Walt and Skeezix, Vol. 3: 1925-1926 by Frank King


Walt and Skeezix, Vol. 3: 1925-1926
Title : Walt and Skeezix, Vol. 3: 1925-1926
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 1897299095
ISBN-10 : 9781897299098
Language : English
Format Type : Hardcover
Number of Pages : 400
Publication : First published October 2, 2007

In this third volume of the much-praised Walt and Skeezix reprint series, the domestic side of Gasoline Alley receives full play. An old flame comes to visit Walt, with an eye toward marriage. Meanwhile, Walt pines for Mrs. Blossom, the neighborhood widow. Out of these entanglements, a long engagement and wedding ensue.

The eighty-page introduction features many private photographs of the cartoonist Frank King and his family and delves into the marketing of Gasoline Alley in the 1920s and 1930s, with many dolls and toys taken from the personal collection of Chris Ware, the series editor and award-winning cartoonist.


Walt and Skeezix, Vol. 3: 1925-1926 Reviews


  • James

    Another wonderful trip courtesy of the great Frank King.

  • Gavin Paul

    Magical stuff. My appreciation and genuine fondness for King grows with each volume. A gifted artist with a keen eye for the nuances of the human spirit. A treasure.

  • The other John

    As I set out to write this review, I discovered that I've never written up my thoughts on the first two volumes of the series. My bad. Overall, I've been enjoying these collections of the earliest Gasoline Alley comic strips. Not only are the comics amusing, but they offer a glimpse of another world--mid-America in the 1920s.* The picture is enhanced by the extensive articles and notes added by the publishers at Drawn & Quarterly Books.

    The strips from 1925 & 1926 focus more on the romance between Walt & Phyllis Blossom and less on Skeezix's shenanigans. They illustrate a culture with strict gender roles and social mores. I'm assuming they've been exaggerated a bit to draw out the storyline and work in a few gags. There also seems to be more travelling involved in this volume than in the previous ones. If I were inclined to count them, I think its possible that more of the strips are set "on the road" than in Gasoline Alley. Makes me wonder how the characters can afford such a lifestyle. But that's taking the book way too seriously. I'd much rather move on to the next volume.
    ________
    *Note: That world is a far from perfect world. The racial stereotypes in the art are painful. The writing is a bit better, though still reflects the biases of the time. Read at your own risk.

  • Michael P.

    Let's face it, there is no finer soap opera comic strip than Frank King's GASOLINE ALLEY. Unfortunately, King, at least at this point in his career, veered too often into melodrama. This most obviously and annoyingly true in the return of Madame Octave yet again threatening to take legal action about Skeezix. I dated women like Miss Blossom, and my advice is to break-up with her. King has Walt marry her, but she is still a manipulating jerk and gets away with it. These are just two of the things that pull GA down in my estimation, and the melodrama keeps the strip from being a higher form of art.

  • Jed Mayer

    Another two years in the charmingly humdrum life of Walt, Skeezix, and their eccentric friends. Not as visually inventive as Windsor Mc Cay or George Herriman, nor as witty as Charles Schultz, Frank King nevertheless brings a gentleness and calm to an art form that otherwise favored big laughs or dazzling spectacle. It’s comforting to know these lovingly compiled strips are around so the slowly unfolding lives of these simple and kind characters are always there for us to share.

  • Paul

    This was the first of the Walt and Skeezix albums that I wouldn't (and, duh, didn't) rate a five out of five. I'm not sure if I'm just becoming accustomed to the strip, and getting pickier, or if Frank King actually lost a little bit of his magic. Maybe it's just my frustration with certain elements of Madame Octave, and of how I think Walt should just be punching her in the head and stomping on her stomach, rather than inviting her to his wedding.

    Regardless...it's still some beautiful cartooning. King was always of the bigfoot style of cartooning, but his layouts and techniques are so creative that he nonetheless was a beautiful illustrator, and I'm glad I've discovered the treasures of the Gasoline Alley strips.

  • Brian

    Third volume of the life of Walt and Skeezix. This took me about a year because I set it down during the winter last year and let it gather dust. Had already got through the first two volumes from when Skeezix is found on the doorstep by Walt just days old. Now Skeezix is in kindergarten and Walt is married (he knew when he was "well off" but changed his mind on that). Goofy humour and plot lines at times and the Gasoline Alley theme is still there in the mobility of Walt and his cohorts. I have another two volumes on deck so another four years of the pair of them to get into. Hopefully at a faster pace than this one.