Pogo: The Complete Syndicated Comic Strips

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| schedule = Irregular

| format = Hardcover

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| genre = Humour
Satire
Political commentary
Anthropomorphic animals

| publisher = Fantagraphics Books

| date =

| startmo = December 5,

| startyr = 2011

| endmo = –

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| issues = Eight published of twelve planned

| main_char_team = Pogo Possum, Albert Alligator, Porky Pine, Churchy LaFemme, Beauregard Bugleboy, Miz Hepzibah, Seminole Sam, Howland Owl

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| writers = Walt Kelly

| artists = Walt Kelly

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| editors = Carolyn Kelly, Kim Thompson, Mark Evanier, Eric Reynolds

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Pogo: The Complete Syndicated Comic Strips is a series of books published by Fantagraphics Books collecting the complete run of the Pogo comic strips, a daily and a Sunday strip written and drawn by Walt Kelly, for the first time.{{cite web |url=http://www.comicbookbin.com/fantagraphicsbooks015.html |title=The Complete Pogo Joins Peanuts at Fantagraphics |author=Leroy Douresseaux |publisher=Comic Book Bin |date=February 20, 2007 |accessdate=February 1, 2019}} Debuting in 1948 in the short-lived New York Star newspaper, during the strip's golden days in the mid 1950s it had an estimated readership of 37 million, appearing in 450 newspapers.{{cite web |url=https://daily.jstor.org/the-most-controversial-comic-strip/ |title=The Most Controversial Comic Strip |author=Matthew Wills |publisher=JSTOR Daily |date=September 8, 2018 |accessdate=February 1, 2019}} The first volume of this reprint series was released in December 2011.

History

Up until Fantagraphics began publishing this hardcover collection, the only somewhat complete trade paperback series, released by Simon & Schuster from 1951 to 1973,{{cite journal |url=https://lareviewofbooks.org/article/us-is-doomed-on-walt-kelly-and-mr-fish/ |title=Us Is Doomed: On Walt Kelly and Mr. Fish |author=F. X. Feeney |journal=Los Angeles Review of Books |date=September 17, 2012 |accessdate= April 7, 2019}} had been the most comprehensive collection of the comic strip, "somewhat complete" meaning missing sequences, dropped panels, abridged plot lines and sometimes unsupplemented new drawings.{{cite web |url=http://www.michaelbarrier.com/Commentary/ReprintCollections/ReprintCollections.html |title=Possums and Ducks and Bears, Oh My! |author=Michael Barrier |date=November 27, 2011 |accessdate=February 1, 2019|author-link=Michael Barrier }} Fantagraphics had during the 1990s published an incomplete collection in an eleven-volume softcover series, covering five and a half years of the strip's run.{{cite web |url=http://www.comicsreporter.com/index.php/fantagraphics_announces_complete_pogo_jeff_smith_to_design_series/ |title=Fantagraphics Announces Complete Pogo; Jeff Smith to Design Series |publisher=The Comics Reporter |date=February 15, 2007 |accessdate=February 1, 2019}}

On February 15, 2007, Fantagraphics Books announced that it had obtained the rights to publish a complete edition of Pogo, with a projected 12 volume comprehensive hardcover collection scheduled to be launched in October 2007, with books to be released on a rough annual basis. In May 2007, Gary Groth of Fantagraphics Books reached out to comic collectors of all sorts in order to help Fantagraphics obtain the best source materials possible. In July 2008, one of the series' editors, Eric Reynolds, stated that he and Fantagraphics had been having a hard time securing good enough source material to reproduce the first couple of years of the comic strip.

By January 2011, it had become a running gag in comic circles online for someone to be "still waiting on Pogo". The first volume of the series was sent to the printers in August 2011, and in December, it was finally released. One year later, the second volume followed.{{cite journal |url=https://www.nyjournalofbooks.com/book-review/pogo-bona-fide-balderdash-vol-2-walt-kellys-pogo |title=Pogo: Bona Fide Balderdash (Vol. 2) (Walt Kelly's Pogo) |author=Mark Squirek |journal=New York Journal of Books |accessdate=April 7, 2019}}

Kim Thompson, co-publisher of Fantagraphics, died of lung cancer on June 19, 2013. In the aftermath of his death, Fantagraphics faced economic difficulties due, in part, to a major loss of sales that fiscal year, due to the postponing of 13 upcoming titles which he had been in charge of editing, nearly a third of the company's scheduled total output that year.{{cite magazine |url=https://www.wired.com/2013/11/fantagraphics-kickstarter/ |title=Fans Spend $150K to Help Save a Beloved Indie Comic Publisher |author=Angela Watercutter |magazine=Wired |date=November 13, 2013 |accessdate=February 1, 2019}} To keep the company afloat after all this turmoil, Fantagraphics launched a Kickstarter campaign on November 5, 2013; the goal of raising $150,000 was reached in about a week. However, the publication schedule suffered from Thompson's passing, and the third volume was released in November 2014. It was dedicated to Thompson, "a good friend of Pogo".

On April 9, 2017, Carolyn Kelly, co-editor of the series and daughter of Walt Kelly, died after a long battle against breast cancer and its complications.{{cite web |url=http://www.comicsbeat.com/rip-carolyn-kelly/ |title=RIP: Carolyn Kelly |date=10 April 2017 |publisher=Comics Beat |accessdate=February 1, 2019}} She had been responsible for painting the covers in the beginning of the series (volume 1-4), designing the books, restoring source material where it was needed and supervising the whole reprint project of her father's work. Mark Evanier, another of the series' editors, stated that by the time of her death, the work of their Pogo series had reached the point where no major restoration was required since they had come to the series' middle years, and source material was no longer scarce nor in horrible shape.

Contents

Each volume is approximately 340 pages long and contains two years worth of chronological daily comic strips reproduced in black-and-white (just as the original newspaper printings were), as well as the entire sequence of color Sunday strips originally published during that same period. The daily one-row strips are arranged three per page and separated from the standalone full page Sunday strips.{{cite web |url=https://www.chicagotribune.com/lifestyles/books/ct-prj-0113-pogo-walt-kelly-20130111-story.html |title= Second volume of 'Pogo' shows Walt Kelly's political bite|website=www.chicagotribune.com |access-date=2019-04-07}}{{title missing|date=May 2022}}

The books include extras such as prefaces by Jimmy Breslin{{cite magazine |url=https://www.publishersweekly.com/978-1-56097-869-5 |title=Pogo, Vol. 1 of the Complete Syndicated Comic Strips: 'Through the Wild Blue Wonder' |magazine=Publishers Weekly |date=December 5, 2011 |accessdate=April 7, 2019}} and Stan Freberg,{{cite news |url=https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2012/nov/25/book-review-pogo-the-complete-syndicated-comic-str/ |title=Book Review: 'Pogo: The Complete syndicated Comic Strips, Vols. 1 & 2' |author=Michael Taube |newspaper=The Washington Times |date=November 25, 2012 |accessdate=April 7, 2019}} among others; weekly plot summaries of the strips; indexes for the comic strips; annotations by comics historian R.C. Harvey; samples of Walt Kelly's original art; and a biography of Walt Kelly, written by Steve Thompson.

Volumes and box sets

The volumes are available individually and in slipcase sets of two.

class="wikitable"

|+ style="background-color:#B0C4DE" | Volumes

style="background-color:#D0E4FE" data-sort-type="number" | Volume

! style="background-color:#D0E4FE" | Release date

! style="background-color:#D0E4FE" | Title

! style="background-color:#D0E4FE" | Period

! style="background-color:#D0E4FE" | Foreword by

| style="background-color:#D0E4FE" | Page count

! style="background-color:#D0E4FE" | ISBN

1December 5, 2011Through the Wild Blue Wonder1948–1950Jimmy Breslin320{{ISBNT|978-1-56097-869-5}}
2December 18, 2012Bona Fide Balderdash1951–1952Stan Freberg344{{ISBNT|978-1-60699-584-6}}
3November 11, 2014Evidence to the Contrary1953–1954Mike Peters344{{ISBNT|978-1-60699-694-2}}
4January 30, 2018Under the Bamboozle Bush1955–1956Neil Gaiman344{{ISBNT|978-1-60699-863-2}}
5October 23, 2018Out of This World at Home1957–1958Jake Tapper344{{ISBNT|978-1-68396-133-8}}
6January 14, 2020Clean as a Weasel1959–1960Jim Davis344{{ISBNT|978-1-68396-243-4}}
7November 10, 2020Pockets Full of Pie1961–1962Sergio Aragonés360{{ISBNT|978-1-68396-376-9}}
8December 13, 2022Hijinks from the Horn of Plenty1963–1964Lucy Shelton Caswell344{{ISBNT|978-1-68396-471-1}}
9May 5, 2026A Distant Past Yet to Come1965–1966344{{ISBNT|978-1-68396-965-5}}

=Box sets=

class="wikitable"

|+ style="background-color:#B0C4DE" | Box sets

style="background-color:#D0E4FE" data-sort-type="number" | Volume

! style="background-color:#D0E4FE" | Release date

! style="background-color:#D0E4FE" | Title

! style="background-color:#D0E4FE" | Period

! style="background-color:#D0E4FE" | ISBN

1December 18, 2012Pogo: The Complete Syndicated Comic Strips Vols. 1 & 21948–1952{{ISBNT|978-1-60699-629-4}}
2March 31, 2018Pogo: The Complete Syndicated Comic Strips Vols. 3 & 41953–1956{{ISBNT|978-1-60699-864-9}}
3January 14, 2020Pogo: The Complete Syndicated Comic Strips Vols. 5 & 61957–1960{{ISBNT|978-1-68396-244-1}}
4December 13, 2022Pogo: The Complete Syndicated Comic Strips Vols. 7 & 81961–1964{{ISBNT|978-1-68396-491-9}}

Recognition

  • 2013
  • The second volume of the series won the Eisner Award in the category "Best Archival Collection/Project—Strips".{{cite web |url=http://www.comicsbeat.com/the-2013-eisner-award-winners-are/ |title=The 2013 Eisner Award Winners Are… |author=Steve Morris |publisher=Comics Beat |date=July 20, 2013 |accessdate=February 1, 2019}}
  • It was also nominated for the Harvey Award in the category "Best Domestic Reprint Project".{{cite web |url=https://www.comicsreporter.com/index.php/your_2013_harvey_awards_winners/ |title=Your 2013 Harvey Awards Winners |date=September 7, 2013 |website=comicsreporter.com}}
  • 2015
  • The third volume was nominated for the Eisner Award in the category "Best Archival Collection/Project—Strips".{{cite web |url=https://comicsalliance.com/eisner-winners-2015/ |title=2015 Eisner Award Winners: Was This the Best Ever Year for the Eisners? (Hint: We Won an Award.) |last=Wheeler |first=Andrew |date=July 11, 2015 |website=comicsalliance.com}}
  • 2019
  • The fifth volume was nominated for the Eisner Award in the category "Best Archival Collection/Project—Strips".{{cite web |url=https://www.comic-con.org/awards/2019-will-eisner-comic-industry-award-nominees |title=2019 Will Eisner Comic Industry Award Nominees |publisher=San Diego Comic-Con |accessdate=May 12, 2019}}
  • 2020
  • Volume six was nominated for the Eisner Award in the category "Best Archival Collection/Project—Strips".{{cite web |url=https://www.ign.com/articles/2020-eisner-award-winners-invisible-kingdom-guts-calvin-hobbes |title=2020 Eisner Award Winners Revealed |last=Schedeen |first=Jesse |date=July 25, 2020 |publisher=IGN}}
  • 2021
  • Volume seven was nominated for the Eisner Award in the category "Best Archival Collection/Project—Strips".{{cite web |url=http://www.dailycartoonist.com/index.php/2021/07/23/2021-eisner-award-winners/ |title=2021 Eisner Award Winners |website=www.dailycartoonist.com |date= 24 July 2021|access-date=2021-08-25}}

References

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