Puneet Varma (Editor)

The Complete Carl Barks Disney Library

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Schedule
  
biannual

Number of issues
  
about 30

Editor(s)
  
Creator
  
Publication date
  
December 2011

Colourist(s)
  
Rich Tommaso

Publisher
  
Fantagraphics Books

The Complete Carl Barks Disney Library Walt Disney39s Donald Duck The Old Castle39s Secret The Co Flickr

Similar
  
Uncle Scrooge, Walt Disney's Comics a, Donald Duck Adventures, The Don Rosa Library, Disney comics

O g nio dos quadrinhos disney carl barks pipoca e nanquim especial 33


The Complete Carl Barks Disney Library is a series of books collecting all of the comic book Donald Duck and Uncle Scrooge stories written and drawn by Carl Barks, originally published between late 1942 and Barks' retirement in June 1966. The series was launched in late 2011, and will comprise 6000 pages over roughly 30 240-page volumes when it is finished.

Contents

The Complete Carl Barks Disney Library Walt Disney39s Donald Duck The Old Castle39s Secret The Co Flickr

Background

The Complete Carl Barks Disney Library Walt Disney39s Donald Duck Trail of the Unicorn The Compl Flickr

The rights to Barks' works were licensed from Disney by Gemstone Publishing from 2003 until the end of 2008, when they ceased publishing Disney titles. When he heard about it, Fantagraphics Books publisher Gary Groth got in contact with Disney, securing the rights to Floyd Gottfredson's work on the Mickey Mouse comic strip, which resulted in the Floyd Gottfredson Library series that started publication in mid-2011. Groth also tried to get the rights to Barks' duck stories. Disney at first announced they would publish the stories themselves, but eventually changed their minds and passed the work on to Fantagraphics. In 2014, Fantagraphics also began publishing a companion series, The Don Rosa Library, collecting the Donald Duck and Uncle Scrooge stories written and drawn by Don Rosa.

Format

The Complete Carl Barks Disney Library httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumb8

Barks' duck stories have been reprinted extensively, especially in Europe. Before Fantagraphics', there has been two complete collections in English published by Another Rainbow. The first was the expensive, scholarly Carl Barks Library archive in 30 hardcover volumes, which was in black-and-white. This was followed up by Carl Barks Library in Color in album form, with modern colouring.

The Complete Carl Barks Disney Library Series The Complete Carl Barks Disney Library Walt Disney39s

Fantagraphics' 7.5" x 10.25" (19 cm x 26 cm) hardcover volumes are published in full color, as the stories originally were. When the series is complete, it will represent a chronological collection of Barks' stories. However, the volumes of the stories are being published out of order, starting with the volumes that the publishers believe will attract the most attention, starting with Lost in the Andes!, a volume containing stories from what is considered to be Barks' "peak" period (the late 1940s to the mid-1950s), including the story "Lost in the Andes", which many fans consider to be representative of Barks' best work, and was Barks' own favorite.

The Complete Carl Barks Disney Library Series The Complete Carl Barks Disney Library

The design work was done by Fantagraphics' lead designer, Jacob Covey. The pages are recolored by Rich Tommaso, using the original comics as a coloring guide, unlike some of Fantagraphics' more scholarly reprints, as the books are aimed at a more general audience than many of Fantagraphics' other offerings, which are often aimed at the comics cognoscenti.

The books are about 240 pages each—about 200 pages of comics, with the remaining pages made up of supplementary material.

Restoration

The books are completely uncensored, including the racial caricatures that appeared in the originals that had been retouched in later reprintings. Some stories were printed from recently rediscovered original artwork, for the first time since their original printings.

Fantagraphics chose to have the artwork computer-recolored, using the original comics as color guides, rather than reprinting with the original off-register colors as they have in many of their other archival projects. Colorist Rich Tommaso has stuck closely to the original colors, although muting the originally garish ones somewhat in a concession to modern readers. Sometimes the colors were changed when it was known that Barks hadn't liked them, or when it was felt they could be corrected or improved.

References

The Complete Carl Barks Disney Library Wikipedia