Selected Product: | The Complete Peanuts 1963-1964 Hardcover Edition: Reprint Author: Charles M. Schulz Publisher: Fantagraphics Books Release Date: 2007-05 ISBN-10: 156097723X ISBN-13: 9781560977230 List Price: $28.95 Average Customer Rating: | | The Complete Peanuts 1969-1970 ISBN-10: 1560978279 ISBN-13: 9781560978275 List Price:$28.99 The Complete Peanuts 1967-1968 ISBN-10: 1560978260 ISBN-13: 9781560978268 List Price:$28.99 The Complete Peanuts 1965-1966 ISBN-10: 1560977248 ISBN-13: 9781560977247 List Price:$28.95 The Complete Peanuts 1961-1962 ISBN-10: 1560976721 ISBN-13: 9781560976721 List Price:$28.95 The Complete Peanuts 1959-1960 ISBN-10: 1560976713 ISBN-13: 9781560976714 List Price:$28.95 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for The Complete Peanuts 1963-1964 by Charles M. Schulz (ISBN-10: 156097723X, ISBN-13: 9781560977230). At this time we have not yet written a review for The Complete Peanuts 1963-1964 by Charles M. Schulz (ISBN-10: 156097723X, ISBN-13: 9781560977230). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com The New York Times best-selling series continues!
The Complete Peanuts will run 25 volumes, collecting two years chronologically at a rate of two a year for twelve years. Each volume is designed by the award-winning cartoonist Seth (It's a Good Life If You Don't Weaken) and features impeccable production values; every single strip from Charles M. Schulz's 50-year American classic is reproduced better than ever before. They Finally Got It Right | Customer Rating: | A good addition to this series. The only let-down is that we're seeing more and more strips that have already been collected in other Peanuts books. It was bound to happen though, so I'm not knocking off a star for this.
There are two real gems to this book. One is the story where Linus (my absolute favorite Peanuts character) runs for class president. I'm betting Schultz had a lot of fun with this. He lampoons the entire election process. This includes the speeches and promises, the press coverage, the polling, and everything else.
The other gem is even more important to me. This is where the title of my review comes into play. They had the great Bill Melendez write the foreward for this book.
Mister Melendez was an animator who wound up directing every single Peanuts movie and special ever made. In addition to this, he also did the voices of Snoopy and Woodstock on most of them (the exceptions being those few specials where Snoopy actually talked). Considering his close association with Schultz and his creation, he really should have been the one to write the foreward back in book 1 when this series started. Instead, throughout this series, we'd get nothing but celebrity endorsement after celebrity endorsement.
I was actually afraid that they'd do this entire series without so much as mentioning the man. Thankfully, these fears came to naught with the release of this book. Like I said, "they finally got it right".
The foreward itself is only 3 pages, but the quality makes up for it. Melendez talks about the events that led up to him meeting Schultz, his first impressions of the man, and how they went from a car commecial to a Peabody Award-winning special ("A Charlie Brown Christmas"), and then to a long and enjoyable career making other animated Peanuts titles (some great; some not so great). This is a story that certainly merits more than 3 pages, but Melendez takes the space he's given and manages both to inform and to satisfy.
If you're a Peanuts fan (especially if you're a Linus fan), click on that buy button. Trust me, you won't regret it. | Let's cuddle up with in security blanket. | Customer Rating: | | This edition of The Complete Peanuts covers the years 1963 and 1964. Probably the most significant event during this time period was the introduction of "5", along with his sisters "3" and "4". 5 may not be well remembered, but he is still a pretty interesting character. These are classic comic strips from one of the masters of the medium. Great stuff, highly recommended. | Nice collection | Customer Rating: | | This book, along with the rest of the collection, is simply marvelous. The complete work of Schulz is nicely presented. It reads itself so fast that we can't keep up buying the next one! | More of the same, however excellent that same was | Customer Rating: | Much of this was more of the same, the continued development of the characters. There is a set of new characters (Five, with Four and Three coming later) but they turn out to be little more than props, good for a week or two and afterwards for when Schulz needed a generic male for Charlie Brown (Shermy now only shows up for group strips). Three and Four look like little Peppermint Patties, and since Peppermint Patty ends up coming from a single-parent family (father only) one wonders if this is sort of backstory for that.
Foreshadowing some of the changes coming up on the next volume are a couple of developments. The baseball mound has become a scene itself, where the characters come up to chat on various things. As for this volume (1963-64), it's just a couple of characters coming up with things to talk about.
As for the red-headed girl, she has changed from a merely distant figure (distant implying "out of Charlie Brown's League) to a seemingly active source of shame and humiliation. Not that Charlie Brown needs her to humiliate him (as some of the baseball groups show, he could do that all by himself), but it definitely adds an accent point to what's going on around him with those he talks to.
One of the most interesting comics has Charlie Brown actually coming on top, although it's more his father than him. Violet spends a few panels bragging about her Father, which Charlie Brown doesn't so much parry but amplifies by explanation. However, CB stops Violet short and explains that his father makes an honorable living and always has a minute for him no matter what he's doing. The last panel has Violet walking with a slight downward tilt of her head and a seeming sadness in her eyes, as if she had finally been devastatingly bested.
In the end, this is worth getting, although I'd get the 1959-1960 and 1961-1962 before this one. | the complete peanuts 1961/62 | Customer Rating: | | I came to peanuts cartoons late in my life, but for the past five years I have bought every book available. Luckily for me as I have been a customer of amazon both in america and england and bringing out yearly books has been marvelous. Whenever I feel down I just read a few pages and I'm fine. The trouble is Im' going to be around 80 years old before this complete series is printed!!!! Is there anyway we can move this along? Doreen uk |
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