The Complete Peanuts Tome 3 - Album

1955 to 1956

Edition en anglais

Note moyenne 
With THE COMPLETE PEANUTS 1955- 1956, a half a decade into the strip's run, Charles Schulz has definitely hit his stride. It's a period of consolidation,... Lire la suite
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Résumé

With THE COMPLETE PEANUTS 1955- 1956, a half a decade into the strip's run, Charles Schulz has definitely hit his stride. It's a period of consolidation, as no new characters are introduced (and the ephemeral "Charlotte Braun" is given the hook), but the remaining nine — Lucy, Linus, Schroeder, Patty, Violet, Shermy, "Pig-Pen," Snoopy, and Charlie Brown — are settling comfortably into the roles and personalities they will play for years to come.
Linus, security blanket now firmly in hand, learns to talk, and thus no longer has to suffer his sister's abuse in silence. Snoopy takes a major leap into his patented lovable eccentricity, launching a long series of impressions, including his fellow cast members, various animals, and...Mickey Mouse ? "Pig-Pen" develops his philosophy of dirt, Lucy's crush on Schroeder becomes unshakable, and Charlie Brown...well, Charlie Brown suffers his first strike-out, his first kite lost in a tree, and the first football pulled out from under him by Lucy !

Caractéristiques

  • Date de parution
    01/10/2008
  • Editeur
  • ISBN
    978-1-84767-075-5
  • EAN
    9781847670755
  • Format
    Album
  • Présentation
    Relié
  • Nb. de pages
    325 pages
  • Poids
    0.925 Kg
  • Dimensions
    22,0 cm × 17,0 cm × 3,0 cm

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À propos de l'auteur

Biographie de Charles Monroe Schulz

Charles Schulz inaugurated the modern comic strip by creating the first (and still, really only) sympathetic cartoon character, which must be due in part to his work ethic : Schulz probably drew Charlie Brown as many times as he signed his own name. Throughout the course of over 17 000 strips read by hundreds of millions of people Schulz refined, developed, and codified the figures of his imagination to such a degree that they became an extension of himself — a handwriting that literally was Charlie Brown, Linus, Lucy, and Snoopy.
And while a few other artists might claim to work as hard, no other cartoonist ever imbued their characters with so much of his own heart ; Charles Schulz couldn't publicly talk about Charlie Brown in the last year of his life without crying. Maybe the only person who cared more about Charlie Brown than the rest of the world was Charles Schulz himself." Chris Ware.

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