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Krazy & Ignatz 1939-1940: "A Brick Stuffed with Moom-bins" (Krazy and Ignatz)
 
 
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Krazy & Ignatz 1939-1940: "A Brick Stuffed with Moom-bins" (Krazy and Ignatz) [Paperback]

George Herriman (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)


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Book Description

February 20, 2002

Continuing the award-winning Krazy Kat Sunday reprints, as designed by Chris Ware.

George Herriman integrated full spectacular color into Krazy Kat in June 1935. The gorgeous evolution continues in our second color volume. Which includes the Sunday strips from all of 1939 and 1940. The color format opens the floodgates for a massive amount of spectacular rare color art from series editor Bill Blackbeard and designer Chris Ware's files, including an unpublished Herriman painting from the 1920s and other surprises.

Krazy Kat is a love story, focusing on the relationships of its three main characters. Krazy Kat adored Ignatz Mouse. Ignatz Mouse simply tolerated Krazy Kat, except for recurrent onsets of targeted tumescence, which found expression in the fast delivery of bricks to Krazy's cranium. Offisa Pup loved Krazy and sought to protect "her" (Herriman always maintained that Krazy was gender-less) by throwing Ignatz in jail. Each of the characters was ignorant of the others' true motivations, and this simple structure allowed Herriman to build entire worlds of meaning into the actions, building thematic depth and sweeping his readers up by the looping verbal rhythms of Krazy & Co.'s unique dialogue. Most of these strips in this volume have not seen print since originally running in Hearst newspapers over 70 years ago.


Editorial Reviews

From School Library Journal

Grade 10 Up–Most of the stories in this beautifully designed eighth volume in the series focus on the enduring character triangle of a Kat deep in love with a spiteful mouse named Ignatz who returns the affection by tossing a brick, and Offisa Pup, the staunch defender of Krazy Kat who constantly seeks to catch Ignatz in the act. Despite the repetitive nature of the stories, Herriman makes them work by giving Ignatz a delightfully crafty mind for creating wild schemes. Here, Ignatz dons bizarre disguises, hides the brick in boxes, and even creates Rube Goldberg-style machines to sharply deliver that brick to Krazy Kat's head. The vaudevillian slapstick will entertain younger readers, while the cleverness of the characters and fun wordplay in the dialogue will grab older readers looking for more depth. Endnotes help those new to the series orient themselves, while an introduction by journalist Jeet Heer places Herriman's work within a cultural context. This particular volume shines with large-scale color pages of comic-strip masterpieces. Herriman even experiments a bit with layouts, breaking away from the block design common to comics by shaping things around a circle and even using a single image on a page. This is Herriman at his best, and it's easy to see why he was such a favorite of literary giants and children alike.–Matthew L. Moffett, Pohick Regional Library, Burke, VA
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

The latest volume of full-page, full-color Sunday installments of Herriman's monumental comic strip shows that, 26 years after first putting Kat to paper, the brilliant cartoonist's inspiration remained seemingly inexhaustible. He continued to extract transcendent art from the fundamental, unwavering triangle of lovesick Krazy, insolent Ignatz Mouse, and steadfast Offissa Pupp. Undimished, too, were the strip's beloved and distinctive, wordplay-riddled dialogue and Herriman's loopily idiosyncratic drawing, which turned the desert landscape of Kokonino County into a bizarrely transmuting backdrop for the cast's perpetual dance of romance and rejection. Gordon Flagg
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Paperback: 120 pages
  • Publisher: Fantagraphics Books; 1st Fantagraphics Books Ed edition (February 20, 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1560977892
  • ISBN-13: 978-1560977896
  • Product Dimensions: 11.9 x 9.1 x 0.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #832,940 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The ménage à trois skips into the 1940s..., April 22, 2007
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This review is from: Krazy & Ignatz 1939-1940: "A Brick Stuffed with Moom-bins" (Krazy and Ignatz) (Paperback)
Ever since that historic event on July 26th, 1910 wherein an unnamed mouse "beaned" an unnamed Kat in George Herriman's "The Dingbat Family," an unlikely unreconcilable love has gone unrequited. Somewhere between then and 1940 the Kat fell in love with the mouse. The mouse, with a slight touch of sadism perhaps, grew more and more to savor the tossing of bricks at the Kat's head. Little by little the Kat's non-verbal cartoon responses to these beanings turned from stars of pain into thick, pulsing hearts of love. An impossible love bloomed, a Krazy love. A love between natural enemies, a Kat and a mouse. This irrational and fundamentally flawed comic love came to resemble that often painful and soul-gorging love that vulnerable human beings can experience. The entire comic soon crytallized that nagging and irrational side of the human experience, that mosquito we can't slap, namely, the horrific fact that we sometimes fall hopelessly in love with that which hates us. With that which can never, and never will, return our pining love. But for some reason we cannot stop loving. We then begin to interpret and hope, foolishly, that specific acts the loved object perpetrates are in fact potential signs that reveal a hidden, perhaps unacknowledged, reciprocal love. In such fuzzy states, our wild human brains sometimes interpret insults and negligence as signs of hope. After all, when logic dissipates, abuse trumps indifference, doesn't it? The human condition can sometimes resemble a hammer to the knees. What's wrong with us?

"Krazy Kat," as a work of art, embraces and encapsulates this irrational love. We're not even sure, as longtime readers, whether Krazy is a boy or a girl. Regardless, Krazy continues to love Ignatz unconditionally. Ignatz's singular act of whacking Krazy with bricks metamorphizes into a singular act of love, or so it appears to Krazy's lovesick soul. Ignatz, with a parallel compulsion, loves hurling bricks at Krazy to the point of crazed addiction. Enter the third actor, Offissa Pupp, who patrols Coconino County in the eternal pursuit of sin. Some signs hint that Pupp has eyes for Krazy, so Ignatz's brick tossing arouses the highest contempt within his law-abiding by-the-book being. When caught, Ignatz lands in the ubiquitous jail. But Krazy sighs and romances about the love-brick that bounced off of his/her skull. The law comes inbetween an irrational love. Offissa Pupp thinks he's protecting Krazy from the beast Ignatz, when really he's preventing the one act that Krazy thirsts for day in and day out. Myopic, unknowing law, or, in more general terms, morality, stifles irrational pleasure. This tension never ceases, and it tugs and pulls at our humanity.

By 1940, George Herriman had developed this theme to a level that can only be described as poetry. Such depth of personal expression can unfortunately lead to public neglect, and the final years of Krazy Kat saw the comic's swift decline into obscurity. People don't often look to the comics page for insights into human nature. But in the case of "Krazy Kat" they should have. Unfortunately, the comic was so revolutionary that few probably sensed what was happening on those blanket-sized pages bursting with surreal color and shapes. Readers just wanted a few yuks. Not only that, fewer and fewer people had access to the comic as the 1940s emerged. Thus, at its peak, the comic vaporized from public view. Only Herriman's lifetime contract with Hearst kept it alive in less than a handful of newspapers.

Fantagraphics has also kept "Krazy Kat" alive by publishing this amazing series. Reproduced in full Krazy Kolor, the full impact of these strips explodes on the senses. The September 8th, 1940 strip provides one major highlight. It includes both the classic "zip... pow" centerpiece and the "Mus' be my 'eggo'" panel across the bottom of the main comic. Throughout the quality remains at the utmost. Ancillary characters also appear, most notably Mimi, the French poodle school teacher, who alters the love theme for a short spell.

"Krazy Kat" ended with Herriman's death in 1944. Fantagraphics thus has a mere two volumes to publish to complete a series that has never seen a full reprint. Early on, they also promised to return to the beginning and republish the Sunday panels from 1916 to 1924. These were previously published by Eclipse, but the series ended at 1924. If Fantagraphics succeeds in this endeavor, they will have provided a great service to those who can't get enough of one of the best comic strips ever to grace a newspaper. Roll on.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Another brick in the wall, June 17, 2007
By 
Christopher Barat (Owings Mills, MD USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Krazy & Ignatz 1939-1940: "A Brick Stuffed with Moom-bins" (Krazy and Ignatz) (Paperback)
My comic-book store was a little tardy in getting this to me, not that it really matters when you're talking about a strip as well-aged as "Krazy Kat" was in the first place... Reading these colorful Sunday strips, you'd never guess that the world had been plunged into its worst war during this period. Herriman ultimately did slip a few off-hand references to WWII ("tank" bricks, etc.) into later 40s strips, but the brick-related schemes, alliteration, songs, and strange backgrounds during these dreadful 24 months are pretty much indistinguishable from those seen earlier in the 30s. Editor Bill Blackbeard provides his usual quota of half-insightful, half-doubtful "debafflers" - does he REALLY believe that Herriman's offhand use of the phone number "Coconino 69696" in one strip was a veiled reference to oral sex?? - and Jeet Heer contributes an interesting, albeit poorly proof-read, piece on Herriman's use of color. Essential reading for serious comics scholars.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Get your magnifier, February 2, 2009
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This review is from: Krazy & Ignatz 1939-1940: "A Brick Stuffed with Moom-bins" (Krazy and Ignatz) (Paperback)
As with others in this series, the text is good. Nice stories, but comics aren't very readable when reduced to maybe 25% of their original size. Better that than nothing, but not much.
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