Le boe: Lucy e le altre
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Charles Schulz è stato un fumettista americano la cui striscia Peanuts è diventata una delle più popolari e influenti nella storia del medium. La capacità unica di Schulz di catturare le complessità dell'emozione umana attraverso personaggi e dialoghi semplici ha risuonato con i lettori di tutto il mondo. Il suo lavoro ha spesso esplorato temi di amicizia, amore e ricerca di significato, intrecciati con umorismo delicato e profonda empatia. Peanuts è più di una semplice striscia; è una rappresentazione senza tempo dell'esperienza umana che continua a connettersi con nuove generazioni decenni dopo.







Continuano le quotidiane avventure a fumetti dello "strano bambino dalla testa rotonda" e dei suoi amici. Lui, Charlie Brown, è un perdente nato, tenero, insicuro, perseguitato da un eterno complesso di inferiorità e innamorato, ma non corrisposto, della ragazzina dai capelli rossi. Linus, incostante genialoide, è diventato, insieme alla sua coperta, il simbolo del bisogno di sicurezza dell'individuo moderno. Snoopy, un cane che è più umano degli umani, pensa, scrive e sogna di combattere il Barone Rosso. Lucy, bisbetica e supponente, ha un'unica debolezza: ama (non riamata) Schroeder, bambino prodigio che adora Beethoven. Poi ci sono Sally, Piperita Patty e tanti altri che negli anni hanno via via raggiunto la banda dei Peanuts.
Per i sessant'anni dei Peanuts un volume a colori del nostro bracchetto preferito. La felicità è ancora un cucciolo caldo. Ironici, surreali, dolcissimi, crudeli, stralunati, timidi, geniali, innamorati, cinici. Snoopy e la sua gang non finiranno mai di stupire e di farsi amare.
I primi Peanuts sono teneri teneri. Vale la pena di rivederli con commozione. Certi sono rimasti presso a poco uguali. Ad esempio Charlie Brown ha appena perduto la quasi disumana sfericità del capoccione, ma è sempre lo stesso succube di tutti gli altri. Lucy era già petulante e autoritaria. Ma Snoopy non accennava ancora ad uscire dalla normalità cucciolesca per diventare il volubile e immaginifico bracchetto. Quanto a Linus, il futuro intellettuale della famiglia, era quasi più cucciolo di Snoopy e non aveva ancora scoperto la copertina taumaturgica.
Continuano le quotidiane avventure a fumetti dello "strano bambino dalla testa rotonda" e dei suoi amici. Lui, Charlie Brown, è un perdente nato, tenero, insicuro, perseguitato da un eterno complesso di inferiorità e innamorato, ma non corrisposto, della ragazzina dai capelli rossi. Linus, incostante genialoide, è diventato, insieme alla sua coperta, il simbolo del bisogno di sicurezza dell'individuo moderno. Snoopy, un cane che è più umano degli umani, pensa, scrive e sogna di combattere il Barone Rosso. Lucy, bisbetica e supponente, ha un'unica debolezza: ama (non riamata) Schroeder, bambino prodigio che adora Beethoven. Poi ci sono Sally, Piperita Patt
Continuano le quotidiane avventure a fumetti dello "strano bambino dalla testa rotonda" e dei suoi amici. Lui, Charlie Brown, è un perdente nato, tenero, insicuro, perseguitato da un eterno complesso di inferiorità e innamorato, ma non corrisposto, della ragazzina dai capelli rossi. Linus, incostante genialoide, è diventato, insieme alla sua coperta, il simbolo del bisogno di sicurezza dell'individuo moderno. Snoopy, un cane che è più umano degli umani, pensa, scrive e sogna di combattere il Barone Rosso. Lucy, bisbetica e supponente, ha un'unica debolezza: ama (non riamata) Schroeder, bambino prodigio che adora Beethoven. Poi ci sono Sally, Piperita Patty e tanti altri che negli anni hanno via via raggiunto la banda dei Peanuts.
Lui, Charlie Brown, un perdente nato, tenero, insicuro, perseguitato da uneterno complesso d'inferiorità, innamorato (ma irrimediabilmente non corrisposto) della ragazzina dai capelli rossi; Linus, incostante e genialoide,diventato insieme alla sua coperta il simbolo del disperato bisogno disicurezza dell'uomo moderno; Snoopy, un cane più umano degli umani, pensa,scrive e sogna di combattere (e prima o poi abbattere) il leggendario BaroneRosso; Lucy, bisbetica e supponente, con una sola debolezza: ama (non riamata)Schroeder, il bambino prodigio che adora Beethoven. E poi Sally, PiperitaPatty, l'uccellino Woodstock e tanti altri che negli anni hanno raggiunto labanda dei Peanuts.
Le migliori strisce domenicali di Schulz in una nuova raccolta che celebra i personaggi dei fumetti più famosi al mondo: Charlie Brown e la sua banda.
Continuano le quotidiane avventure a fumetti dello "strano bambino dalla testa rotonda" e dei suoi amici. Lui, Charlie Brown, è un perdente nato, tenero, insicuro, perseguitato da un eterno complesso di inferiorità e innamorato, ma non corrisposto, della ragazzina dai capelli rossi. Linus, incostante genialoide, è diventato, insieme alla sua coperta, il simbolo del bisogno di sicurezza dell'individuo moderno. Snoopy, un cane che è più umano degli umani, pensa, scrive e sogna di combattere il Barone Rosso. Lucy, bisbetica e supponente, ha un'unica debolezza: ama (non riamata) Schroeder, bambino prodigio che adora Beethoven. Poi ci sono Sally, Piperita Patty e tanti altri che negli anni hanno via via raggiunto la banda dei Peanuts.
Dal 1950 al 2000, una scelta antologica delle migliori tavole domenicali dei PeanutsComic book in Italian. Peanuts' 50th anniversary, from the year 1950 to 2000. Color book.
Continuano le quotidiane avventure a fumetti dello "strano bambino dalla testa rotonda" e dei suoi amici. Lui, Charlie Brown, è un perdente nato, tenero, insicuro, perseguitato da un eterno complesso di inferiorità e innamorato, ma non corrisposto, della ragazzina dai capelli rossi. Linus, incostante genialoide, è diventato, insieme alla sua coperta, il simbolo del bisogno di sicurezza dell'individuo moderno. Snoopy, un cane che è più umano degli umani, pensa, scrive e sogna di combattere il Barone Rosso. Lucy, bisbetica supponente, ha un'unica debolezza: ama (non riamata) Schroeder, bambino prodigio che adora Beethoven. Poi ci sono Sally, Piperita Patty e tanti altri che negli anni hanno via via raggiunto la banda dei Peanuts.
Continuano le quotidiane avventure a fumetti dello "strano bambino dalla testa rotonda" e dei suoi amici. Lui, Charlie Brown, è un perdente nato, tenero, insicuro, perseguitato da un eterno complesso di inferiorità e innamorato, ma non corrisposto, della ragazzina dai capelli rossi. Linus, incostante genialoide, è diventato, insieme alla sua coperta, il simbolo del bisogno di sicurezza dell'individuo moderno. Snoopy, un cane che è più umano degli umani, pensa, scrive e sogna di combattere il Barone Rosso. Lucy, bisbetica e supponente, ha un'unica debolezza: ama (non riamata) Schroeder, bambino prodigio che adora Beethoven. Poi ci sono Sally, Piperita Patty e tanti altri che negli anni hanno via via raggiunto la banda dei Peanuts.
COMIC STRIP FICTION / GRAPHIC NOVELS. In The Complete Peanuts 1963-64: this volume is particularly rich in never-before-reprinted strips: Over 150 (more than one fifth of the book!) have never seen the light of day since their original appearance over 40 years ago, so this will be a trove of undiscovered treasures even for avid Peanuts collectors. These "lost" strips include Linus making a near-successful run for class president that is ultimately derailed by his religious beliefs (two words: "great" and "pumpkin"), and Snoopy getting involved with a group of politically fanatical birds. Snoopy's doghouse begins its conceptual expansion, as Schulz reveals that the dog owns a Van Gogh, and that the ceiling is so huge that Linus can paint a vast (and as it turns out unappreciated) "history of civilisation" mural on it. With an introduction by Bill Melendez. Ages 6+.
Part of Canongate's highly collectible and praised series, with an introduction by Robert Smigel
The latest in Canongate's highly collectible and highly praised series, with an introduction by Jake Tapper
This Peanuts box set features the beloved comic strip from 1991-1994, presented in a stylish slipcase. A perfect collection for fans of Charles Schulz's timeless characters and humor.
Collects all the "Peanuts" comic strips as originally published in newspapers, including both daily and Sunday strips
Collects all the "Peanuts" comic strips published from 1967 to 1968 in newspapers, including both daily and Sunday strips
COMIC STRIP FICTION / GRAPHIC NOVELS. In The Complete Peanuts 1965-66: We are now in the mid-1960s, one of Schulz's peak periods of creativity (and one third of the way through the strip's life!). Snoopy has become the strip's dominant personality, and this volume marks two milestones for the character: the first of many "dogfights" with the nefarious Red Baron, and the launch of his writing career ("It was a dark and stormy night..."). Two new characters-the first two from outside the strip's regular little neighborhood-make their bows. Roy (who befriends Charlie Brown and then Linus at summer camp) won't have a lasting impact, but upon his return from camp he regales a friend of his with tales of the strange kids he met, and she has to go check them out for herself. Her name? Peppermint Patty. The Complete Peanuts 1965-66 features a new introduction by Hal Hartley, writer/director of acclaimed independent films Trust, Henry Fool, Kimono, Simple Men, The Unbelievable Truth, and Fay Grim. Ages 6+.
Collects all the "Peanuts" comic strips as originally published in newspapers, including both daily and Sunday strips.
Part of Canongate's highly collectible and highly praised series, with an introduction by Kristin Chenoweth
As the 1950s close down, Peanuts definitively enters its golden age. Linus, who had just learned to speak in the previous volume, becomes downright eloquent and even begins to fend off Lucy's bullying; even so, his security neurosis becomes more pronounced, including a harrowing two-week "Lost Weekend" sequence of blanketlessness. Charlie Brown cascades further down the hill to loserdom, with spectacularly lost kites, humiliating baseball losses (including one where he becomes "the Goat" and is driven from the field in a chorus of BAAAAHs); at least his newly acquired "pencil pal" affords him some comfort. Pig-Pen, Shermy, Violet, and Patty are also around, as is an increasingly Beethoven-fixated Schroeder. But the rising star is undoubtedly Snoopy. He's at the center of the most graphically dynamic and action-packed episodes (the ones in which he attempts to grab Linus's blanket at a dead run). He even tentatively tries to sleep on the crest of his doghouse roof once or twice, with mixed results. And his imitations continue apace, including penguins, anteaters, sea monsters, vultures and (much to her chagrin) Lucy. No wonder the beagle is the cover star of this volume.
As the creator of Peanuts, the world's most widely read comic strip, Charles Schulz (1922-2000) touched the hearts and funny bones of millions of people, with his work appearing in more than two thousand newspapers around the world and translated into twenty-one languages. Through such lovable characters as Charlie Brown and Snoopy (not to mention the rest of the Peanuts gang), Schulz created, in the words of Doonesbury cartoonist Garry Trudeau, "the uncontested gold standard for comics, " and paved the road for future cartoonists. The Peanuts Treasury is a fitting testimony to Charles Schulz's enduring legacy and will stand for years to come as a loving tribute to one of the most influential cartoonists of all time.
Featuring beloved characters like Charlie Brown, Snoopy, Lucy, and Linus, this box-set collection brings together three classic Peanuts comic strip books. Spanning over 360 pages, it showcases daily and Sunday strips that capture the humor of childhood experiences, including school, crushes, and baseball. Art cards with cover art enhance the experience, while readers get a rare glimpse of Pig-Pen looking clean. This compilation is a nostalgic journey through the whimsical world of Peanuts and its timeless themes.
This two-volume gift set features nearly 1,500 daily and Sunday "Peanuts" comic strips. It was a 2005 Quills Award nominee for Best Humor Book, making it a delightful collection for fans of Charles Schulz's beloved characters.
"Peanuts was, and is, and will continue to be the funniest comic in the world. Bravo."Ray Bradbury"I have naturally curly hair." With those fateful words, The Complete Peanuts introduces another main character to the gang, the vain Frieda (not to mention her cat Faron). Also in this volume, which collects two full years from the early 1960s - one of Schulz's most fertile periods - Sally begins to grow up, Snoopy endures an avian family crisis,Linus loses his blanket again (when Lucy turns it into a kite and then lets it fly away), and more baseball routs. Aaaughh!!
This volume takes us into the mid-1950s as Linus learns to talk, Snoopy begins to explore his eccentricities, Lucy's unrequited crush on Schroeder takes final shape, and Charlie Brown becomes - well, even more Charlie Brown-ish.
Part of Canongate's highly collectible and highly praised series, with an introduction by Billie Jean King
The 11th Facsimile edition of the original 1960 classic Peanut paperbacks first published in 1965 featuring 126 Sunday Peanuts newspaper strips from 1962-1965. The beloved comic series is celebrating its 70th anniversary, the new Snoopy Show is launching via Apple TV+.
A fifth collection of classic Peanuts newspaper comic strips features 248 daily strips from 1955-1958 and feature Snoopy, perhaps Peanuts most popular character, certainly when it comes to cainines!This book is a facsimile edition of the fifth Peanuts collection originally published back in 1958 by the Clarke, Irwin & Company, Ltd of Toronto, Canada.This collection of 248 daily Peanuts newspaper strips that appeared between 1955 -1958 focuses on, perhaps the most famous character in the Peanuts universe, Charlie Brown's Beagle, Snoopy. Whether he's chasing snow flakes, doing impersonations or just dancing his world famous happy jig, things are always going to a little sillier when Snoopy's around.The strip's bitter-sweet humour and child-like innocence helped to cement the Peanuts comic strip's popularity and secure its reputation as a true, one-of-a-kind, timeless classic.
Whether you're a fussbudget like Lucy, Flying Ace like Snoopy, or a lovable loser like Charlie Brown, there is something to make you laugh in Peanuts.
Despite Charlie Brown's sufferings, Linus's insecurities, Lucy's shrewishness, Snoopy's pleas for affection, and Schroeder's obsession with Beethoven, the Peanuts gang stays together
Book by Schulz, Charles M.
This collection features the final years of oversized Peanuts Sunday strips in vibrant vintage colors, presented for the first time in a complete format. A must-have for fans of Charles Schulz's beloved comic strip.
Part of Canongate's highly collectible and highly praised series, with an introduction by Alec Baldwin
Part of Canongate's highly collectible and praised series, with an introduction by Al Roker
The paperback rerelease of Fantagraphics' award-winning, best-selling Peanuts series.
The 12th facsimile edition of the original 1960 classic Peanuts paperbacks first published in 1965 featuring 126 Sunday Peanuts newspaper strips from 1962-1965. The beloved comic series is celebrating its 70th anniversary, the new Snoopy Show is launching via Apple TV+. Featuring many of your favourite characters, including Snoopy, Charlie Brown, Schroeder, Linus, Susan Brown and Shermy. This book is a facsimile edition of the 12th Peanuts paperback book, and collects together 126 Sunday Peanuts newspaper strips that first appeared in newspapers across the world between 1962 - 1965. The book was originally published back in 1965 by Clarke, Irwin & Company, Ltd of Toronto, Canada.
Surrounded by other kids with extremely commercial ideas about Christmas, Charlie Brown struggles to understand the true spirit of the holiday.
Relive the classic moments from the Peanuts holiday television specials and spend Halloween, Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Valentine's Day with the Peanuts gang. This special-edition box set contains four 128-page paperback editions of some of our best-selling Peanuts titles, featuring text and art from four holiday-time Peanuts TV specials.
Enjoy the Peanuts charm of Schulz's heartfelt lessons as Charlie Brown muddles through all of the classic holiday stories. Linus patiently awaits the Great Pumpkin. Charlie Brown brings the Peanuts gang together for a Thanksgiving they will never forget, and Chuck's tiny tree demonstrates the true meaning of Christmas. Charlie Brown's ongoing quest for love and accptance during Valentine's Day is overflowing with eternal optimism, and, finally, Peppermint Patty tries unsuccessfully to teach Marcie all about Easter Eggs.
Featuring beloved characters like Snoopy, Charlie Brown, and Lucy, this box-set collects three classic comic strip books that showcase the whimsical adventures of Snoopy. Readers will enjoy over 360 pages of daily and Sunday strips, highlighting Snoopy's escapades, from saving his doghouse to dreaming of being a dinosaur and his antics as the Phantom Punter. The collection also includes art cards with cover art from the individual books, making it a delightful treasure for fans of the Peanuts gang.
In this classic comic strip volume by Charles Schulz, Snoopy's family grows with the arrival of his wandering brother Spike, beloved sister Belle, and a nephew, bringing new adventures and heartwarming moments to the beloved characters.
Part of Canongate's highly collectible and highly praised series, with an introduction by Leonard Maltin
Part of Canongate's highly collectible and highly praised series, with an introduction by Patton Oswalt
The latest in Canongate's highly collectible and highly praised series, with an introduction by Paul Feig.
America's most beloved comic strip, Peanuts, is now a major motion picture produced by Blue Sky Studios. Now you can collect the first ten original comic strip collections, published by Titan Comics! The tenth volume in this facsimile series was originally published back in 1961 by the Clarke, Irwin & Company, Ltd of Toronto, Canada. A tenth collection of classic Peanuts newspaper comic strips, this time 122 Peanuts Sunday strips, from 1958-1961. The larger format, three tier rather than the single daily strip format allowed Schultz to play with the format of the gag and construct perfect little vignettes - from Sally Brown’s first Sunday appearance to waiting for the Great Pumpkin with Linus, or Charlie Brown’s yearly battle with Lucy to kick the football. There’s not a page that’s not filled with beautiful drawing and Schulz’s wonderful rye take on childhood.