In the wake of our Eisner Award–nominated Captain Easy Sunday adventure newspaper strip series, we are collecting the very best of the daily comic exploits of Easy and Tubbs.
The third volume in Fantagraphics’ ongoing reprint of Roy Crane’s legendary comedy-action series features what many consider the absolute peak of the series: “Temple of the Swinks,” in which Wash and
Our boy Buz battles a sinister saboteur on the icy slopes of the Alps in the latest collection of legendary newspaper cartoonist Roy Crane’s flyboy strip.
Buz Sawyer — adventurer, bon vivant, andformer bachelor — can’t leta little thing like romance and marriageslow him down. Buz knows thatChristy is the only woman for him —brave, beautiful, and able to
In the fourth volume of Fantagraphics’ Captain Easy series, our eponymous hero and his loyal sidekick Wash Tubbs answer a newspaper ad that they don’t know is years out of date, and wind up stranded i
World War II has ended, and with so many pilots mustered out at the end of the war, jobs for pilots are hard to find, and Buz’s record as a “hot-shot” pilot does not recommend him to commercial airlin
This second of four volumes reprints in full color the rare Captain Easy Sundaypages from the 1930s. Roy Crane’s Soldier of Fortune, Captain Easy, fights forgold in the frozen north, is mistake
Territories of Poverty challenges the conventional North-South geographies through which poverty scholarship is organized. Staging theoretical interventions that traverse social histories of the Ameri
Territories of Poverty challenges the conventional North-South geographies through which poverty scholarship is organized. Staging theoretical interventions that traverse social histories of the Ameri