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Definitive Flash Gordon and Jungle Jim book cover 1
Definitive Flash Gordon and Jungle Jim book cover 2
Definitive Flash Gordon and Jungle Jim book cover 3
Definitive Flash Gordon and Jungle Jim
Series · 4 books · 2011-2013

Books in series

Definitive Flash Gordon and Jungle Jim Vol. 1 book cover
#1

Definitive Flash Gordon and Jungle Jim Vol. 1

1934-1936

2011

IDW's Library of American Comics is producing The Definitive Flash Gordon & Jungle Jim as part of the Ultimate Alex Raymond Collection. Edited by Eisner Award-winner Dean Mullaney, The Definitive Flash Gordon & Jungle Jim will present every Sunday by Raymond from both classic strips together for the first time, in the oversized 12" x 16" champagne edition format. Created by Raymond in 1934, Flash Gordon is arguably the most famous science fiction comic strip of all time. It follows the adventures of the title character and his companions, Dale Arden and Dr. Zarkov, as they leave Earth to discover the source of meteors that are threatening the planet, and get waylaid on the planet Mongo, where they battle the evil Ming the Merciless. The three Earthlings encounter one strange race after another, from the water-breathing Shark-Men of the Undersea Kingdom, the winged Hawkmen, and the ferocious Tusk-Men. All the while, Flash finds himself in the arms of one beautiful woman after another—much to Dale Arden's chagrin. Jungle Jim was created as a strip topper for Flash Gordon, and followed the life of Jim Bradley, who fought pirates, slave traders, and assorted villains in the exotic Southeast Asia of the 1930s. This neglected Raymond classic also features Jim's native cohort Kolu and femme fatale Lille DeVrille.
Definitive Flash Gordon and Jungle Jim Vol. 2 book cover
#2

Definitive Flash Gordon and Jungle Jim Vol. 2

1936-1939

2012

Nominated for three Eisner Awards! The Definitive Flash Gordon & Jungle Jim presents every Sunday strip by Raymond from both classic strips together for the first time, in the oversized 12" x 16" champagne edition format. Created by Raymond in 1934, Flash Gordon is arguably the most famous science fiction comic strip of all time. It follows the adventures of the title character and his companions—Dale Arden and Dr. Zarkov—as they leave Earth to discover the source of meteors that are threatening the planet, and get waylaid on the planet Mongo, where they battle the evil Ming the Merciless. The three Earthlings encounter one strange race after another, from the water-breathing Shark-Men of the Undersea Kingdom, to the winged Hawkmen, to the ferocious Tusk-Men. All the while, Flash finds himself in the arms of one beautiful woman after another—much to Dale Arden's chagrin. From IDW, the publisher who brought you: Caniff HC 9781600109201 Complete Chester Gould's Dick Tracy Vol 1 9781600100369 Complete Terry And The Pirates Vol 1: 1934-1936 9781600101007 Genius, Illustrated: The Life and Art of Alex Toth 9781613770245 Genius, Isolated: The Life and Art of Alex Toth 9781600108280 Rip Kirby Vol 1 9781600104848 Scorchy Smith And The Art Of Noel Sickles 9781600102066 Steve Canyon Vol 1: 1947-1948 9781613771259 X-9: Secret Agent Corrigan Vol 1 9781600106972
Definitive Flash Gordon and Jungle Jim Vol. 3 book cover
#3

Definitive Flash Gordon and Jungle Jim Vol. 3

1939-1941

2013

The third volume of the Definitive Flash Gordon and Jungle Jim includes every Alex Raymond Sunday from March 12, 1939 through the end of 1941. Flash, Dale Arden, and Dr. Zarkov have a lengthy adventure with Fria, the stunning Snow Queen of Frigia; Dale is captured by Ming's secret service, culminating in a fight to the finish between Flash and the merciless tyrant. Meanwhile, when radio signals from Earth find their way to Mongo, Flash and company must decide—do they stay on Mongo or return home to help overthrow "The Dictator"?! In the topper strip, Jim, Lil, and Kolu ward off moon worshippers on the Malay Peninsula, protect the Panama Canal from sabotage, and, in the midst of an expanding world war, are enlisted to keep a Caribbean island free of hostile foreign influences. In the introduction by Bruce Canwell, Joe Kubert tells of being a 12-year-old making his first-ever trip out of Brooklyn to visit Alex Raymond at his Connecticut home! Plus, Howard Chaykin discusses the influence of the Matt and Benton Clark on Raymond's drawing style. Edited by Dean Mullaney, designed by Lorraine Turner, Introduction by Bruce Canwell.
Definitive Flash Gordon and Jungle Jim Vol. 4 book cover
#4

Definitive Flash Gordon and Jungle Jim Vol. 4

1942-1944

2013

The grand conclusion to the multple Eisner Award-nominated edition of Alex Raymond's Flash Gordon and Jungle Jim. Reproduced in the oversized Champagne Edition format are Raymond's spectacular Sunday pages from 1942 through 1944; also included is the first storyline by Austin Briggs, who followed Raymond's tenure. Edited by Dean Mullaney, designed by Lorraine Turner, with an Introduction by Bruce Canwell.

Author

Alex Raymond
Alex Raymond
Author · 20 books

Alexander Gillespie Raymond was an American comic strip artist, best known for creating the comic Flash Gordon in 1934. The serial hit the silver screen three years later with Buster Crabbe and Jean Rogers as the leading players. Other strips he drew include Secret Agent X-9, Rip Kirby, Jungle Jim, Tim Tyler's Luck, and Tillie the Toiler. Alex Raymond received a Reuben Award from the National Cartoonists Society in 1949 for his work on Rip Kirby. Born in New Rochelle, New York, Alex Raymond attended Iona Prep on a scholarship and played on the Gaels' football team. He joined the US Marines Corp in 1944 and served in the Pacific theatre during World War II. His realistic style and skillful use of "feathering" (a shading technique in which a soft series of parallel lines helps to suggest the contour of an object) has continued to be an inspiration for generations of cartoonists. Raymond was killed in an automobile accident in Westport, Connecticut while driving with fellow cartoonist Stan Drake, aged 46, and is buried in St. John's Roman Catholic Cemetery in Darien, Connecticut. During the accident which led to his untimely demise, he was said to have remarked (by the surviving passenger of the accident) on the fact that a pencil on the dashboard seemed to be floating in relation to the plummet of the vehicle. He was the great-uncle of actors Matt Dillon and Kevin Dillon.

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