FRITZ THE CAT
Fritz the Cat is a comic strip created by Robert Crumb. Set in a “supercity” of anthropomorphic animals, it focused on Fritz, a tabby cat who frequently went on wild adventures that sometimes involved sexual escapades.
DC’s G.I.COMBAT
We want to post DC’s “G.I. COMBAT” featuring the Haunted Tank w/ J.E.B. Stuart and Sgt. Rock, but the numbers are pretty daunting. After Karloff is done we plan on putting up the ’60s issues as a start.
note: in response to some requests:
One thing we will never have is Marvel, which is shite from beginning to end of its history.
However a precursor to Marvel, Atlas, has some good stuff we might bring out in time.
We’re posting stuff on a “how much do we personally like it” basis, and trying to do requests that include stuff we have on hand or can reasonably acquire.
Kjartan Arnórsson, better known as Karno, is a furry artist and comic writer from Iceland, who lives in Tucson, Arizona, USA. Karno has been involved in the furry fandom since the late 1980s, (more…)
Added 6 classic single issue r. crumb comics to the 2 issues of BIGASS, including some of his most ‘misogynistic.
dirty laundry #01
Cartoonists Co-Op/Last Gasp (Summer 1974)
Dirty Laundry Comics #1 was published by Keith Green and Cartoonists Co-op Press in the summer of 1974. It features a single, rambling story that mixes insights on their relationship with a spaceship fantasy featuring LSD guru Timothy Leary (a huge fan of underground comics). (more…)
The Print Mint, Inc. was a major publisher and distributor of underground comix based in the San Francisco Bay Area during the genre’s late 1960s-early 1970s heyday. (more…)
Robert Crumb had already produced or contributed to a multitude of comics in 1968 and early ’69, including three issues of Zap Comix and the smut digests Snatch and Jiz, not to mention all the stuff he did for tabloids (like Yarrowstalks and the East Village Other) and magazines like Help! and Cavalier. While underground comics had brought Crumb considerable social and financial status, he also endured quite a bit of criticism for his chauvinism and outright hostility towards women. After the hyper-smut content of the Snatch and Jiz comics, Crumb said that he hoped the raw porn in those books had broken all the sexual taboos and would subsequently allow cartoonists to move on to something else. In the spring of 1969 Crumb produced Motor City Comics #1, which introduced one of his most earnest feminist characters, Lenore Goldberg. The Goldberg character still perpetuated some aspects of Crumb’s sexism, but she was his strongest female figure up to that time.
R. Crumb delivers what he’s famous for, big asses.
Timeless tales of daring combat and deeds of honor set throughout world history! This archive collects the EC series Valor from the heroic and legendary artistic talents of Carl Wessler, Bernie Krigstein, Graham Ingels, Wally Wood, Al Williamson, Joe Orlando, Reed Crandall, and George Evans. 1999 reprint ncluded the complete run of Valor (issues #1-#5) in full color. o Includes a foreword from P. Craig Russell! (more…)
Impact
EC Comics (1950-55)
Impact was a short-lived comic book series published by EC Comics in 1955 as the first title in its New Direction line. (more…)
Piracy
EC Comics (1950-55)
Piracy is an EC Comics title published in the early 1950s. The bi-monthly comic book, published by Bill Gaines and edited by Al Feldstein, began with an issue cover-dated October–November, 1954. It ran for seven issues, ending with the October–November, 1955 issue. Front covers were by Wally Wood, Reed Crandall, Bernard Krigstein and George Evans. The stories of adventure on the high seas were illustrated by Wood, Crandall, Krigstein, Jack Davis, Al Williamson, Graham Ingels and Angelo Torres. (more…)
Smile
Kitchen Sink (1970-1972)
SHERMAN : There was a period where there seemed to be a series of syndicated strips that got reprinted in Smile magazine.
KITCHEN: Yeah. For a while we were syndicating strips to alternative newspapers and college papers…
SHERMAN: It sounds like the Rip Off Syndicated pages. (more…)