


Books in series
#1
Peanuts
1952
The very first adventures of the world-famous newspaper strips by Charles Schultz!
Filled with bitter-sweet humour and child-like innocence, join Charlie Brown, Snoopy, and the gang in this beautiful new facsimile edition of the timeless classic Peanuts strips by the legendary cartoonist Charles Schultz.
This collection contains 240 Peanuts strips taken from 1950-1952 and introduces several of the comic strip’s famous and familiar characters, including Charlie Brown, Snoopy, Lucy, Linus, Patty, Sherman, Schroeder and Violet.
The strip’s bitter-sweet humour and child-like innocence helped to cement the Peanuts comic strip’s popularity and secure its reputation as a true, one-of-a-kind, timeless classic.

#2
More Peanuts
1954
This collection contains 240 Peanuts strips taken from the three year span of 1952-1954 featuring many of your favourite characters.
The strip’s bitter-sweet humour and child-like innocence helped to cement the Peanuts comic strip’s popularity and secure its reputation as a true, one-of-a-kind, timeless classic.

#3
Good Grief, More Peanuts
1956
Early Peanuts cartoons feature Linus learning to crawl, Lucy stirring up trouble, Charlie Brown playing baseball, and Snoopy playing in the snow

#4
Good Ol' Charlie Brown
1957
Good Ol' Charlie Brown \[Aug 01, 1957\] Schulz, Charles M.

#5
A New Peanuts Book Featuring Snoopy
1958
A fifth collection of classic Peanuts newspaper comic strips features 248 daily strips from 1955-1958 and feature Snoopy, perhaps Peanuts most popular character, certainly when it comes to cainines!
This book is a facsimile edition of the fifth Peanuts collection originally published back in 1958 by the Clarke, Irwin & Company, Ltd of Toronto, Canada.
This collection of 248 daily Peanuts newspaper strips that appeared between 1955 -1958 focuses on, perhaps the most famous character in the Peanuts universe, Charlie Brown's Beagle, Snoopy. Whether he's chasing snow flakes, doing impersonations or just dancing his world famous happy jig, things are always going to a little sillier when Snoopy's around.
The strip's bitter-sweet humour and child-like innocence helped to cement the Peanuts comic strip's popularity and secure its reputation as a true, one-of-a-kind, timeless classic.