Showing posts with label Red Ryder. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Red Ryder. Show all posts

Friday, March 18, 2022

RED RYDER Rides Again! (1939)


The continuing adventures of Red and Beaver were reprinted in Crackajack Funnies #13, 14 & 15 in 1939, as found on ComicBookPlus. They'll be back - as will the dastardly Ace Hanlon.








Tuesday, January 5, 2021

RED RYDER in "The Extermination of Ace Hanlon" (1939)


Lo, these many moons ago (HERE), we saw how Red met The Beav, and how they foiled the dastardly plans of mustachioed Ace Hanlon. But Ace was still infesting the town, and we just knew a return engagement was coming. Here it is, as reprinted from the funny papers in Crackajack Funnies #s 11 & 12 back in 1939, and snatched by yours truly from comicbookplus.








Tuesday, February 5, 2019

RED RYDER meets Little Beaver (1938 and '39)


Fred Harman's Red Ryder made his first appearance in the funny papers in November 1938, and the comic book Crackajack Funnies began running these reprints in March 1939. That makes it a fair bet that these converted stips represent his debut, and first meeting with Little Beaver. I found these on the Digital Comic Museum site.








Friday, April 16, 2010

Forgotten Book: Red Ryder (the strip) by Fred Harman


When you see the name Red Ryder, what comes to mind? A BB gun, right? Or maybe Don “Red” Barry or Allan “Rocky” Lane, two of the guys who played him in the movies. Or maybe Robert Blake when he was on trial for murder, with the media constantly reminding us he played Little Beaver in some of those movies. Or an old comic book. Or a Whitman hardcover. Or even a Big Little Book.

What comes to mind is almost anything but the real thing - the Fred Harman comic strip that ran from 1938 to 1964. That’s because - of all those manifestations - the comic strips are just about the hardest to come by. As we’re currently enjoying a resurgence in comic strip reprints, we can only hope that old Red will soon be one of those getting the deluxe treatment.

In the meantime, this slim 1985 collection from Dragon Lady Press is about as good as it gets. (The cover above is not by Harman, but by V. Laszlo trying to emulate his style.) The book has only 66 pages, but it’s good stuff, presenting the first 7½ months of the strip’s run. Here are the first nine days . . .

(click to SUPERSIZE)



Harman went on to become a serious and respected western painter. My wife and I visited the Fred Harman Museum in Pagosa Springs, CO a few years back, where we had a nice visit with his son and saw a lot of amazing art. Here's a sample of his later work (I bought a print of this first one):





As usual, you should gallop on over to pattinase for Patti Abbott's list of links to other Forgotten Books.