Before we dive into the strips, a little oddity I found.
This is from the front page of the Tennessean, dated June 17, 1976. On the left side of the paper's name there would be a "today's weather" box. On that day it used a drawing from the strip. Childress mentioned that the Tennessean paper has been one of his first sale. This leads to a theory that the paper was very faithful to the strip. I don't think I've ever seen this with another strip. I might find one soon, though...
And with that note, here is the final Conchy daily. It was published on February 5, 1977, exactly two weeks after James Childress's death.
However, that's not the end yet. Because the Sunday comics are produced on a different schedule, the Conchy Sundays ran a month longer. Below is the last strip, which ran on March 13, 1977.
And that's it. Conchy ran just over 7 years (1970-1977). It was never a big hit and even today it's still obscure, but there's no denying that it had a small following, and still does. Here's hoping that the complete collection will be published eventually.
Sunday, February 28, 2010
Saturday, February 27, 2010
Friday, February 26, 2010
Thursday, February 25, 2010
Conchy part 1 of 4
The local library down here has archives of The Nashville Tennessean in the form of microfilms. It only goes back to 1974 but already I found some goodies. Among those is Conchy by James Childress.
I've already talked about the strip many times on this blog, but the Tennessean archive was important to me in particular, because they actually published the strip from start to finish. I was able to find the final strips through their microfilms.
I randomly had 16 strips scanned (including the last strip). I will post four per day on this blog until this Sunday. These are all from the final year, 1976-77. One thing I found interesting was that the titular character didn't appear much. In fact, of the sixteen strips Conchy only appears in one. He doesn't even appear in the last strip (which, in all honesty, was just another strip that happened to be published last).
Anyway, here are the first batch.
I've already talked about the strip many times on this blog, but the Tennessean archive was important to me in particular, because they actually published the strip from start to finish. I was able to find the final strips through their microfilms.
I randomly had 16 strips scanned (including the last strip). I will post four per day on this blog until this Sunday. These are all from the final year, 1976-77. One thing I found interesting was that the titular character didn't appear much. In fact, of the sixteen strips Conchy only appears in one. He doesn't even appear in the last strip (which, in all honesty, was just another strip that happened to be published last).
Anyway, here are the first batch.
Wednesday, February 24, 2010
Early FoxTrot interview
Tuesday, February 23, 2010
Monday, February 22, 2010
Sunday, February 21, 2010
Saturday, February 20, 2010
Friday, February 19, 2010
At the Zü part 1
At the Zü is a great comic that nobody has ever heard of. The strip was by Ron Ruelle and it was distributed by Creators Syndicate from 11/20/1995 to 6/20/1998, but was later continued as a weekly webcomic, retitled "Darwin and Co" at this point, until 2000. Roughly 30 newspapers ran it altogether.
I've written about it before so I won't go into too much, but I found a bunch more strips in the Google News Archive and I couldn't bear to not post some. In a similar manner to the Jack & Tyler posts I did, I'm going to post a bunch of Zu strips for the rest of the week. Enjoy.
I've written about it before so I won't go into too much, but I found a bunch more strips in the Google News Archive and I couldn't bear to not post some. In a similar manner to the Jack & Tyler posts I did, I'm going to post a bunch of Zu strips for the rest of the week. Enjoy.
Thursday, February 18, 2010
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