Carl Barks, 99, the once anonymous “duck man” for Walt Disney whose draftsmanship and writing gained him a cultlike following among artists and fans of Donald Duck comic books and of his own creation, ...
Why is Christian Science in our name? Our name is about honesty. The Monitor is owned by The Christian Science Church, and we’ve always been transparent about that. The Church publishes the Monitor ...
A new collection of Carl Barks' Donald Duck stories sheds fresh light on why so many consider him one of the greatest comics creators of all time. Carl Barks began writing and drawing Donald Duck ...
The man appears to be concerned about money, mainly. He can’t afford to buy Christmas presents for his nephews. He has a rich uncle who’s notoriously penny-pinching. The man concocts various ...
With the December publication of Donald Duck: Lost in the Andes, Fantagraphics will bring the classic comics stories of cartoonist Carl Barks (1901-2000) to bookstores in a comprehensive collection of ...
Let me return today to two past column subjects: the Riverside County years of Carl Barks and Harpo Marx. Why pair Barks and Marx? Chalk it up as one of my larks. Barks was the Disney cartoonist who ...
As the story opens, Donald Duck is trying to purchase a model airplane for Huey, Dewey and Louie. But instead of getting a small model, he inadvertently acquires an actual Air Force surplus military ...
Carl Barks began writing and drawing Donald Duck comic books in 1942. For nearly the next 30 years, the Disney Studio ceded a remarkable degree of control to Barks as he feverishly cranked out ...