thing ever to hit the eyes is the Krazy Kat entourage a la George Herriman. With the most surrealistic spelling and the most endearing characters in a love triangle (Krazy, Ignatz, and Offisa Pupp), one can find relief from the drabness and the pressures of life. (Was that a brick that just went by?)... more
More Comics By: George Herriman, Chris Ware, Bill Blackbeard
|  Details »
|
| 10. Krazy & Ignatz 1939-1940: "A Brick Stuffed with Moom-bins" (Krazy and Ignatz) | 
|
By: George Herriman Publisher: Fantagraphics Books February 20, 2002
As with others in this series, the text is good. Nice stories, but comics aren't very readable when reduced to maybe 25% of their original size. Better that than nothing, but not much... more
More Comics By: George Herriman
|  Details »
|