
Barnaby Volume Five
Description
Volume Five collects the final two-plus years of the strip, including the rarely-if-ever-seen conclusion of the strip, as five-year-old Barnaby Baxter says goodbye to his Fairy Godfather, Mr. O'Malley. Unlike most comic strips, Barnaby ended its ten-year run with an emotionally satisfying ending that broke the hearts of fans when first published in newspapers. The magic of Barnaby resides in its canny mix of fantasy and satire, amplified by the understated elegance of Crockett Johnson's clean, spare art.
Barnaby expanded our sense of what comics can do through its combination of Johnson's sly wit and O'Malley's amiable windbaggery, illustrating a child's feeling of wonder and an adult's wariness, highly literate jokes and a keen eye for the ridiculous. This volume also features essays by comics historian Susan Kirtley and Johnson biographer Philip Nel, as well as an introduction by filmmaker Ron Howard, whose acting career was launched in 1959 at the age of five, when he was cast as Barnaby in a 1959 adaptation for General Electric Theater, hosted by Ronald Reagan. The book includes rarely-seen stills from the 1959 production -- which also featured Wizard of Oz alum Bert Lahr as Mr. O'Malley!
Product Details
Publisher | Fantagraphics Books |
Publish Date | March 11, 2025 |
Pages | 388 |
Language | English |
Type | |
EAN/UPC | 9798875000461 |
Dimensions | 10.7 X 6.5 X 1.4 inches | 2.7 pounds |
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Reviews
[Barnaby] radiates human warmth and whimsy . . . [T]he artist's brilliantly written characters . . . keep their feet planted in the all-too-real world of 1940s America while flying off on pink wings into one of the greatest fantasy strips ever made.--Art Spiegelman
Highly verbal and quietly unexpected, the strip is a clear antecedent of the sort of comic situations experienced by Calvin and Hobbes -- and the visuals predict Johnson's own Harold with his purple crayon. Cleverly absurd.-- "School Library Journal"
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