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| Complete Terry And The Pirates Volume 4: 1941-1942 (Complete Terry & the Pirates) | 
enlarge | Author: Milton Caniff Publisher: IDW Publishing Category: Book
List Price: $49.99 Buy New: $28.01 You Save: $21.98 (44%)
New (36) Used (9) from $28.01
Avg. Customer Rating: 1 reviews Sales Rank: 47701
Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 352 Shipping Weight (lbs): 4.3 Dimensions (in): 11.2 x 8.7 x 1.6
ISBN: 160010195X Dewey Decimal Number: 741 EAN: 9781600101953 ASIN: 160010195X
Publication Date: October 8, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Brand New! Save 30 - 50% off of retail prices on our wide selection of comic book graphic novels, manga and anime, role playing games, DVDS, Osprey military history books, and more!
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description America's premiere adventure comic strip thunders to its pre-war crescendo in an October, 1941 storyline so powerful creator Milton Caniff was forced to take to the radio airwaves to explain why he chose to shock the nation with the death of a major character. In the 1942 strips, the World War drives Terry Lee to join the military, where he meets nurse Taffy Tucker and Army flight instructor Flip Corkin, then gets into plenty of trouble investigating a spy ring! And then there's the women - the strong, beautiful and independent Caniff women! IDW Publishing's Library of American Comics has collected over 700 newspaper strips, including more than 100 Sunday pages restored to their original luster, in this pivotal volume in the Terry and the Pirates saga.
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| Customer Reviews:
The ' Sublime ' Terry and the Pirates enters its 6th year September 26, 2008 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
What a comic strip.
The first three volumes of the already gripping adventure began in 1935 with a blocky, art deco style almost flat and hyerogliphic like all good early 1930s strips in the vein of Chester Goulds' Dick Tracy.
The masterful Milton Caniff yet to emerge as the consummate storyteller he was so soon to become developed a new style, in his use of heavily stylised black areas, and fantastic lighting, along with meticulously accurate real life scenery, bringing out volume by volume a true American original.
The prinicipal characters, Terry Lee, Pat Ryan, and their Chinese servant and interpreter, Connie, lead all manner of rivetting adventures in the South China Seas battling the pirates of the title such as the Dragon Lady.
By this, the fourth volume, its the eve of America's War in the Far East, and in the weeks before Pearl Harbour, our interpid heroes suffer their first true tragedy when Raven Sherman, the beloved of the character, Dude Hennick, a loose tail Flyer dies horribly slowly after being thrown from the back board of a speeding truck by arch villain, Captain Judas.
Poor Raven, relief worker to Chinese orphans, and philanthropic Heiress died from her injuries, and in real life, provoked a storm of reader protest unparalleled in the World of the funny papers. The cover of this volume depicts the luckless young Terry Lee, and Dude Hennick, burying the body of their friend in cinematic long shot, on a barren Chinese hill, in a nameless grave. Highly poignant and very sad, this is storytelling of pure Hollywood calibre.
The volume here is the first real acknowledgement that people do die in war, and as the strip moves into the early months of 1942, Caniff finally manages to emerge from his veiled pro War stance which up until the real war had been thinly disguised due to the editorial policy of his newspaper, to a full - fledged commitment to military activity. Gone are the boyish serial adventures, replaced by a reality of America field hospitals, and air operations.
This is a beautiful book in keeping with the other parts to this series, with two very good essays, and some various pieces of non comic strip continuity art, and other features. Of particular interest was the piece written by John Romita Snr., about his own experiences as a ten year old reader coping with the death of Raven Sherman, and his drawing a parallel to his own career at Marvel, thirty years later when he had to kill off a popular comics character, Spider Man's girlfriend, Gwen Stacy.
Excellent ................... This reviwer cannot wait for volume 5.
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