Comic Book Bin 
 
 Comics
 Comic Reviews
 Manga Reviews
 Comic News
 Spotlight
 Phil's Bubble
 European Comics
 Canuck
 Black Astronaut
 Comics 101
 Web Comics
 Comic Strips (38)
 
 Action Figures
 
 Video Games
 
 Fan Films
 
 Movies
 
 Books
 
 Interviews
 
 About
 Classifieds
 Newsletter
 RSS

Comics : Comic Strips
Last Updated: Aug 21, 2008 - 3:13:23 PM




HANK KETCHAM'S The Complete Dennis the Menace: 1951-52
By Leroy Douresseaux
Sep 11, 2005 - 7:13:00 PM

Fantagraphics Books
Email this article
 Printer friendly page

Add to Del.icio.us     Add To Reddit
Add To Digg     Add To Stumbleupon
Add To Technorati Favorites     Add To Ask


dennis.jpg

HANK KETCHAM’S COMPLETE DENNIS THE MENACE: 1951-1952 (Volume 1)

FANTAGRAPHICS BOOKS
CARTOONIST: Hank Ketcham
ISBN: 1-56097-680-2; hardcover
624 pp., B&W, $24.95
5.5” x 6.25,” Humor/COMIC STRIPS

Fantagraphics Books, which over its history has made a great name for itself with the complete reprinting of several classic newspaper comic strips in books collections, has a hit with The Complete Peanuts. That series is meant to be much more friendly to the general book trade and bookstore market than any of Fantagraphics numerous other strip reprint series (such as Little Orphan Annie and Little Nemo in Slumberland). Their second attempt to really penetrate bookstores with comic strip reprints is HANK KETCHAM’S COMPLETE DENNIS THE MENACE.

The first volume reprints Ketcham’s single panel strip from its humble beginnings on March 14, 1951 to the December 31, 1952. If quality alone is enough to make The Complete Dennis a hit, then, Fantagraphics will be overwhelmed with good sales. First, the company known for its often-exquisite production values and always-sturdy hard cover books does not disappoint. This is printed in Korea, and goes a long way to discourage the idea that Korea manufactures junk (hee-hee).

In the first two years of the strip, Dennis Mitchell is a menace, but is not quite the iconic character that we know from numerous merchandising, although he’s wearing his trademark overalls. Ketcham’s art is sleek and manic, but his line work manages to be both economical and lavish; if such a thing is possible, Ketcham achieved it. It becomes evident through reading the strip that Ketcham was an uncanny master of facial expressions, body language, and the movement of bodies in clothes. He has the facility of an old master, but the good sense to apply it to the practical needs of a daily comic strip.

Still, the man was not just a great cartoonist; he was also a great illustrator and artist, and it may take this series to spread that truth beyond the number of fellow cartoonists and comic book artists who study the him in order to improve themselves. I found myself repeatedly looking over each brilliant rendered panel contained within this beautiful little book. In each drawing, every line and every brush strokes means something. It’s not just the written gag that sells the strip, but also a subtle pen stoke that suggests a facial expression or quiet change in emotion. Ketcham reportedly composed each single daily panel as if it were a painting, and that shows. Such dedication to craft and audience deserves our attention.


Related Articles:
Hank Ketcham's Complete Dennis the Menace: 1955-1956
Hank Ketcham's Complete Dennis the Menace: 1953-1954
HANK KETCHAM'S The Complete Dennis the Menace: 1951-52
ANNOUNCING HANK KETCHAM’S COMPLETE DENNIS THE MENACE!



Comment Script Join the discussion:

Add a Comment

Comments


© Copyright 2002-2008, Coolstreak Cartoons Inc. - All rights Reserved. All other texts, images, characters and trademarks are copyright their respective owners. Use of material in this document(including reproduction, modification, distribution, electronic transmission or republication) without prior written permission is strictly prohibited.

Top of Page

Search

The Modern American Comic Strip Today
American comic strips in the 21st Century - challenges and successes
Postage Stamp Funnies: Dirty Cartoons XXX
Dirty cartoons and x-rated funnies for adults only
Corey Barba's YAM: Bite-Size Chunks
Bite-size fun to read.
The Pin-Up Art of Dan DeCarlo 2
The second volume of Dan DeCarlo pin-up cartoons is also a winner.
Growing Old with B.C.: A Fifty Year Celebration
Look up “fun∙ny, adv.” in Wiley’s Dictionary, and you’ll find a drawing of Johnny Hart
The Complete Peanuts 1955 to 1956 (Book 3)
Linus speaks and Lucy begins to terrorize Charlie Brown with a football.
The Complete Peanuts 1953 to 1954 (Book 2)
Pig-Pen debuts and Lucy was almost a Tiger Woods in Book 2 of definitive reprint series.
The Spirit: The Origin Years
In the early 90's, a company called Kitchen Sink Press published a ten-issue series called The Spirit: The Origin Years
The Complete Peanuts 1965 to 1966 (Book 8)
Enter Peppermint Patty and Snoopy begins his long war with the Red Baron.
Hank Ketcham's Complete Dennis the Menace: 1955-1956
A perfect world - safe for a little boy's exploits and exploration.
Hank Ketcham's Complete Dennis the Menace: 1953-1954
A menace worth keeping close to the heart.
The Complete Peanuts 1963 to 1964 (Book 7)
Charlie Brown goes on the injured list and his baseball team finally starts winning.
The Hot Rock Glide
Hot Rock Glide (HRG) reprints an episode from 1938-1939 that introduced several of Jack’s most important characters
Even White Boys Get The Blues
The South has risen again, ya'll, in one of those rare anomalies, a comic strip that is actually funny
Popeye Volume One: "I Yam What I Yam"
Debuting in fine comic book shops (and book stores) tomorrow, Dec. 20, 2006, is a wonderful new hard back collection of Popeye comic strips.