Average customer rating:
- Excellent Don Rosa and Carl Barks stuff
- A Letter From Home by Don Rosa
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Uncle Scrooge #342 (Uncle Scrooge (Graphic Novels))
Don Rosa , and
Daniel Branca
Manufacturer: Gemstone Publishing
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
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Similar Items:
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Uncle Scrooge #339 (Uncle Scrooge (Graphic Novels))
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The Life and Times of Scrooge McDuck
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Walt Disney's Uncle Scrooge & Donald Duck: Don Rosa Special (Gladstone Comic Album, No. 28)
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Uncle Scrooge #334 (Walt Disney's Uncle Scrooge)
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The Life and Times of Scrooge McDuck Companion
ASIN: 0911903763 |
Amazon.com
Gemstone's Uncle Scrooge 342 is an excellent addition for fans of Don Rosa's Life and Times of Scrooge McDuck. The main tale, "The Old Castle's Other Secret, or A Letter from Home," is a modern-day follow-up to Rosa's life history of Scrooge, in which he, Donald, and Huey, Louie, and Dewey return to the old homestead, Castle McDuck, in search of the treasure of the Knights of the Templar. Filler stories include Byron Erickson and Wanda Gattino's "The Customer Is Always Wrong" (featuring Gyro Gearloose), Lars Jensen & Jack Sutter and Maria Jose Sanchez Nunez's "The Door Trap" (the Beagle Boys), and "Raven Mad," a Carl Barks classic featuring another attempt by Magica De Spell to capture Scrooge's no. 1 dime. --David Horiuchi
Book Description
Adventures and short stories starring Uncle Scrooge, Donald Duck, and other standard Disney characters.
Customer Reviews:
Excellent Don Rosa and Carl Barks stuff.......2006-06-01
In this comic book, you can read the second part of Don Rosa's two-part story about the Knight Templars and the Crusader Kings. You will also find a Carl Barks story featuring a raven exclaiming the notorious word "Nevermore", plus a couple of other short stories.
The front cover is a masterpiece by Don Rosa, coloured by Susan Daigle-Leach.
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Uncle Scrooge, "The Old Castle's Other Secret" or "A Letter From Home"
Story & art: Don Rosa
Colour: Egmont & Susan Daigle-Leach
Lettering: Todd Klein
First I should point out that to enjoy this story to the full, you should read Don Rosa's "The Crown of the Crusader Kings", published in Uncle Scrooge No. 339. Furthermore, to get the full enjoyment of that story, you
shouldn't read this one first, because it contains some spoilers introductorily.
The second part of Don Rosa's diptych about the Crusader Kings and Scrooges search for their Templar treasures stretches over massive 36 pages, counting prologue and sum ups. Since the story is so long, it's devided into three parts, interrupted by other, shorter stories.
Scrooge, Donald and the nephews continues pursueing the footmarks of the Knight Templars. This time they're after the trasury of the Knight Templars, so they return to the old McDuck Castle in Scotland trying to find clues. Castle McDuck is taken care of by Scrooge's sister, Matilda, and she reveals that everybody in the McDuck clan always knew about the Crusader secrets - everybody except Scrooge himself. Even though there seems to be some hidden conflicts from the past between Scrooge and his sister, Matilda still guides them towards clues that could lead to the Templar treasury. But following Scrooge and his crew is the director of the international money council, Monsieur Molay and his partner Maurice Mattressface, and they try their best to snatch the treasure right in front of Scrooge's nose.
Although Don Rosa seems to have some minor issues drawing proper-sized beaks and tails, I still love his magnificant drawing style. I enjoy every little detail he manages to put into a panel (which is not a few!), and his humorous gags often make me giggle. A good example is when Donald falls down something he believes is a fiendish pitfall booby-trap made by the diabolical Templars, though it's actually something quite different. This story will keep you entertained during the entire comic book for sure, before it wraps the story up with a rather touching ending in part three.
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Beagle Boys, "The Door Trap"
Story: Lars Jensen & Jack Sutter
Art: Maria Jose Sanchez Nez
Dialogue: David Gerstein
Colour: Egmont & Marie Javins
Lettering: Susie Lee
The Beagle Boys are anxious to get rid of Scrooge McDuck once and for all. The police find their secret hideout after their latest robbery, and half of the Beagle Boys (there seems to be six of them in this story) are arrested while Scrooge grinningly observes the imprisonment. The remaining three Beagle Boys concludes that they must get rid of Scrooge in some way, so they visit a fellow con, Memphis Marv. Marv sells them a door, and when somebody walks through that door, they'll be magically transported to the Gobi Desert. Now the remaining challenge is to get old McDuck to walk through that door...
This is a rather short story, only 7 pages long. The drawings and colouring are decent, and the story is ok reading material (though I didn't quite buy the fact that Scrooge gives up a fight over a quarter).
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Gyro Gearloose, "The Customer Is Always Wrong"
Story: Byron Erickson
Art: Wanda Gattino
Colour: Egmont & Scott Rockwell
Lettering: Jon Babcock
Gyro Gearloose gets a little desperate since his workshop is filled with unconventional and wonderful inventions, but nobody is interested in trying them. They story starts out with Donald testing a leaf vacuumer, but since Donald never listens to Gyro's orders not to do a certain thing, Gyro gets mad at him. But when he realises none but Donald is willing to try out some of his untraditional inventions, he decides to give Donald a second chance.
8 pages long, this story is also adequate filling material to give the buyer more than "just" a rather long Don Rosa adventure. Gattino does a good job making Little Helper display human feelings.
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Uncle Scrooge, "Raven Mad"
Story & art: Carl Barks
(WDC 265, Oct 1962)
Colour: Susan Daigle-Leach
I first read this story in a Norwegian Donald Duck magazine, and liked it instantly. When I found it available in the English untranslated version, I didn't hesitate to buy it so I could re-read those 10 pages of joy with the original jargon.
Donald's nephews have found a raven which can talk (it says "nevermore!"), and they've named it Randolph. In the park nearby there's a big bazaar, and Scrooge McDuck is exhibiting his number one dime, and he's asked Donald and his nephews to help him guard his rare coin. There's one person in particular the coin needs to be guarded from, and that's Magica de Spell. After a failed attempt to steal the number one dime, Magica hypnotizes the nephews' raven and orders it to snatch it for her.
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All in all, this is a great buy if you're a Don Rosa and/or Carl Barks fan. The Don Rosa story is exciting and thrilling, and the final story by Barks is, as usual when it comes to Barks' tellings, great reading.
A Letter From Home by Don Rosa.......2005-08-08
I was asked once, about the bitter fight between Scrooge and his sisters, (see The Life and Times of Scrooge McDuck, by Don Rosa, chapter 11) that sent them away and out of Scrooge's life forever...what happened to the sisters?
What happened to Donald's mother is a mystery at this point, we know from the old stories that Donald was raised not by his mother Hortense (Scrooge's sister), but instead by Grandma Duck aka Elvira Coot--there is no mention of her ever past the fight between her and her brother in L&T's. However, we do know that Scrooge's other sister, married Prof. Ludwig Von Drake and than moved back to Scotland to live at the family castle, Von Drake however is rarly seen as his profession keeps him ever on tour around the world, and so with this knowledge in mind, move on to...
"The Old Castle's Other Secret...or A Letter From Home", by Don Rosa
Gemstone Uncle Scrooge #342 June 2005
This is the last or at least the current last chapter of the "Tralla-La" saga. This segment takes us back to Dismal Downs, in Scotland and a dark, somber story, that spends much of it's time in the McDuck clan cemetary, and the dungeons of Castle McDuck.
This story assumes that you have read Barks' story "The Old Castle's Secret", and has many refferances to it.
The usual gag-lines that Don Rosa is noted for, are scattered through-out this story, but it's not the gags and puns that drives this story onward----it's the sheer heart-break that Scrooge now lives in, thinking back of an earlier time when he and his sisters were a loving family, contrasted to the bitter fueding and sharp remarks that are scattered throughout as Scrooge and his sister Matilda are reunited after 25 years of not speaking to each other...we see referances to the dark day in Africa, when Scrooge burned Foola Zoola's village (L&T's chapter 11)....true to Zoola's words, it's not Bombie the Zombie that haughts Scrooge, it's his own guilt and the shame that he brought down on his family, the knowledge that he could never face his sisters after what he'd done....
Along with this there is another reason for being back in Scotland---the Templar Knight guarding the crown lost in Hati, (The Crown of the Crusader Kings, by Don Rosa) had been a McDuck, and he had been the guardian of a far greater treasure----the Holy Grail and the vast treasure vault of the Templar Knights, and hidden in the tombstones of the McDuck cemetary, are encrypted clues to the whereabouts of that vast treasure...a treasure that to Scrooge's utter horror, had been guarded by his own father, and had been know of by the entire family---but they had sworn to never tell Scrooge about it, for fear that his greed for gold, would end the family's honor entirly.
This knowledge, bears down harder than anything else that's ever happened to Scrooge, for the lesson he had only half learned in Xanadu (Return to Xanadu, by Don Rosa) finally sinks in once and for all and it is to his own horror that his greed for gold has utterly destroied whatever faith his family had in him. Only Donald and the 3 little nephews are still able to see past the greedy miser, to see the old man that seeks nothing more than the love of his family.
And yet, unknown to Scrooge and his family, is that while they are all professing they hate each other...the same spy and theif that had followed them to Hati, has stolen the crown, gone to France and stolen the Philosopher's Stone, has followed them to Scotland, and is now hiding under the window listen to their every word...and their words end in one last fit of hatred beteween Scrooge and Matilda, resulting in Scrooge storming off for the dungeons while Matila runs outside saying she's not returning to the castle until Scrooge has left Scotland, and she runs right into the waiting hand of the gun-toting spy...
No spoilers in this review, sorry. This is one of those ultra long 30 page Don Rosa stories, and what I've told you here only takes you about 15 pages in...
I'm going to say, here and now that this by-far out ranks the "Life & Times" story.... I'm not going to tell you how this "Tralla-La saga" ends...and when I get done writing this post, I'm gonna go cry my eyes out, because I do know how this story ends, and I've yet to get through reading it without a box of hankies...
$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
If you want to read the entire "saga" of the story of Tralla-La, there are 5 stories that it consists of...
First of course is "Tralla-La", by Carl Barks (1955)
Next you will need to read "The Lost Crown of Genghis Khan", by Carl Barks (1956)
After this Don Rosa picks up the story with "Return to Xanadu". (1991)
Followed by "The Crown of the Crusader Kings", by Don Rosa (2005)
And currently the story has lead us to this issue here "The Old Castle's Other Secret: or A Letter From Home", by Don Rosa (2005)
We only see the ducks visiting Tralla-La twice----in Carl Barks' "Tralla-La and again in Don Rosa's "Return To Xanadu"....however, the story itself goes beyong the 2 trips to Tralla-La.
Also it's helpful if you read these 2 before starting the Tralla-La series, because the last 2 chapters do a lot of referance back to these 2 stories...
"The Old Castle's Secret" by Carl Barks 1948 (look at that date! Scrooge don't look like the Scrooge we all know in this one; this is Scrooge's second story)
"The Fablulous Philosopher's Stone", by Carl Barks
$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
Now I think I'm gonna go read A Letter From Home again. It's quickly becoming my favorite story. I love this story. It is by far the greatest story Don Rosa has ever written. I need to get another copy, I'm gonna wear this one out.
"A Letter From Home" goes way past 5 stars, and I don't think 10 stars are enough either....this one should get a full 100!
Amazon.com
Bedtime stories will never again be the same--at least not after reading James Finn Garner, who, in surprisingly true Fairy Godmother fashion, waved his authorial wand and revised a large collection of fairy tales and holiday lore in Politically Correct: The Ultimate Storybook. This volume compiles his three separately published books, Politically Correct Bedtime Stories, Once Upon a More Enlightened Time, and Politically Correct Holiday Stories, examining the many "isms," whether glaringly obvious or more subtle, inherent in traditional favorites.
The tales begin similarly to their Brothers Grimm and Hans Christian Anderson predecessors, but veer suddenly to incorporate non-offensive, politically correct language and modern issues that range from overzealous lawyers to rampant real estate development to the destruction of the environment. Garner refashions over two dozen tales including Sleeping Beauty and Cinderella, plucking damsels and the disenfranchised from captive plot lines, increasing their self-awareness, spunk and dialogue ten-fold, then settles them comfortably back into tales where they can live happily ever after as confident, happy, successful entrepreneurs with a social mission.
The disclaimers preceding each of the three sections, as well as the abundant use of politically correct speech throughout the collection, appears at times more of a pointed mockery than a true attempt to enlighten stories locked in medieval thought. The tales do however, offer a witty and clever alternative to spoon-fed tradition. --Mara Shurgot
Customer Reviews:
Great fun. Somebody really needed to write books like this, and I am glad he did..........2006-12-19
Kudos to Mr. Garner. I have read all three books. I think the bedtime story book 1 and the Holiday story book are the best. I am employed in a large metro area, where we seem to be inundated with all this touchy-feely, politically correct stuff - I see it in memos and we have training to attend from time to time where we hear terms like those in the books. Garner does such an excellent job showing how ridiculous it can get and how ridiculous many of them are. Any time I need a good laugh I read one of his updated stories, and have a good "belly laugh". I absolutely love these books.
Best Book in the world.......2006-05-27
This book is hands down the best book in the world.It is extremely intelligent and is the most interesting book to our imagination.Brilliant humor in every paragraph or sentence for that matter.There was no book like it..of course,now others are expanding on Mr.Garners idea.I have the shorter version but it was disappointing as it didnt have all of his humorous stories..this book,Once Upon a More Enlightend Time etc..is the book i take everywhere.I do not get tired of reading the funny terms..definately takes away the realities of reality and grumpy people who have no sense of decent humor.Lighten up,have fun with this book.Mr.G,your a GENIUS.
Great Book!.......2003-07-08
This was very entertaining to me. Read the whole thing with a grin on my face. I really enjoyed the authors humour in telling the stories over only in a politically correct way. Great read for anyone needing a smile.
Very funny, boys, very funny, ha ha ha.......2002-09-01
I first read some of these stories quite a while ago. I enjoyed the Snow White story quite a bit, and having spent some time in a trailer park, I can easily understand the people in Pied Piper of Hamelin. Although I am not a feminist and think personally that the old values are better than the new ones, I can still appreciate the humour in most of the stories. I can't say I enjoyed all of them though.
Mostly the reason I got this book was because of the Christmas collection, which is by far the best set of these stories that James Garner has done. This section gets three of my stars.
"The Night Before Solstice" is a very well-done parody. "The children were nestled all snug in their beds, dreaming of lentils and warm whole-grain breads..." He talks about how overfed Santa is and how bad smoking is for Santa's health.
"Frosty the Snowman" concerns two argumentative children who build a snowman and when he tells them he's going to melt, they march to Washington to protest about abuse of the ozone layer.
"Rudolf the Red-Nosed Reindeer" is the story of a disliked outsider who suddenly became OK to Santa when Santa could get some use out of him. But Rudolf won't have any of it. He says the deer are underprivileged and need a more flexible work schedule and a retirement plan.ù
"The Nutcracker" is in here too, but at the time I read it I didn't know the real story and therefore it didn't make any impression on me.
The there's "A Christmas Carol"... You know, the story that begins with that famous line: "Jacob Marley was non-viable." The ghosts try to teach him all he needs to know. The second one in particular I remember. He was a fat slob and went from house to house to raid the fridge. When all is said and done, Scrooge decides he's a victim of circumstance like Diminutive Timòn... It's all quite involved and you really have to read it for yourself. But it's very funny. I've read it many times. (I recommend that you read the real story by Dickens first - it's not that long - it will make you laugh more at the PC one.)
So if for nothing else, get this for the Christmas section.
Great Book.......2000-12-13
This book was funny, witty, and had a wry sense of humor. The author, James Finn Garner, has commented on our modern society in a politically correct manner that will have you howling with laughter. He satirizes traditional fairy tales and folk tales and yet they have a charm of their own!! I am sure you will love this book. My hobby is storytelling, and audiences really love these stories.
Customer Reviews:
truly funny.......2003-06-18
Garner takes some of the most beloved childrens stories and turns them into the most perfect polically correct stories possible by removing any possibly offensive thoughts. In doing so, he has turned the idea of political correctness on its ear. By making the story as politically correct as possible, Garner has shown how stupid political correctness truly is. This book is not for the pollitically correct, but for those who want to needle them. Garner used different spellings of women to wommon so there wouldn't be a reference to men with women. He even apologizes in his introduction for not being politically correct enough. This is truly funny and the politically correct will miss the forest for the trees. Highley reccomended.
PLEASE re-print this........2000-11-21
This is a great series of stories. I bought these for my first daughter when she was still in the womb. We reaad them to her all the time before and after her birth. Now I want them for my niece and nephew. They are more for the adult than the child, but when they are a year and under you'll both love them.
The Best since the brothers Grimm.......1999-12-04
Loved it and hope there's more comin
Book Description
Following in the footsteps of Politically Correct Bedtime Stories, this book retells classic bedtime stories, stripped of any elements that might be offensive to women, gays, short people, minorities, giants, or wolves, as well as any details that might encourage aggression, cruelty, sexism, prejudice, littering, and so on.
At the same time he pokes fun at our politically correct sensitivity, the author points out biases in our traditional stories that we may not have been aware of.
Customer Reviews:
Fairy tales told in the most politically correct manner possible.......2007-05-22
This book is extremely funny. Garner takes the following classic fairy tales and turns them into extremely politically correct satires.
*) Hansel and Gretel
*) The Ant and the Grasshopper
*) The Little Mermaid
*) The Tortoise and the Hare
*) Puss In Boots
*) Sleeping Beauty
*) The City Mouse and the Country Mouse
The content can be summed up by the alternate title for Sleeping Beauty, " Sleeping Persun of Better-Than-Average Attractiveness." Everyone in the stories talks like the most totally committed politically correct person imaginable. It is satire that works and is an extension of what we see and read on a daily basis.
Fun, but just more of the same.......2006-07-11
Given the popularity and originality of Garner's previous work, "Politically Correct Bedtime Stories," a sequel was all but inevitable. But the brilliance of that first effort was in its freshness and surprise. Now that the feline animal companion is out of the bag, another book on the same topic was bound to be disappointing.
Garner rewrites old fairy tales (Hansel and Gretel, The Little Mermaid) and fables (The Ant and the Grasshopper, the Tortoise and the Hare) to echo the sensitivities of the far, far left. He tongue-in-cheekedly uses spellings that avoid the word "man" ("persun" for "person," "wommon" for "woman,") and has his heroes and heroines (excuse me, she-roes) adopt anti-capitalist, pro-environment and pro-animal rights stances. But (sigh) it has all been done before. What Garner needed to do was to take his lampoon to a new level. He accomplishes this one time, with "Puss in Boots," a satire on the American political system, in which artful consultants spin empty-headed candidates into electoral gold.
Garner is a clever man, a skilled writer and a gifted satirist. This work is OK, but I'm anxious to see him move in new directions.
That Tortoise used Performing Enhancement Drugs.......2003-09-17
This sequel to Politically Correct Bedtime Stories introduces the reader to more politically correct fairy tales. Hansel and Gretel and the Tortoise and the Hare are my favourites. This is on par with the first book but avoid the next book in the series Politically Correct Holiday Stories as it does not live up to the standards of these two. Also read Apocalypse Wow by the same author.
Other great versions of fairytales can be found in Once Upon a Crime and the book called Whatever happened to...? The Ultimate Sequels.
Enlightenment the easy way..........2003-07-22
Given the success of the first volume, 'Politically Correct Bedtime Stories', James Finn Garner took another journey into fairytale land to find a revisionist's dream of reframed stories, and assembled them into the volume 'Once Upon a More Enlightened Time'. Like the first volume, this one holds nothing sacred, highlighting both the excesses of prejudice in the past while exposing the excesses of the politically correct currents of today.
Once again, the tone is set from the start in the Introduction by Garner: 'At the outset, I would like to apologise sincerely for the success of my last book. The number of trees that voicelessly gave their lives so that my resource-greedy publisher and I could meet retail demand was truly appalling, and quite likely contributed to the global warming that gave those of us in the Northern Hemisphere such an unseasonably warm winter.'
Garner misses the opportunity here to remind us of the disparity of wealth between hemispheres, but beyond that, he doesn't miss much. The titles of the stories will give you insight:
- A Politically Correct Alphabet
- Hansel and Gretel
- The Ant and the Grasshopper
- The Princess and the Pea
- The Little Mer-persun (Mer-maid is a demeaning title)
- The Tortoise and the Hare
- Puss in Boots
- Sleeping Persun of Better-than-Average Attractiveness (to call her a beauty demeans all others)
- The City Mouse and the Suburban Mouse (the countryside having been ravaged and now no longer exists close to cities; the country mouse has become suburban)
The politically correct alphabet I will list below--this gives a flavour of the rest of the text.
A is an Activity itching to fight
B is a Beast with its animal rights
C was a Cripple (now differently abled)
D is a Drunk who is 'liquor-enabled'
and so forth...
Garner hastens to add that, of course, the traditional ordering of the letters does not in any way imply that 'A' is more better or deserving a letter than X, Y, or Z.
Garner's publicity blurb says that he is called 'a master of the tour de force' by The Washington Post and 'a smart-alec, mealy-mouthed creep' by The London Daily Telegraph, yet feels the truth lies somewhere in between.
These stories will be loved by anyone who doesn't take life too seriously. Nothing is sacred here--be prepared to find something in yourself in here.
Lots of Fun.......1999-10-17
This is very funny stuff. I throughly enjoyed everybit. I also suggest you check out "Corporate Fairy Tales". It a similar idea but for the business world.
Product Description
This is a "topsy-turvy" book of both Politically Correct Bedtime Stories and Once Upon a More Enlightened Time in one volume, an exclusive Quality Paperback Book Club edition. No publishing date is given, copyright dates of 1994 and 1995 for the two books.
Average customer rating:
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Politically Correct Bedtime Stories: Once upon a More Enlightened Time
James Finn Garner
Manufacturer: Macmillan Publishing Company
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
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ASIN: 0028613996 |
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