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Graphic Novels
Dick Tracy: Volume 1
Dick Tracy: Volume 2
Dick Tracy: Volume 3
Dream of the Rarebit Fiend
Flash Gordon: Volume 1
Flash Gordon: Volume 2
Flash Gordon: Volume 3
Flash Gordon: Volume 4
Flash Gordon: Volume 5
Flash Gordon: Volume 6
Flash Gordon: Volume 7
McCay: Editorial Works
McCay: Editorial Works
McCay: Editorial Works
McCay: Editorial Works
Sigil Vol. 5
McCay: Editorial Works
McCay: Editorial Works
Sojourn 6
Steve Canyon: 1947
Steve Canyon: 1948
Steve Canyon: 1949
Steve Canyon: 1950
Steve Canyon: 1951
Steve Canyon: 1952
Steve Canyon: 1953
The Path Vol. 3
McCay: Editorial Works
Winsor McCay: Volume I
Winsor McCay: Volume II
Winsor McCay: Volume III
Winsor McCay: Volume IV
Winsor McCay: Volume V
Winsor McCay: Volume VI
Winsor McCay: Volume VII
Winsor McCay: Volume VIII

EDITORIAL REVIEWS


"Publishers Weekly"

McCay, one of early newspaper comics' major figures, delighted in seeing how a sequence of graphic images could lead readers to imagine reality transformed. The form best suited to that experiment, McCay found, was the dream, as in his famed "Little Nemo in Slumberland," that filled a page with glorious hijinks before returning to the waking world in the last panel. In the first section of this collection, "Dreams of the Rarebit Fiend" (19041914), people who have eaten rich foods have nightmares (e.g., a woman dreams her alligator skin purse becomes a real alligator that grows large enough to swallow her whole, then wakes up vowing never to overindulge again). The book also includes "Little Sammy Sneeze" (1903), whose eponymous protagonist always does his thing at the most inopportune moments; and "A Pilgrim's Progress" (19051910), a modern, secular version of Bunyan's tract, in which the melancholy traveler tries hopelessly to ditch his enormous valise. Readers may be uneasy with the racial and ethnic stereotypes innocently employed here (and rather strangely spotlighted on the cover), and they'll surely feel baffled when they encounter forgotten events, customs and slang (reading such old works requires as much mental gear-shifting as picking up a Japanese manga). However, McCay's art nouveau draftsmanship is superb, and it's fascinating to watch him experiment with the comics medium, as when Little Sammy's sneeze shatters the strip itself, leaving him staring at the reader out of a heap of panel surface and pieces of the border. Even in these early, relatively minor works, McCay's genius amazes and delights.

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"Rain Taxi Review of Books"

“Popular art in the USA owes a lot to Winsor McCay – Maurice Sendak once compared him to Lewis Carroll and Buster Keaton in the same sentence – so it is fitting to see his early cartoon work so assiduously collected.”

Stepan Chapman


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