Product Details
Eagle Annual of the 1950s (Annual): The Best If the 1950s Comic Features Dan Dare the Greatest Comic Strip of All Time

Eagle Annual of the 1950s (Annual): The Best If the 1950s Comic Features Dan Dare the Greatest Comic Strip of All Time
By Daniel Tatarsky

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Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #5743 in Books
  • Published on: 2007-10-04
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 176 pages

Editorial Reviews

CHOICE
'A delight'

Review
'This Week's Must-Have... With not a whiff of the terrible Eighties retread, this sticks to square-jawed heroes, spaceships, war - and a detective called Harris Tweed.' (LIVE - MAIL ON SUNDAY )

'A lovingly rendered facsimile of highlights ffrom the original comics.' (TIMES )

'Irresistible... its 176 pages, lovingly compiled, contain that curious mixture of features - diverting, educational and religious' (DAILY MAIL )

'Given that it reproduces comics from nearly 60 years ago, the Eagle Annual of the 1950s is in some ways amazingly up to date' (Simon Hoggart GUARDIAN )

'Beautifully published collection of greatest hits from the classic comic - not just the strips, but readers' letters, car cross-sections, sports pages and adverts ******' (TIME OUT )

'A stunning compilation from the Eagle comics of the 50s... Far from being a condescending look at a niave age, this spiffing annual may well inspire a new dawn for the comic.' (DAILY SPORT )

'Spiffing romps from the golden age of Eagle comics' (THE LONDON PAPER )

'A fascinating social documentation' (GOOD BOOK GUIDE )

'Christmas really can come early. Sometimes, it can seem like several have come all along at once - and that's the feeling that many chaps of a certain age will get with even a sideways glance at the cover of this marvellous book' (MANCHESTER EVENING NEWS )

'The newly published Eagle Annual should keep those children of the 50s quiet for hours this Christmas... this facinating book tells the story of how the comic was born as well as taking readers on a trip down memory lane.' (DERBY EVENING TELEGRAPH )

'Whether you are old enough to have enjoyed The Eagle the first time round, or you're looking at the strips for the first time, this will have you captivated... Nostalgia at its best.' (NUNEATON TELEGRAH )

'Holding this book is like holding a mint edition of an original Eagle annual from the 1950s - sheer joy! Absolutely stunning - Dads won't be able to resist the charm of this fascinating collector's item. A second volume, Eagle Annual of the 1960s is promised for this time next year - so that's next year's Christmas sorted!' (GATEWAY )

'A social reflection from a more innocent age... A Christmas stocking filler of quality' (HUDDERSFIELD DAILY EXAMINER )

'This excellent collection draws on the vast Eagle archive, and features original strips as well as individual drawing and artwork...a delight' (PARK AND HOLIDAY HOMES )

'A delight' (CHOICE )

GOOD BOOK GUIDE
'A fascinating social documentation'


Customer Reviews

Better than a curate's egg . . .4
I'm not surprised that this book has produced such wildly polarised opinions (see earlier reviews). This is because it approaches a popular subject, and one much published upon over the last thirty years, from a new and original angle, but unfortunately makes one or two easily avoidable bloopers in doing so.

This book is an Eagle scrapbook, nothing more, nothing less, and as such offers a novel perspective on this much-anthologised subject. Earlier Eagle-based publications have concentrated on the picture-strip stories, and on the premier features such as the centre-page cutaway schematics. Readers lamenting the relegation of the strips to single-page tasters in this book should check out the wonderful Hawk reprints of the complete adventures of Dan Dare from 1950 to around 1964, especially in the first editions which were produced full-size using the original published pages, unedited, and also the beautifully-offered strips in Hawk's one-off editions of Fraser of Africa, Harris Tweed, Riders Of The Range and PC49. The strips and the best features from the weekly also grace Marcus Morris's original The Best Of Eagle from 1977, and Denis Gifford produced The Best Of Eagle Annual in 1989 which offers a similar mixture taken from Eagle Annuals, 1951-59. All of these are generally available in used condition on Amazon or elsewhere.

What the present volume does offer, for the first time, is a flavour of all the other bits and pieces that made Eagle what it was, especially in the early years: the educational titbits, the news and sporting items, the puzzles and quizzes, the competitions, and, yes, those adverts. As a hardcore Eagle reader from around 1955 to around 1962 - aged 6 to 13 - these more humble items of course went right over my head when compared to the highly-coloured derring-do of Dare, Luck and Jeff Arnold. But today they present a fascinating social document of young-boy culture from that decade which now seems a world away, and for that very reason are most welcome.

Perhaps Mr Tatarsky's mistake is to include any pages from the great strips at all, especially as these are so freely available elsewhere. Maybe he should have offered us "The Rest Of Eagle"? However not including them would make this a severely specialist publication, and, after all, sales figures do matter. Hence readers should accept what is here for what it is, enjoy it in that spirit, and look to the other books listed above for the more monumental Eagle achievements.

There are other issues. Although the careworn cover simulation has a certain charm, the hideous mock foxing effect on the pages inside is a big mistake, and considerably cheapens the presentation rather than giving it atmosphere. It is to be hoped that this technique will not be used in the forthcoming 1960s companion volume. The title "Eagle Annual" is misleading as this is a compendium from the periodical itself, not from the annuals. And certainly the reprographic process used to reproduce the pages has resulted in some blurry images, surely avoidable in these days of high-tech scanners and printers.

However, putting all this aside, there is plenty in this relatively inexpensive volume to fascinate all men of a certain age who hanker after the nostalgia of the 'fifties, when the appearance of Eagle brightened up every Tuesday in austerity Britain. It will be interesting to see what the 1960s volume looks like when it appears, as Eagle changed greatly with the departures of Frank Hampson and Marcus Morris, and sadly not for the better.

Eagle Annual of the 50's4
If, as I do, you have fond memories of the 50's then this book is a MUST. In so many ways the Eagle comic represented this era better than any other British comic. The book is beautifully presented and contains so much nostalgic reading and excellent reproduction of pages from the original comic including the first ever issue in April 1950. Yes, some strips are not included but this is a small critism. Buy it, you won't be disappointed.

What a let down!2
I saw this book and thought that it was the very book that I had been looking for; but what a disappointment! Two big problems in my view. First, there is far far too much of editorial, 'club news' and cutaway drawings. Second there are no complete stories of Dan Dare, Luck of the Legion;et al even just one full story of each would be welcome. After all we know what the comic looked like; I wanted to reread a story and relive the threat of the Mekon. Any annual has to have complete stories not just a series of 'tasters'. I can't waste more words on it.