Index to Comic Art Collection: "Kidn" to "Kido"  Michigan State University Libraries
 Special Collections Division
 Reading Room Index to the Comic Art Collection
 "Kidnap" to "Kidô"

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Kidnap / Helge Reumann. -- Genève : IG Comic Schweiz, 1998. --
   8 p. : ill. ; 15 cm. -- Part of the collection Töpfferware,
   no. 3 : Schweizer Comics. -- Call no.: PN6756.T603 1998
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"Kidnap a White Woman"* (Tumbleweeds) / by Kitchen. 1 tier in
   Snarf, no. 3 (Nov. 1972). -- Parody of the daily newspaper
   strip, with a gag about women as cows. -- Call no.:
   PN6728.45.K5S58no.3
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"Kidnap Cargo" (Captain Wings) / by Major T.E. Bowen ; art:
   Bob Lubbers. 10 p. in Wings Comics, no. 93 (May 1948). --
   Title from cover. -- Data from Lou Mougin via The Grand
   Comics Database Project. -- Call no.: Film 15791r.82
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Kidnap Cavern.
   Index entry (p. 112) in Bonzer : Australian Comics
   1900-1990s, edited by Annette Kay Shiell (Melbourne : Elgua
   Media, 1998). -- Call no.: PN6790.A8 S47 1998
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Kidnap Cavern.
   Index entry (p. 1240) in Historia de los Comics / J.
   Toutain, J. Coma (Barcelona : Toutain, 1982-1984?) -- Call
   no.: PN6710.H5 1982a
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Kidnap Cavern.
   Index entry (p. 188) in Panel by Panel : A History of
   Australian Comics, by John Ryan (Stanmore, NSW : Cassell
   Australia, 1979). -- Index by John Melloy. -- Call no.:
   PN6790.A8R9
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"The Kidnap Flight to Berlin!" (Captain Battle Jr.) / story by
   Lev Gleason & Joe Greene ; art by Don Rico. 38 p. in
   Captain Battle Jr., no. 1 (Fall 1943). -- Call no.:
   PN6728.1.G55C33no.1
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"Kidnap Koin Boy" (Mail Order Murphy) / M. Angelo. 2 p. in New
   Adventure Comics, no. 18 (Aug. 1937). -- Only appearance of
   Mail Order Murphy, a detective. -- Data from Lou Mougin and
   Grand Comic-Book Database. -- Call no.: PN6728.1.N3A3m
   no.18
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Kidnappé! / de Hugo Pratt ; d'après l'œuvre de Robert-Louis
   Stevenson. -- Paris : Bang!, 2005. -- 38 p. : ill. ; 28 cm.
   -- Supplement to Bang! for December 2005. -- An adaptation
   of Robert Louis Stevenson's Kidnapped. -- Adventure story
   genre. -- Call no.: PN6767.P7K5 2005
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Kidnapped

 Adaptations of the Robert Louis Stevenson story


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"Kidnapped" / Jon Small, adaptation and art. 7 p. in Doc
   Savage Comics, v. 1, no. 9 (Sept. 1942). -- Adaptation of
   the Robert Louis Stevenson novel. -- Final episode. --
   Credit from Lou Mougin, Gary L. Watson & Leonard Wolinsky
   via Grand Comics Database Project. -- Call no.: Film
   15791r.176
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Kidnapped / Robert Louis Stevenson. -- Chicago, Ill. : The
   Chicago Sun, 1947. -- 4 pts. : col. ill. ; 38 cm. --
   (Illustrated Classic) -- A Classics Illustrated comic book
   published as Sunday newspaper supplements dated March 30
   through April 20, 1947. -- Call no.: PN6726 .I4K5 1947
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Kidnapped / Robert Louis Stevenson -- New York : Gilberton,
   1949? -- 48 p. : col. ill. ; 26 cm. -- (Classics
   Illustrated ; no. 46)
   I. Stevenson, Robert Louis, 1850-1895. II. Series. Call
   no.: PN6728.1.G5C55no.46
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Kidnapped / based on the novel by Robert Louis Stevenson ;
   adapted by Gaylord Du Bois ; pictures by Al Schmidt. -- New
   York : Golden Press, 1960. -- 58 p. : ill. (part col.) ; 23
   cm. -- (A Golden Reading Adventure ; 378)
   I. Du Bois, Gaylord, 1899-  II. Stevenson, Robert Louis,
   1850-1894. III. Schmidt, Al. IV. Series. Call no.:
   PR5484.K5 1960
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Kidnapped / Robert Louis Stevenson ; adapted by Nick Tall ;
   illustrated by Frank Redondo. -- West Haven, Conn. :
   Pendulum Press, 1974. -- 62 p. : ill. ; 21 cm. -- (Now Age
   Books)
   I. Stevenson, Robert Louis, 1850-1894. II. Tall, Nick. III.
   Redondo, Frank. IV. Series. Call no.: PR5484.K5 1974
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Kidnapped / by Robert Louis Stevenson ; Doug Moench, script ;
   Pete Lijauco & Sonny Trinidad, artists. -- New York :
   Marvel Comics Group, 1977. -- 48 p. : col. ill. ; 26 cm. --
   (Marvel Classics Comics ; no. 27)
   I. Stevenson, Robert Louis, 1850-1894. II. Moench, Doug,
   1948- III. Lijauco, Pete. IV. Trinidad, Sonny. V. Series.
   Call no.: PN6728.4.M3M15no.27
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Kidnapped / by Robert Louis Stevenson ; adapted by Deborah
   Kestel. -- New York : Playmore, Inc., 1977. -- 236 p. :
   ill. ; 14 cm. -- (Illustrated Classic Editions ; 4505)
   (Moby Books) -- Call no.: PS3561.E725K5 1977
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Kidnapped / Robert Louis Stevenson. -- West Haven, Conn. :
   Academic Industries, 1984. -- 61 p. : ill. ; 18 cm. --
   (Pocket Classics ; C18)
   I. Stevenson, Robert Louis, 1850-1894. II. Series. III.
   Academic Industries. Call no.: PR5484.K5 1984
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Kidnapped / Robert Louis Stevenson ; essay by Andrew Jay
   Hoffman ; adaptation by John O'Rourke ; art by Robert Webb.
   -- New York : Acclaim Books, 1997. -- Cover title:
   Kidnapped & Notes. -- 1 v. : col. ill. ; 20 cm. --
   (Classics Illustrated) -- (Acclaim Books Study Guide) --
   Adventure story genre. -- Call no.: PR5484.K5 1997
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Kidnapped! / writer, Roy Thomas ; penciler, Mario Gully ;
   inker, Jason Martin. -- New York : Marvel Publishing, Inc.,
   2009. -- col. ill. ; 26 cm. -- (Marvel Limited Series) --
   Complete in 5 nos. -- "Robert Louis Stevenson." --
   Adventure story genre. -- LIBRARY HAS: no. 2. -- Call no.:
   PN6728.7.M3K473 2009
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Kidnapped / Robert Louis Stevenson ; adapted by Mark Jones ;
   illustrated by Naresh Kumar. -- New Delhi : Kalyani Navyug
   Media, 2010. -- 68 p. : col. ill. ; 26 cm. -- (Campfire
   Classics) -- Summary (from SkyRiver): Retells Stevenson's
   story about sixteen-year-old David Balfour who, after being
   kidnapped by his villainous uncle, escapes and becomes
   involved in the struggle of the Scottish highlanders
   against English rule. -- Adventure story genre. -- Call
   no.: PN6790 .I53 K8K5 2010
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"Kidnapped" / from Robert Louis Stevenson's immortal book ;
   pictures by Jon Small. 8 p. in Doc Savage Comics, v. 1, no.
   7 (Mar. 1942). -- To be continued. -- Call no.: Film
   15791r.176
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"Kidnapped, pt 2" / Robert Louis Stevenson's adventure classic
   ; pictures by Jon Small. 8 p. in Doc Savage Comics, v. 1,
   no. 8 (June 1942). -- Call no.: Film 15791r.176
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"Kidnapped" (pt. 1) p. 79-94 in Walt Disney Comics Digest, no.
   7 (Jan. 1969). -- "Based on the story by Robert Louis
   Stevenson." -- Call no.: PN6728.W47W3no.7
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Kidnapped.
   Robert Louis Stevenson's Kidnapped / adapted by Alan Grant
   ; illustrated by Cam Kennedy. -- Ontario : Tundra Books ;
   Plattsburgh, N.Y. : Tundra Books of Northern New York,
   2007. -- 1 v. : col. ill. ; 26 cm. -- Summary (from OCLC):
   Retells in comics format Stevenson's story about David
   Balfour who, after being kidnapped by his villainous uncle,
   escapes and becomes involved in the struggle of the
   Scottish highlanders against English rule. -- Historical
   adventure genre. -- Call no.: PN6737.K36K5 2007
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Kidnapped.
   Walt Disney Robert Louis Stevenson's Kidnapped. -- New York
   : Dell Publishing Co., 1960. -- 32 p. : col. ill. ; 26 cm.
   -- "Kidnapped O.S. #1101-605". -- Call no.: PN6728.3.D4K47
   1960
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Kidnapped.
   Walt Disney Robert Louis Stevenson's Kidnapped. --
   Poughkeepsie, N.Y. : K.K. Publications, 1963. -- 32 p. :
   col. ill. ; 26 cm. -- Reprints Dell's Four Color #1101
   (1960). --  Date from cover code: "306" translates to June
   1963. -- Call no.: PN6728.3.G56K47 1963
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Kidnapped.
   Walt Disney's Treasury of Classic Tales. -- San Diego : IDW
   Publishing, 2016- . -- col. ill. ; 23 x 32 cm. -- (The
   Library of American Comics) -- (Disney Comics) -- Contents:
   v. 1: Cinderella ; Alice in Wonderland ; Story of Robin
   Hood ; Peter Pan ; Sword and the rose ; Ben and me ; Rob
   Roy, the Highland rogue ; Peter and the wolf ; 20,000
   leagues under the sea ; Lady and the tramp. v. 2: The
   legends of Davy Crockett ; The littlest outlaw ; The great
   locomotive chase ; Lambert the sheepish lion ; Westward ho
   the wagons! ; Gus and Jaq ; Johnny Tremain ; Perri ; Old
   Yeller ; The seven dwarfs and the witch-queen ; The light
   in the forest ; Sleeping beauty ; The shaggy dog. v. 3:
   Darby O'Gill and the little people ; Third man on the
   mountain ; Toby Tyler ; Kidnapped ; Pollyanna ; Swiss
   family Robinson ; 101 dalmatians ; Nikki, wild dog of the
   north ; Parent trap ; Babes in Toyland ; Moon pilot ; Bon
   voyage ; Big Red ; In search of the castaways. -- Adventure
   story and funny animal genres. -- LIBRARY HAS: v. 1, 3. --
   Call no.: PN6728.W32 I2 2016
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Kidnapped. Chinese.
   Jin yin dao / yuan zhu Sidiwensheng ; Xin Nong gai xie. --
   Taibei Shi : Di qiu chu ban she, Minguo 82 [1993] -- 96 p.
   : col. ill. ; 27 cm. -- (Shi jie wen xue ming zhu ; di 6
   ji) -- Adaptation of Robert Louis Stevenson, Kidnapped. --
   Adventure story genre. -- Call no.: PN6790.C42X506 1993
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Kidnapped. French.
   Kidnappé! / de Hugo Pratt ; d'après l'œuvre de Robert-Louis
   Stevenson. -- Paris : Bang!, 2005. -- 38 p. : ill. ; 28 cm.
   -- Supplement to Bang! for December 2005. -- An adaptation
   of Robert Louis Stevenson's Kidnapped. -- Adventure story
   genre. -- Call no.: PN6767.P7K5 2005
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Kidnapped. Italian.
   L'Isola del Tesoro di Robert Louis Stevenson e Il Ragazzo
   Rapito / Hugo Pratt, Mino Milani. -- Seconda edizione. --
   Milano : Rizzoli Lizard, 2011. -- 175 p. : col. ill. ; 24 x
   30 cm. -- Two comics stories inspired by Treasure Island
   and Kidnapped. -- Adventure story genre. -- Call no.:
   PN6767.P7 I7 2011
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Kidnapped--Miscellanea.
   Index entry (p. 158) to Principes des Littératures
   Dessinées / Harry Morgan (Angoulême : Editions de l'An 2,
   2003). -- Reference to the R.L. Stevenson story. -- Call
   no.: PN6710.M57 2003
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Kidnapped

 Stories with this title, other than the one by Stevenson


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"Kidnapped" (Are You a Detective?) / Allen Bellman. 2 p. in
   Reno Browne, no. 52 (Sept. 1950). -- Features Detective
   Skip McCoy. -- Data from Thomas G. Lammers, Banks S.
   Robinson, Mike Nielsen, et al via Grand Comics Database. --
   Call no.: PN6728.1.M3C58no.52
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"Kidnapped!" (X-Men) / Chris Claremont, writer ; Dave Cockrum
   & Joe Rubinstein, artists. 22 p. in The Uncanny X-Men, no.
   145 (Nay 1981). -- Call no.: PN6728.3.M3 X15no.145
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"Kidnapped, part 4"* (Little Linda) / script and art, Whitney
   Ellsworth. 2 p. in More Fun Comics, no. 19 (Mar. 1937). --
   Summary: Silas Flint rushes to the hospital to be with his
   nephew, Ned Flint. -- Appearance of Watson. -- Data from
   Gene Reed, Lou Mougin, Pat Lang, et al. via Grand Comics
   Database. -- Call no.: folio PN6728.N333N4m no.19
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Kidnapped.
   Aliens : Kidnapped / Woodring, Green, Lopez. -- Milwaukie,
   Ore. : Dark Horse Comics, 1997-1998. -- col. ill. ; 26 cm.
   -- To be complete in 3 nos. -- Genre: Science fiction. --
   LIBRARY HAS: no. 1-2. -- Call no.: PN6728.6.D34A345 1997
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"Kidnapped."*
   "The Flying Dutchman, part 1"* (Socko Strong) / Joseph
   Sulman, script and art. 6 p. in Adventure Comics, no. 40
   (July 1939). -- Titled "Kidnapped" in earlier indexing by
   Gene Reed. -- Introduction of Socko Strong, a boxer, and
   Jerry Indutch ; the villains are the champ, his manager,
   and gun-runners. -- Sports genre. -- Data from Bob Cherry,
   Gene Reed, Lou Mougin, et al., via Grand Comics Database
   Project. -- Call no.: PN6728.1.N3A3m no.40
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Kidnapped.
   Gunsmith Cats : Kidnapped / story and art by Kenichi Sonoda
   ; translated by Dana Lewis and Toren Smith. -- Milwaukie,
   OR : Dark Horse Comics, 1999-2000. -- ill. ; 26 cm. --
   Complete in 10 nos. -- LIBRARY HAS: no. 1-10. -- Call no.:
   PN6790.J33 S6K5 1999
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Kidnapped.
   Gunsmith Cats : Kidnapped / story and art by Kenichi Sonoda
   ; translation by Dana Lewis & Toren Smith ; lettering and
   retouch by Susie Lee & PC Orz. -- Milwaukie, OR : Dark
   Horse Comics, 2001. -- 1 v. : ill. ; 21 cm. -- "This book
   collects issues 1-10 of the Dark Horse comic-book series
   Gunsmith Cats: Kidnapped". -- Call no.: PN6790.J33 S6K5
   2001
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Kidnapped. French.
   L'Enlèvement / Simon Stern. -- Paris : Casterman, 1983. --
   26 p. : col. ill. ; 30 cm. -- (Les Aventures de Capitaine
   Ketchup) -- Translation of: The Astonishing Adventures of
   Captain Ketchup : Kidnapped. -- Adventure story comic. --
   Call no.: PN6737.S7A7414 1983
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"The Kidnapped Bridegroom"* (Sherlock the Monk, 1912) / Gus
   Mager. p. 92 in The Comic Strip Century (Kitchen Sink
   Press, 1995). -- Call no.: PN6726.C595 1995v.1
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Kidnapped by a Space Ship

 A science fiction story serialized in Treasure Chest of Fun & Fact in 1959


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Kidnapped by a Space Ship ; pt. 1
   "Off to the Stars!" (Kidnapped by a Space Ship, part 1) /
   by Frances E. Crandall ; F.M. p. 29-34 in Treasure Chest of
   Fun and Fact, v. 14, no. 11 (Jan. 29, 1959). -- "To be
   continued." -- Call no.: PN6728.1.P43T6v.14no.11
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Kidnapped by a Space Ship! ; pt. 2
   "Red Danger!" (Kidnapped by a Space Ship!, part 2) p. 38 in
   Treasure Chest of Fun and Fact, v. 14, no. 12 (Feb. 12,
   1959). -- "To be continued." -- Call no.:
   PN6728.1.P43T6v.14no.12
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"Kidnapped by a Space Ship, part 3" / by Frances E. Crandall.
   p. 20-25 in Treasure Chest of Fun and Fact, v. 14, no. 13
   (Feb. 26, 1959). -- "To be continued." -- Call no.:
   PN6728.1.P43T6v.14no.13
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Kidnapped by a Space Ship, pt. 4.
   "Marooned on a Doomed World!" (Kidnapped by a Space Ship,
   pt. 4) / by Frances Crandall. p. 22-28 in Treasure Chest of
   Fun and Fact, v. 14, no. 14 (Mar. 12, 1959). -- "To be
   continued." -- Call no.: PN6728.1.P43T7v.14no.14
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Kidnapped by a Space Ship, pt. 5
   "Into New Peril!" (Kidnapped by a Space Ship, pt. 4) p.
   6-11 in Treasure Chest of Fun and Fact, v. 14, no. 15 (Mar.
   26, 1959). -- Begins: "The invading planet, hanging in the
   red-tinted sky close about the little group, seems to glow
   with evil triumph at their danger." -- "To be continued."
   -- Call no.: PN6728.1.P43T7v.14no.15
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Kidnapped by a Space Ship ; pt. 6
   "The Laughing Death!" (Kidnapped by a Space Ship, pt. 6) p.
   27-32 in Treasure Chest of Fun and Fact, v. 14, no. 16
   (Apr. 9, 1959). -- Begins: "The first shock over, Tom and
   Gecher leap into action, while Colonel Martin draws his
   gun." -- "To be continued." -- Science fiction genre. --
   Call no.: PN6728.1.P43T7v.14no.16
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Kidnapped by a Space Ship ; pt. 7
   "A Mountain Explodes!" (Kidnapped by a Space Ship, pt. 7)
   p. 9-14 in Treasure Chest of Fun and Fact, v. 14, no. 17
   (Apr. 23, 1959). -- "To be continued." -- Call no.:
   PN6728.1.P43T7v.14no.17
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Kidnapped by a Space Ship ; pt. 8
   "A Race with Death!" (Kidnapped by a Space Ship, pt. 8) p.
   3-8 in Treasure Chest of Fun and Fact, v. 14, no. 18 (May
   7, 1959). -- Cover title: "The Space Travelers Trapped Near
   a Volcano." -- Final episode. -- Call no.:
   PN6728.1.P43T7v.14no.18
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"Kidnapped By Blaga Daru"* (Gale Allen) / art: Al Bryant. 6 p.
   in Planet Comics, no. 11 (Mar. 1941). -- Villain Blaga Daru
   dies; appearance of Jack North; introduction of the Queen
   of Venus. -- Data from Lou Mougin via the Grand Comics
   Database Project. -- Call no.: PN6728.1.F5P55m no.11
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The Kidnapped Congress.
   "The Case of the Kidnapped Congress" (Captain Marvel) /
   script, E. Nelson Bridwell ; art, Kurt Schaffenberger. 17
   p. in Shazam!, no. 26 (Nov./Dec. 1976) ; reprinted in
   Shazam from the Forties to the Seventies (1977) ; reprinted
   again in Showcase Presents Shazam, v. 1 (2007) ; and in
   Shazam! the World's Mightiest Mortal, v. 2 2020). --
   Summary: Billy and Uncle Dudley (as Mentor) set off on a
   tour around the country doing a series on young people. The
   first stop is Washington, D.C., where Dr. Sivana has made
   the Capitol disappear. -- Data from Gene Reed and from Jan
   Roar Hansen, CT Garry, Mike Nielsen, et al. via Grand
   Comics Database. -- Call no.: PN6728.4.N3S49no.26
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The Kidnapped Crusader.
   "Case of the Kidnaped Crusader!" (Robin) / Bob Brown &
   Frank McLaughlin, art ; Elliot Maggin, story. 8 p. in
   Batman, no. 249 (June 1973) ; reprinted in Robin the Bronze
   Age Omnibus (2020). -- Summary: Tom Carson, a consumer
   advocate, goes missing during the test drive of a new
   experimental car. -- Data from Jan Roar Hansen, Matthew
   Peets, Nick Caputo, et al. via Grand Comics Database. --
   Call no.: PN6728.1.N3B3no.249
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Kidnapped Cuties.
   "The Case of the Kidnapped Cuties" (Beau Brummell) 9 p. in
   Atomic Bomb, no. 1 (1945). -- Call no.: Film 15791, r.26
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"The Kidnapped Debutante"* (Calling Duke Kelly, Ace Inspector)
   / by Larry Antonette. 9 p. in Silver Streak Comics, no. 2
   (Jan. 1940) -- SUMMARY: A radio singer is kidnapped by an
   escaped millionare lunatic.
   I. Antonette, Larry. I. Calling Duke Kelly, Ace Inspector.
   II. Duke Kelly. k. Debutantes. k. Radio Singers. k.
   Singers. k. Escaped Millionaire Lunatics. k. Millionaire
   Lunatics. k. Lunatics. Call no.: Film 15791, r.163
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The Kidnapped Dummy.
   "The Secret of the Kidnapped Dummy!" (Wonder Woman) / by
   Charles Moulton, H.G. Peter. 12 p. in Wonder Woman, no. 27
   (Jan./Feb. 1948). -- Call no.: PN6728.1.N3W6no.27. Call
   no.: PN6728.1.N3W6m no.27
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The Kidnapped Governor.
   Jim Craig, State Trooper, and the Kidnapped Govenor / by
   Steve Saxton ; illustrated by Herbert Anderson. -- Racine,
   Wis. : Whitman Publishing Company, 1938. -- 424 p. : ill. ;
   12 cm. -- (The Big Little Book ; 1466) -- Detective genre.
   -- Call no.: PN6728.W47J48 1938
-----------------------------------------------------
The Kidnapped Heiress.
   "Case of the Kidnapped Heiress"* (Sandman) / Gardner Fox,
   script ; Creig Flessel, art. 10 p. in Adventure Comics, no.
   54 (Sept. 1940) ; reprinted in Golden Age Sandman Archives,
   v. 1. -- Introduction of Nana Martin, and Jim Holt ;
   villains are a gang of kidnappers, introduced here. --
   Superhero genre. -- Data from Bob Cherry, Gene Reed, Lou
   Mougin, Bob Hughes, Craig Delich, et al., via Grand Comics
   Database Project. -- Call no.: PN6728.1.N3A3m no.54
-----------------------------------------------------
"Kidnapped in His Sleep"* (Dr. Daniels) p. 21-26 in Treasure
   Chest of Fun & Facts, v. 3, no. 8 (Dec. 9, 1947). --
   Summary: Dr. Daniels falls asleep reading a mystery, and
   dreams an adventure. -- Call no.: PN6728.1.P43T7v.3no.8
-----------------------------------------------------
"Kidnapped in Space" / Gardner Fox, script ; Bob Oksner,
   pencils ; Bernard Sachs, inks. 5 p. in Mystery in Space,
   no. 5 (Dec./Jan. 1951/1952). -- Science fiction genre. --
   Data from Mike Tiefenbacher, Bob Hughes, Clayton Emery and
   Mike Nielsen via Grand Comics Database Project. -- Call
   no.: Film 15791 r.272
-----------------------------------------------------
"Kidnapped Millionaire"* (What Would You Do?) / by Louis
   Wolfe. 2 p. in True Comics, no. 68 (Jan. 1948)
   I. Wolfe, Louis. II. What Would You Do? k. Millionaires.
   Call no.: PN6728.1.P3T7no.68
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Kidnapped Orphans.
   The Rescuers. -- New York : Random House, 1977. -- 42 p. :
   col. ill. ; 24 cm.-- (Disney's Wonderful World of Reading ;
   37) -- Based on a full-length animated film of the same
   title. -- Summary (from OCLC): Two enterprising mice live
   up to the motto of the Rescue Aid Society, "We help anyone
   ... anywhere," when they rescue a kidnapped orphan. --
   Funny animal fiction. -- Call no.: PN1997.5.R3R39 1977
-----------------------------------------------------
"The Kidnapped Pitcher"* (Inspector Dayton) / art: C.A.
   Winter. 7 p. in Jumbo Comics, no. 37 (Mar. 1942). --
   Baseball and gambling story. -- Data from Lou Mougin via
   The Grand Comics Database Project. -- Call no.: Film
   15791r.196
-----------------------------------------------------
The Kidnapped Prince.
   Tullus and the Kidnapped Prince. -- Elgin, Ill. : D.C.
   Cook, 1975. -- 123 p. : ill. ; 18 cm.
   I. The Kidnapped Prince. Call no.: PN6728.T777K5 1975
-----------------------------------------------------
The Kidnapped Princess.
   Dick Tracy and the Kidnapped Princess / by Chester Gould.
   -- Long Beach, Ca. : T. Raiola, 1983. -- 48 p. : ill. ; 30
   cm. -- Title from cover. -- Reprint of Black and White, no.
   15, originally published by Dell.
   1. Detective and mystery comic books, strips, etc. I.
   Gould, Chester. II. The Kidnapped Princess. III. Black and
   White ; no. 15   Call no.: PN6728.D5K5 1983
-----------------------------------------------------
"The Kidnapped Tank" (Haunted Tank) / Kanigher & Glanzman. 12
   p. in G.I. Combat, no. 181 (Aug. 1975). -- Data from
   Michael Tiefenbacher. -- Call no.: PN6728.2.Q3G2no.181
-----------------------------------------------------
The Kidnapped Water-Head Baby.
   "The Miser and the Kidnapped Water-Head Baby" 1 p. in Zap
   Comix, no. 10 (1982). -- Full-page drawing. -- Call no.:
   PN6728.45.P7Z3no.10
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapper. -- Delhi : Raj Comics, 2010? -- 42 p. : col. ill. ;
   21 cm. -- (Fighter Toads ; 2367) -- In Hindi. -- Superhero
   and funny animal genres. -- Call no.: PN6790 .I54 F52K5
   2010
-----------------------------------------------------


Kidnappers

 See also Dognappers


-----------------------------------------------------
"Kidnappers"* (Minimidget) 7 p. in Amazing-Man Comics, no. 18
   (Dec. 1940). -- Call no.: PN6728.1.C4A45no.18
-----------------------------------------------------
"Kidnappers"* (The Trolls) p. 35-40 in Captain Marvel Junior,
   no. 6 (Apr. 21, 1943). -- Call no.: Film 15791 r.87
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnappers.
   Angel : Autumnal / by Christopher Golden, et al. --
   Miwaukie, Or. : Dark Horse Comics, 2001. -- 1 v. : col.
   ill. ; 26 cm -- Contents: Vermin ; Little girl lost. --
   Summary (from SkyRiver): Angel searches an abandoned
   amusement park to rescue a little girl from a vicious gang
   of kidnappers. But the kidnappers aren't the only things
   Angel must contend with. He, the girl, and the thugs have
   to fight their way past an army of demonic rats! In
   'Vermin' we find out why Angel has such a dislike for the
   furry little buggers. Then in 'Little Girl Lost, ' Angel
   investigates a series of bizarre deaths caused by
   spontaneous combustion. He soon links the deaths to a
   teenage runaway and a demon spellcaster. Whats the
   connection? Angel better find out or he might be the one on
   the hot seat. -- Horror genre. -- Call no.: PN6728.A544A8
   2001
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnappers.
   "The Angel's Space Kidnappers"* (Star Pirate) / art:
   Maurice Whitman? 5 p. in Planet Comics, no. 62 (Sept.
   1949). -- Villain is The Angel (introduced here; Miss
   Range). -- Data from Lou Mougin via the Grand Comics
   Database Project. -- Call no.: PN6728.1.F5P55m no.62
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnappers.
   Annie and the Kidnappers / by Amy Ehrlich ; illustrated by
   Leonard Shortall. -- New York : Random House, 1982. -- 64
   p. : ill. ; 20 cm. -- (An Annie Adventure) -- Summary (from
   OCLC): When she goes to a poor neighborhood to claim her
   missing dog Sandy, Annie falls into the hands of kidnappers
   who demand a million dollars ransom from Daddy Warbucks. --
   Call no.: PN6728.L55E34 1982
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnappers.
   Arctic Nation / Juan Diaz Canales, writer ; Juanjo
   Guarnido, artist and colorist ; translated by Anthya Flores
   & Patricia Rivera. -- New York : Ibooks, 2004. -- 56 p. :
   col. ill. ; 31 cm. -- (Blacksad ; bk. 2) -- "In a town
   where white supremacists have moved in and are brutally
   seizing control, Blacksad is asked to find a kidnapped
   child and bring the kidnappers to justice. As he gets
   deeper into his investigation, Blacksad discovers a tale of
   sickening horror involving murder and worse that condemns
   some of the town's most powerful citizens." -- Detective
   and funny animal genres. -- Call no.: PN6777.G77B55213 2004
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnappers.
   The Blank in the Comics strip collection includes a file of
   one or more daily comic strips related to this keyword or
   topic. Call no.: PN6726 f.B55
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnappers.
   "The Cryonic Kidnappers" (Madam Fatal) 4 p. in Corn Fed
   Comics (1972) / Kim Deitch. -- Call no.: PN6728.45.C35C6
   1972
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnappers.
   "Desperate Kidnapper"* (Special Agent of the Federal Bureau
   of Investigation) 5 p. in True Comics, no. 77 (June 1949).
   -- Call no.: PN6728.1.P3T7no.77
-----------------------------------------------------
"Kidnappers."
   Dream Fossil : the Complete Stories of Satoshi Kon /
   translation, Yota Okutani ; production, Grace Lu, Risa Cho,
   Anthony Quintessenza, Melissa DeJesus. -- New York :
   Vertical, Inc, 2015. -- 413 p. : ill. (some col.) ; 21 cm
   -- Originally published in Japan in 2011 as Yume no Kaseki
   by Kodansha, Ltd., 2011. -- Contents: Carve ; Horseplay ;
   Baseball brats ; Summer of anxiety ; Focus ; Day has dawned
   ; Kidnappers ; Guests ; Waira ; Picnic ; Beyond the sun ;
   Joyful bell ; Desert dolphin ; The adventures of Master
   Basho ; Toriko--prisoner. -- Alternative genre. -- Call
   no.: PN6790.J33 K6475Y813 2015
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnappers.
   "The Furious Captain Discovers that the Kidnappers have
   Designs on His Daughter" / S. Clay Wilson. 1 p. in Zap
   Comix, no. 12 (1989). -- Call no.: PN6728.45.P7Z3no.12
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnappers.
   "The Ghostly Mission of Lucy Preston"* (Ghost Gallery) /
   Alex Blum, art. 7 p. in Jumbo Comics, no. 80 (Oct. 1945).
   -- Introduction of Lucy Preston, Tommy Preston, Jim, Sister
   Death, and Sister Life ; villains Nick, Jake, Nell and
   other kidnappers are also introduced. -- Data from Lou
   Mougin, Henry Steele, Hames Ware & Jim Vadeboncoeur Jr. via
   Grand Comics Database Project. -- Call no.: PN6728.1.F5J8m
   no.80
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnappers.
   "Le Héros Déshonoré" (Cap'tain Swing) p. 3-66 in Cap'tain
   Swing, no. 113 (Août 2003). -- Summary: Fort Brix is under
   siege, and food and ammunition are almost gone. Captain
   Swing sneaks in through a passageway only he knows, to try
   to encourage the defenders. Only two more days and
   reenforcements will arrive. Colonel Hopkins is in despair,
   though. If the British actually push their advantage the
   fort won't last two hours. Hopkins wonders how Swing got
   past the British lines and Swing explains, but somebody
   overhears. That night a silver platter is thrown out the
   window of Fort Brix with the details of the secret passage
   scratched on it. The British sneak in. Only Captain Swing,
   the Colonel's daughter Vivian, and her fiancé Bertie
   Wilkins survive. Swing is badly wounded. He tells a general
   investigating the case that he only told Colonel Hopkins
   about the passage, and although the Colonel is dead he is
   disgraced as a traitor. Capt. Swing takes several weeks to
   recover from his wounds. Then, at an inn, Swing
   accidentally finds the silver platter because of a
   confusion of luggage with another guest. The confusion is
   soon corrected and Swing doesn't know the significance of
   the platter, but Vivian and Bertie chance to come in as he
   is holding it. Bertie recognizes it, and since he signed
   the message with his initials decides that Swing must
   already know about his treachery. Bertie's efforts to
   recover the platter are to no avail, of course, because the
   other customer has it and has gone on his way. Swing is
   knocked out by a mysterious man searching his room (it was
   Bertie) and is invited to Vivian's place to recover. Vivian
   seems to have a slave named Sam, or at least a very
   obsequious Black servant and cook. Bertie hires a man to
   kill Swing, and has Mister Bluff (Swing's sidekick) taken
   hostage. The ransom note demands the silver plate, but
   Swing doesn't know what that's about. Swing is being held
   at gunpoint by the kidnappers when Pouik (Bluff's dog)
   brings him a pistol and joins the fray. Hibou (another
   sidekick) turns up as well, and Bluff is soon freed. The
   man with the platter knows its significance, and returns to
   ask Vivian for 200 guineas to prove her father's innocence.
   Bertie Wilkins gets to the man first, stabs him, and takes
   the platter. The man lives long enough to explain it to
   Vivian and Swing. Swing finds Wilkins trying to bury the
   platter, and the game is up. The Hopkins name is cleared,
   and Vivian is single again. -- Call no.: PN6748.C336no.113
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnappers.
   "Just for Me?"* (Hawk) / Robert Webb, art. 4 p. in Jumbo
   Comics, no. 159 (May 1952). -- Summary: The Hawk rescues
   Velvet from kidnappers, and she wonders about his
   motivations. -- Data from Lou Mougin, Henry Steele, Hames
   Ware, Jim Vadeboncoeur Jr. via Grand Comics Database
   Project. -- Call no.: Film 15791r.315 
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnappers.
   "Mediterranean Kidnapping"* (Steve Conrad Adventurer) /
   Jack Lehti, script and art. 6 p. in Adventure Comics, no.
   55 (Oct. 1940). -- Introduction of Col. Crawford and Miss
   Crawford ; villains are kidnappers introduced here. --
   Adventure story genre. -- Data from Bob Cherry, Gene Reed,
   Lou Mougin, et al., via Grand Comics Database Project. --
   Call no.: PN6728.1.N3A3m no.55
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnappers.
   "Meet the Tootlys"* (Hooks Devlin, Special Agent) / art:
   John Martin. 8 p. in Fight Comics, no. 20 (Aug. 1942). --
   Peaches Tootly, part of an eccentric but wealthy family,
   wants Hooks to find her missing father, who was last seen
   walking their collie. Their chauffeur turns out to be a
   Nazi spy kidnapper. -- Feature introduced here as "a
   brand-new, fast, mystery feature: Hooks Devlin, Special
   Agent." -- Data from Gene Reed via Grand Comic Book
   Database. -- Call no.: Film 15791 r.148
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnappers.
   News by Computer Foils Kidnappers! / writer, editorial
   director, William Palmer ; artists, Carmine Infantino and
   Chic Stone. -- Mamaroneck, NY : for the Radio Shack
   Division of Tandy Corporation by Archie Comic Publications,
   1988. -- 32 p. : col. ill. ; 26 cm. -- (Tandy Computer Whiz
   Kids ; cat. no. 68-2020) -- Genres: Adventure story,
   advertising, educational. -- Call no.: PN6728.25.R3P33 1988
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnappers.
   "Oh, You Kid-Napper!" (Snarky Parker) 9 p. in Ribtickler,
   no. 3 (1957). -- Call no.:  PN6728.2.G7R5no.3
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnappers.
   "The Origin of the Shield, part 2"* (The Shield, G-Man
   Extraordinary) / script, Harry Shorten ; art, Irv Novick.
   10 p. in Shield-Wizard Comics, no. 1 (Summer 1940) ;
   reprinted in The Shield: America's 1st Patriotic Comic Book
   Hero (2002). -- Summary: Joe Higgins joins the F.B.I. and
   goes on his first case to rescue John Ingot from
   kidnappers. -- Data from Lou Mougin, Keith Chandler, Craig
   Delich et al. via Grand Comics Database. -- Call no.:
   PN6728.1.A7S47m no.1. Call no.: PN6728.S4742S47 2002
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnappers.
   "Outwitting the Kidnappers" (U.S. Royal) 1 p. in Real Fact
   Comics, no. 9 (July/Aug. 1947) ; also printed in True
   Comics, no. 64 (Sept. 1947) -- 6-panel U.S. Royal bike
   tires ad. -- Call no.: PN6728.1.N3R4no.9. Call no.:
   PN6728.1.P3T7no.64
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnappers.
   "The Society Kidnappers"* (Spencer Steel) / art and script:
   Bob Powell? 6 p. in Fight Comics, no. 12 (Apr. 1941). --
   Villains The Boss, Petey, and Joe are all introduced here.
   -- Data from Gene Reed via Grand Comic Book Database. --
   Call no.: Film 15791 r.108
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnappers.
   "The Three Limping Kidnappers"* (Ellery Queen) 8 p. in
   Crackajack Funnies, no. 26 (Aug. 1940). -- Detective genre.
   -- Data from Lou Mougin, Tom Cotrill, Jim Van Dore, et al.
   via Grand Comics Database. -- Call no.: PN6728.1.D4C7no.26
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnappers.
   "The Tiger Kidnappers"* (Tiger Man) / script: Eric Marlin.
   9 p. in Rangers Comics, no. 34 (Apr. 1947). -- Data from
   Lou Mougin via The Grand Comics Database Project. -- Call
   no.: Film 15791r.154
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnappers.
   "The Wallace Kidnap Mob"* (Inspector Dayton) / by George
   Thatcher ; art: Art Saaf. 7 p. in Jumbo Comics, no. 34
   (Dec. 1941). -- Summary: Inspector Dayton rescues a kidnap
   victim being held in a cabin in the frozen north. -- Data
   from Lou Mougin via The Grand Comics Database Project. --
   Call no.: Film 15791r.179
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnappers.
   "We Were Told You Might Show Up Here"* (Capt. Easy, June
   28, 1954) / Leslie Turner. -- Summary: Wags Patakey stops
   in the office of the Seattle Times to report his escape
   from kidnappers to his syndicate. -- Call no.: PN6726 f.B55
   "Seattle"
-----------------------------------------------------
"The Kidnappers and the Hurricane"* (Shark Brodie) / art:
   George Tuska. 9 p. in Fight Comics, no. 6 (June 1940). --
   Villains Krodin and his gang introduced; introduction of
   Andrea Dale. -- Data from Gene Reed via Grand Comic Book
   Database. -- Call no.: Film 15791 r.134
-----------------------------------------------------
"The Kidnappers' Housekeeper"* (Hawk) / by Willis B. Rensie ;
   art: Robert Webb. p. 33-38 in Jumbo Comics, no. 46 (Dec.
   1942). -- Data from Lou Mougin via The Grand Comics
   Database Project. -- Call no.: Film 15791r.196
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnappers of Cholla Wash.
   Index entry (p. 47) in Ron Goulart's Great History of Comic
   Books (Chicago : Contemporary Books, 1986). Call no.:
   PN6725.G635 1986
-----------------------------------------------------
"Kidnappers of Stella Nova"* (Space Rangers) / art: Joe
   Cavallo. 6 p. in Planet Comics, no. 63 (Winter 1949). --
   Villains Xero and Chanda are introduced; introduction of
   Dr. Holgor. -- Data from Lou Mougin via the Grand Comics
   Database Project. -- Ca ll no.: PN6728.1.F5P55m no.63
-----------------------------------------------------
"Kidnapers on the Fairways"* (Cadet) / art, Nina Albright. 9
   p. in Target Comics, v. 8, no. 2 (Apr. 1947). -- Incipit
   title. -- Data from Lou Mougin, James Ludwig, Tony R. Rose,
   et al. via Grand Comics Database. -- Call no.:
   PN6728.1.N6T3v.8no.2
-----------------------------------------------------


Kidnapping

 See also

-----------------------------------------------------
"The Kidnapping!" (Supergirl) / John Albano, script ; Bob
   Oksner, art. 7 p. in Adventure Comics, no. 414 (Jan. 1972).
   -- Call no.: PN6728.1.N3A3no.414
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   Alistair in Outer Space / by Marilyn Sadler ; illustrated
   by Roger Bollen. -- New York : Trumpet Club, 1991. -- 39 p.
   : col. ill. ; 28 cm. -- Summary: When Alistair is kidnapped
   by a spaceship full of Goots from Gootula, his main concern
   is for his overdue library books. -- Call no.:
   PS3569.A25A45 1991
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "The Ambassador"* (Crimson Avenger) / Jack Lehti, script
   and pencils ; Charles Paris, inks and letters. 6 p. in
   World's Best Comics, no. 1 (1941). -- Summary: Crimson
   Avenger saves the governor from a kidnapping attempt. --
   Appearance of Wing. -- Superhero genre. -- Data from Bob
   Hughes, Bob Klein, Gene Reed, Craig Delich, et al. via
   Grand Comics Database. -- Call no.: PN6728.1.N3W7m no.1
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "Annie is Kidnapped and Taken to the Middle East"*
   (12/3/79-3/16/80) v. 1 of Annie / Leonard Starr (notebooks
   of clipped strips). -- Data from Jon Merrill. -- Call no.:
   PN6728.L55S76 1979
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "Annie wonders why Angela Pease has kidnapped her"*
   (1/9/95-6/4/95) v. 46 of Annie / Leonard Starr (notebooks
   of clipped strips). -- Data from Jon Merrill. -- Call no.:
   PN6728.L55S76 1979
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "The Ant Crook" (Captain Marvel Jr.) / Otto Binder, script
   ; Joe Certa, art. 10 p. in Captain Marvel Jr., no. 89
   (Sept. 1950) -- Begins: "This is a story about a criminal
   who leads a gang of thugs in robbery! And who abducts a
   queen for ransom! and who attempts to lead an army of
   invasion into the world! and yet this ruthless criminal is
   not human! Captain Marvel Jr., the world's mightiest boy,
   meets his mightiest surprise when he battles the Ant
   Crook!" -- Summary: An explorer named Colonel Jackson sends
   an S.O.S. from the Amazon. Jackson has discovered a race of
   giant intelligent ants, and introduces Captain Marvel Jr.
   to Zoggo, the prime minister of Ant City, and to Illia, the
   queen. A criminal ant called Zatan is causing trouble by
   committing robberies. "Within the unhuman ant form exists
   an evil, cruel mind!" Zatan plans to take over Ant City and
   be king, then conquer the rest of the world. Zatan gets
   away from Captain Marvel Jr. using his "great jumping
   ability, like all insects." He's an "ant Hitler!" Before an
   ant-human peace treaty can even be proposed, Zatan kidnaps
   Queen Illia and demands to be made king as his ransom. Once
   he has the crown, the soldiers obey him and are soon
   attacking a human village. Freddy Freeman and the queen end
   up tied together, and when Freddy is able to say "Captain
   Marvel" they escape and uncrown Zatan. Zatan goes to jail.
   -- Cover title: "The Amazing Ant Crook." -- Credits from
   Lou Mougin via Grand Comics Datasbase Project. -- Call no.:
   PN6728.1.F3C32no.89
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   Arctic Nation / Juan Diaz Canales, writer ; Juanjo
   Guarnido, artist and colorist ; translated by Anthya Flores
   & Patricia Rivera. -- New York, NY : Ibooks, 2004. -- 56 p.
   : col. ill. ; 31 cm. -- (Blacksad ; bk. 2) -- "In a town
   where white supremacists have moved in and are brutally
   seizing control, Blacksad is asked to find a kidnapped
   child and bring the kidnappers to justice. As he gets
   deeper into his investigation, Blacksad discovers a tale of
   sickening horror involving murder and worse that condemns
   some of the town's most powerful citizens." -- Detective
   and funny animal genres. -- Call no.: PN6777.G77B550213
   2004
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "The Atomic Counter" (Captain Atom) 14 p. in Captain Atom,
   no. 4 (1951) -- SUMMARY: Enemy agents in South Africa
   kidnap Professor King to get his invention, the uranium
   detector. -- Call no.: PN6728.2.N2C3no.4
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   Bad Night : a Criminal Edition / by Ed Brubaker and Sean
   Phillips ; colors by Val Staples ; introduction by Ken
   Bruen. -- New York : Marvel Worldwide, 2009. -- 1 v. : col.
   ill. ; 26 cm. -- (Criminal ; v. 4) -- (Icon) -- Contains
   material originally published in magazine form as Criminal
   v.2 #4-7. -- "Years ago, Jacob Kurtz was a happy family
   man, long-retired from the life of crime he was raised in.
   Then the police made him the prime suspect in a horrible
   crime and ripped his life apart. Now Jacob is less than a
   shadow of his former self, an insomniac who roams the city
   at night, looking for anything to distract him from his
   empty bed. Until he walks into the wrong place at the right
   time, and one bad night starts Jacob down a twisted path to
   kidnapping, robbery, murder, and just maybe the answer to
   the mystery buried in his past." -- Detective genre. --
   Call no.: PN6728.C735B3 2009
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   Batman and the Ninja / adapted by Chip Lovitt ; based on
   the script by Steve Perry ; illustrated by Mike Parobeck,
   Rick Burchett, and Rick Taylor. -- Racine, Wis. : Western
   Pub., 1995. -- 1 v. : col. ill. ; 21 cm. -- (A Golden Book)
   -- (Golden Look-Look Books) -- Summary: Batman flies to
   Japan to help an old friend when a rogue ninja kidnaps a
   martial arts pupil. -- Genre: Superhero fiction. -- Call
   no.: PN6728.B37L68 1995
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   Bayou. vol. one / created by Jeremy Love ; colors by
   Patrick Morgan. -- New York : DC Comics, 2009. -- 1 v. :
   col. ill. ; 16 x 22 cm. -- "Originally published online at
   zudacomics.com". -- Collects the first four chapters of the
   webcomic series. -- Summary (from Skyriver): Lee Wagstaff
   is the daughter of a black sharecropper in the
   depression-era town of Charon, Mississippi. When Lily
   Westmoreland, her white playmate, is snatched by agents of
   an evil creature known as Bog, Lee's father is accused of
   kidnapping. Lee's only hope is to follow Lily's trail into
   this fantastic and frightening alternate world. Along the
   way she enlists the help of a benevolent, blues singing,
   swamp monster called Bayou. Together, Lee and Bayou trek
   across a hauntingly familiar Southern Neverland,
   confronting creatures both benign and malevolent, in an
   effort to rescue Lily and save Lee's father from being
   lynched. -- Horror genre. -- Call no.: PN6727.L62B39 2009
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "Birdnapper" (Tweety and Sylvester) / Poole & Costanza. 5
   p. in Tweety and Sylvester, no. 78 (Feb. 1978). -- About
   kidnapping. -- Data from Robin Snyder. -- Call no.:
   PN6728.3.G56T87no.78
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   The Blank in the Comics strip collection includes a file of
   one or more daily comic strips related to this keyword or
   topic. Call no.: PN6726 f.B55
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "Bobby Crusoe, chapter seven" / by Dwig. 7 p. in Supersnipe
   Comics, v. 4, no. 2 (Oct./Nov. 1947). -- Begins: "There,
   Sappho. I think yawhoo understands." -- Summary: Sappho is
   kidnapped by offensively caricatured natives ("cannibals").
   -- Call no.: PN6728.1.S75A7v.4no.2
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "But Why Didn't You Tell the Police that Carlos and His
   Gang Kidnaped You?"* (The Gumps, 1925) / Sidney Smith. p.
   126 in The Comic Strip Century (Kitchen Sink Press, 1995).
   -- Summary: Henrietta is afraid her reputation will be
   ruined. -- 16th in a sequence. -- Call no.: PN6726.C595
   1995v.1
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "Cajero" p. 40 in Condorito, no. 720 (Nov. 19, 2013). --
   Summary: Comegato and Criminal Condorito notice a bank
   teller who looks just like Ungenio. They kidnap the teller,
   replace him with Ungenio, and prepare to accept deposits.
   Except that Ungenio doesn't get it right. -- Call no.:
   PN6790.C474C588no.720
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   The Calculus Affair / Hergé ; translated by Leslie
   Lonsdale-Cooper and Michael Turner. -- Boston : Little,
   Brown, 1976. -- 62 p. : col. ill. ; 30 cm. -- (The
   Adventures of Tintin) -- (An Atlantic Monthly Press Book)
   -- Translation of: L'affaire Tournesol. -- Summary: Tintin,
   the Captain, and Snowy attempt to rescue Dr. Calculus who
   has been kidnapped by the Bordurians. -- Call no.:
   PN6747.H4T53713 1976
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "Captain Ballsworth Attempts to Rescue his Kidnapped
   Daughters from the Insane Captain Collingwood" p. 6 in S.
   Clay Wilson Portfolio Comix (Berkeley, Calif. : Print Mint,
   1970). -- Call no.: PN6728.45.P7S2 1970
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "The Captive of the Amazons" (Superman) / Wayne Boring and
   Stan Kaye, art ; Jerry Siegel, script. 13 p. in Superman,
   no. 207 (June 1968) ; reprinted from Action Comics, no. 266
   (July 1960) -- SUMMARY from table of contents: "Jena, an
   Amazon princess from another planet, decides to make Clark
   (Superman) Kent her husband! And what Jena wants, Jena
   gets, even if it takes kidnapping, blackmail and a weird
   love potion!" -- Data from Jon Ingersoll.
   I. [Each creator] k. Amazons. k. Jena, an Amazon Princess.
   k. Princesses. k. Husbands. k. Kidnapping. k. Blackmail. k.
   Love Potions. Call no.: PN6728.1.N3S8no.207
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   Carnívora / Pericles Júnior. -- Porto Alegre, Brazil :
   Avec, 2015. -- 1 v. : ill. ; 27 cm. -- A story about
   kidnapping and police in Brazil. -- Call no.: PN6790.B73
   J8C3 2015
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "Carrier Pigeon Ransom Note"* (You're the Detective) p.
   22-23 in True Comics, no. 70 (Mar. 1948)
   1. Homing pigeons--Comic books, strips, etc. I. You're the
   Detective. k. Pigeons. k. Ransom Notes. k. Notes. k.
   Kidnapping. Call no.: PN6728.1.P3T7no.70
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "The Difficulties of Adventure" p. 24-31 in Insatiable /
   Fernando Caretta ; translated by Laura Petrarca (Seattle,
   WA : Eros Comix, 1998). -- Summary: An editor is tired of
   his reporter's lukewarm stories, and demands something
   exciting. Jones, the timid reporter, gets a lead on a Mafia
   boss and heads for Morocco. He is almost killed, then
   seduced, then kidnapped, then saved by the Foreign Legion
   and the F.B.I., and exchanged for a K.G.B. spy. The editor
   doesn't believe him. -- Call no.: PN6767.C33 I513 1998
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   Disney's The Great Mouse Detective. -- Racine, Wis. :
   Western Publishing Company, 1986. -- 24 p. : col. ill. ; 21
   cm. -- (A Golden Look-Look Book) -- Summary: Ratigan plans
   to kidnap the queen and replace her with a life-size toy
   through whom he will rule England. Basil of Baker Street
   foils the plot. -- Funny animal fiction. -- Call no.:
   PS3550.A1G7 1986
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "Doe Eyes"* (Arrowhead) / Joe Sinnott. 6 p. in Arrowhead,
   no. 3 (Aug. 1954). -- Begins: "Arrowhead, the renegade!
   Reckon I'll collect." -- Summary: Arrowhead is branded as a
   renegade by the White man, and also is an outcast from his
   Pawnee tribe. He waits, longing to catch sight of his
   beloved Doe Eyes, the Pawnee maid, as she picks berries. He
   is not the only one watching. Bounty hunter Joel Turk sees
   her and decides to bribe the invading Oglala Sioux tribe
   into kidnapping her. The Sioux attack the Pawnee village
   the next morning, and Arrowhead counterattacks. He is too
   late to prevent the kidnapping, so he follows the Sioux and
   waits for dusk to free Doe Eyes. The attempt is discovered
   but the Pawnee couple manages to escaped, taking Turk's
   horse with them. Arrowhead takes Doe Eyes home. She
   declares her love for him, but he tells her his life as an
   outcast is not one for her to share. He leaves, knowing she
   will never be safe as long as Turk is alive. -- Call no.:
   PN6728.2.M3A75no.3
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   The Dukes of Hazzard : Someone Kidnapped Daisy / art by
   James Sherman. -- New York : Modern Promotions, 1981. -- 31
   p. : ill. ; 28 cm. -- Coloring and activity book.
   1. Coloring books. I. Sherman, James. II. Someone Kidnapped
   Daisy. k. Kidnapping. Call no.: PN1992.77.D85S6 1981
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "L'Énigmatique Mr. Barelli" (Barelli) / Bob de Moor. p.
   3-9, 44-50 in Tintin, ann. 36, no. 317 (Oct. 2, 1981). --
   Summary: Georges Barelli and Inspector Moreau arrive at a
   hospital to find that the reporter Randor, the patient they
   meant to visit, has been kidnapped. They deduce that it was
   the work of the "Chef," a gang leader and master of
   disguise. The Chef has stolen an ambulance and Moreau has
   sprained an ankle, so Barelli, Inspector Lapiste, and the
   ambulance driver give chase. The third ambulance they catch
   is the right one, but it's empty. They find Randor in a
   doctor's office near the abandoned vehicle, but not the
   Chef. Randor is soon kidnapped again from the doctor's
   office. This doctor is a plastic surgeon, and he is working
   for the Chef. A secret passage from the doctor's bathroom
   leads to a chase through tunnels. The Chef gets away, but
   Randor is recovered and Barelli ends up in a basement
   cabaret. -- Call no.: PN6748.T48ann.36no.317
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "L'Enlèvement" (Nahomi) / Crisse. p. 20-25, 28-33 in
   Tintin, ann. 36, no. 321 (Oct. 30, 1981). -- Summary: The
   Emperor Ming of China is coming to visit the island of King
   Morodor. China wants a defense treaty and considers the
   island vulnerable as it is located between Japan and Korea.
   While the Emperor is visiting, Nahomi, a little girl of
   Morodor's court, is kidnapped by the Panda King. The Panda
   King rules a legendary talking animal population on the
   island. Nahomi helps them with a problem and is returned
   home, but in the meantime the Chinese have been blamed for
   her kidnapping and imprisoned. This insult, and Morodor's
   continuing refusal to negotiate a pact, leaves the island
   preparing for war with China." -- Call no.:
   PN6748.T48ann.36no.321
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "Even On Vacation Dusty Runs Headlong Into Adventure"*
   (Dusty) / script, Harry Shorten. 8 p. in Shield-Wizard
   Comics, no. 10 (Spring 1943). -- Summary: Dusty's friend
   Pete Harkins is kidnapped by lumber camp owner Ernest
   Hermann. -- Data from Lou Mougin, Craig Delich, Steinar
   Ådland, et al. via Grand Comics Database. -- Call no.: film
   15791r.122
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "The Farx Job" (Schlomo Raven) / Byron Preiss, Tom Sutton.
   53 p. in Fiction Illustrated, v. 1 (1976). -- Summary:
   Schlomo Raven is a very short detective. His secretary
   Eppie says he has "the heart of a lion and the mind of a
   rabbi." Heepo, Choocho, Zeepo and Grippo Farx have been
   kidnapped. Talc and large footprints on the scene lead
   Schlomo to suspect Bella Bugosi and Morton Barloff are
   involved, so he flies to Los Angeles. Bugosi and Barloff
   had indeed been there to steal a coffin, but had not
   kidnapped the brothers. Another clue leads him to Bumphrey
   Hogart's place, where he finds the Farx Brothers have been
   hired by Hogart to teach him how to be funny. Story ends
   with: "Tomorrow morning I'd buy the Times, take a walk in
   the park, call my rabbi. I was looking forward to it." --
   Call no: PN6726.F5v.1
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "Festival and Revolution"* (Billy and Bonny Bee) 8 p. in
   New Funnies, no. 68 (Oct. 1942) -- SUMMARY: Billy and Bonny
   win commendations for their parts in the annual Grand
   Festival in honor of the Queen Bee. That night, Bonny is
   kidnapped by revolutionaries and Billy manages to warn the
   Queen, foil the plot and rescue Bonny.
   I. Billy and Bonny Bee. k. Revolution. k. Commendations. k.
   Grand Festival. k. Queen bees. k. Bees. k. Kidnapping. k.
   Rescue. Call no.: PN6728.1.D4F8no.68
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "Flaming Arrows of the Son of Fire" 7 p. in Redskin, no. 3
   (Feb. 1951). -- Summary: David Brown is a White man who
   grew up with the Arapaho Indians. He is called Tonagwah, or
   Son of Fire, because he fights with flaming arrows.
   Tonagwah has dedicated his life to making "peace between
   Red men and White." Crooked Indian Agent Charley Cole has
   been illegally selling guns to renegades like Yellow Dog.
   Agent Cole kidnaps Enid, daughter of Lt. Fernald of the
   cavalry. Tonagwah is trying to figure out how to rescue
   Enid and stop the flow of guns, when he comes upon an
   itinerant Chinese fireworks peddler named Chief Charlie,
   who is drawn in exaggerated stereotype. The Indians are
   afraid of fireworks so Chief Charlie's stock helps save the
   day. -- Call no.: PN6728.2.Y6R4no.3
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "For Kidnapping and Illegally Mining Tapioca under Public
   Property, You'll Get Life, La Morte!"* (Norb, Mar. 3, 1990)
   / Pinkwater and Auth. -- Summary: Freddie is a hero. --
   Call no.: PN6726 f.B55 "tapioca"
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "The Frognapping" 1 p. text in Ha Ha Comics, no. 35 (Nov.
   1946). -- Call no.: PN6728.1.A5H3no.35
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   Funhouse Phantom / by Andy Ball; pictures by MADA Design,
   Inc. -- New York : HarperFestival, 2010. -- 1 v. : col.
   ill. ; 21 cm. -- (Spider-Sense Spider-Man) -- Summary (from
   SkyRiver): Fun turns to horror when Morbius, the living
   vampire, kidnaps Peter Parker's girlfiend at the holiday
   carnival. Now it's up to Spider-Man to find Mary Jane and
   stop Morbius in his tracks! -- Superhero fiction. -- Call
   no.: PN6728.A5F83 2010
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "The Ghost with Two Faces!" (Rose and the Thorn) / Robert
   Kanigher, writer ; Rich Buckler, pencils ; Dick Giordano,
   inks. 10 p. in Superman's Girl Friend Lois Lane, no. 117
   (Dec. 1971). -- Summary: While on vacation, Rose rents a
   house that is rumored to be haunted, and the Thorn rescues
   a kidnapped newspaper publisher. -- Data from Bill
   Wormstedt, Bob Hughes, Mike Nielsen et al. via Grand Comics
   Database. -- Call no.: PN6728.2.N3S78no.117
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   The Golden Compass : the Graphic Novel / Philip Pullman ;
   adapted by Stéphanie Melchior ; art by Clément Oubrerie ;
   coloring by Clément Oubrerie with Philippe Bruno ;
   translated by Annie Eaton. -- New York : Alfred A. Knopf,
   2017. -- 1 v. : col. ill. ; 23 cm. -- Contents: Part I.
   Oxford ; Part II. Bolvangar ; Part III. Svalbard. --
   "Originally published in three volumes in French as Les
   Royaumes du Nord 1, 2, and 3." -- Fantasy genre, involving
   kidnapping and missing persons. -- Call no.: PN6790 .I93
   O85R613 2017
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "The Golden Turtle"* (Airboy) 13 p. in Airboy Comics, v. 8,
   no. 7 (Aug. 1951) -- SUMMARY: Nancy Harris is kidnapped by
   thugs ("natives of some kind") from the schooner Black
   Drake, who were looking for a small golden turtle, the key
   to a sunken treasure; Airboy gets himself shanghaied,
   fights man-eating sea turtles and a hurricane, and saves
   Nancy. -- Call no.: PN6728.1.H5A35v.8no.7
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "Le Grand Combat" p. 34-50 in Sous le Ciel de l'Ouest /
   textes et dessins de Morris, in Lucky Luke : Spécial 2
   (Marcinelle-Charleroi, Belgique : Dupuis, 1980). --
   Summary: Lucky Luke comes across a fellow who can't read,
   but who can knock out a charging bull with one punch, and
   who carries his horse when the horse needs a rest. The
   man's name is Percival Belden. Lucky Luke offers to be his
   manager and set up a boxing match with Killer Kelly, as
   Kelly is offering a $10,000 prize to anyone who can beat
   him. Percival agrees because he'd like to have enough money
   to marry Rosita, and so "Battling Belden the Butcher" is
   born. After a full set of gags about boxing and betting,
   the fight is about to begin when Rosita is kidnapped. A
   note says that if Belden wins the fight he'll never see
   Rosita again. Belden gets in the ring and starts letting
   himself be knocked down, while Lucky Luke rides out in
   search of Rosita, returning just in time to allow Belden to
   win the match with one punch. -- Call no.: PN6747.M64L804
   1980
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   Green Lantern Corps : the Weaponer / Tony Bedard, writer ;
   Tyler Kirkham, penciller ; Batt with Rob Hunter, inkers ;
   Nei Ruffino, colorist ; Steve Wands, letterer. -- New York
   : DC Comics, 2011. -- 1 v. : col. ill. ; 26 cm. --
   (Brightest Day) -- "Originally published in single magazine
   form in Green Lantern Corps 53-57." -- Summary (from
   SkyRiver): When the Weaponer kidnaps Sinestro's daughter,
   Soranik Natu, Honor Lantern Kyle Rayner and his fellow
   Honor Guard Lanterns will risk everything to get her back.
   -- Superhero genre. -- Call no.: PN6728.G74W4 2011
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   A Hardy Day's Night / Scott Lobdell, writer ; Paulo H.
   Marcondes with Marcel Zero, artists. -- New York :
   Papercutz, 2007. -- 1 v. : col. ill. ; 20 cm. -- (The Hardy
   Boys Undercover Brothers ; no. 10) -- Summary (from
   SkyRiver): When a rogue mentor agent within A.T.A.C. tries
   to kill them, Frank and Joe Hardy discover that the agent
   was being manipulated by malevolent forces who kidnapped
   his son, and the Hardy Boys have until dawn to find the
   child. -- Detective genre. -- Call no.: PN6728.H365L61 2007
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
    Hayate : the Combat Butler / Kenjiro Hata. -- San
   Francisco : Viz Media, 2006- . -- ill. ; 20 cm. -- Summary
   (from SkyRiver): Since the tender age of nine, Hayate
   Ayasaki has busted his behind at various part-time jobs to
   support his degenerate gambler parents. And how do they
   repay their son's selfless generosity? By selling his
   organs to the yakuza to cover their debts! But fate throws
   Hayate a bone, sort of. Hardworking Hayate has a plan to
   pay back the yakuza, who are now the legal owners of his
   body parts: he'll kidnap someone and ransom them for a
   mountain of money. But things get tricky when his would-be
   kidnappee, who as luck would have it is the daughter of a
   mind bogglingly wealthy family, mistakes Hayate's actions
   for a confession of love, and subsequently hires him to be
   her personal servant. At least his employment future is
   secure, or so he thinks. -- Organized crime setting. --
   LIBRARY HAS: v. 8. -- Call no.: PN6790.J33 H354H313 2006
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "The Heart" (Warstrike) / Dan Danko, writer ; Hoang Nguyen,
   penciller ; Bob Downs, inker. 24 p. in Warstrike, no. 1
   (May 1994) -- Summary: Warstrike, hired by Senator Kline to
   find his kidnapped daughter, defeats Nero; Xanadu
   Amalgamated introduces the Ultra, Blind Faith, who plans to
   kill Warstrike.
   k. Senators. k. Kidnapping. k. Daughters. k. Nero. k Xanadu
   Amalgamated. k. Blind Faith. I. Danko, Dan. II. Nguyen,
   Hoang. III. Downs, Bob. Call no.: PN6728.6.M25W3no.1
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "Heart of the Warrior" / writer, Bill DuBay ; artist,
   Alajandro Sanchez. p. 25-32 in Creepy, no. 111 (Sept.
   1979). -- "Crash! Who's There? it is I Gorrax, captain of
   the Imperial Guard! Gorrax returns from the border wars to
   embrace his beloved Shira. But Shira was kidnapped by a
   griffin and taken to evil Krothar."  -- Call no.:
   PN6728.3.W3C7no.111
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "Heiress Kidnapped by the Moth" (Dr. Fung) / script and
   art, Bob Powell. 6 p. in Samson, no. 2 (Dec./Jan.
   1940/1941) ; reprinted from Wonderworld Comics, no. 9 (Jan.
   1940). -- Data from Lou Mougin, Henry Steele, Hames Ware,
   et al via Grand Comics Database. -- Call no.:
   PN6728.1.F6S3m no.2
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   Hell and Back / Frank Miller. -- Milwaukie, Or. : Dark
   Horse Books, 2005. -- 2nd ed. -- 296 p. : ill. (some col.)
   ; 26 cm. -- (Sin City ; v. 7) -- "This volume collects
   issues one through nine of the Dark Horse comic book series
   Sin City: Hell and Back" -- Summary (from SkyRiver):
   Wallace, a former Navy Seal and current artist, saves
   Esther from a suicide attempt. Just when they're starting
   to hit it off, Esther is kidnapped. Wallace, angry and
   unable to forget her, starts investigating and uncovers a
   ring of corruption and crime that stinks even by Sin City
   standards. -- Detective genre. -- Call no.: PN6727.M48S57
   2005
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "The Horny Goof" / Moebius. 24 p. in Moebius 0 (Milwaukie,
   OR : Dark Dark Horse Comics, 1990). -- Summary: Lady
   Kowalsky kidnaps the title character, also know as the
   "Syldanian Wild Pecker," for her own pleasure, touching off
   a war in which two billion die. She takes him to Flower,
   the pleasure asteroid. -- Translation of "Le Bandard Fou."
   -- Call no.: PN6747.G5M6 1990
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "Hung Jury" (Moon Knight) / Chuck Dixon, writer ; J.J.
   Birch, artist. 8 p. in Marvel Comics Presents, no. 152
   (Late Apr. 1994) -- (pt. 1 of 3) -- Summary: Members of the
   white supremacist Praetorians kidnap a juror's son to
   ensure a favorable verdict.
   k. Juries. k. White supremacists. k. Praetorians. k.
   Kidnapping. k. Sons. k. Verdicts. I. Dixon, Chuck. II.
   Birch, J. J. Call no.: PN6728.5.M3M23no.152
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "I Am Very Sorry But Your Services are No Longer Required"*
   (The Gumps, 1925) / Sidney Smith. p. 125 in The Comic Strip
   Century (Kitchen Sink Press, 1995). -- Summary: The widow
   Zander has lost her job because she was away being
   kidnapped. She talks to herself, calling herself Henrietta.
   -- 12th in a sequence. -- Call no.: PN6726.C595 1995v.1
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "I Was Kidnapped by a Flying Saucer!" / Paul Reinman, art.
   5 p. in Weird Wonder Tales, no. 2 (Feb. 1974) ; retitled
   from "The Little Men" in Marvel Tales, no. 138 (Sept.
   1955). -- Data from Lou Mougin, Dan Kocher, Terry Watkins
   et al. via Grand Comics Database. -- Call no.:
   PN6728.4.M3W4no.2
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "I'd Heard About Kid Colt!"* (Kid Colt) / script, Joe Gill
   ; art, Jack Keller. 5 p. in Kid Colt Outlaw, no. 33 (Jan.
   1954). -- Incipit title. -- Summary: Kid Colt comes upon
   Cat Hardin's camp and finds a young lady who has been
   kidnapped. When he frees her, Cooper Moss mistakenly
   believes it is so that he can get the ransom money, but he
   soon discovers that Kid Colt is nothing like him. -- Data
   from Ethan Hoddes, Lou Mougin, Nick Caputo, et al. via
   Grand Comics Database. -- Call no.: PN6728.1.M3K5no.33
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "I'll Just Keep the Old Eagle Eye on That Door"* (The
   Gumps, 1925) / Sidney Smith. p. 124 in The Comic Strip
   Century (Kitchen Sink Press, 1995). -- Summary: Andy
   decides to shadow Carlos, whom he suspects of kidnapping
   the widow Zander. -- Seventh in a sequence. -- Call no.:
   PN6726.C595 1995v.1
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   The Indestructible Metal Men / Paul Collicutt. --
   Somerville, Mass. : Candlewick Press, 2010. -- 1 v. : col.
   ill. ; 23 cm. -- (Paul Collicutt's Robot City Adventures ;
   3) -- "Featuring super-strong robots Harold, Godfrey, and
   Horace." -- Summary (from SkyRiver): An evil millionaire
   has kidnapped one of the Indestructable Metal
   Men--super-strong robots over one hundred years old--and is
   planning to use it to build an army of indestructible
   robots unless a fiesty young scientist can stop him. --
   Science fiction genre. -- Call no.: PN6737.C575 I5 2010
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   Index entry (p. 35, 36, 37, 46, 53, 81, 85, 154, 155) in
   The Will Eisner Companion, by N.C. Christopher Couch &
   Stephen Weiner (New York : DC Comics, 2004). -- Call no.:
   PN6727.E35 Z5C6 2004
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   Indiana Jones et la Cité de la Foudre / C. Moliterni ; G.
   Alessandrini. -- Paris? : Bagheera ; Société des Pétroles
   Shell, 1994. -- 48 p. : col. ill. ; 30 cm. -- (L'Été des BD
   ; 4) -- Summary: Arriving in Calcutta by train, Indy
   reports to a colonial policeman named Blake that a
   traveling companion was attacked by thugs, and he saved
   her. She is a dancer, named Kamala. Indy meets up with
   reporter Marya Smirnova, who tells him she has information
   about a lost temple. That night they go to Kamala's
   performance, and while they're walking her to the hotel she
   is kidnapped by Thugs. Indy tells the story of the Thugs, a
   cult of Kali now apparently revived after a century of
   dormancy. When Indy and Marya arrive at Bhubaneshwar to
   look for the temple and Kamala, Marya is met at the train
   by the Rolls-Royce of the Maharajah, who turns out to be an
   old chum of Marya's named Sardar. They are invited to be
   guests at his palace. That evening just outside the palace
   they hear a speech by Mahatma Gandhi, who is organizing to
   resist the British government. On a tiger hunt the next day
   Jones falls off his elephant and kills a tiger right away,
   and finds that the tiger was guarding a cave leading to the
   temple. That night Indy and Marya sneak in and see Kamala
   in chains, and hear the announcement of her sacrifice to
   Kali the next day. On the way out they lose their way and
   find a cave of lepers, who try to escape, but Indy locks
   them back in. Next day Marya figures out that Sardar is the
   chief of the Thugs, and that night they sneak into the
   temple ceremony in disguise. Kamala is made to dance before
   her death, and Indy grabs her just in time, while Marya
   grabs a big ruby from Kali's statue. They discover that the
   colonial policeman from Calcutta is one of the Thugs. To
   help them in their escape, Indy releases the lepers. Once
   outside the cave, Kamala grabs the ruby and throws it back
   in, whereupon the cave collapses. She explains that she is
   a priestess of Kali, chosen since birth by the Thugs for
   this sacrifice. She had tried to flee, but the policeman,
   Blake, brought her back. Blake, the son of an Englishman
   and Indian woman, felt rejected by both communities and
   revived the Thugs as revenge to start an uprising against
   the British and to sabotage Gandhi's movement. -- Call no.:
   PN6747.M59 I52 1994
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   Iron Man : Teen Novelization / by Dan Jolley ; based on the
   screenplay by Mark Fergus and others ; based on the Marvel
   comic. -- New York : HarperEntertainment, 2008. -- 254
   pages ; 18 cm. -- "Based on the new movie!" -- Summary
   (from OCLC): Billionaire Tony Stark is kidnapped in a
   foreign land and forced to help his enemies. Will these
   days as Iron Man be his last? -- Superhero fiction. -- Call
   no.: PS3610 .O57 I7 2008
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "John and Mary, Mary and John" 28 p. in Three Women at the
   Frontier / Eleuteri-Serpieri, Ambrosio. -- El Cajon, CA:
   Blackthorne, 1985. -- (Stories of the West ; 1) -- Summary:
   A middle-aged trapper named John comes upon a middle-aged
   woman named Mary living in a remote cave. They tell their
   stories. John once had an Indian wife who was killed by a
   bear, then helped a woman named Alice build a saloon. When
   a rich man tried to muscle Alice out of her saloon, John
   killed him and his thugs and left. Mary had been kidnapped
   by Indians and forced to live as the wife of one of them. A
   white man bought her from the Indians as a slave, and she
   killed him and left. Mary and John decide to be vagabonds
   together. -- Call no.: PN6767.S4T47 1985
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "Kid-Zapped" (Yosemite Sam and Bugs Bunny) 6 p. in Yosemite
   Sam, no. 28 (June 1975)
   k. Zapping. k. Kidnapping. k. Bugs Bunny. Call no.:
   PN6728.4.G56Y6no.28
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   Kilala Princess / art by Nao Kodaka ; story by Rika Tanaka
   ; English adaptation, Kathy Schilling. -- Los Angeles :
   Tokyopop, 2007- . -- ill. ; 19 cm. -- Other title: Disney's
   Kilala Princess. -- "When Kilala awakens a sleeping prince
   named Rei, she magically gains the power of the princesses!
   But her friend Erica is kidnapped, so she and Rei must set
   off on a quest to rescue her. Filled with the most popular
   Disney princesses, Ariel, Cinderella, Jasmine, Snow White,
   Belle, Tokyopop's Kilala Princess is a truly enchanting new
   series!" -- Fantasy and girls' genres. -- LIBRARY HAS: v.
   1, 3. -- Call no.: PN6790.J33 K62D5 2007
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   Krazy Kat : a novel in five panels / Jay Cantor. -- 1st ed.
   -- New York : Alfred A. Knopf, 1988. -- 245 p. : ill. ; 23
   cm. -- Based on characters created by George Herriman. --
   SUMMARY: Krazy no longer appreciates being hit by bricks
   after seeing the atomic bomb test at Alamogordo, and
   refuses to work; to get the strip back Ignatz tries
   psychoanalysis, a change of media to Hollywood film, a
   Patty Hearst-style kidnapping, and finally an extended
   directed fantasy.
   1. Funny animal fiction. I. Cantor, Jay. II. Herriman,
   George, 1880-1944. III. Alfred A. Knopf. k. Bricks. k.
   Ignatz Mouse. k. Atomic Bomb Tests. k. Alamogordo. k.
   Psychoanalysis. k. Hollywood. k. Hearst, Patty. k.
   Kidnapping. k. Directed fantasy. Call no.: PS3553.A5475K7
   1988
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "The Lair of Brainiac!" (Superbaby) / Jerry Siegel, script
   ; Curt Swan and George Klein, art. 9 p. in Superman Family,
   no. 167 (Oct./Nov. 1974) ; reprinted from Superboy, no. 106
   (July 1963) ; also reprinted in Superman in the Sixties (DC
   Comics, 1999). -- Summary: Brainiac kidnaps baby Kal-El to
   force Jor-El to turn over one of his inventions. -- "An
   Untold Story of Superbaby." -- Data from Gene Reed, Lou
   Mazzella, Mike Nielsen et al. via Grand Comics Database. --
   Call no.: PN6728.2.N3S8no.167
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   The Lindbergh Child : the Atrocious Kidnapping and Murder
   of the Infant Son of America's Hero Col. Charles A.
   Lindbergh / written and illustrated by Rick Geary. -- New
   York : NBM, 2008. -- 1 v. : ill. ; 24 cm. -- (ComicsLit) --
   (A Treasury of XXth Century Murder) -- Includes
   bibliographical references. -- Summary (from SkyRiver): All
   was well for Charles Lindbergh, after his daring solo
   crossing of the Atlantic. Fame and fortune came quickly.
   Soon after the Lindbergh's build themselves their dream
   home far from the madding crowd, tragedy strikes--their
   baby is abducted. -- Historical genre. -- Call no.:
   PN6727.G35L5 2008
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "Le Livre Maudit" (Cap'tain Swing) p. 3-66 in Cap'tain
   Swing, no. 114 (Sept. 2003). -- Summary: The Redcoat
   soldiers arrest a man in the street who complains loudly of
   his fate, but when he is taken to the commanding officer it
   turns out he's an undercover agent, a traitor turning over
   a list of patriots' names. Lord Marmaduke Langsburry, an
   emisary direct from the King in London, witnesses the
   transaction and asks to see the list. Lord Langsburry
   pockets the list, then removes his beard to reveal that he
   is indeed Captain Swing. In short order the traitor is
   dead, and the fine carriage that brought "Langsburry" has
   left at a gallop. The British soldiers take off after the
   carriage, making it easy for Swing to sneak out of the
   headquarters to hide with his old friend Professor
   Griffith. The professor is puzzling over an old Rosicrucian
   book he bought from an antiquarian book dealer in
   Strasbourg. The reading isn't going well since it's
   Greco-Latino-Hebraic in runic characters. By chance, a
   soldier has seen Swing enter Griffith's house, so the
   soldiers come and the two have to flee. Also there is a
   sinister-looking bald man lurking in the house looking for
   a chance to steal the book. The professor takes the book
   with him, and they ride to Fort Ontario. Betty sets the
   professor up with a place to study. The creepy bald man
   returns to his home as well, on Black Skull Mountain, which
   is not far from Fort Ontario. He thinks awhile, then sends
   one of his superstitious Black servants, named Mumbulah, to
   go to Fort Ontario on Lake Ontario and retrieve the book,
   no matter whose life it costs. Meanwhile Griffith suddenly
   figures out the book, and it makes him crazy. He babbles
   nonsense and ancient-sounding words, and tries to kill
   Mister Bluff's dog, Pouik, by hanging it by the neck with a
   rope. Griffith's raving is so violent they have to tie him
   up. Mumbulah arrives at the fort and tries to steal the
   book, but gets locked up for his trouble. Hibou thinks
   sorcery is involved. Taking the book, Swing rides out from
   Lake Ontario for a few hours to a mountain cave full of
   books, bottles and a smoking brazier. Swing asks the wise
   man there to take a look at the book, and the wise man is
   interested. He says to come back in a few days when he's
   studied the book. Meanwhile, the strange bald man from
   Black Skull Mountain shows up at Fort Ontario asking for
   lodging. As he enters both Griffith and Mumbulah can be
   heard raving from their respective lockups, and Mister
   Bluff wonders if it might be the weather causing it. Hibou
   says that Indians lose their spirit in captivity too, and
   in sympathy lets Mumbulah out for some exercise. Mumbulah
   sees his master and immediately commits suicide by jumping
   from a tower. Then the bald man hypnotizes Betty from
   behind without her having even seen him. He tells her to go
   to town and buy a blue dress, and when she leaves the fort
   on foot he kidnaps her. When Swing comes back from
   delivering the book to his guru, a ransom note is found.
   The Rosicrucian book must be brought to Black Skull
   Mountain in exchange for Betty's life. Swing, Bluff and
   Hibou retrace Swing's path to retrieve the book, and arrive
   just as the wise man has deciphered it. He also starts
   raving and has to be tied up. The bald man gets excited
   when he mentally feels the book approaching, the book that
   was "stolen from them at Tubingen." The man tries to
   capture Swing rather than release Betty, and in the
   struggle the book and the whole house are burned to ashes.
   At that moment both of the raving scholars are released
   from their spells miles apart. They get together at Fort
   Ontario and agree that the destruction of the book was a
   good thing. The one from the mountain, the one that Swing
   calls "master," quotes Shakespeare: "There are more things
   in heaven and earth than are dreamt of in your philosopy."
   -- Call no.: PN6748.C336no.114
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "The Long Trail Back, chapter 3" / by Lucy Parr ; illus. by
   Reed Crandall. text p. 31-32 in Treasure Chest of Fun and
   Fact, v. 21, no. 3 (Oct. 7, 1965). -- "The story this far:
   Red Cliff, an Apache boy, is kidnapped by the Utes. After
   several days' travel he escapes and starts back to his
   people." -- "To be continued." -- Call no.:
   PN6728.1.P43T7v.21no.3
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   Lupin III's Greatest Capers [videorecording] : Albatross,
   Wings of Death ; Aloha, Lupin / Streamline Pictures ; Tokyo
   Movie Shinsha ; executive producer, Yutaka Fujioka ;
   English version adapted produced and directed by Carl
   Macek. -- Los Angeles, Calif. : Orion Home Video, 1994. --
   1 videocassette (50 min.) : sd., col. ; 1/2 in. -- VHS
   format. -- Closed-captioned for the hearing impaired. --
   "Based on characters created by Monkey Punch." -- Aloha,
   Lupin: written & directed by Hayao Miyazaki. -- Summary:
   Albatross, Wings of Death: Wolf (Lupin III) learns that his
   girlfriend/partner has been kidnapped by an eccentric
   wealthy businessman who is threatening the world with a
   nuclear device. -- Summary: Aloha, Lupin: A powerful robot
   terrorizes the locals with the blame falling on Lupin. --
   Call no.: PN1997.5.L86L86 1994
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   Mars Needs Moms! / Berkeley Breathed. -- New York :
   Philomel Books, 2007. -- 1 v. : col. ill. ; 23 x29 cm. --
   Summary (from OCLC): When a disgruntled boy sees his mother
   being kidnapped by Martians, he realizes he loves her and
   will go to any lengths to protect her. -- Call no.:
   PN6727.B64M3 2007
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "Mediterranean Kidnapping"* (Steve Conrad Adventurer) /
   Jack Lehti, script and art. 6 p. in Adventure Comics, no.
   55 (Oct. 1940). -- Introduction of Col. Crawford and Miss
   Crawford ; villains are kidnappers introduced here. --
   Adventure story genre. -- Data from Bob Cherry, Gene Reed,
   Lou Mougin, et al., via Grand Comics Database Project. --
   Call no.: PN6728.1.N3A3m no.55
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "The Mentabelt"* (Magno the Magnetic Man) 13 p. in
   Super-Mystery Comics, v. 2, no. 1 (Apr. 1941). -- Summary:
   The Clown kidnaps Davey and his new device makes Davey
   obey. -- Superhero genre. -- Call no.: PN6728.1.A2S77m
   v.2no.1
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "Mirror, Mirror!" (Captain America) / Conway ; S. Buscema,
   J. Verpoorten. 21 p. in Captain America, no. 150 (June
   1972). -- Summary: Jakar (as The Stranger) kidnaps Earthian
   children in a scheme to repopulate his homeworld. -- The
   Falcon co-stars, per Olshevsky. -- Call no.:
   PN6728.2.M3T25no.150
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "The Missing Tycoons"* (Sargon the Sorcerer) / John B.
   Wentworth, writer ; Howard Purcell, art. 7 p. in
   All-American Comics, no. 44 (Nov. 1942). -- Appearances of
   Flora Styles, Harold Corsten, Jimmy Corsten, Mabel Corsten,
   Bob, and villains Arum Hahuth and Snatch Kelly. -- Summary:
   After a prominent businessman is kidnapped, a medium
   contacts his wife and arranges for her to attend a seance
   so that she can meet her husband again. -- Data from Gene
   Reed, Bob Hughes and Craig Delich via Grand Comics
   Database. -- Call no.: PN6728.1.N3A38no.44
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "The Model Plane Kidnapping"* (Chuck White and His Friends)
   / Matt Christopher and Fran Matera. p. 3-8 in Treasure
   Chest of Fun & Fact, v. 22, no. 11 (Jan. 26, 1967). --
   Begins: "After the Bobcats-Lions game, Chuck is forced into
   a car by two strange men." -- To be continued. -- Call no.:
   PN67281.P43T7v.22no.11
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "Monkeynappers"* (Floogy the Fiji) 5 p. in Crack Comics,
   no. 57 (Nov. 1948). -- Call no.: PN6728.1.Q3C7no.57
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "Mother Appleby and the Walking Dead"* (Tiger Man) / by
   Eric Marlin ; art: George Evans. 9 p. in Rangers Comics,
   no. 45 (Feb. 1949). -- Summary: Mamba, Queen of Voodoo,
   transforms skid row kidnapees into slave labor in South
   America. -- Data from Lou Mougin via The Grand Comics
   Database Project. -- Call no.: Film 15791r.154
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "The Needle in the Haystack!" (Lady Danger) / pencils,
   Carmine Infantino ; inks, Frank Giacoia. 10 p. in
   Superman's Girl Friend Lois Lane, no. 117 (Dec. 1971) ;
   reprinted from Sensation Comics, no. 87 (Mar. 1949). --
   Summary: A unique charity gimmick at a carnival leads Lady
   Danger to a story involving kidnapping and a stolen key to
   an ancient box containing a fortune. -- Lady Danger is
   Valerie Vaughn; appearance of Gary Grath. -- Data from Bill
   Wormstedt, Bob Hughes, Mike Nielsen et al. via Grand Comics
   Database. -- Call no.: PN6728.2.N3S78no.117
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "The Night Has a Thousand Eyes" (Dr. Mid-Nite) / Charles
   Reizenstein, script ; Stan Aschmeier, art. 7 p. in
   All-American Comics, no. 44 (Nov. 1942). -- Appearances of
   Myra Mason, Hotty, Dr. Cooper, and villains Whiteways Word,
   Jeska, Sorry, and Pook. -- Summary: Dr. Mid-Nite witnesses
   the kidnapping of a fellow doctor and succeeds in capturing
   the men responsible, discovering in the process that the
   kidnappers had been hired by a criminal attorney. -- Data
   from Gene Reed, Bob Hughes and Craig Delich via Grand
   Comics Database. -- Call no.: PN6728.1.N3A38no.44
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "A Night to Remember" (Wolverine) / Dwight Zimmerman, Nel
   Yomtov, writers ; Paul Ryan, pencils ; Rey Garcia, inks. 8
   p. in Marvel Comics Presents, no. 152 (Late Apr. 1994) --
   (Pure Sacrifice ; pt. 1 of 4) -- Summary: In Madripoor,
   Wolverine and Tyger Tiger (Jessica Hoan) fight Abdul
   Alhazred, who hypnotizes and kidnaps Tyger.
   k. Remembering. k. Madripoor. k. Tyger Tiger. k. Abdul
   Alhazred. k. Hypnotism. k. Kidnapping. I. Zimmerman,
   Dwight. II. Yomtov, Nel. III. Ryan, Paul. IV. Garcia, Rey.
   V. Series. Call no.: PN6728.5.M3M23no.152
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "1976 : Pettigrew for President!" / by Berry Reece ; illus.
   by Joe Sinnott. p. 26-31 in Treasure Chest of Fun and Fact,
   v. 19, no. 12 (Feb. 13, 1964). -- Begins: "Thinking their
   children kidnapped, the Blatts rush for home." -- "To be
   continued." -- Call no.: PN6728.1.P43T7v.19no.12
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   Okko : the Cycle of Water / written and illustrated by Hub
   ; colors by Hub and Stephan Pecayo ; translated by Edward
   Gauvin. -- Fort Lee, NJ : Archaia Studios Press, 2006-2007.
   -- col. ill. ; 27 cm. -- "Originally published in France by
   Delcourt." -- Complete in 4 issues. -- Summary (from
   SkyRiver): Year 1108 in the official calendar of the Pajan
   Empire. This turbulent age, often called the Asagiri Era or
   the Time of Mists, saw the great clans wage decades-long
   wars in attempts to seize power. Far from the fields of
   battle, Okko the ronin heads a small group of demon
   hunters, wandering the realms of Empire. He is accompanied
   by Noburo, a mysterious giant who hides his face behind a
   red mask, and the whimsical monk Noshin, the sake lover
   with the power to summon and commune with the spirits of
   nature. When Tikku's sister Little Carp is kidnapped by
   pirates, the young fisherman enlists the group's help in
   finding her. But the quest will have a price, and will lead
   our four heroes much farther afield than they'd ever
   imagined. The first of five Cycles by French comics master
   Hub. -- Fantasy genre. -- LIBRARY HAS: no. 2-3. -- Call
   no.: PN6747.H684 O3413 2007
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   One Hundred and One Dalmatians [videorecording] -- United
   States : Walt Disney Home Video, 1992. -- 1 videocassette
   (79 min.) : sd., col. ; 1/2 in. -- (Walt Disney Classics)
   -- At head of title: Walt Disney Presents. -- Originally
   produced as motion picture in 1961. -- VHS. -- Summary
   (from OCLC): Dalmatians Pongo and Perdita settle into their
   owners' flat in London to become proud parents of 15
   precocious pups. It's one big happy dog family until the
   evil Cruella De Vil kidnaps the puppies, along with every
   other Dalmatian in the city. It's up to Pongo and Perdita
   to unite the entire animal population in a mission to help
   the courageous pups outsmart their captor. -- Call no.:
   PN1997.5 .O5W25 1992
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "Origin of Madam Fatal"* (Madam Fatal) / art by Art
   Pinajian. 5 p. in Crack Comics, no. 1 (May 1940). --
   Summary: Former actor John Stanton, posing as an old woman
   (Madam Fatal), does everything he can to track down a man
   he has been searching for for years, John Carver. Stanton
   had married the woman Carver loved, but Carver became
   jealous and, two years later, kidnapped Stanton's only
   daughter. Now the two come face to face, and all Stanton
   cares about is if his daughter is still alive. --
   Appearances of Hamlet (Madam Fatal's parrot), Sarah, Mr.
   Porter the postman, Johnny, Reeves (John Carver's driver),
   and villains Lou and Mike. -- Data from Bob Klein, Lou
   Mougin, Jim Van Dore, et al. via Grand Comics Database. --
   Call no.: PN6728.1.Q3C7m no.1
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "Overcome by Visions of Unutterable Horror She Swooned Away
   into Merciful Unconsciousness"* (The Gumps, 1925) / Sidney
   Smith. p. 124 in The Comic Strip Century (Kitchen Sink
   Press, 1995). -- Summary: Carlos's gang kidnaps the fair
   widow Zander. -- Sixth in a sequence. -- Call no.:
   PN6726.C595 1995v.1
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "Play It Again, Sam" / E. Sánchez Abulí, Jordi Bernet. 10
   p. in Torpedo 1936 2 (New York : Catalan Communications,
   1985). -- Summary: Barbara, the wife of a rich man, has
   been kidnapped. Pinocchio knows it's Sam's gang that has
   her, and talks Luca Torelli and Rascal into impersonating
   private detectives to return Barbara to her husband for a
   reward. The scheme almost works, but the police arrive just
   after they've killed the gang, so they don't get any money.
   -- Call no.: PN6777.S3T6213 1985
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "The Plitch" p. 39-48 in Outer States / Enki Bilal (New
   York : Catalan Communications, 1990). -- Summary: Large
   populations of people and animals are disappearing, and the
   only clue in each case is a floating pink thing that goes
   'plitch.'  The government cover story is that it's an
   epidemic and that everybody's in a clinic in Albania. Soon
   the whole population of Earth is missing, except for top
   government leaders of communist and Nato countries, who
   meet in Albania and kill each other off. The Plitch leaves
   the planet with a big load of kidnapped people and animals.
   -- Call no.: PN6747.B5M313 1990
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "Powerless, part 6" (Powerless) / script, Matt Cherniss,
   Peter Johnson ; art, Michael Gaydos ; colors, Lee
   Loughridge ; letters, Dave Sharpe. 24 p. in Powerless, no.
   6 (Jan. 2005). -- Summary: William Watts once again visits
   with the disturbed and disturbing Bruce Banner who
   convinces him to take some action in the kidnapping of Gwen
   Stacy. Kingpin personally kills Matt Murdock and is caught
   in the act. Peter Parker confronts Norman Osborn and
   rescues Gwen without having to compromise his boss, Tony
   Stark. Logan tracks down his old boss from the government.
   Getting off for Murdock's murder, Kingpin is taken down by
   a vengeance seeking Frank Castle. Watts concludes our tale
   by pondering the events since his awakening from a coma and
   how his visions of heroes translated into real life. --
   Data from Kelly Langston-Smith, Ramon Schenk, Derek
   Reinhard, et al. via Grand Comics Database. -- Call no.:
   PN6728.7.M3P62 2004 no.6
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   Pran's Chacha Chaudhary and the Great Kidnapping. -- Delhi
   : Diamond Comics, 2010?  -- 82 p. : col. ill. ; 19 cm.--
   Call no.: PN6790 .I54 C44G68 2010
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "The President's Been Kidnapped" (The Black Condor) /
   penciller, Lou Fine ; colorist, Greg Theakston. p. 183-191
   in The Greatest Golden Age Stories Ever Told (New York : DC
   Comics, 1990). -- Originally presented in Crack Comics, no.
   19 (Dec. 1941). -- Call no.: PN6726.G7 1990
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "Prince of Patrania, part 17"* (Spike Spalding) / Vin
   Sullivan, script and art. 2 p. in More Fun Comics, no. 19
   (Mar. 1937). -- Summary: Count Alex decides to kidnap King
   Philip. -- Appearances of Pincus, The Sailor, and Ruppo. --
   Adventure story genre. -- Data from Gene Reed, Lou Mougin,
   Pat Lang, et al. via Grand Comics Database. -- Call no.:
   folio PN6728.N333N4m no.19
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   Raggedy Ann & Andy / by Kathleen N. Daly ; based on the
   screenplay by Patricia Thackray and Max Wilk. -- New York :
   Dell Publishing Co., 1977. -- 91 p. : ill. (some col.) ; 23
   cm. -- (A Dell Yearling Special) -- Based on the animated
   film. -- Summary (from OCLC): Raggedy Ann and Andy venture
   into the Deep-Deep Woods in search of Babette, a beautiful
   Parisian doll kidnapped by Captain Contagious. -- Call no.:
   PS3554.A463R344 1977
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "Rama" / script, Anant Pai ; illustrations, Pratap Mulick ;
   editor, Anant Pai. 32 p. in Amar Chitra Katha, no. 504
   (1970, 2010 printing) ; originally printed in Amar Chitra
   Katha, no. 15 (1970?). -- (Epics & Mythology) -- "Retold
   from the Ramayana." -- Summary from back cover: "Rama was
   happy living in the forest with his wife and brother.
   Palace intrigue may have forced his exile, but the next
   fourteen years promised to be quite pleasant. Suddenly,
   this idyllic life was thrown into turmoil. His beloved wife
   Sita was kidnapped! With unmatched skill as a warrior, Rama
   destroyed the ten-headed Ravana. And along the way, he won
   a host of very grateful friends." -- Call no.: PN6790
   .I54A5no.15. Call no.: PN6790 .I54A5no.504
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   Ransom / J.T.C. -- Chino, Calif. : Chick Publications,
   1995. -- 24 p. : ill. ; 8 x 13 cm. -- Religious comic about
   kidnapping and Christian salvation. -- Call no.:
   PN6728.C47R3 1995
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   The Rescuers / Carla Speed McNeil ; logistics, Mike McNeil
   ; production, Vincent Sneed ; acoustics, Layn Just. --
   Annapolis Junction, MD : Lightspeed Press, 2005. -- 151 p.
   : ill. ; 26 cm. -- (Finder) -- Collects issues 32 through
   37 of the magazine series Finder. -- "Anvard's upper
   classes have become quite blase about the threat of
   kidnapping. There's even been talk about writing a
   convention to define ethical treatment of victims held for
   ransom, and prosecuting only those who don't abide by the
   rules. What's an honest cop to do in a world in which
   kidnapping is almost legal? That's what detective Smithson
   keeps asking himself--especially since his best witness is
   the one person no one will ever, ever believe." -- Science
   fiction genre. -- Call no.: PN6727.M288R4 2005
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "Rico, Come Home!" (Bionic Woman) / art, Jack Sparling. 12
   p. in The Bionic Woman, no. 1 (Oct. 1977). -- Summary:
   Jaime Sommers comes to the aid of one of her students when
   an attempt is made to kidnap him. -- Data from Gene Reed,
   Ramon Schenk, Terry Watkins, et al. via Grand Comics
   Database. -- Call no.: PN6728.4.C47B5no.1
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   Rite of Passage / script, John Ostrander ; pencils, Jan
   Duursema ; inks, Ray Kryssing ; colors, Brad Anderson ;
   letters, Digital Chameleon ; cover artist, Jan Duursema &
   Dave McCaig. -- Milwaukie, OR : Dark Horse Comics, 2003. --
   1 v. : col. ill. ; 26 cm. -- (Star Wars) -- "This volume
   collects issues #42-45 of the Star Wars comic-book series."
   -- Summary (from SkyRiver): A royal heir has been
   kidnapped-along with Jedi Master Tholme, who was protecting
   the boy. Now two of Tholme's former Padawans have teamed up
   to rescue their master, unaware of the forces arrayed
   against them. Their most immediate foes are a father and
   son team of Morgukai assassins, who have the training and
   the weapons to go toe-to-toe with Jedi. But behind it all
   are the machinations of the notorious Count Dooku! --
   Science fiction genre. -- Call no.: PN6728.S75R53 2003
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "Rock Opera" / by Rod Kierkegaard, Jr. p. 92-95 in Heavy
   Metal, v. 5, no. 7 (Oct. 1981). -- Begins: In a foolish
   attempt to stop my friend Marty from kidnapping the Miss
   Moral America semifinalists, I had followed General Banzai
   out across the Space Skuttle launchpad. -- "To be
   continued." -- Call no.: PN6728.H43v.5no.7
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "Ronald Weston's Visit to America"* (Paul Revere Jr.) 11 p.
   in Captain Courageous Comics, no. 6 (Mar. 1942). --
   Summary: An English boy comes to town and gets kidnapped by
   Nazis. -- Call no.: PN6728.1.A2B3m no.6
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "The St. John's Team Goes to Pieces"* (Chuck White) p.
   11-18 in Treasure Chest of Fun & Fact, v. 4, no. 19 (May
   17, 1949). -- Begins: "Unknown to anyone but Norton, the
   Y.P.L. has kidnaped Weston to keep him from pitching
   against St. Mark's. With Chuck pitching, the St. John's
   team goes to pieces in the first inning." -- "To be
   continued." -- Call no.: PN6728.1.P43T7v.4no.19
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "Sandman Scores a Blow to Crime"* (The Sandman) / Larry
   Dean. 6 p. in Justice League of America, no. 94 (Nov. 1971)
   ; reprinted from Adventure Comics, no. 40 (July 1939) --
   Begins: Extra! Vivian Dale kidnaped by. -- Distinctive
   title supplied by Gene Reed. -- Call no.:
   PN6728.3.N3J8no.94
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "Scalphunter" (Scalphunter) / Michael Fleisher, writer;
   Dick Ayers and George Evans, artists. 18 p. in Weird
   Western Tales, no. 39 (Mar./Apr. 1977) ; reprinted in Jonah
   Hex and Other Western Tales, no. 1 (Sept./Oct. 1979). --
   Summary: When a group of grave robbers tangles with a band
   of Kiowa Indians, a passing column of U.S. Cavalry kills
   all but one of the Kiowa, whom they assume are the
   aggressors in the fight. The survivor, who is called
   Ke-Woh-No-Tay, is actually Brian Savage, the son of Matt
   Savage, who was kidnapped as an infant. He is reunited with
   his dying father, but rejects his White heritage and is
   jailed. He escapes prison and tracks down the grave
   robbers, killing all but one, who clears him of wrongdoing
   in the original conflict. -- First episode of this feature.
   -- Data from Gene Reed, Jim Van Dore and Max Capp via Grand
   Comics Database. -- Call no.: PN6728.4.N3A5no.39
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "The Secret of the Kidnapped Dummy!" (Wonder Woman) / by
   Charles Moulton, H.G. Peter. 12 p. in Wonder Woman, no. 27
   (Jan./Feb. 1948)
   k. Kidnapping. k. Dummies. I. Marston, William Moulton,
   1893-1947. II. Peter, Harry G. Call no.:
   PN6728.1.N3W6no.27. Call no.: PN6728.1.N3W6m no.27
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "She's Top Bitch" / by Carolyn Ridsdale. p. 31-34 in Women
   Out of Line (London : Carol Bennett, 1997) -- Summary: The
   daughter of Harpy Fforbes-Cretin, publisher of women's
   magazines, is kidnapped by the terrorist Women's
   Provisional Army. -- Call no.: PN6736.W6 1997
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "Shipload of Brides"* (The Pirate Prince) / by Dick
   Briefer. 6 p. in Silver Streak Comics, no. 20 (Apr. 1942)
   -- SUMMARY: A captain taking a shipload of women to America
   makes the mistake of kidnapping a friend of the Pirate
   Prince.
   I. Briefer, Dick. II. The Pirate Prince. k. Brides. k.
   Captains. k. America. k. Kidnapping. k. Princes. Call no.:
   PN6728.1.G55S5no.20
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "The Sir Galahad Mission"* (The Sea Devil) / by Morgan
   Hawkins ; art: Howard Larsen. 5 p. in Rangers Comics, no.
   18 (Aug. 1944). -- Summary: The Japanese are kidnapping
   young Chinese women to entertain their soldiers. -- Data
   from Lou Mougin via The Grand Comics Database Project. --
   Call no.: Film 15791r.162
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "Skip Smith Kidnaps Annie from Anya Toze"* (9/29/80-2/8/81)
   v. 4 of Annie / Leonard Starr (notebooks of clipped
   strips). -- Data from Jon Merrill. -- Call no.:
   PN6728.L55S76 1979
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "Slim is Kidnapped"* (Pep Morgan) / George Papp, art ; 6 p.
   in Action Comics, no. 38 (July 1941) -- Data from Jon
   Ingersoll, Bob Klein, Brian Mowbray of Grand Comics
   Database. -- Call no.: Film 15791r.48
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   Space Jam / written by David Cody Weiss ; illustrated by
   Leonardo Batic, Alberto Saichann, and Horacio Ottolini. --
   DC Comics, 1996. -- col. ill. ; 26 cm. -- Based on the
   Warner Bros. movie, Space Jam, starring Bugs Bunny and
   Michael Jordan. -- Summary (from OCLC): Bugs Bunny and the
   rest of the Looney Tunes have been kidnapped by aliens, and
   Bugs challenges the aliens to a game of basketball to
   settle things. -- Funny animal, science fiction and sports
   genres. -- Call no.: PN6728.6.D3S616 1996
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "The Space Kidnapping"* (Fero) / art: Gene Fawcette. 4 p.
   in Planet Comics, no. 6 (June 1940). -- Introduces A Grand
   Councilman and Brenda (his daughter); villain introduced is
   an alien king. -- Data from Lou Mougin via the Grand Comics
   Database Project. -- Call no.: PN6728.1.F5P55m no.6
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "Spartacus" (Cap'tain Swing) p. 3-66 in Cap'tain Swing, no.
   112 (Juillet 2003). -- Summary: A group of Redcoats
   commanded by a Lieutenant Abbott stops at an inn where
   Bluff and Hibou are waiting to meet Cap'tain Swing. The
   innkeeper, Simeon, has had a run-in with the bad-tempered
   Abbott before, so he runs off when Bluff offers to play
   host. Abbott has a mysterious small chest with him that he
   seems to be guarding with exaggerated care. Hibou and Bluff
   are curious, so Hibou ties some pans to Pouik's tail to
   distract Abbott, and Bluff switches the contents of the
   chest for some stinky cheese. Meanwhile, a few miles away,
   Swing is talking to Madame Meyer, a lady from whom the
   British have just stolen a small chest of family jewels.
   Also her husband has been missing for three days. When
   Swing arrives at the inn the English soldiers have gone. He
   and Bluff look at the jewels and Swing sends Bluff and
   Hibou to return them to Madame Meyer and to look for her
   husband, while Swing continues on his previous mission for
   Dr. Strong. Another guest at the inn overhears and steals
   the jewels. Meanwhile the Governor has presented the box of
   stinky cheese to his wife as a gift, and Lt. Abbott is in
   deep trouble. Three days later Swing hears a troubador
   singing a ballad of Spartacus, and Swing asks the singer
   where he can find Spartacus. The singer says he might not
   even exist, but another audience member says to ask the
   Redcoats, who have been humiliated by Spartacus a thousand
   times. Swing meets Spartacus in a bar, goes to his hideout,
   and asks him for Dr. Strong to join an American attack on
   the British. Hibou and Bluff, thanks to Pouik's tracking
   ability, arrive at the hideout at the same time on the
   trail of the jewel thief. It turns out to be the wife of
   Spartacus who stole the jewels in order to buy arms for the
   resistance. It turns out also that Spartacus is just a
   bandit and he is also holding Mr. Meyer captive. Swing
   frees Meyer, returns the jewels, and kidnaps Spartacus for
   trial in an American tribunal. -- Call no.:
   PN6748.C336no.112
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "The Story of a Famous Kidnapping Case and How the the
   F.B.I. Solved It" 13 p. in Top Secrets, no. 1 (Nov. 1947).
   -- Panel and caption style (typeset captions), with some
   word balloons. -- Call no.: PN6728.1.S75T6no.1
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "The Strange Kidnapping of Paul Webster"* (Kayo Kirby) /
   art: Rudy Palais. 6 p. in Fight Comics, no. 15 (Oct. 1941).
   -- Villains Tex Webster, Tiger Dorgan and their gang are
   introduced; some of the gang dies; introduction of Paul
   Webster. -- Data from Gene Reed via Grand Comic Book
   Database. -- Call no.: Film 15791 r.108
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   Superman : Escape from Bizarro World / Geoff Johns, Richard
   Donner, writers ; Eric Powell, artist ; Dave Stewart,
   colorist ; Rob Leigh, Nick J. Napolitano, letterers. -- New
   York : DC Comics, 2008. -- 157 p. : col. ill. ; 26 cm. --
   Originally published in single magazine form in Action
   Comics 855-857, Superman 140, DC Comics presents 71, and
   The man of steel 5. -- Summary (from SkyRiver): Superman
   goes to Bizarro World to rescue his father, who was
   kidnapped by Bizarro Superman, and runs across strange
   versions of the Justice League of America, Lois Lane, Lex
   Luthor, and others as he tries to accomplish his mission.
   -- Also collects other classic Bizarro tales. -- Call no.:
   PN6728.S8E8 2008
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "Take a Fall" p. 3-10 in Burton & Cyb 1 / Antonio Segura,
   José Ortiz (New York : Catalan Communications, 1991) --
   Summary: Cyb destroys an android boxer before a big fight,
   and Burton volunteers to take his place, for a prepayment
   of five thousand taped to his stomach. Cyb then kidnaps
   Burton just before the fight, so the fighter's owner has to
   forfeit and pay off the bets. Together Burton and Cyb have
   taken five thousand in the prepayment, and ten thousand in
   bets. -- Call no.: PN6777.S45B8 1991
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "Le Tambour Magique" (Les Memoires de Mathias) / M. Uderzo
   ; Moloch. p. 4-15 in Tintin, ann. 36, no. 314 (Sept. 11,
   1981). -- Summary: Old man Mathias has returned to the
   village of his youth as a mystery man. Three boys visit him
   and he starts to tell his story. As a youth Mathias was
   unhappy working for his mean adoptive blacksmith father,
   and ran away. He fell in with bandits heading for Canada
   and hoping to profit from the war between the French and
   the English. The bandits kidnapped a little aristocratic
   girl eager for adventure. The leader of the bandits is
   named Louis-Acné de Malaria, and his most notable henchman
   is an actor named Panaris, who in this installment is shown
   always in drag. -- Call no.: PN6748.T48ann.36no.314
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "The Tarantula Strikes" (Sandman) / Bert Christman (as
   Larry Dean), script and art. 6 p. in Adventure Comics, no.
   40 (July 1939) ; reprinted in Justice League of America,
   no. 94 (Nov. 1971) ; reprinted in Golden Age Sandman
   Archives, v. 1. -- Introduction of The Sandman (Wesley Dodd
   or Dodds), and villain The Tarantula (Crossart). -- The
   Sandman wears an orange business suit through issue 43. --
   Begins: "Extra! Vivian Dale kidnaped by" -- Superhero
   genre. -- Data from Bob Cherry, Gene Reed, Lou Mougin, et
   al., via Grand Comics Database Project. -- The distinctive
   title "Sandman Scores a Blow to Crime"* was assigned by
   Gene Reed in earlier indexing. -- Call no.: PN6728.1.N3A3m
   no.40
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   That Yellow Bastard / Frank Miller. -- 3rd ed. --
   Milwaukie, OR : Dark Horse Books, 2010. -- 217 p. : ill.
   (some col.) ; 23 cm. -- (Sin City ; v. 4) -- "This volume
   collects issues one through six of the Dark Horse comic
   book series Sin City: That Yellow Bastard." -- Summary
   (from SkyRiver): Frank Miller changes the game in the
   fourth volume of his signature crime series, introducing
   the only truly heroic figure in Sin City's world of vice,
   Detective Hartigan. A highlight of the series, and the
   inspiration for one of the segments of the blockbuster Sin
   City film, That Yellow Bastard returns in a newly
   redesigned edition, with a brand-new cover by Miller - some
   of his first comics art in years! The worst thing to be in
   Basin City is an honest cop, but it's Hartigan's last day
   on the job, and he plans to go out with a bang. Little
   Nancy Callahan, age eleven, has been kidnapped by a psycho
   who likes to hear children scream, and Hartigan's going to
   find her no matter what it takes. Hell of a way to start
   retirement. -- Detective genre. -- Call no.: PN6727.M48S54
   2010
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "This Island" (Spaceman) / script, Brian Azzarello ; art,
   Eduardo Risso ; colors, Patricia Mulvihill, Giulia Brusco ;
   letters, Clem Robins. 25 p. in Spaceman, no. 1 (Dec. 2011).
   -- Summary: In a post-apocalyptic future, a genetically
   engineered former astronaut gets mixed up in a kidnapping
   case. -- Data from Jim Van Dore, Ramon Schenk and Gregory
   Fischer via Grand Comics Database. -- Call no.:
   PN6728.8.D3S63 2011 no.1
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "This'll Sorta Defrost th' Little Lady"* (Moon Mullins,
   June 7, 1950) / Willard. -- Summary: Moon knocks on the
   door of room 414, thinking he has saved her dog from being
   kidnapped, but she still has her dog.-- Call no.: PN6726
   f.B55 "dogs"
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "Three Men and a Baby Bottle" / E. Sanchez Abuli, Jordi
   Bernet. 10 p. in Torpedo 1936 7 (New York : Catalan
   Communications, 1991). -- Summary: Torpedo (Luca Torelli),
   Rascal and Meow kidnap a baby for ransom, and the baby
   won't stop crying. They hire Cora to breast-feed him. Cora
   collects the ransom herself and skips town. -- Call no.:
   PN6777.S3T6713 1991
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   Tintin in America / Hergé. -- London : Methuen Children's
   Books, 1978. -- 62 p. : col. ill. ; 31 cm. -- (The
   Adventures of Tintin) -- Summary: Tintin and Snowy arrive
   in Chicago, in 1931, to clean up the gangsters. Tintin is
   kidnapped by Al Capone, but saved by Snowy. A rival gang
   drugs him and throws him into Lake Michigan, but he wakes
   up. Many of Chicago's criminals are arrested, but Tintin
   pursues Bobby Smiles out west, where he and Snowy meet
   cowboys and Indians, strike oil, and get in a train wreck,
   a prairie fire, and get captured by a lynch mob. Smiles is
   captured, but then back in Chicago Snowy is kidnapped, and
   rescued, and a capitalist tries to grind both of them into
   corned beef, but a strike stops the factory. Tintin is
   kidnapped again from a banquet celebrating the victory over
   crime, dumped again in Lake Michigan tied to 400-pound
   dumbbells, which turn out to be made of wood. 355 suspects
   are then arrested, and Chicago's underworld is out of
   business. -- Genre: Adventure story. -- Call no.:
   PN6748.T483A5 1978
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "Toy Airship"* (Johnny Gruelle's Raggedy Ann) 8 p. in New
   Funnies, no. 98 (Apr. 1945). -- Summary: The Raggedys take
   a ride in a lighter-than-air toy, lifted by hot air from a
   candle and propelled by a rubber band propeller. They land
   in Grampie and Granny Hootieowl's tree, as they discover
   their grandchild, Sally Screechowl, has been kidnapped.
   Kidnapper Walter Weasel has left his paw print, and the
   Raggedys retrieve her using the airship and a fishhook.
   Next they accidentally snag a puppy, who takes them home to
   a little boy, but they escape by finding some new candles
   to lift the ship. -- Call no.: PN6728.1.D4F8no.98
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   Transformers Animated. Vol. 5 / adaptation by Zachary Rau ;
   letters and design by Tom B. Long. -- San Diego, Calif. :
   IDW Publishing, 2008. -- 1 v. : col. ill. ; 18 cm. --
   Contents: Survival of the fittest / written by Steven Grant
   ; Lost and found / written by Rich Fogel. -- "As seen on
   Cartoon Network." -- Summary: Survival of the fittest:
   Prowl and Bulkhead track and find the kidnapped Sari where
   a mighty beast tries to control their powers. -- Summary:
   Lost and found: Blitzwing and Lugnut make their way to
   Detroit on the trail of Megatron. -- Science fiction genre.
   -- Call no.: PN6728.T67A505 2008
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "Trouble in Wolf's Head Canyon" (Roy Rogers and Trigger) 10
   p. in Roy Rogers and Trigger, no. 102 (June 1956). --
   Summary: Roy Rogers and Pat Brady have assembled a
   "gyro-glider" in sheriff Bob Marsh's back yard. The sheriff
   gets a call from the Indian hospital saying Dr. John Cloud
   Mountain has been injured in a Jeep accident and wants to
   see Roy. Dr. Cloud Mountain is a "brilliant Navajo surgeon"
   and a crusader for "white man medicine," who has detractors
   among the Indian medicine men. His nurse and fiancée, Marie
   Bluebell, seems to have been kidnapped while he was
   unconscious at the site of the wreck. The doctor suspects
   it was all the work of her father Yellow Singer and her
   half-brother Short Bull, both bitter opponents of the
   hospital. Roy and John figure out that Marie Bluebell is
   being held in a small remote canyon, and to avoid shooting
   Roy sneaks in for a landing at night in his new and silent
   man-powered helicopter-glider. Roy and Marie sneak out as
   far as where Trigger is waiting, but then the shooting
   starts and Roy tells Marie to ride away. She doesn't go
   far, and comes back in the nick of time to save Roy. John
   and Marie get married, and Yellow Singer gives the bride
   away as a condition for not going to jail. -- Call no.:
   PN6728.1.D4R6no.102
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "Treasure of the Lost Empire, Chapter 1" (Rory Randall the
   Singing Cowboy) / Mitch Manzer. p. 49-63 in Prime Cuts, no.
   1 (Jan. 1987). -- Namron, evil dictator of the underground
   city Vizania, plots to kidnap Rory, who meanwhile is trying
   to learn the facts of life. -- Call no.: PN6700.P7no.1
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "Two Birds with One Stone" p. 53-60 in Insatiable /
   Fernando Caretta ; translated by Laura Petrarca (Seattle,
   WA : Eros Comix, 1998). -- Summary: To restore their
   dignity, two men kidnap a woman from a rival family. One
   man kills the other because he wants her alone; she seduces
   the other and then kills him. -- Call no.: PN6767.C33 I513
   1998
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   Walt Disney's Mickey Mouse Mystery at Dead Man's Cove. --
   Racine, Wis. : Western Publishing Company, 1980. -- 248 p.
   : ill. ; 13 cm. -- (A Big Little Book ; 5781-2) -- "A
   Whitman book." -- Summary (from OCLC): Minnie Mouse and
   Professor Gustavus Rozier have been kidnapped. Mickey and
   the boys must not only rescue them, but also save an ocean
   liner from disaster. -- Funny animal and detective genres.
   -- Call no.: PN6728.W47M5285 1980
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "What is Reality, Papa?" / by Ribera and Godard. p. 18-24
   in Heavy Metal, v. 4, no. 12 (Mar. 1981). -- "Hollywood was
   all aflutter, last we saw. The townspeople were panicked at
   the recent trend in which actors throughout Univers-all
   were taking their roles all too seriously. Stuart, the
   troubled studio head, was attacked and slain by a crazed
   motorcycle clan; Chimeer was kidnapped by two SS Men, and
   Axle is believed to be the pope's envoy." -- "To be
   continued." - Call no.: PN6728.H43v.4no.12
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   What They Did to Princess Paragon / Robert Rodi. -- New
   York : Dutton, 1994. -- 281 p. ; 23 cm. -- Jacket
   illustration by Mary Wilshire. -- Novel about comic books,
   kidnapping, and gay men. -- Call no.: PS3568 .O34854W43
   1994
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "When You Were Just Born I Planned to Run Away with You"*
   (Apartment 3-G, Aug. 21, 1999) / Kotzky & Trusiani. -- Call
   no.: PN6726 f.B55 "kidnapping"
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   "The Wild, Wild West" (Lancelot Link) 6 p. in Lancelot
   Link, Secret Chimp, no. 5 (May 1972). -- Summary: Chump
   tries to kidnap King Rex. -- Appearances of Creto, The
   Baron, Dead-Eye Dutton, and Mata Hairi. -- Data from Terry
   Watkins, Karl Wilcox, Jim Van Dore, et al. via Grand Comics
   Database. -- Call no.: PN6728.4.G56L35no.5
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping.
   Yu-Gi-Oh! R / story and art by Akira Ito. -- San Francisco
   : VIZ Media, 2009-2010. -- ill. ; 19 cm. -- (Shonen Jump
   Manga) -- "Sequel to Yu-Gi-Oh! Duelist and prequel to
   Yu-Gi-Oh! Millennium World". -- "Original
   concept/supervised by Kazuki Takahashi." -- Complete in 5
   vols. -- Contents: v. 1. A wicked shadow ; v. 2. A world
   ruled by fear ; v. 3. The perfect duel. -- Summary (from
   SkyRiver): Seeking vengeance against Yugi for the defeat of
   his master, Maximillion Pegasus, Yako Tenma kidnaps Anzu
   Mazaki and brings her to the KaibaCorp building, where Yugi
   will have to face dangerous gamers, but Yako's plans for
   Anzu do not end there. -- Fantasy genre. -- LIBRARY HAS: v.
   2-3. -- Call no.: PN6790.J33 T297Y8513 2009
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping Cars.
   "The Enchanted Flivver" / by Frank Moss ; illustrated by
   Frank Borth. p. 9-14 in Treasure Chest of Fun and Fact, v.
   16, no. 7 (Dec. 8, 1960). -- Begins: "Bobby Lane is due to
   demonstrate the flying flivver, but somebody has just
   kidnapped Henrietta!" -- "To be continued." -- Call no.:
   PN6728.1.P43T7v.16no.7
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping Cats.
   Walt Disney Pictures' Oliver & Company : the More the
   Merrier / by Justine Korman ; illustrated by Willy Ito and
   Ron Dias. -- Racine, Wis. : Western Publishing Company,
   1988. -- 24 p. : col. ill. ; 21 cm. -- (A Golden Book) --
   (A Golden Look-Look Book) -- Summary (from SkyRiver):
   Oliver the kitten leaves Fagin's barge to find a new home
   with eight-year-old Jenny and her pampered poodle, but
   Fagin's scruffy dogs come to kidnap him back. -- Funny
   animal fiction. -- Call no.: PN1997.5 .O4M6 1988
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping Cats.
   Walt Disney Productions' The Aristocats. -- Burbank,
   Calif.? : Walt Disney Productions, 1970. -- 24 p. : col.
   ill. ; 19 cm. + record. -- (Disneyland Record and Book ;
   LLP-349) -- Summary: When wealthy Madame Bonfamille makes
   her cats heirs to her estate, the butler kidnaps them. --
   Call no.: PN1997.5.A7W3 1970
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping Cats.
   Walt Disney The Aristocats. -- Troy, MI : K Mart
   Corporation, 1988. -- 95 p. : col. ill. ; 30 cm. -- (Disney
   Classic Series) -- Summary (from OCLC): When Edgar, the
   butler, finds out that Madame Bonfamille is leaving all of
   her money to her cats, he kidnaps them and leaves them far
   out in the country. O'Malley, an alley cat, aids them in
   their return to their Paris home and becomes a member of
   the family. -- "Produced by Twin Books." -- "Printed in
   Hong Kong." -- Funny animal fiction. -- Call no.:
   PN1997.5.A7W3 1988b
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping en Télétrans.
   Chaland Intégrale 4 / Yves Chaland. -- Genève : Les
   Humanoïdes Associés, 1997. -- 121 p. : col. ill. ; 31 cm.
   -- Contents: Cœurs d'Acier ; Atomax ; Kidnapping en
   Télétrans ; Adolphus Claar ; Les Cybers ne sont pas des
   Hommes (texte de François Landon). -- Call no.: PN6747.C4
   I504 1997
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping Horses.
   Ride Into Fear. -- Danbury, CT : Stabenfeldt Inc., 2005. --
   48 p. : col. ill. ; 26 cm. -- (Horse Angel Comic Book) --
   "For almost any other girl, a week's riding camp would be a
   dream come true, but for Lucy Jones, it's a nightmare.
   Sure, she loves horses, but a bad accident has left her
   terrified of riding. And her tormentor is going to be
   there! But when Lucy overhears two mystery men plotting to
   kidnap a beautiful Arabian horse, she leaps into action.
   With the help of the mysterious girl, Angelica, with hair
   of gold and strange powers, they follow the kidnappers on a
   trail filled with danger! Can Lucy overcome her fear in
   order to save the horse? Join us for the first-ever comic
   book in the popular horse angel series!" -- Translated from
   Norwegian? -- Girls' and adventure story genres. -- Call
   no.: PN6790.N64 H6R513 2005
-----------------------------------------------------
"Kidnapping In Space"* (Star Pirate) / art: Murphy Anderson. 7
   p. in Planet Comics, no. 46 (Jan. 1947). -- Introduction of
   Marcus Billionaire and his daughter; villains Boyd and
   Lucretia are introduced. -- Data from Lou Mougin via the
   Grand Comics Database Project. -- Call no.: PN6728.1.F5P55m
   no.46
-----------------------------------------------------
"Kidnapping in Ten Easy Lessons!" (Star-Spangled Kid) / art,
   Jon Small. 10 p. in Star Spangled Comics, no. 36 (Sept.
   1944). -- Data from Dave Marchand, Tony R. Rose, Jim Van
   Dore, et al. via Grand Comics Database. -- Call no.: Film
   15791r.7
-----------------------------------------------------
"Kidnapping in the Orient"* (Skip Schuyler) / Tom Hickey,
   script and art. 6 p. in Adventure Comics, no. 42 (Sept.
   1939). -- A villain named Hawkins is introduced ;
   introduction of Lung Yen and Diana Allen. -- Adventure
   story genre. -- Data from Bob Cherry, Gene Reed, Lou
   Mougin, et al., via Grand Comics Database Project. -- Call
   no.: PN6728.1.N3A3m no.42
-----------------------------------------------------
"Kidnapping in the Sky"* (Jane Martin) / art: George Tuska. 6
   p. in Wings Comics, no. 91 (Mar. 1948). -- Introduction of
   Roger Wayne and his son. -- Villains, all seen for the
   first time: Lucky Devins, Bugsy, Trigger, Jasper, and other
   crooks. -- Data from Lou Mougin via The Grand Comics
   Database Project. -- Call no.: Film 15791r.82
-----------------------------------------------------
"The Kidnapping of a Minute-Man"* (Hourman) / Gardner Fox,
   script ; Bernard Baily, art. 8 p. in Adventure Comics, no.
   54 (Sept. 1940). -- Introduction of Rodney Morvan, and Mr.
   and Mrs. Morvan ; appearances of Jimmy Martin and the
   Minute Men of America ; villains are Reemy Maffiri and his
   gang, all introduced here. -- Superhero genre. -- Data from
   Bob Cherry, Gene Reed, Lou Mougin, et al., via Grand Comics
   Database Project. -- Call no.: PN6728.1.N3A3m no.54
-----------------------------------------------------
"The Kidnapping of Baby Steel"* (Spencer Steel) / script:
   Dennis Colebrook. 4 p. in Fight Comics, no. 7 (July 1940).
   -- Last appearance of this series was in Jumbo Comics, no.
   14. -- Introduces Spencer Steel, Jr. (born in this story)
   and villains The Berge gang. -- Data from Gene Reed via
   Grand Comic Book Database. -- Call no.: Film 15791 r.134
-----------------------------------------------------
"The Kidnapping of Belle Wayne"* (The Owl) / art, Frank
   Thomas. 7 p. in Crackajack Funnies, no. 27 (Sept. 1940). --
   Superhero genre. -- Data from Lou Mougin, Tom Cotrill, Jim
   Van Dore, et al. via Grand Comics Database. -- Call no.:
   PN6728.1.D4C7no.27
-----------------------------------------------------
"The Kidnapping of Col. Bentley's Daughter"* (Steve Conrad
   Adventurer) / Jack Lehti, script and art. 6 p. in Adventure
   Comics, no. 52 (July 1940). -- Introduction of Col. Bentley
   and his daughter. -- Adventure story genre. -- Data from
   Bob Cherry, Gene Reed, Lou Mougin, et al., via Grand Comics
   Database Project. -- Call no.: PN6728.1.N3A3m no.52
-----------------------------------------------------
"The Kidnapping of Donna Carnochan"* (Skip Schuyler) / Tom
   Hickey, script and art. 6 p. in Adventure Comics, no. 40
   (July 1939). -- Introduction of characters Anthony and
   Donna Carnochan. -- Data from Bob Cherry, Gene Reed, Lou
   Mougin, et al., via Grand Comics Database Project. -- Call
   no.: PN6728.1.N3A3m no.40
-----------------------------------------------------
"The Kidnapping of General Syin" (Doug Grant, Secret Agent) 7
   p. in Spy Cases, no. 13 (Oct. 1952) -- Spelled "Kidnaping".
   -- Summary: Because "great generals are as rare among the
   Reds as intelligence and decency," Doug Grant is sent to
   Korea to kidnap or kill General Syin and thus change the
   course of the war. At first the Reds give him a fake
   general, pretending to be a defector, who plans to deliver
   misinformation to the enemy. Grant sees through that scheme
   (it's the toupée). Then he gets the drop on the real
   general and sneaks him out, because the rest of the Reds
   still think he's leaving with the stand-in. All Asians seem
   to look pretty much alike, even to other Asians. -- Call
   no.: PN6728.2.M3S63no.13
-----------------------------------------------------
"The Kidnapping of Lt. Tone"* (Jeep Milarkey) / art: Jim
   Chambers? 4 p. in Rangers of Freedom Comics, no. 1 (Oct.
   1941). -- Introduction of Jeep Milarkey (an MP), Lt. Kitty
   Tone (an Army nurse); villains are Nazis. -- Data from Lou
   Mougin via The Grand Comics Database Project. -- Call no.:
   Film 15791r.149
-----------------------------------------------------
"The Kidnapping of Linda Hale" (Skip Schuyler) / Tom Hickey,
   script and art. 6 p. in Adventure Comics, no. 46 (Jan.
   1940). -- Introduction of General Hale and Linda Hale. --
   Final appearance of this feature. -- Adventure story genre.
   -- Data from Bob Cherry, Gene Reed, Lou Mougin, et al., via
   Grand Comics Database Project. -- Call no.: PN6728.1.N3A3m
   no.46
-----------------------------------------------------
"The Kidnapping of Mary Lou"* (Supersnipe) 6 p. in Army and
   Navy Comics, v. 1, no. 5 (July 1942). -- Call no.: Film
   27398
-----------------------------------------------------
"The Kidnapping of Mary Sloan"* (Mob Buster Robinson) / George
   Tuska, art ; Larry Vance, story. 5 p. in Wonderworld
   Comics, no. 6 (Oct. 1939) -- Data from Lou Mougin of Grand
   Comic-Book Database. -- Call no.: Film 15791r.129
-----------------------------------------------------
"The Kidnapping of Rolf Chandler"* (Star Spangled Kid) / Jerry
   Siegel, script ; Hal Sherman, art. 14 p. in Star Spangled
   Comics, no. 2 (Nov. 1941). -- Superhero genre. -- Data from
   Gene Reed and Jim Walls, via Grand Comics Database Project.
   -- Call no.: PN6728.1.N3S75m no.2
-----------------------------------------------------
"The Kidnapping of Shirley Stellar"* (Ted Parrish) / Bob
   Powell, art ; Bob Powell, script? 5 p. in Speed Comics, no.
   2 (Nov. 1939). -- Data from Lou Mougin of Grand Comic-Book
   Database. -- Call no.: PN6728.1.H3S63no.2
-----------------------------------------------------
"The Kidnapping of the Governor"* (The Fargo Kid) 4 p. in
   Feature Comics, no. 58 (July 1942). -- Data from Bob Klein,
   Lou Mougin, Matthew Torrance, et al. via Grand Comics
   Database. -- Call no.: Film 15791r.327
-----------------------------------------------------
"Kidnapping of the Mercury Women"* (Spurt Hammond) / art:
   Henry Kiefer. 5 p. in Planet Comics, no. 11 (Mar. 1941). --
   Introduces Murda (King of the Lobster Men of Mercury),
   Queen Merca, Arco, Deco; villain introduced is Prof. Morta.
   -- Data from Lou Mougin via the Grand Comics Database
   Project. -- Call no.: PN6728.1.F5P55m no.11
-----------------------------------------------------
"Kidnapping or Slavery or Something Like That!"* (Chuck White
   and His Friends) / by Max Pine and Fran Matera. p. 28-33 in
   Treasure Chest of Fun and Fact, v. 21, no. 18 (May 5,
   1966). -- Begins: "A prisoner on the abandoned barge,
   Charlie feels a flood of hope as a sailboat comes into
   view." -- To be continued. -- Call no.:
   PN6728.1.P43T7v.21no.18
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping Plants.
   "It's Those Thieves Who Robbed Your House and Kidnapped My
   Plant"* (Phoebe's Place, Feb. 9, 1991) / by Bill Schorr. --
   Summary: They'll return the plant "when the Palestinian
   question is settled." -- Call no.: PN6726 f.B55 "Palestine"
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidnapping Plants.
   "Stay Tuned for the Barbara Walters Special with Sonny
   Bono, Marilyn Quayle, and Spuds McKenzie"* (Phoebe's Place,
   Feb. 19, 1991) / by Bill Schorr. -- Summary: The kidnapped
   plant is forced to watch television, and calls Amnesty
   International. -- Call no.: PN6726 f.B55 "Amnesty
   International"
-----------------------------------------------------
"The Kidnapping Racket" (Steve Malone, District Attorney) /
   script, Gardner Fox ; art, Don Lynch. 6 p. in Detective
   Comics, no. 35 (Jan. 1940). -- Data from Tony R. Rose,
   Matthew Peets, Bob Hughes, et al. via Grand Comics
   Database. -- Call no.: PN6728.1.N3D4m no.35
-----------------------------------------------------
"The Kidnapping Spies."*
   "The Girl in Red"* (The Crimson Avenger) / Jack Lehti,
   script and art. 6 p. in Detective Comics, no. 42 (Aug.
   1940). -- Other assigned title (from Gene Reed): "The
   Kidnapping Spies." -- Data from Tony R. Rose, Matthew
   Peets, Bob Hughes, et al. via Grand Comics Database. --
   Call no.: PN6728.1.N3D4n no.42
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidney Monkey Publishing Empire.
   Posthumous Warnings. -- Seattle, WA : Kidney Monkey
   Publishing Empire, . -- ill. ; 22 cm. -- Copyright by
   Kristopher Thor Jensen. -- New wave genre. -- LIBRARY HAS:
   no. 13 (1993). -- Call no.: PN6728.55.K485P6
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidney Theft.
   Sammy : Tourist Trap / created, written, and illustrated by
   Azad ; plot assist by Haig Bedrossian. -- Orange, CA :
   Image Comics, 2003. -- ill. ; 26 cm. -- Complete in 4 nos.
   -- Summary: Sammy is in Acapulco, and a rogue surgeon has
   stolen his kidneys. -- Copyright by Azad Injejikian and
   Guerrilla Comics. -- Adventure story genre. -- LIBRARY HAS:
   no. 1-2. -- Call no.: PN6728.7 .I5S315 2003
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidney Thieves.
   Flies to a Spider / by Gregg Hurwitz, Mike Benson, Joseph
   L. Clark ; artist, Jerome Opena, Roland Boschi, Das
   Pastoras. -- New York : Marvel Publishing, 2009. -- 1 v. :
   col. ill. ; 26 cm. -- (Wolverine) -- Summary (from
   SkyRiver): Wolverine gets into various violent adventures
   involving a biker gang, a kidney thief, a serial killer,
   Russian mobsters, and terrorists. -- "Contains material
   originally published in magazine form as Wolverine: Chop
   Shop ; Wolverine: Switchback ; Wolverine Holiday Special:
   Flies to a Spider ; Wolverine: Revolver and Wolverine: the
   Anniversary." -- Superhero genre. -- Call no.:
   PN6728.W56F55 2009
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidney Transplants.
   The Blank in the Comics strip collection includes a file of
   one or more daily comic strips related to this keyword or
   topic. Call no.: PN6726 f.B55
-----------------------------------------------------


Kidneys



-----------------------------------------------------
Kidneys.
   The Blank in the Comics strip collection includes a file of
   one or more daily comic strips related to this keyword or
   topic. Call no.: PN6726 f.B55
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidneys.
   "Bring Us a Coupla Hamburgers and Then Go See Your
   Doctor!"* (Bachelor's Diner) / Cam. 3 p. in Four Favorites,
   no. 25 (Sept. 1946). -- Art by Al Cammarata? -- Summary:
   The waitress has stewed kidneys, boiled tongue, fried
   brains, pickled pig's feet, and boiled liver. -- Call no.:
   Film 15791r.199
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidneys.
   "Edgar Allan Poe in a Moment of Writer's Block" (The Far
   Side, Nov. 5, 1987) / Larson. -- Summary: Some of the
   titles that didn't work: The Tell-Tale Kidney (bladder,
   spleen, duodenum, stomach). -- Call no.: PN6726 f.B55 "Poe"
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidneys.
   "What a Work!" / illustrated by Powell. p. 20-25 in
   Treasure Chest of Fun and Fact, v. 10, no. 11 (Jan. 27,
   1955). -- Anatomy lesson on the endocrine system (glands),
   and especially the liver and kidneys. -- "To be continued."
   -- Call no.: PN6728.1.P43T7v.10no.11
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Kido, Izumi.
   Tenshi ja nai!! = I'm no Angel! / story and art by Takako
   Shigematsu ; translation, Akira Tsubasa. -- Agoura Hills,
   CA : Go! Media Entertainment, 2005- . -- ill. ; 20 cm. --
   "In the play of life, all Hikaru Takabayashi wanted was to
   be part of the scenery, but fate had other ideas. When the
   15-year-old introvert transfers to an all-girls academy,
   her new roommate turns out to be the super-popular TV idol
   Izumi Kido! As if living with a celebrity wasn't bad
   enough, Hikaru discovers that there's more to Izumi than
   her 'good girl' image! Now Hikaru's the unwilling star
   player in a madcap tales of deception, abduction,
   humiliation and blackmail. You know, the usual romantic
   stuff." -- LIBRARY HAS: v. 5. -- Call no.: PN6790.J33
   S443T413 2005
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Kidô Butôden G Gandamu--Parodies, Imitations, Etc.
   Raijingu Shinsatsu Gandamu / Pinxter. -- Tôkyô : United
   Twin, 1995. -- 32 p. : ill. ; 26 cm. -- An erotic fan comic
   based on the anime Mobile Fighter G Gundam, or Kidô Buyûden
   G Gandamu. -- "Adults only." -- Call no.: PN6790.J33 T57M62
   1995
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Kidô Butôden Jî Gandamu Batoru Memorii. -- Tôkyô : Rapôto,
   1995. -- 120 p. : ill. (some col.) ; 26 cm. -- (Rapôto
   Derakkusu) -- Summary: Art design and staff interviews for
   the anime Kidô Butôden G Gandamu (Mobile Fighter G-Gundam),
   edited by Komaki Masanobu. -- Call no.: PN6790.J33 T57M622
   1995
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidô Keisatsu Patlabor.
   Entry (v. 3, p. 722) in Dictionnaire Encyclopédique de
   Héros et Auteurs de BD, by Henri Filippini (Grenoble :
   Glénat, 2000). -- Call no.: PN6707.F5 1998 v.3
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidô Keisatsu Patlabor.
   Index entry (p. 108, 230-231, 285, 314-315) in 500 Manga
   Heroes & Villains, by Helen McCarthy (Barrons, 2006). --
   Call no.: PN6790.J3M26 2006
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Kidô Senshi Gandamu 2

 An animated Japanese science fiction television series with success in other media as well, including manga. The English-language comics versions appear as Mobile Suit Gundam.


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Kido Senshi Gandamu. English.
   Mobile Suit Gundam. -- Tokyo : E. Yamaura, 1991. -- 143 p.
   : col. ill. ; 30 cm. -- Translated from the Japanese.
   1. Japanese comics. 2. Science fiction comic books, strips,
   etc. I. Kido Senshi Gandamu. English. II. Yamaura, E. Call
   no.: PN1992.77.K53K5313 1991
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidô Senshi Gandamu. English.
   Mobile Suit Gundam : The Last Outpost / art by Koichi
   Tokita ; created by Hajme Yadate & Yoshiyuki Tomino ;
   translator, Yuki Ichimura ; English adaptation, Jake
   Forbes. -- Los Angeles : Tokyopop, 2002-2003. -- ill. ; 19
   cm. -- Translation of: Kidô Senshi Gandamu. -- Complete in
   3 vols. -- "First published in 1997 by Kodansha, Ltd.,
   Tokyo." -- Science fiction genre. -- LIBRARY HAS: v. 1-3.
   -- call no.: PN6790.J33 T57L3 2002b
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidô Senshi Gandamu--Miscellanea.
   Index entry (p. 65-66) in 500 Manga Heroes & Villains, by
   Helen McCarthy (Barrons, 2006). -- Call no.: PN6790.J3M26
   2006
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidô Senshi Gandamu--Miscellanea.
   Index entry (p. 339) in Manga: an Anthology of Global and
   Cultural Perspectives, ed. by Toni Johnson-Woods
   (Continuum, 2010). -- Call no.: PN6790.J3M265 2010
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidô Senshi Gandamu Ekôru dyu Shieru. English.
   Mobile Suit Gundam École du Ciel = Tenkû no Gakkô / by
   Haruhiko Mikimoto ; translation, Ikoi Hiroe ; English
   adaptation, Ikoi Hiroe and Paul Morrissey. -- Hamburg :
   Tokyopop, 2005- . -- ill. ; 19 cm. -- Translation of: Kidô
   Senshi Gandamu Ekôru dyu Shieru. -- "First published in
   Japan in 2002 by Kadokawa Shoten Pub." -- Summary (from
   OCLC): Asuna is a below-average student at École du Ciel
   where teachers and students belittle her, but as the world
   spirals towards war, she is headed for a crash course in
   danger and love. -- Science fiction genre. -- LIBRARY HAS:
   v. 3-4. -- Call no.: PN6790.J33 M4K513 2005
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidô Senshi Gandamu Seed. English.
   Mobile Suit Gundam Seed / Masatsugu Iwase ; story by Hajime
   Yatate and Yoshiyuki Tomino ; translated and adapted by
   Jason DeAngelis ; lettered by Studio Cutie. -- New York :
   Random House Pub. Group, 2004- . -- ill. ; 19 cm. --
   Translation of: Kidô Senshi Gandamu Seed. -- "Official
   adaptation of the thrilling television show." -- "Del
   Rey/Ballantine books." -- Science fiction genre. -- LIBRARY
   HAS: v. 1-2. -- Call no.: PN6790.J33 I873M6 2004
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidô Senshi Gandamu Seed--Parodies, Imitations, Etc.
   Sutoraiku Zôn ; Gekkôji, author, artist. -- Japan : Just-K,
   2003. -- 20 p. : ill. ; 26 cm. -- Other titles: Sutoraiku
   Manyû ; Strike Zone. -- "Adult only." -- Fan comic based on
   the anime series Gundam Seed (Kidô Senshi Gandamu Seed). --
   Erotic genre. -- Call no.: PN6790.J33 G45S7 2003
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidô Senshi Gundamu Shîdo : Destiny.
   Mobile Suit Gundam Seed : Destiny / art by Magasatsugu
   Iwase ; original story by Hajime Yatate and Yoshiyuki
   Tomino ; translated and adapted by Ikoi Hiroe. -- New York
   : Del Rey Books, 2006-2007. -- Cover title: Gundam Seed :
   Destiny. -- Translation of: Kidô Senshi Gandamu Shîdo :
   Destiny. -- ill. ; 19 cm. -- Science fiction genre. --
   LIBRARY HAS: v. 2-4. -- Call no.: PN6790.J33 I873M62 2006
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidô Senshi Gandamu Shîdo Astray. English.
   Mobile Suit Gundam Seed Astray / story by Tomohiro Chiba ;
   art by Kouichi Tokita ; translator, Ikoi Hiroe ; English
   adaptation, Ikoi Hiroe and Paul Morrissey. -- Los Angeles,
   Calif. : Tokyopop, 2004- . -- Translation of: Kidô Senshi
   Gandamu Shîdo Astray. -- ill. ; 20 cm. -- "First published
   in Japan in 2003 by Kadokawa Shoten." -- Science fiction
   genre. -- LIBRARY HAS: v. 1-3. -- Call no.: PN6790.J33
   T57K513 2004
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidô Senshei Gandamu Shîdo Ekkusu Asutorei. English.
   Mobile Suit Gundam Seed X Astray / story by Tomohiro Chiba
   (Studio Orphee) ; art by Kouichi Tokita ; created by Hajime
   Yatate & Yoshiyuki Tomino ; translation, Jeremiah Bourque.
   -- Los Angeles : Tokyopop, 2006- . -- ill. ; 19 cm. --
   Translation of: Kidô Senshi Gandamu Shîdo Ekkusu Asutorei.
   -- Science fiction genre. -- LIBRARY HAS: v. 2. -- Call
   no.: PN6790.J33 T57M6313 2006
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidô Senshi Gandamu the Anthology. vol. 1 = Mobile Suits
   Gundam Manga Anthology. vol. 1 / authors, Ohwada Hideki,
   and others. -- Tôkyô : Kadokawa, 2003. -- 170 p. : ill. ;
   21 cm. -- (Kadokawa Comics A Extra) -- Science fiction
   genre. -- Call no.: PN6790.J33 T57A5 2003
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidô Senshi Gandamu, the Origin / Yasuhiko Yoshikazu. -- Tokyo
   : Kadokawa Shoten, 2002- . -- ill. (part col.) ; 18 cm. --
   Summary (by Kevin Banks): It is the year 0079 and the
   eighth month of a war between the Earth Federation and a
   breakaway nation of space colonists known as the
   Principality of Zeon. The story is told from the
   perspective of a crew ship known as the White Base. --
   Science fiction genre. -- LIBRARY HAS: v. 1-2. -- Call no.:
   PN6790.J33 Y2K5 2002
-----------------------------------------------------
Kidô Senshi Gandamu, the Origin. English.
   Gundam, the Origin / story and art by Yoshikazu Yasuhiko.
   -- San Francisco : Viz Communications, 2002- . -- ill. ; 21
   cm. -- (Viz Graphic Novel) -- Translation of: Kidô Senshi
   Gandamu, the Origin. -- Science fiction genre. -- LIBRARY
   HAS: v. 1-5, 7-8 (2002-2003). -- Call no.: PN6790.J33
   Y2K513 2002
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 On down the list

 This segment last edited July 12, 2021