Saturday, September 11, 2010
As I Recall the 'Sixties
The parallels between the 1860s and 1960s have long fascinated me. Those of us who grew up in the 1960s sometimes think that particular bubble in time was unique. But was it really? The captions could easily fit the 1960s, but the etching-like illustrations of the 1860s are also appropriate.
Now get set for a long printing history only of interest to comix fans. And I'm sure the following is not complete. There are some printings in my own files that I can't explain, account for, or guess at their origin:
One of my more reprinted minicomix. First published in Pullman, Washington in 1983, 75 copies.
The 2nd ed. was published by Robert Stump in Hopewell, Virginia in 1984.
In 1994 I had a large catalog of titles I would print on demand and each work had a "Reprint Series" statement. An unknown number of copies of this minicomic were printed and sold.
Also in 1994 25 copies (blue cardstock) were printed for the "Media, Communication, and Culture" program, South Puget Sound Community College (SPSCC), Olympia, Washington.
And again in 1994, 20 copies were printed as a "Special Fandom House Ed." for a distributor in Colorado.
In 1997 As I Recall the 'Sixties was reprinted in Maximum Traffic's enormous comix anthology, Truth Be Known, published in Butler, Pennsylvania.
38 copies were printed in 1998 for Mike Murray's history class at SPSCC (13 gray, 23 blue, and 2 blue without edition statements)
40 copies (20 green, 20 blue) were printed for Mike Murray's class in Feb. 1999. One of these was later posted on OlyBlog (July 2007)
The comic was included among several others as part of an exhibit of my comix at SPSCC July 5-Aug. 12, 1999.
The "KHW Ed." of Oct. 21, 2002 consisted of a grand total of 5 copies (4 green, 1 white).
The last hardcopy versions were published as 1st Danger Room Reprint Ed. in June 2005. Five copies (4 blue, 1 pink).
Labels:
Abraham Lincoln,
Andrew Johnson,
As I Recall the Sixties,
John F. Kennedy,
John Wilkes Booth,
Lee Harvey Oswald,
Lyndon Baines Johnson,
Richard Nixon,
Robert Stump,
Truth Be Known,
Ulysses S. Grant