Imagen del autor

Al Capp (1909–1979)

Autor de The Short Life and Happy Times of the Shmoo

81+ Obras 1,109 Miembros 38 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

Incluye los nombres: Capp Al, Al Capp Studios

Créditos de la imagen: http://www.s9.com/Biography/Capp-Al

Series

Obras de Al Capp

The best of Li'l Abner (1978) 44 copias
The World of Li'l Abner (1953) 25 copias
Fearless Fosdick (1990) 23 copias
Al Capp's Bald Iggle (1956) 4 copias
Li'l Abner in New York (1936) 2 copias
Li'l Abner, 1939-1940 (1983) 2 copias
Return of the Shmoo (1959) 2 copias
Il Mago - Dicembre 1979 - n.67 — Artista de Cubierta — 1 copia
Li'l Abner 1 copia
i'l abnerl 1 copia

Obras relacionadas

Back to B.C. (1961) — Prólogo, algunas ediciones; Prólogo, algunas ediciones141 copias
On the Firing Line: The Public Life of Our Public Figures (1989) — Contribuidor — 112 copias
The Tom Lehrer Song Book (1954) — Introducción — 34 copias
Li'l Abner [1959 film] (1959) — Original story — 33 copias
Li'l Abner [1940 film] (1940) — Original story — 16 copias
Li'l Abner: Original 1956 Broadway Cast Recording (1956) — Original story — 12 copias
Steve Canyon Magazine No. 7 (1984) — Contribuidor — 8 copias
Steve Canyon Magazine No. 2 (1983) — Contribuidor — 7 copias
Li'l Abner: Original 1959 Motion Picture Soundtrack (1959) — Original story — 6 copias
Steve Canyon No. 17 (1986) — Contribuidor — 6 copias
The Fireside Treasury of Modern Humor (1963) — Contribuidor — 5 copias
Satellite Science Fiction August 1957 (1957) — Contribuidor — 3 copias
Barbarella speciale — Autor — 2 copias
Comics 8 — Contribuidor — 1 copia
Linus (1967) Luglio — Autor — 1 copia
Linus (1970) n.10 — Autor — 1 copia
Linus (1969) n.4 — Autor — 1 copia
Il grande Alter - Hamburger — Autor — 1 copia

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Miembros

Reseñas

With a bizarre introduction by [[Harlan Ellison]], this has the 1948 and 1959 Shmoo infestations of the U.S. of A. I was reminded of both what I like and what I didn't like about L'il Abner. And an interesting reminder that while we were in them, they weren't "the good old days." If you don't know shmoos, you should read this.
½
 
Denunciada
quondame | Jan 12, 2022 |
Weird that Al Capp chose these as his best. Very few of the strips feature Li'l Abner in any meaningful role, and the storylines often have gaps of missing strips. I'm confident there are better compilations out there.
 
Denunciada
James_Maxey | 2 reseñas más. | Jun 29, 2020 |
Lil Abner is likely the quintessential American art. These IDW collections are thorough, though the panels are definitely too small.
 
Denunciada
Adammmmm | Sep 10, 2019 |
Wouldn't Al Capp have had fun in today's world? Of course, in today's world, newspapers and thus the comic strips found in newspapers have shrinking importance, so we should be glad Capp lived when he did (1909-1979). Still, it is interesting to wonder what he would have made of the soap opera that the national political scene has become.

Capp had a knack for making sharp political commentary while seemingly drawing his Li'l Abner comic strip about absurd happenings in a never-never land called Dogwatch. In “The Best of Li'l Abner,” a 1978 collection I just read again, we find tales about a girl called Boyless Bailey who because of a curse may remain boyless even with the Sadie Hawkins Day race approaching, another girl whose lips can fry a boy's brains and a plague of turnip termites that could bring starvation to Dogwatch. Yet Capp always managed to insert just enough mid-20th-century reality into these outlandish stories to make them read like current events.

"A satirist has only one gift," Capp wrote in an introduction, "he sees where the fraud and fakery are. I turned around and let the other side have it." For Capp, the "other side" often actually was the other side, not the conservatives who were usually the ones targeted by satirists but those on the left. This was especially true during the turbulent Sixties when he again and again targeted campus radicals and those college administrators who seemed willing to let them get away with anything.

Much of Capp's humor had to do with playing with names, which may seem like junior high school except that he did it so well. In this book we find a body builder named Stanley Strongnose, a plastic surgeon named Rex Moosehead, a Liberace-like pianist named Loverboynik, a long-haired singer named Hawg McCall, a cartoon busybody named Mary Worm, a chubby movie star named Anita Eatburg, a pork-and-bean executive named J. Roaringham Fatback, an Indian princess named Minihahaskirt, an advice columnist named Hazel Homewrecker (actually a bigamist named B. Fowler McNest), a wild boar named Porknoy (who naturally has a complaint) and a TV talk show host named Tommy Wholesome.

Richard Nixon, Nelson Rockefeller, Barry Goldwater, Lyndon Johnson and other political figures of the day made cameo appearances in the comic. It was all great fun.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
hardlyhardy | 2 reseñas más. | Oct 9, 2018 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
81
También por
19
Miembros
1,109
Popularidad
#23,170
Valoración
4.0
Reseñas
38
ISBNs
89
Idiomas
6

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