Fantagraphics Books reprints every single Prince Valiant strip written and drawn by Foster. Valiant is a 5th-century Nordic prince from Thule whose friendship earns him knighthood. Foster would write and draw Prince Valiant every week for 34 years, until arthritis forced him to retire.
Fantagraphics Books reprints every single Prince Valiant strip written and drawn by Foster. Valiant is a 5th-century Nordic prince from Thule whose friendship earns him knighthood. Foster would write and draw Prince Valiant every week for 34 years, until arthritis forced him to retire.
Fantagraphics Books reprints every single Prince Valiant strip written and drawn by Foster. Valiant is a 5th-century Nordic prince from Thule whose friendship earns him knighthood. Foster would write and draw Prince Valiant every week for 34 years, until arthritis forced him to retire.
Fantagraphics Books reprints every single Prince Valiant strip written and drawn by Foster. Valiant is a 5th-century Nordic prince from Thule whose friendship earns him knighthood. Foster would write and draw Prince Valiant every week for 34 years, until arthritis forced him to retire.
tion, with its attendant limita- tions (both creative and finan- cial); he decided to emancipate himself by responding to rival publisher William Randolph Hearsts entreaties to come work for him, creating a brand new strip called Prince Valiant in the Days of King Arthur. Valiant is a 5th-century Nordic prince from Thule whose friendship with the Arthurian knights Sir Gawain and Sir Tristram earns him entry into King Arthurs in- ner circle, and membership as a Knight of the Round Table. From that point on, Valiant would roam the world, start- ing off from his adopted home of Camelot and his birthplace of Thule, visiting virtually all of Europe, some of Africa, the Mediterranean Islands (where he would encounter his bride- to-be, Aleta), and even, a mil- lennium before Christopher Columbus, the New World. He would have many exciting adventures and meet count- less colorful friends and ad- versaries and eventually, his children would begin going off on their own exploits, creating one of the great multi-gener- ational sagas of adventure fic- tion, illustrated or not. Foster would write and draw Prince Valiant every week for 34 years, until advancing arthritis forced him to pass the torch at least the illustrative torch to other hands. Beginning in 1971, John Cullen Murphy took over the drawing of the strip (based on Fosters scripts, layouts, and pencils), gradu- ally assuming a greater share of the art. In 1980, Foster re- tired from the strip entirely, turning the writing over to Murphys son Cullen. More than three decades later, new episodes of Prince Valiant continue to appear, now under the stewardship of Mark Schultz (writer) and Thomas Yeates (artist) one of the few classic adventure strips that continues to thrill newspaper readers every week around the world. Beginning in 2009, Fantagraphics Books launched the project of reprinting every single Prince Valiant strip written and drawn by Foster, scanned from the finest resources available (Fosters own person- al collection of proof sheets) and presented with state-of- the-art digital restoration. The sixth volume (covering 1947 and 1948) appeared ear- lier this year, and the seventh (which includes the two stories collected herein) will be pub- lished later this summer. We hope new readers will be intrigued by their intro- duction to this great classic, and Valiant fans will enjoy this sneak peek at our upcoming volume. The Publishers prince valiant: free comic book day special edition contains two sequences from 1950: The Homecoming (January- March) and The Challenge (March-May). In order to fit within the reduced comic-book format and to eliminate certain narrative re- dundancies created by the original weekly serialization, certain panels have been modified, omitted, or moved around. The full, original versions will of course be appearing in the forthcoming Prince Valiant Vol. 7: 1949-1950. prince valiant: free comic book day special edition is copyright 2013 King Features Syndicate. All contents copyright 2013 King Features Syndicate. All rights reserved. You must obtain the publishers permission to reproduce any portion of this publication. Fantagraphics Books, 7563 Lake City Way NE, Seattle, WA 98115. Publishers: Gary Groth and Kim Thompson. Associate Publisher: Eric Reynolds. Editor: Kim Thompson. Production: Paul Baresh. Special thanks to the Special Collections Research Center of the Syracuse University Library for providing the scans for the strips reprinted in this comic, reproduced from original syndicate proofs. First Printing: April 2013. Printed in Canada. INTRODUCING: PRINCE VALIANT I n 1936, the Canadian-born cartoonist Harold Rudolf Hal Foster (1892-1982) had been working away on the newspaper-strip ver- sion of Edgar Rice Burroughss Tarzan for United Feature Syndicate for close to half a decade, in the process cementing his position as one of the greatest adventure cartoonists of all time. 2 3 4 5 6 7