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MUTT & JEFF GIANT-SIZE VOLUME THREE BLACK & WHITE EDITION: COLLECTING ISSUES #18-27 RETRO COMIC REPRINTS #434
Barnes and Noble
MUTT & JEFF GIANT-SIZE VOLUME THREE BLACK & WHITE EDITION: COLLECTING ISSUES #18-27 RETRO COMIC REPRINTS #434
Current price: $33.99
Barnes and Noble
MUTT & JEFF GIANT-SIZE VOLUME THREE BLACK & WHITE EDITION: COLLECTING ISSUES #18-27 RETRO COMIC REPRINTS #434
Current price: $33.99
Size: OS
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The first comic strip to use multiple sequential panels in a single feature format six days a week was the
short-lived A PIKER CLERK by Clare Briggs. The second was the wildly popular MUTT & JEFF. MUTT & JEFF
first saw print in the San Francisco Chronicle on November 15, 1907 and continued until June 26, 1983.
During that time the strip was published by various newspaper syndicates starting with King Features
and ending with the Field Newspaper Syndicate.
MUTT & JEFF has been published by various comic book companies including Dell and Harvey, but most
famously by ALL-AMERICAN PUBLICATIONS, now known as D.C. Comics. MUTT & JEFF's historical pedigree
includes the strip being part of what is considered by most comic historians as the first modern comic
book, FAMOUS FUNNIES #1. In 1939 D.C. Comics published MUTT & JEFF #1. The series had one hundred
and three issues and lasted just shy of twenty years. For reasons known only to the clerical gods, the D.C.
MUTT & JEFF comics slipped quietly into the public domain.
The images in this book are the best quality currently available. That stated some of the pages are
a tad blurry and grainy but still readable and still very enjoyable..
short-lived A PIKER CLERK by Clare Briggs. The second was the wildly popular MUTT & JEFF. MUTT & JEFF
first saw print in the San Francisco Chronicle on November 15, 1907 and continued until June 26, 1983.
During that time the strip was published by various newspaper syndicates starting with King Features
and ending with the Field Newspaper Syndicate.
MUTT & JEFF has been published by various comic book companies including Dell and Harvey, but most
famously by ALL-AMERICAN PUBLICATIONS, now known as D.C. Comics. MUTT & JEFF's historical pedigree
includes the strip being part of what is considered by most comic historians as the first modern comic
book, FAMOUS FUNNIES #1. In 1939 D.C. Comics published MUTT & JEFF #1. The series had one hundred
and three issues and lasted just shy of twenty years. For reasons known only to the clerical gods, the D.C.
MUTT & JEFF comics slipped quietly into the public domain.
The images in this book are the best quality currently available. That stated some of the pages are
a tad blurry and grainy but still readable and still very enjoyable..