Synopsis:
Front cover flap has an excerpt from the introduction; title and publisher pages; indicia page plus production and reprint credits; table of contents.
Notes:
Three full-page unpublished album cover images for Barrelhouse Records. "Unknown Detroit Bluesmen volume 1" (catalog #BH-03); "Apex Moving Company" (shows a bluesman sitting on the far right corner next to traffic. A truck with the sign "Apex Moving Company" is in the lower middle. Signed and dated "R. Crumb was here 1970."); "Ain't No Stopper On My Faucet, Mama!" (catalog #BH-06)
Notes:
Jam comic with the listed artists. The table of contents for the second printing of this volume of The Complete Crumb (March 1998) does not list Jeffery Hayes, Jim Osborne or Joel Beck as contributors to this.
The Great Speckled Post Esquire Magazine Illustrations
Illustration
on
Interior Page(s)
Credits
Writer(s):
?
Subject Matter
Character(s):
Snoid
Reprinting
Reprint Notes:
Miscellaneous
Pages:
0.73
Notes:
Four small illustrations made for "The Great Speckled Post," a Saturday Evening Post parody in that Esquire issue. "Coast Vibes by The Big Banger" (in the issue's "Karma Burns a Pig Branch Bank" article); "What - me relevant?" (An Alfred E. Neuman-inspired illustration in the "Why David Eisenhower Chose the Navy" article); "Dat's life, kid!" (in the "Post Scripts" cartoon page); "The Great Speckled Post" (article masthead illustration)
Notes:
This is the first page from the Little Annie Fanny strip in the July 1970 Playboy magazine. A character is shown holding a newspaper called "The East Village Mother." The front and back cover of the paper show a Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers and a Angelfood McSpade strip. Both pages can be read in their entirety. They are indexed just below.
Notes:
Six "Zonk cards" made for American Greetings during a visit to Cleveland. The captions are: "Roses are Red Violets are Blue...;" "Do you really love me??;" "I love you in spite of all your weird habits!;" "I never knew I could love anybody...;" "You may think I look silly standing on my head like this, but look here;" "My advice to you is plain and to the point!" (feat. Mr. Natural)
Character(s):
Snoid (intro only); Pete the Plumber; Plungo
Synopsis:
Despondent over unpaid bills and an accident caused by one of his repairs, Pete attempts suicide by flushing himself down the toilet. After passing through a jungle of pipes, he winds up in a very unusual place.