Prince Valiant Vol. 1: 1937-1938 [Reprint Pre-Order]
Price:
$29.99
This Afterword is excerpted in its entirety from Prince Valiant Vol. 1: 1937-1938 from Fantagraphics Books.
Terrifically popular from its inception,
Prince Valiant is one of the
most frequently reprinted comic
strips of all time. Like many other classics,
it was extensively collected in comic book
form early on, but starting in the 1950s,
it was also one of the first to graduate to
bona fide book editions. Sadly, commercial
and technical limitations conspired to
undercut the true glory of Foster’s work,
as the strips were recolored (inevitably to
their detriment, as in the otherwise impressive
1960s Nostalgia Press editions)
and sometimes even rewritten (as in the
simplified 1950s Hasting House editions
which, adding insult to injury, presented
the work in black-and-white). And when
a publisher decided to do it entirely right,
as Rick Norwood of Manuscript Press
did in the 1980s with his magnificent
Prince Valiant — An American Epic project, the
cost of recreating new color separations
to exactly match the original series and
printing them in a giant newspaper size
caused the series to peter out after only
three volumes.
Since our hero is of Scandinavian
blood and as a result has always been popular
in Northern Europe, it is fitting that
the most ambitious Valiant reprint job to
date was engineered by Danes. Beginning
in the 1970s, the Danish publisher
Interpresse produced a series of comics
albums reprinting the entire Foster
Valiant canon; partway through, they invited
publishers from other countries to
join them in order to share the burden of
production and printing costs—a call to
which Fantagraphics responded enthusiastically.
Thus, between 1984 and 2004
Fantagraphics collected not only the entire
run of Foster-drawn Valiants (as was the
original plan) but continued beyond that,
ultimately committing to print the following
decade’s worth of strips that, while
drawn by Foster’s successor John Cullen
Murphy, were still being written and laid
out by Foster. While the Danes had access
to decent black-and-white proof sheets,
resulting in nice, crisp reproduction, they
did re-color most of the strips “European
style,” with results that, while quite good
on their own merits, left many Foster fans
hoping someday to see an edition more
faithful to Foster’s original.
 LEFT TO RIGHT: Three samples of the same Prince Valiant panel in three PV editions: The 1960s Nostalgia Press edition, the 1980s Interpresse/ Fantagraphics edition (both recolored), and the present edition (shot from engraver's proofs).
Well, that day is upon us! Here in the 21st
century color digital reproduction technology
has advanced to the point where it
is possible to scan classic Valiant color pages
and then color-correct and restore them
to the point where they regain 99% of the
crispness and glory of their original appearance.
While this technique has been
used on countless other recent comic strip
reprints, including Fantagraphics’ own
Krazy Kat and Popeye, IDW’s Dick Tracy, Terry
and the Pirates, and Little Orphan Annie, Sunday
Press’s Little Nemo and Gasoline Alley, and
many others — did we mention this is the
golden age of classic comic strip reprints?
— Prince Valiant benefits from an extra stroke
of good luck: The availability of a nearly
full set of pristine color engraver’s proof
sheets of almost the entire Prince Valiant
run, carefully preserved by Foster and
donated to Syracuse University, who has
generously provided scans of these pages
for our use. So special thanks are in order
to Syracuse U.’s Sean M. Quimby and
Nicolette Dobrowolski for their help in
securing these.
Additional thanks to Brian M. Kane
(who was also the one told us about the
existence and availability of the Syracuse
proofs so crucial to this project) for supplying
us with a spate of fascinating Foster
art and photos to accompany his introduction
and Fred Schreiber’s interview.
And when it turned out that Syracuse’s
files did not include 17 pages from these
two years, Achim Dressler, whose Bocola
Verlag has been releasing a (German-language)
complete Valiant series based
on scrupulously restored scans of original
printed newspaper pages, was able to jump
into the breach and provide us with seven
of them — pages 15, 16, 17, 24, 37, 72,
and 89. That, as a bonus, gave us the uncensored
seen-only-in-Europe gruesome
second panel of page 37 (the American release
was minus that jutting sword); so to
him we extend our cosmopolitan dankeschöns
as well. Meanwhile, when it turned
out nobody had particularly good color
tearsheets or proofs from the ultra-rare
first 10 pages (Bocola’s scans were pretty
ragged for these), the aforementioned
Rick Norwood generously allowed us to
shoot from his American Epic book with
its re-created color separations (and even
in that version readers will notice some
smudgy linework on several of the pages).
Also thanks are in order to Glenn Mott of
King Features Syndicate, and within our
own four walls, a special tip of the sword to
color-corrector/retoucher extraordinaire
Paul Baresh and to designer supreme
Adam Grano. All deserving of prime seating
at the Round Table.
More Prince Valiant books (click covers for complete product details and ordering information):
Prince Valiant Vol. 1: 1937-1938 [BLACK & WHITE Libri Impressi Edition - NORTH AMERICA ONLY]
Price:
$35.00
|
Prince Valiant Vol. 3: 1941-1942
Price:
$29.99
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Prince Valiant Vols. 1-3: 1937-1942
Price:
$89.97
$71.98
You Save: 20.00%
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The Definitive Prince Valiant Companion [Hardcover Ed.]
Price:
$39.99
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All available Prince Valiant books
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