Lead On, Snoopy
      Just finished reading "Lead On, Snoopy" by Charles M. Schulz, published by Fawcett Crest back in 1993.
Many frequent visitors to Barnes & Noble and other "big box" bookstores and independently owned bookstores with physical retail locations will find it hard to believe that once upon a time that bookstores did not have sections devoted entirely to graphic novels like they do nowadays.
Now the bookstores of old did have shelves/sections devoted to what I call "comic strip books" which essentially were collections of previously ran strips of a newspaper comic ran that were reprinted in paperback. It was really only later, at least here in the Untied States, where hardcover collections of comic strips like "Calvin & Hobbes" and "The Farside" were reprinted in hardcover and readily available to collectors and consumers here in the United States and across the world. [Sidenote: Just wait to Zack and Jeff when they find out who gets which collection in my will Bwahahahahahahaha].
While Michelle's Bookstore in the Brynn Marr shopping center in Jacksonville, North Carolina closed its doors for the last time in the mid-1990s, they did have a section that was ceiling-to-floor of shelves filled with comic strip books - a majority of which "Peanuts" books by Charles M. Schulz. Schulz, shared a similarity to Andre Norton in the 1970s because they completely dominated the shelves in their respective sections in bookstores.
Now a majority of my "Peanuts" books were lost in time due to when we moved to Jacksonville, Florida, and I got my "replacement" copies at Chamblin's Bookmine out on Roosevelt Avenue.
The Peanuts comic strips collected in "Lead On, Snoopy" were originally published in newspapers back in 1998. If memory serves me correctly, I first bought "Lead On, Snoopy" when we visited Camp Lejeune for the Beirut Memorial a couple of years after we moved to Florida.
While a few strips show us Spike's, Snoopy's brother, life in the desert where he lives, we get to see Peppermint Pattie and Marcie interact with each other in and outside of school. and we are treated to Sally making several observations about going to see movies in several strips.
HIGHLY RECOMMENDED!
TEN STARS!
https://www.amazon.com/Lead-Snoopy-Ch...
    
    
Many frequent visitors to Barnes & Noble and other "big box" bookstores and independently owned bookstores with physical retail locations will find it hard to believe that once upon a time that bookstores did not have sections devoted entirely to graphic novels like they do nowadays.
Now the bookstores of old did have shelves/sections devoted to what I call "comic strip books" which essentially were collections of previously ran strips of a newspaper comic ran that were reprinted in paperback. It was really only later, at least here in the Untied States, where hardcover collections of comic strips like "Calvin & Hobbes" and "The Farside" were reprinted in hardcover and readily available to collectors and consumers here in the United States and across the world. [Sidenote: Just wait to Zack and Jeff when they find out who gets which collection in my will Bwahahahahahahaha].
While Michelle's Bookstore in the Brynn Marr shopping center in Jacksonville, North Carolina closed its doors for the last time in the mid-1990s, they did have a section that was ceiling-to-floor of shelves filled with comic strip books - a majority of which "Peanuts" books by Charles M. Schulz. Schulz, shared a similarity to Andre Norton in the 1970s because they completely dominated the shelves in their respective sections in bookstores.
Now a majority of my "Peanuts" books were lost in time due to when we moved to Jacksonville, Florida, and I got my "replacement" copies at Chamblin's Bookmine out on Roosevelt Avenue.
The Peanuts comic strips collected in "Lead On, Snoopy" were originally published in newspapers back in 1998. If memory serves me correctly, I first bought "Lead On, Snoopy" when we visited Camp Lejeune for the Beirut Memorial a couple of years after we moved to Florida.
While a few strips show us Spike's, Snoopy's brother, life in the desert where he lives, we get to see Peppermint Pattie and Marcie interact with each other in and outside of school. and we are treated to Sally making several observations about going to see movies in several strips.
HIGHLY RECOMMENDED!
TEN STARS!
https://www.amazon.com/Lead-Snoopy-Ch...
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