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----------------------------------------------------- Prion. Aces High : 10 of the Best Air Ace Library Comic Books ever! / general editor, Steve Holland. -- London : Prion, 2009. -- 655 p. : ill. ; 23 cm. -- Contents: Flash point ; Fighter, fighter! ; No survivors ; War smoke ; Dive bomber ; Target Tirpitz ; Whirlwind in the sky ; Steel bats ; Teeth of battle ; Blast bomb. -- War genre. -- Reprints from: Air Ace Picture Library. -- Call no.: PN6738.A377A3 2009 ----------------------------------------------------- Prion. The Best of the Victor / edited by Morris Heggie ; foreword by Andy McNab. -- London : Prion, 2010. -- 175 p. : ill. (some col.) ; 31 cm. -- Adventure story genre. -- Call no.: PN6738.V47B4 2010 ----------------------------------------------------- Prion. H.M. Bateman / edited by Mark Bryant. -- London : Prion, 2002. -- ca. 150 p. : ill. (some col.) ; 18 cm. -- (Prion Cartoon Classics) -- Call no.: NC1479.B26H2 2002 ----------------------------------------------------- Prion. Mother Tells You How : Essential Life Skills for Modern Young Women. -- London : Prion, 2007. -- 128 p. : col. ill. ; 17 x 26 cm. -- Advice and informational strips on home economics and other topics, collected from the comic book Girl, 1952-1960. -- Educational and girls' genres. -- Call no.: PN6738.G5M6 2007 ----------------------------------------------------- Prion. No Surrender! : Six of the Best Comic-Book Adventures from War Picture Library / general editor, Steve Holland. -- London : Prion, 2010. -- ca. 400 p. : ill. ; 22 cm. -- War genre. -- Call no.: PN6738.W25N6 2010 ----------------------------------------------------- Prion. Rick Random Space Detective : 10 Classic Interplanetary Comic Book Adventures / general editor, Steve Holland. -- London : Prion, 2008. -- 656 p. : ill. ; 23 cm. -- Reprints from Super Detective Library beginning in 1954, drawn by Ron Turner. -- Science fiction and detective genres. -- Call no.: PN6738.R5 2008 ----------------------------------------------------- Prion Cartoon Classics. H.M. Bateman / edited by Mark Bryant. -- London : Prion, 2002. -- ca. 150 p. : ill. (some col.) ; 18 cm. -- (Prion Cartoon Classics) -- Call no.: NC1479.B26H2 2002 ----------------------------------------------------- Prior, Marcos, 1975- Entry (p. 1022) in De la Historieta y su Uso, 1873-2000 / Jesús Cuadrado (Atlas Español de la Cultura Popular ; v. 1) -- (Madrid : Ediciones Sinsentido, 2000). -- Call no.: PN6775.C8 2000 ----------------------------------------------------- Prior, Rob. "Rob Prior" (Gallery) p. 5-8 in Heavy Metal, v. 22, no. 3 (July 1998). -- Prior is an American fantasy artist. -- Call no.: PN6728.H43v.22no.3 ----------------------------------------------------- Prior, Rob. "Shadow Walker" / written by Paul Jenkins ; art by Rob Prior. p. 70-80 in Heavy Metal, v. 30, no. 3 (July 2006). -- Call no.: PN6728.H43v.30no.3 ----------------------------------------------------- "Prior Engagements." Donna Barr's Stinz : Charger, the War Stories. -- Bremerton, WA : Fine Line Press, 1999. -- 235 p. : ill. ; 26 cm. -- Stories previously published in issues of Stinz. -- Contents: "Prior Engagements" ; "Draft Horse" ; "Breaking to Harness" ; "Breaking In" ; "Sorting Things Out" ; "Fashion Victims" ; "Wedding Hell" ; "On a Pale Horse" ; "Freed Elections" ; "Pipe Dream" ; "Bad Memories." -- Call no.: PN6727.B355S75 1999 ----------------------------------------------------- "Prior Warning!" 2 p. in Adventure Comics, no. 425 (Dec./Jan. 1972/1973). -- Call no.: PN6728.1.N3A3no.425 ----------------------------------------------------- Priorini, Andrea. Spike : the Complete Series / written by Brian Lynch ; art by Franco Urru, Nicola Zanni, and Stephen Mooney ; colors by Andrea Priorini, Andrea Tentori, and Fabio Mantovani ; letters by Robbie Robbins and Neil Uyetake. -- San Diego, Calif. : IDW Publishing, 2012. -- 1 v. : col. ill. ; 26 cm. -- "Originally published as Spike issues #1-8." -- Summary (from SkyRiver): Spike is on his own again and while encountering new faces and old familiar ones he is taking control of his destiny and the consequences of being a vampire with a soul. -- Horror genre. -- Call no.: PN6728.S643C6 2012 -----------------------------------------------------
Priorities |
----------------------------------------------------- "Priorities" / Diana Green. -- Summary: Comics page compares funding for sex-change surgeries (which can prevent suicides) with that for cleaning legislative offices in Minnesota. inside back cover of TNT : Transsexual News Telegraph, no. 4 (Spring 1995). -- Call no.: HQ77.9.T2no.4 ----------------------------------------------------- "Priorities" (Gravity) / Sean McKeever writes and Mike Norton draws ; Jonathan Glapion, inks ; Guru EFX, colors ; VC's Rus Wooton, letters. 24 p. in Gravity, no. 4 (Nov. 2005). -- "Previously: Greg Willis was just an everyday teenager until a mysterious 'accident' bestowed upon him the power to control the force of gravity. Deciding to become a super hero, Greg trades his rural Wisconsin life for the fast-paced world of New York City, attending NYU while moonlighting as his heroic alter ego, Gravity." -- Call no.: PN6728.7.M3G7 2005 no.4 ----------------------------------------------------- Priorities. 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 ----------------------------------------------------- Priorities. "The Fireman's Priorities"* (Pierre) p. 35 in Treasure Chest of Fun & Fact, v. 11, no. 6 (Nov. 17, 1955). -- Silent strip. -- Pierre interrupts putting out a fire to rescue a kitten from a tree. -- Call no.: PN6728.1.P43T7v.11no.6 ----------------------------------------------------- Priorities. "He Never Has a Problem with Priorities"* (Frank & Ernest, June 24, 1988) / Thaves. -- Summary: Frank & Ernest are watching a dog named Hugo who is enthusiastically eating. -- Call no.: PN6726 f.B55 "dog food" ----------------------------------------------------- Priorities. "Our First Priority is to Save the Miners"* (Brick Bradford, Apr. 30, 1985) / by Paul Norris. -- Summary: Looks like they won't be hunting for Dur Blaz. -- Call no.: oversize PN6726.K52A2 ----------------------------------------------------- Priorities. "Well At Least You Have Your Priorities in Check"* (Desktop Blues, Mar. 28, 2011) / LeBaron Rogers. -- Summary: There's a test today, but he watched a George Romero zombie movie marathon last night. -- College strip from The Lookout (Lansing Community College). -- Call no.: PN6726 f.B55 "zombies" ----------------------------------------------------- Prioritizing. 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.: PN6726f.B55 ----------------------------------------------------- Priority Seating. The Doors are Closing in the Priority Seating : Ten Foot Rule Odds and Ends / by Shawn Granton. -- Portland, Ore. : TFR Industries, 2007. -- 12 p. : ill. ; 22 cm. -- New wave genre. -- Call no.: PN6728.55.T2D6 2007 ----------------------------------------------------- Priority, White Heat. -- Longwood, FL : AC Comics, 1986- . -- col. ill. ; 26 cm. -- To be complete in 2 nos. -- LIBRARY HAS: no. 1. 1. Spy comics. I. AC Comics. k. White Heat. k. Heat. Call no.: PN6728.5.A5P7 1986 ----------------------------------------------------- Priority, White Heat--Miscellanea. Entry (p. 441) in The Slings and Arrows Comic Guide, Frank Plowright, ed. (London : Aurum Press, 1997). -- "Reviews and analyses." -- Call no.: PN6707.S55 1997 ----------------------------------------------------- Prioux, Katia. La Bédéthèque Idéale : édition 1999-2000 / conception et coordination Thierry Groensteen et Catherine Ternaux ; rédaction Frédéric Brémaud, Thierry Groensteen, Danielle Jammet, Claire Jerrethie, Jean-Philippe Martin, Jean-Pierre Mercier, Katia Prioux, Marie Restoin, Christine Sibille, Catherine Ternaux, Dorothée Vincent ; couverture: David Prudhomme ; pictogrammes: Mathieu Sapan. -- Bordeaux : Centre national de la bande dessinée et de l'image, 1998. -- 175 p. : ill. ; 24 cm. -- Includes bibliographical references and index. -- "Best of" lists organized by genre. -- Call no.: PN6710.B43 1998 ----------------------------------------------------- PRISA. Pequeño Pais. -- Madrid : Promotora de Informaciones, Sociedad Anónima (PRISA), . -- ill. ; 29 cm. -- Sunday supplement to: El Pais. -- LIBRARY HAS: no. 698-699, 710, 713-715 (1995). -- Call no.: PN6778.P4 ----------------------------------------------------- Prisciliano el Preso. "Vendedor Ambulante"* (Prisciliano el Preso) 1/2 p. in Durango Kid, no. 56 (May 1957) ; and in Rodeo, no. 32 (Aug. 1957). -- Call no.: PN6790.M44D8no.56 ----------------------------------------------------- Priscilla. Chester 5000 XYV / by Jess Fink. -- Marietta, GA : Top Shelf Productions, 2011. -- 141 p. : all ill. ; 20 cm. -- "1885: an age of industrial revolution and sexual frustration. Priscilla is a woman with needs, and her inventor husband Robert is a little too busy with his experiments to keep her fully satisfied. Science to the rescue! With a few gears and springs, the proper appendages, a little lubrication, and a lot of love, Chester 5000 is born. He's the perfect tool for the job, but what if Chester is more than just a machine? What are the consequences of trying to engineer love? A delight for adult readers of all stripes, Jess Fink's Top Shelf debut reads like a whimsical love-child of steampunk, silent film and erotic comics." -- Erotic genre, with a robot. -- Story without words. -- Call no.: PN6727.F515C47 2011 ----------------------------------------------------- Priscilla. Dark Moon Diary / created by Che Gilson ; illustrated by Brett Uher. -- Los Angeles : Tokyopop, 2007- . -- ill. ; 19 cm. -- "When 15-year-old Priscilla's parents pass away, she has nowhere to go but to her last 'living' relatives in the European town of Nachtwald. Once there, she learns that not only is Nachtwald populated by ghosts, werewolves, witches and other preternatural beings, but that her relatives are vampires. Amidst the pandemonium, she turns to her diary, and slowly learns what it takes to survive a new family, new friendships and the anxiety of high school, all the while living in an unfamiliar world!" -- Fantasy genre. -- LIBRARY HAS: v. 1. -- Call no.: PN6727.U34D3 2007 ----------------------------------------------------- Priscilla. "A Piggy Bank, of Course!" (Boner's Ark, Apr. 28, 1985) / by Addison & Johnson. -- Summary: Priscilla talks about a career when they get off the ark. -- Call no.: oversize PN6726.K52A2 ----------------------------------------------------- Priscilla. "Some Beagle and His Dog House"* (Boner's Ark, Oct. 30, 1987) / Frank Johnson. -- Summary: Priscilla and Dum-Dum are the second most devoted couple in comic strips, and Dum-Dum wants to know who came in first. -- Call no.: PN6726 f.B55 "dog houses" ----------------------------------------------------- "Priscilla Loves Melvin" (My Favorite Martian) / Dan Spiegle, art. 11 p. in My Favorite Martian, no. 2 (July 1964). -- Data from Lou Mougin, Ramon Schenk, Donald Dale Milne, et al., via Grand Comics Database. -- Call no.: PN6728.3.G56M9no.2 -----------------------------------------------------
Priscilla's PopNewspaper comic strip about the Nutchell family, by Al Vermeer, in the family humor genre. Some of the characters are |
----------------------------------------------------- Priscilla's Pop / by Al Vermeer. -- 1947-1975. -- 14 v. : ill. ; 26-30 cm. -- Caption title. -- Scrapbooks of daily comic strips dated from April 28, 1947 to June 14, 1975. I. Vermeer, Al. Call no.: PN6728f.P76F6 1947 ----------------------------------------------------- Priscilla's Pop. -- New York : Dell Publishing Co., 1954-1957. -- col. ill. ; 26 cm. -- Published no. 569 (July 1954) - no. 799 (May 1957). -- Four-color series numbering: no. 569, 630, 704, 799. -- Family stories. -- LIBRARY HAS: no. 569. -- Call no.: PN6728.2.D4P73 ----------------------------------------------------- Priscilla's Pop : Sunday tear sheets / by Al Vermeer. -- NEA, Inc., 1969-1970. -- ca. 45 leaves : col. ill. ; 19 x 37 cm. -- Clipped Sunday comic strips from Aug. 10, 1969 to June 14, 1970. -- Family humor genre. -- Call no.: folio PN6728.P76W4 1969 ----------------------------------------------------- Priscilla's Pop (May 30, 1947) "Something Has Been Added" (Priscilla's Pop, May 30, 1947) / by Al Vermeer. -- Summary: Pop's using the push mower with two kids riding on his back: "Before we were married I could cut a lawn twice this big without getting tired!" -- Call no.: PN6728.P76F6 1947 v.1 ----------------------------------------------------- Priscilla's Pop (July 5, 1947) "And Company" (Priscilla's Pop, July 5, 1947) / by Al Vermeer. -- Summary: Carlyle's making money cutting lawns for neighbors, and Pop wants to join him. -- Call no.: PN6728.P76F6 1947 v.1 ----------------------------------------------------- Priscilla's Pop (July 19, 1947) "Rolling His Own" (Priscilla's Pop, July 19, 1947) / by Al Vermeer. -- Summary: Waldo was going to hire Carlyle to cut the lawn, until he heard the estimate. -- Call no.: PN6728.P76F6 1947 v.1 ----------------------------------------------------- Priscilla's Pop (Aug. 19, 1947) "Ask For and Receive" (Priscilla's Pop, Aug. 19, 1947) / by Al Vermeer. -- Summary: Pop complains about feeling cooped up and Hazel sends him out to mow the lawn. -- Call no.: PN6728.P76F6 1947 v.1 ----------------------------------------------------- Priscilla's Pop (Sept. 20, 1947) "What Every Husband Knows" (Priscilla's Pop, Sept. 20, 1947) / by Al Vermeer. -- Summary: Waldo mops the floor, mows the lawn, and trims the hedge, and is told how lucky he is not to have to work on Saturdays. -- Call no.: PN6728.P76F6 1947 v.1 ----------------------------------------------------- Priscilla's Pop (Oct. 13, 1948) "Spoken For" (Priscilla's Pop, Oct. 13, 1948) / Al Vermeer. -- Summary: Standing outside a pet shop, Pop says some day they can have a puppy, but it will be half Carlyle's, and Priscilla says she wants the front half. -- Call no.: PN6728.P76F6 1947v.1 ----------------------------------------------------- Priscilla's Pop (Nov. 4, 1948) "Higher Education" (Priscilla's Pop, Nov. 4, 1948) / by Al Vermeer. -- Summary: Priscilla gets a big stack of books, so she can climb on them to get a copy of "Icky Comics" from the mantel. -- Call no.: PN6728.P76F6 1947 v.1 ----------------------------------------------------- Priscilla's Pop (Nov. 29, 1948) "The Home Fires" (Priscilla's Pop. Nov. 29, 1948) / by Al Vermeer. -- Summary: Waldo's taking tobacco money out of the house money, because he plans to smoke it in the house. Hazel objects. -- Call no.: PN6728.P76F6 1947 v.1 ----------------------------------------------------- Priscilla's Pop (Sept. 10, 1949) "How To Win Friends, Etc." (Priscilla's Pop, Sept. 10, 1949) / by Al Vermeer. -- Summary: Mr. Botts brags about his hole in one, and Waldo asks what he's going to do with it. -- Call no.: PN6728.P76F6 1947 v.2 ----------------------------------------------------- Priscilla's Pop (Feb. 16, 1949) "More Than One Way" (Priscilla's Pop, Feb. 16, 1949) / by Al Vermeer. -- Summary: Carlyle celebrates not having to go back to the dentist, but it doesn't mean his teeth are fixed, just that he bit the dentist. -- Call no.: PN6728.P76F6 1947 v.2 ----------------------------------------------------- Priscilla's Pop (Apr. 22, 1950) "No Short Cuts" (Priscilla's Pop, Apr. 22, 1950) / by Al Vermeer. -- Summary: Carlyle wants to work hard and be an Eagle Scout, and Pop with the push mower suggests he could start by clipping the edges of the lawn. -- Call no.: PN6728.P76F6 1947 v.2 ----------------------------------------------------- Priscilla's Pop (June 17, 1950) "The Bookie Worm" (Priscilla's Pop, June 17, 1950) / by Al Vermeer. -- Summary: Carlyle's mowing the lawn to earn a baseball mitt; Mr. Botts says he invested his money when he was a kid in horse racing. -- Call no.: PN6728.P76F6 1947 v.2 ----------------------------------------------------- Priscilla's Pop (Aug. 25, 1950) "More Than Meets the Eye" (Priscilla's Pop, Aug. 25, 1950) / by Al Vermeer. -- Summary: Carlyle's mowing the lawn without being asked, but it turns out it's only until he finds the missing baseball. Priscilla is wearing a catcher's mitt and has a bird cage on her head. -- Call no.: PN6728.P76F6 1947 v.2 ----------------------------------------------------- Priscilla's Pop (Jan. 9, 1962) "Makes Me Feel Like a Subversive"* (Priscilla's Pop, Jan. 9, 1962) / Al Vermeer. -- Summary: Hollyhock wonders at the fact that dogs forsake their own kind in favor of the 'alien society' of people, and Oliver (the dog) comments. -- Call no.: PN6728. P76F6 1947 v.8 ----------------------------------------------------- Priscilla's Pop (Jan. 25, 1962) "My Beautiful Encyclopedia, Outdated!"* (Priscilla's Pop, Jan. 25, 1962) / Al Vermeer. -- Summary: Hollyhock's book tells her the weight of the Earth, and Priscilla observes that Jenny Lu's folks just had an 8 pound baby. -- Call no.: PN6728.P76F6 1947 v.8 ----------------------------------------------------- Priscilla's Pop (Feb. 2, 1962) "Some of Us Never Quite Made It"* (Priscilla's Pop, Feb. 2, 1962) / Al Vermeer. -- Summary: Hollyhock's science book tells her that humans took billions of years to emerge from the mud, and Priscilla takes a similar lesson from seeing two little boys in a puddle. -- Call no.: PN6728.P76F6 1947 v.8 ----------------------------------------------------- Priscilla's Pop (Feb. 17, 1962) "Pop Never Plays It Any More"* (Priscilla's Pop, Feb. 17, 1962) / Al Vermeer. -- Summary: Rev. Weems is soliciting aid to send a missionary to the South Seas, and Priscilla offers a ukelele. -- Call no.: PN6728.P76F6 1947 v.8 ----------------------------------------------------- Priscilla's Pop (Apr. 9, 1962) "Goodbye, Friend!"* (Priscilla's Pop, Apr. 9, 1962) / Al Vermeer. -- Summary: Hollyhock returns a book to the library, and the librarian, Miss West, immediately reshelves it. -- Call no.: PN6728.P76F6 1947 v.8 ----------------------------------------------------- Priscilla's Pop (May 4, 1962) "I've Already Saved $11,938.77 in Steamer Tickets"* (Priscilla's Pop, May 4, 1962) / Al Vermeer. -- Summary: Hollyhock is 'book traveling' to Spain, land of guitars and toreadors, and Stuart says it's stupid. -- Call no.: PN6728.P76F6 1947 v.8 ----------------------------------------------------- Priscilla's Pop (Dec. 23, 1966) "Let's Tell 'em She Threw a Wing and Had to make a Crash Landing!"* (Priscilla's Pop, Dec. 23, 1966) / Al Vermeer. -- Summary: The family tries to decide how to explain that their angel in the Christmas pageant has a shiner. -- Call no.: PN6726 f.B55 "black eyes" ----------------------------------------------------- Priscilla's Pop (June 14, 1969) "Especially to the Meat Market"* (Priscilla's Pop, June 14, 1969) / Al Vermeer. -- Summary: Oliver will gladly follow Priscilla anywhere. -- Call no.: PN6728.P76F6 1947v.12 ----------------------------------------------------- Priscilla's Pop (July 11, 1969) "Sorry, No Vacancy"* (Priscilla's Pop, July 11, 1969) / Al Vermeer. -- Summary: Oliver reads a news report about homeless dogs, then looks at his comfortable dog house, and hangs a sign. -- Call no.: PN6728.P76F6 1947v.12 ----------------------------------------------------- Priscilla's Pop (Aug. 18, 1969) "Lucky for Me I'm One-Sixteenth Water Spaniel"* (Priscilla's Pop, Aug. 18, 1969) / Al Vermeer. -- Summary: The family has drifted 10 miles from shore in the houseboat, but Oliver isn't worried about himself. -- Call no.: PN6728.P76F6 1947v.12 ----------------------------------------------------- Priscilla's Pop (Sept. 11, 1969) "We Got Dragon Bones in Our Yard"* (Priscilla's Pop, Sept. 11, 1969) / Al Vermeer. -- Summary: Priscilla overhears as Pop complains about Oliver dragging bones into the yard. -- Call no.: PN6728.P76F6 1947v.12 ----------------------------------------------------- Priscilla's Pop (Sept. 25, 1969) "Hardly Seems Like National Dog Week Without a Parade"* (Priscilla's Pop, Sept. 25, 1969) / Al Vermeer. -- Summary: Oliver waits and waits by the curb, but is disappointed. -- Call no.: PN6728.P76F6 1947v.12 ----------------------------------------------------- Priscilla's Pop (Apr. 22, 1970) "Snake-Bite Kit?"* (Priscilla's Pop, Apr. 22, 1970) / Al Vermeer. -- Summary: They're sending Stuart to play right field, and checking his equipment: Glove, sunglasses, etc. -- Call no.: PN6726 f.B55 "snake bites" ----------------------------------------------------- Priscilla's Pop (June 23, 1970) "I Only Do It During Dog Food Commercials"* (Priscilla's Pop, June 23, 1970) / Al Vermeer. -- Summary: Priscilla yells at Oliver for standing too close to the television. -- Call no.: PN6726 f.B55 "commercials" ----------------------------------------------------- Priscilla's Pop (July 28, 1970). "He's Obviously Never Seen Mrs. Cooley's St. Bernard"* (Priscilla's Pop, July 28, 1970) / Al Vermeer. -- Summary: Mr. Nutchell tells them about the Redwoods, the biggest living things on Earth, but Oliver has his own opinion. -- Call no.: PN6726 f.B55 "Redwood trees" ----------------------------------------------------- Priscilla's Pop (July 31, 1974) Original comic art : sample collection of artwork for various U.S. comic strips. -- ca. 40 items in box 63 x 53 x 9 cm. -- Assembled from various acquisitions of the Russel B. Nye Popular Culture Collection at the Michigan State University Libraries . -- CONTENTS: Alley Oop, 6/30/45 -- Animal crackers (Rog Bollen), 8/5/68 -- Born loser (Art Sansom), 10/20/75 -- Brenda Starr, Reporter (Dale Messick), 4/6/69 -- Bringing up father (George McManus), undated -- Broom-Hilda (Russell Myers), 2/4/72; 9/24/75 -- Conchy (James Childress), 2/25/75 -- Eek and Meek (Howie Schneider), 6/30/67 -- Ella Cinders (Charlie Plumb), 4/6/42 -- Emmy Lou (Marty Links), 9/3/?? -- Farley (Phil Frank), 10/26/92 -- Flash Gordon (Mac Raboy), 12/30/56 -- Freckles and his friends (Merrill Blosser), 6/7/45; 5/14/57 -- Funky Winkerbean (Tom Batiuk), 10/3/74 -- Funny business (Ralph Hershberger), 6/7/45 -- Johnny Hazard (Frank Robbins), 5/4/66 -- Mark Trail (Ed Dodd), 11/4/62; 11/23/62; 12/19/65; 6/5/68; 6/7/68 -- Moose Miller (Bob Weber), 4/26/71; 6/25/72 -- Nancy (Ernie Bushmiller), 9/24/44 -- Our Boarding House, 7/6/45 -- Out Our Way (J.R. Williams), 2/27/39 -- Priscilla's Pop (Al Vermeer), 7/31/74 -- Rick O'Shay and Hipshot (Stan Lynde), 10/27/74 -- Slim & Spud (Max Gwin), 4/7/79 -- Smilin' Jack (Zack Mosley), 2/9/70; 2/4/73 -- Tiger (Bud Blake), 7/21/75 -- Travels with Farley (Phil Frank), 12/29/80 -- Tumbleweeds (Tom K. Ryan), 9/3/73; 11/22/73 -- Wash Tubbs (Leslie Turner), 5/9/45 -- The Wizard of Id (Brant Parker & Johnny Hart), 1/4/?? (Sunday). 1. Newspaper comic strips. I. [Each strip title and date]. II. [Each creator] Call no.: oversize PN6726 .O7 ----------------------------------------------------- Priscilla's Pop--Miscellanea. Entry (v. 2, p. 323) in Dictionnaire Encyclopédique de Héros et Auteurs de BD, by Henri Filippini (Grenoble : Glénat, 1998). -- Call no.: PN6707.F5 1998 v.2 ----------------------------------------------------- Priscilla's Pop--Miscellanea. Entry (p. 249) in 100 Years of American Newspaper Comics : an Illustrated Encyclopedia / edited by Maurice Horn. (New York : Gramercy Books, 1996). -- Call no.: PN6725.H597 1996 ----------------------------------------------------- Priscilla's Pop--Miscellanea. Index entry to Cartoonist Profiles, no. 28 (Dec. 1975), p. 68-69 -- Data from R.C. Harvey. Call no.: NC1300.C35no.28 ----------------------------------------------------- Priscilla's Pop--Miscellanea. Index entry to Cartoonist Profiles, no. 52 (Dec. 1981), p. 74-79 -- Data from R.C. Harvey. Call no.: NC1300.C35no.52 ----------------------------------------------------- Priscilla's Pop--Miscellanea. Index entry (p. 257, 271) in Comic Art in America, by Stephen D. Becker (New York : Simon and Schuster, 1959). Call no.: NC1420.B4 ----------------------------------------------------- Priscilla's Pop--Miscellanea. Index entry (p. 97, 247) in Encyclopédie des bandes dessinées / éd. Marjorie Alessandrini. Nouv. éd. (Paris : A. Michel, 1986) Call no.: PN6707.E5 1986 ----------------------------------------------------- Priscilla's Pop--Miscellanea. Index entry (p. 193) in A History of Komiks of the Philippines and Other Countries, by Cynthia Roxas & Joaquin Arevalo Jr. (Islas Filipinas Pub. Co., 1985). -- Call no.: PN6790.P47R6 1985 ----------------------------------------------------- Priscilla's Pop--Parodies, Imitations, Etc. "New Hat"* (Priscilla's Pop) / by Kitchen. 1 tier in Snarf, no. 3 (Nov. 1972). -- Parody of the daily newspaper strip, with Pop using a vulgar word. -- Call no.: PN6728.45.K5S58no.3 ----------------------------------------------------- Priscille et Olivier. Entry (v. 2, p. 668) in Dictionnaire Encyclopédique de Héros et Auteurs de BD, by Henri Filippini (Grenoble : Glénat, 1998). -- Call no.: PN6707.F5 1998 v.2 ----------------------------------------------------- Priser, Marie-Thérèse. "Etat de la BD Basque" / Gregorio Muro Harriet ; traduction Marie-Thérèse Priser. -- (Carte Blanche) p. 92 in Les Cahiers de la Bande Dessinée, no. 86 (Sept. 1989). -- Brief article on Basque comics. -- Call no.: PN6745.S37no.86 ----------------------------------------------------- "La Prisionera de los Arapahoes" (Rocky Lane) 10 p. in Valor del Oeste, no. 23 (Jan. 1958). -- Call no.: PN6790.M44V24no.23 -----------------------------------------------------
El Prisionero de las EstrellasScience fiction story by Alfonso Font |
----------------------------------------------------- El Prisionero de las Estrellas / Alfonso Font. -- Barcelona : Norma Editorial, 1985. -- 101 p. : ill. ; 30 cm. -- (Colección BN ; 2) -- Genre: Science fiction. -- Call no.: PN6777.F6P7 1985 ----------------------------------------------------- El Prisionero de las Estrellas. Danish. Djævlelejren / af Alfonso Font ; oversat af Niels Søndergaard ; tekstet af Frank Madsen. -- Bagsværd : Interpresse, 1982. -- 54 p. : ill. ; 29 cm. -- (Stjernernes Fange ; 1) -- Originaltitel: El prisionero de las estrellas. -- Genre: Science fiction. -- Call no.: PN6777.F6D5319 1982 ----------------------------------------------------- El Prisionero de las Estrellas. Danish. Det Tabte Paradis / af Alfonso Font ; oversat af Niels Søndergaard ; tekstet af Frank Madsen. -- Bagsværd : Interpresse, 1983. -- 48 p. : ill. ; 29 cm. -- (Stjernernes Fange ; 2. del) -- Translation of: El Prisionero de las Estrellas. -- Science fiction genre. -- Call no.: PN6777.F6P719 1983 ----------------------------------------------------- El Prisionero de las Estrellas. English. Prisoner of the Stars / Alfonso Font. -- San Diego, Calif. : IDW Publishing, 2008. -- 102 p. : ill. ; 28 cm. -- Translation of: El Prisionero de las Estrellas. -- Science fiction genre. -- Call no.: PN6777.F6P713 2008 ----------------------------------------------------- El Prisionero de las Estrellas--Miscellanea. Index entry (p. 304) in Comics, vom Massenblatt ins multimediale Abenteuer, by Andreas C. Knigge (Reinbeck bei Hamburg : Rowohlt, 1996). -- Call no.: PN6710.K53 1996 ----------------------------------------------------- El Prisionero de las Estrellas--Miscellanea. Index entry (p. 1145) in Historia de los Comics / J. Toutain, J. Coma (Barcelona : Toutain, 1982-1984?) -- Call no.: PN6710.H5 1982a ----------------------------------------------------- El Prisionero de Zenda / Anthony Hope ; adaptación original, John Calhoun Fago ; ilustraciones, Nestor Leonidez ; adaptación y versión castellana, Bernat Hervas. -- México, D.F. : Editorial OMGSA, 1984. -- 61 p. : ill. ; 21 cm. -- (Biblioteca Ilustrada ; 26) -- Translation of: The Prisoner of Zenda. -- Call no.: PR4762.P717 1984 ----------------------------------------------------- "El Prisionero que Volvió" (La Clinica del Crimen) 6 p. in Acción Policíaca, no. 82 (Sept. 1958). -- Narrator is prison psychiatrist Dr. Tom Rogers. -- Call no.: PN6790.M44A3no.82 ----------------------------------------------------- "Prisioneros Americanos"* (Rip Carson) / por Rollin W. Bell. 5 p. in Tigresa, no. 7 (Oct. 1955). -- Korean War story. -- Call no.: PN6790.M44T48no.7 ----------------------------------------------------- Prisioneros de los Mayas / Victor Alcázar, argumento y texto ; Manfredo Sommer, cubierta ; Edmundo Fernández Ripoll, ilustraciones interiores. -- Barcelona : Editorial Bruguera, 1973. -- 30 p. : col. ill. ; 27 cm. -- (Grandes Aventuras Juveniles ; 56) -- (Supernova) -- Adventure story genre. -- Call no.: PN6778.G73no.56 ----------------------------------------------------- Prisioneros del Mar. Index entry (p. 149) in Historia del Comic Español, 1875-1939, by Antonio Martín (Barcelona : Editorial Gustavo Gili, 1978) -- Call no.: PN6775.M37 1978 ----------------------------------------------------- Prisionnière de l'Armée Rouge / Roman Slocombe ; préface de Jean-Pierre Dionnet. -- Poitiers : Le Lézard Noir, 2006. -- 50 p. : ill. ; 21 cm. -- Full-page drawings of women in bondage, with parallel captions in French, English and Japanese. -- Alternative genre. -- Call no.: PQ2679.L5P7 2006 ----------------------------------------------------- Prisk, Tom--Miscellanea. Mirth, Mockery and Mayhem from the Tri-Coastal State. -- Ypsilanti, Mich. : University Gallery, Eastern Michigan University, 2009. -- 84 p. : ill. ; 22 cm. -- Catalog of an exhibition: "Michigan Comics: Mirth, mockery, and mayhem from the tri-coastal state, March 31 - June 5, 2009, University Gallery, Eastern Michigan University," cf. photo caption on p. 82. -- Co-curated by Dave Coverly and Richard Rubenfeld. -- Includes artist index. -- "Bibliography": p. 84. -- Statements by, photographs of, and work samples from: Jeremy Bastian ; Suzanne Baumann ; Gary Scott Beatty ; Sean Bieri ; Jeffrey Brown ; Michelangelo Cicerone ; Katie Cook ; Dave Coverly ; Mark Dancey ; Jerry Dumas ; Matt Feazell ; Jay Fosgitt ; Phoebe Gloeckner ; Gary Grimshaw ; Patrick Hardin ; Jonny Hawkins ; Greg Hildebrandt ; Marty Hirchak ; Jane Irwin ; Laurie Keller ; Vince Locke ; Carl Lundgren ; Jef Mallett ; Bill Messner-Loebs ; Jim Ottaviani ; Mike Pascale ; Dave Petersen ; Nate Pride ; Tom Prisk ; Scott Rosema ; Jesse Rubenfeld ; Harley Schwadron ; Paul Sizer ; Mike Thompson ; Jerry Van Amerongen ; Mike Vosburg ; Aaron Warner ; Larry Wright. -- Call no.: PN6705.M5M5 2009 ----------------------------------------------------- "Prism : Second Generation Blues" / author, Gerry Boudreau ; illustrator, Noly Panligan. p. 27-35 in Creepy, no. 127 (May 1981). -- "The Pacific Splendor went down under mysterious circumstances off the Pacific coast! The Los Angeles Times had to know why! So they sent Sterling Hackett, ace investigative reporter, to find out!" -- Call no.: PN6728.3.W3C7no.127 ----------------------------------------------------- Prism. Entry (p. 419) in The Encyclopedia of Superheroes / Jeff Rovin (New York : Facts on File, 1985). -- Dial H for Hero character. -- Call no.: PN6707.R6 1985 ----------------------------------------------------- PRISM Awards. "Stan Lee Honored" p. 24 in The Comics Journal, no. 204 (May 1998). -- (News Watch) -- Lee received the Larry Stewart Leadership and Inspiration Award at the PRISM awards. -- Call no.: PN6700.C62no.204 ----------------------------------------------------- "Prism Comics" / Britta Madeleine Woitschig. 5 p. p. in Teil 3 of Lexikon der Comics (Meitingen : Corian-Verlag Wimmer, 1991-) -- (Comic-Verbände) -- Article about the American association for gay and lesbian comics creators, with bibliography. -- Call no.: PN6707.L44 1991 ----------------------------------------------------- Prism Comics : Your LGBT Guide to Comics. -- Atlanta, GA : Prism Comics, 2003- . -- ill. ; 26 cm. -- Began with no. 1 (July 2003). -- LIBRARY HAS: no. 1. -- Call no.: PN6700.P74 ----------------------------------------------------- Prism Comics--Miscellanea. "Gay Outreach Comics Publisher Asks for Financial Help" p. 38-39 in The Comics Journal, no. 266 (Feb./Mar. 2005). -- (Newswatch : Journal Datebook) -- About the publisher Prism Comics. -- Call no.: PN6700.C62no.266 ----------------------------------------------------- "Prism Hands Out Grant to Steve MacIsaac" p. 33 in The Comics Journal, no. 272 (Nov. 2005). -- (Newswatch : Journal Datebook) -- The first Queer Press grant for his new work, Shirtlifters. -- Call no.: PN6700.C62no.272 ----------------------------------------------------- Prism Queer Press Grant. "Braddock Donation Ups Ante for Prism Award" p. 46-47 in The Comics Journal, no. 271 (Oct. 2005). -- (Newswatch : Journal Datebook) -- Paige Braddock contributes to making the Prism Queer Press Grant worth $1,000. -- Call no.: PN6700.C62no.271 ----------------------------------------------------- Prisma ; 7 Quel Fantastico Mondo : Padri, Figli, Padrini, Padroni e Padreterni del Fumetto Italiano / Gianni Brunoro. -- Bari : Edizioni Dedalo, 1984. -- 198 p. : ill. (some col.) ; 25 cm. -- (Prisma ; 7) -- A book about Italian comics. -- Call no.: PN6765.B73 1984 ----------------------------------------------------- Prismacolor. Teknophage versus Zeerus / Paul Jenkins, writer ; Fred Harper, artist & cover artist ; John Workman, letterer ; Prismacolor, colorist. -- Boca Raton, FL : Big Entertainment, 1996. -- 1 v. : col. ill. ; 26 cm. -- Published no. 1 (July 1996) only. -- Cover title: Culture Clash : Teknophage versus Zeerus. -- Science fiction genre. -- LIBRARY HAS: no. 1. -- Call no.: PN6728.6.B52T4 ----------------------------------------------------- Prismarte. -- Ouro Preto : PADA (Produtora Artística de Desenhistas Associados), . -- ill. ; 21 cm. -- LIBRARY HAS: no. 5 (1993). -- Call no.: PN6790.B74P7 ----------------------------------------------------- Prisme. Index entry (p. 59) in La bande dessinée au Québec / Mira Falardeau (Montréal : Boréal, 1994). -- Call no.: PN6731.F34 1994 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison. -- Long Beach, CA : Mystic Corp., 1990- . -- col. ill. ; 26 cm. -- Began with no. 1 (Jan. 91). -- Superhero genre. -- LIBRARY HAS: no. 1 (1991). -- Call no.: PN6728.6.M92P7 ----------------------------------------------------- La Prison / Makyo, Vicomte. -- Paris : J'ai Lu, 1988. -- 127 p. : col. ill. ; 18 cm. -- (La Balade au Bout du Monde ; 1) (J'ai Lu BD ; 59) -- Call no.: PN6747.M305P7 1988 ----------------------------------------------------- La Prison. Swedish. Fängelset / Makyo, Vicomte ; svensk text, Jann Westrup. -- Stockholm : Carlsen, 1983. -- 48 p. : col. ill. ; 30 cm. -- (Världens Ande ; 1) -- Translation of: La Balade au Bout du Monde 1: La Prison. -- Call no.: PN6747.M305 B3219 1983 ----------------------------------------------------- "The Prison" (Metallic and Miserable) / by Luis Royo. p. 28-33 in Heavy Metal, v. 30, no. 4 (Sept. 2006). -- Story and feature titles from contents page. -- Feature title from caption: "Metallici & Miserabiles." -- Call no.: PN6728.H43v.30no.4 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison. Ultimate Iron Man II / writer, Orson Scott Card ; artist, Pasqual Ferry with Leonardo Manco ; colorist, Dean White, et al. ; letterer, Virtual Calligraphy's Cory Petit. -- New York : Marvel Publishing, 2008. -- 1 v. : col. ill. ; 27 cm. -- "Contains material originally published in magazine form as Ultimate Iron Man II #1-5." -- Summary (from SkyRiver): With his father in prison after being falsely accused of murdering his business rival, Zebediah Shane, Iron Man attempts to prove his father's innocence and defeat Obadiah Shane, who is seeking vengeance for his father's death. -- Superhero genre. -- Call no.: PN6728 .I76U452 2008 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Bases. The Wrong Side of the War / writers, Welles Hartley, John Jackson Miller ; pencillers, Davidé Fabbri, Brian Ching ; inker, Christian Dalla Vecchia. -- Milwaukie, OR : Dark Horse Books, 2007. -- 1 v. : col. ill. ; 26 cm. -- (Star Wars Empire ; v. 7) -- "Lucas Books." -- "This volume collects issues #35-40 of the Dark Horse comic book series." -- "These stories take place approximately eight months after the events in Star Wars: A New Hope." -- Summary (from SkyRiver): Fresh from Jabiim, Imperial Lieutenant Janek Sunber has been posted to the prison base on Kalist VI, but the rebels have set their sights on the prison base, both for the fuel stored there and for a very important prisoner, and Sunber's about to meet up with an old friend. -- Science fiction genre. -- Call no.: PN6728.S75E4507 2007 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Break. -- New York : Avon Periodicals, 1951-1952. -- col. ill. ; 26 cm. -- Published no. 1 (Sept. 1951) - no. 5 (Sept. 1952), Cf. Overstreet Comic Book Price Guide. -- Detective genre. -- LIBRARY HAS: no. 1. -- Call no.: PN6728.2.A85P68 ----------------------------------------------------- "Prison Break" 2 p. text in Fight Comics, no. 85 (Spring 1953). -- Summary: A soldier named Buck escapes from the Reds. -- War genre. -- Data from Gene Reed, Lou Mougin, Peter Croome, et al. via Grand Comics Database Project. -- Call no.: Film 15791r.395. Call no.: PN6728.1.F5F5no.85 ----------------------------------------------------- "Prison Break Behind the Iron Curtain"* (Suicide Smith) / by Capt. A.E. Carruthers ; art: Lee Elias. 5 p. in Rangers Comics, no. 64 (Apr. 1952). -- Data from Lou Mougin via The Grand Comics Database Project. -- Call no.: Film 15791r.308 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Breakouts. "The Axis Prison Breakout"* (#711) / George E. Brenner. 5 p. in Police Comics, no. 10 (July 1942). -- Data from Lou Mougin, Len Wolinsky, Gregory Fischer, et al. via Grand Comics Database. -- Call no.: PN6728.1.Q3P6m no.10 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Breakouts. "The Neptune Prison Breakout"* (Mars, God of War) / art: Joe Doolin. 8 p. in Planet Comics, no. 31 (July 1944). -- Villain Adna is introduced and dies ; introduction of Bozar. -- Data from Lou Mougin via the Grand Comics Database Project. -- Call no.: PN6728.1.F5P55m no.31 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Breaks. Murder by High Tide / M. Tillieux. -- Seattle, Wash. : Fantagraphics Books, 2011. -- 92 p. : col. ill. ; 28 cm. -- (Gil Jordan, Private Detective) -- Contents: Murder by High Tide ; Catch as Catch Can. -- Summary: In "Murder By High Tide," a mysterious death at sea leads Gil Jordan to a very dangerous case; in "Catch As Catch Can," the vengeful Joe the Syringe stages a baffling prison break. -- Translations from the French of: Une Enquête de Gil Jourdan 3: La Voiture Immergée, and Une Enquête de Gil Jourdan 4: Les Cargos du Crépuscule. -- Detective genre. -- Call no.: PN6747.T5G50313 2011 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Breaks. "The Oklahoma Prison Break" / art by Alan Mandel and Dan Barry. p. 271-277 in Crime Does Not Pay. v. 1 (Milwaukie, Or. : Dark Horse Books, 2012). -- Reprinted from Crime Does Not Pay, no. 25 (Jan. 1943). -- Call no.: PN6728.C73A7 2012 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Breaks. "The Phony Lightning"* (Lightning) / art: Charles Wotjkoski. 8 p. in Jumbo Comics, no. 16 (June 1940). -- Cover title: "Lightning Strikes Twice." -- Summary: Appearance of General Larkin. A black convict named Sledge appears, and he speaks in dialect. A villain just called The Boss steals Lightning's belt and impersonates Lightning. A thug gets drunk from having wine spilled on him. -- Begins: "Behind the grey, grim walls of the state prison, several convicts are preparing to stage a break that will take Lightning on his most thrilling and dangerous adventure." -- Data from Lou Mougin, Henry Steele, Hames Ware, et al. via The Grand Comics Database Project. -- Call no.: PN6728.1.F5J8m no.16 ----------------------------------------------------- "The Prison Camp."* "Captured by Col. Benback, part 2"* (Captain Desmo) / Ed Winiarski, script and art. 6 p. in Adventure Comics, no. 40 (July 1939). -- Adventure story genre. -- Data from Bob Cherry, Gene Reed, Lou Mougin, et al., via Grand Comics Database Project. -- The distinctive title "The Prison Camp"* was assigned by Gene Reed in earlier indexing. -- Call no.: PN6728.1.N3A3m no.40 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Camps. "Death March" / Paul Reinman ; story by R. Bernstein. 6 p. in War Action, no. 3 (June 1952). -- Begins: "It is early winter of 1951! A column of captured American troops are being escorted to a Red prison camp but the prisoners have marched many miles." -- Korean War story. -- Call no.: PN6728.2.M3W23no.3 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Camps. "Escape Back Into Prison Camp!" 2 p. text in Combat Casey, no. 9 (Apr. 1953). -- Call no.: PN6728.2.M3W3no.9 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Cells. "The Incredible Herc, part 3: Walls of Troy" (Hercules) / Greg Pak, Fred Van Lente, script ; Khoi Pham, pencils ; Paul Neary, inks ; Stephane Peru, colors ; Joe Caramagna, letters. 22 p. in Incredible Hercules, no. 114 (Feb. 2008). -- Summary: Ares has shot Hercules up with Hydra blood and Herc is tearing through the streets, unable to tell the past from the present. Black Widow uses this to her advantage and makes Hercules think he is back in his time with the Champions. In retailation for grave injuries done to his puppy, Cho steals the old SHIELD Behemoth helicarrier and uploads a virus that will knock the other helicarriers out of the sky, open the cells in the Negative Zone prison and wipe out all of SHIELD's data all over the world. -- Appearances of Wonder Man, Angel, Iceman, and Ghost Rider. -- Data from Kelly Langston-Smith, Gregory Fischer, Ramon Schenk via Grand Comics Database. -- Call no.: PN6728.6.M3H78no.114 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Cells. "Naturally the Income Tax People were out to get me: The Government was in the Red an' There I Was, Solvent!" (Life's Like That, Jan. 27, 1954) / by Fred Neher. -- Setting: Prison cell, pinups. -- Call no.: PN6726 f.B55 "solvency" ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Chaplains. "From Sing Sing to Alcatraz" / by Sister Lilliana Owens. p. 31-34 in Topix, v. 6, no. 5 (Feb. 1948). -- Begins: "Introducing Father Ralph Gallagher, S.J. He has served as chaplain in almost every prison in the country." -- Call no.: PN6728.1.C3T6v.6no.5 -----------------------------------------------------
La Prison de RobertsonvilleLa Prison de Robertsonville / dessins, Willy Lambil ; scénario, Raoul Cauvin. -- Belgium : Dupuis, 1975. -- 46 p. : col. ill. ; 30 cm. -- (Les Tuniques Bleues ; no. 6) -- Funny military genre. -- Call no.: PN6747.L27 T806 1975Summary: A Civil War battle rages, the Confederates are counterattacking, and the Yankee general orders a cavalry charge. Corporal Blutch and Sergeant Cornelius Chesterfield are among the cavalry. Blutch gets so excited he chases a rebel soldier far behind his own lines. Chesterfield goes to retrieve him and finds him with a bullet in his calf. They are both taken prisoner and march with the other Yankee prisoners toward the dread Robertsonville Prison. On the way they make an enemy of a Confederate soldier named Cancrelat, who is also one of the guards at Robertsonville. They also become friendly with a fellow prisoner named Raphaël Ralph. Once in the prison building Chesterfield immediately tries to escape but is stopped by a punch from the head of the camp, a lieutenant. The next morning, because he refuses to hurry, Sgt. Chesterfield is locked in the "box" for punishment while the rest of the prisoners work in the woods cutting down trees. Blutch fells a tree deliberately on Cancrelat, and is sent to join Chesterfield in the box. The box is a wooden building about the size of a telephone booth or small outhouse, standing on the prison grounds. The lieutenant, while enjoying a drink brought to him by a Black slave, orders Cancrelot to assemble all the prisoners at the end of their work day to witness the opening of the box and the humiliation of Chesterfield and Blutch. The box is empty when opened because the two have dug a tunnel, but they are easily recaptured. The lieutenant feels he has been humiliated and orders Cancrelat to make the two prisoners lick the lieutenant's boots. In the next escape attempt that night, Chesterfield gets tangled in barbed wire trying to cross the fence. The lieutenant orders ankle chains. The next day, with Ralph's help, Blutch and Chesterfield hijack a supply wagon and make a run for it. They are soon retrieved. Next Ralph supplies dresses, and disguised as women of a prisoners' aid society they talk their way out the front gate. Blutch trips on his ankle chains, still there under his dress, and the two only make it a few yards from the gate. Back in their own uniforms and no longer chained, Blutch and Chesterfield are given shovels and a pick and told to dig for a gold dollar in the prison yard. Two Rebel guards are assigned to watch them and shoot them if they stop digging. Hours later the hole is deep and the lieutenant comes by to check, calls the digging men up out of the excavation, and finds that it is the guards he earlier assigned now doing the digging in their underwear. Blutch and Chesterfield have turned the tables on their guards and now have the freedom of the camp in Confederate uniforms. The lieutenant falls into the hole crying and babbling. Cancrelat assumes command. Blutch and Chesterfield steal horses and escape with Cancrelat and a party of mounted soldiers in pursuit. They ride to the front lines, past retreating Rebel troops toward the advancing Yankees, and this inspires the Rebels to turn and fight again. The Yankees fire on the two horsemen with a cannon, because they are wearing grey uniforms, so they retreat back to the Confederate forces just as Cancrelat and his men arrive and they have to turn around again. Most of this back and forth happens at a river crossing. Finally, on the Yankee side, the two are caught and put in a stockade with other Rebel prisoners of war. Cancrelat is soon captured as well, and Chesterfield and Blutch are put in a covered hole in the ground as punishment for beating him up. The Robertsonville prisoners are freed, and Ralph tells the Yankee general the story of Blutch and Chesterfield. The general sends men to let them out of the hole, but when they take the cover off the hole they find the two men have tunneled away and escaped. Everything works out all right, though. Blutch and Chesterfield are recaptured and are soon back in blue coats battling for their lives in the cavalry. Other editions:
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----------------------------------------------------- "The Prison Doctor!" (Batman) / Bill Finger, script ; Jim Mooney, art ; Ira Schnapp, letters. 12 p. in Batman, no. 49 (Oct./Nov. 1948). -- Introduction of Dr. Paul Taber. -- Data from Bill Wormstedt, Lou Mougin, Craig Delich, O'Hearn/Desris, et al., via Grand Comics Database Project. -- Call no.: PN6728.1.N3B3no.49 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Doors. "Drick!"* (Asterix, Mar. 21, 1983) -- Summary: Swedish language daily strip with a sequence from Astérix et Cléopâtre (plate 26, tier 2), about drinking magic potion and opening a prison door. -- Call no.: PN6726 f.B55 "doors" ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Escapes. "The Gambler Bets His Life" (Green Lantern) / script, Lee Goldsmith ; pencils, Howard Purcell ; inks, Bob Oksner. 13 p. in Green Lantern, no. 27 (Aug./Sept. 1947). -- Summary: The Gambler bets that Green Lantern and the warden will die instead of him on execution night. He then escapes from prison on the scheduled night, believing the odds are in his favor. -- Appearance of Doiby Dickles. -- Data from Lou Mougin, Bob Hughes, Craig Delich et al. via Grand Comics Database. -- Call no.: PN6728.1.N3G7m no.27 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Escapes. "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 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Farms. "Julius Franklin Lynch" 1 p. in Wanted Comics, no. 47 (May 1952). -- Summary: Lynch escaped on Sept. 8, 1950 from a prison farm in Douglas, Georgia. -- Call no.: PN6728.1.T6W3no.47 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Food. 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.: PN6726f.B55 ----------------------------------------------------- "Prison for Heroes" (Superman and Batman) / script, Edmond Hamilton ; pencils, Curt Swan ; inks, George Klein. 15 p. in World's Finest Comics, no. 145 (Nov. 1964) ; reprinted in World's Finest Comics, no. 197 (Oct./Nov. 1970). -- Summary: Batman is hypnotized into becoming the warden of an alien prison and charged with capturing Superman and imprisoning him with other heroes. The second half (part II) is titled "The Revenge of Superman!": Superman escapes from the prison and takes revenge on Batman. The aliens from the planet Vor come down to try to regain control of their prison plan to conquer the universe." -- Appearances of the Batcave, Electric Man, The Freezer, Balloon Man, the Flame, Waraj, and Dr. Marlin, with cameos of Lois Lane and Jimmy Olsen. -- Data from Bob Hughes, Lou Mougin, Craig Delich, et al. via Grand Comics Database. -- Call no.: PN6728.1.N3W7no.145 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Guards. 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.: PN6726f.B55 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Guards. 73304-23-4153-6-96-8 / Thomas Ott. -- Seattle : Fantagraphics Books, 2008. -- 142 p. : all ill. ; 25 cm. -- Cover title: Number 73304-23-4153-6-96-8. -- Summary (from publisher's website via SkyRiver): "When clearing up the cell of a prisoner who has been sentenced to death and subsequently executed, a prison guard finds a small piece of paper with a combination of numbers on it. On the spur of the moment, he puts it into his pocket. As the guard lives a solitary, monotonous life, the numbers on the paper awake his curiosity. To find out their hidden meaning could add a new meaning to his life as well, so the guard stumbles into situations in which the number or part of it seem to achieve a certain importance and offer him hints and possible solutions. And the numbers signal a radical change in his luck. He gets to know a woman, falls in love with her, and one night, in a casino, he wins a huge amount of money when gambling on these numbers. But the next morning, the woman and money have disappeared. The man goes in search of the woman and the money. But from that day on, his luck changes and the numbers bring him only bad luck, sending him inexorably into an abyss that he might not recover from." -- Story without words. -- Call no.: PN6747 .O78S4 2008 ----------------------------------------------------- "Prison in the Sky" (The Fabulous World of Krypton) / E. Nelson Bridwell, story ; Curt Swan, art. 7 p. in Superman, no. 234 (Feb. 1971). -- Appearance of Jor-El. -- Call no.: PN6728.1.N3S8no.234 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Inmates. Cruel and Unusual / created by Jamie Delano, Tom Peyer and John McCrea ; Andrew Chiu, inker. -- Norcross, GA : Desperado Publishing, 2007. -- ca. 100 p. : ill. ; 26 cm. -- "What can America do with 2.2 million prison inmates? What it does best: Turn a profit. Make celebrities. Execute them live on TV. Sell advertising. And praise the Lord. A black comedy." -- Horror genre. -- Call no.: PN6737.M24C7 2007 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Interviews. "Another Prison Interview"* (Shoe, Sept. 2, 2007) / by Chris Cassatt and Gary Brookins. -- Summary: It's a slow news day. -- Call no.: oversize PN6726.S79 Sept. 2, 2007 ----------------------------------------------------- "Prison Knife Fight." Machine of Death : a Collection of stories about people who know how they will die / edited by Ryan North, Matthew Bennardo & David Malki. -- Venice, CA : Bearstache Books, 2010. -- 452 p. : ill. ; 23 cm. -- Illustrated texts. -- "The machine had been invented a few years ago: a machine that could tell, from just a sample of your blood, how you were going to die. It didn't give you the date and it didn't give you the specifics. It just spat out a sliver of paper upon which were printed, in careful block letters, the words 'Drowned' or 'Cancer' or 'Old age' or 'Choked on a handful of popcorn.' It let people know how they were going to die." -- Contents: Flaming marshmallow / Camille Alexa, Shannon Wheeler ; Fudge / Kit Yona, Vera Brosgol ; Torn apart and devoured by lions / Jeffrey C. Wells, Christopher Hastings ; Despair / K. M. Lawrence, Dean Trippe ; Suicide / David Michael Wharton, Brian McLachlan, ; Almond / John Chernega, Paul Horn ; Starvation / M. Bennardo, Karl Kerschl ; Cancer / Camron Miller, Les McClaine ; Firing squad / J Jack Unrau, Brandon Bolt ; Vegetables / Chris Cox, Kevin McShane ; Piano / Rafa Franco, Kean Soo ; HIV infection from Machine of Death needle / Brian Quinlan, KC Green ; Exploded / Tom Francis, Jesse Reklaw ; Not waving but drowning / Erin McKean, Carly Monardo ; Improperly prepared blowfish / Gord Sellar, Jeffrey Brown ; Love ad nauseum / Sherri Jacobsen, Kate Beaton ; Murder and suicide, respectively / Ryan North, Aaron Diaz ; Cancer / David Malki, Danielle Corsetto ; Aneurysm / Alexander Danner, Dorothy Gambrell ; Exhaustion from having sex with a minor / Ben "Yahtzee" Croshaw, Cameron Stewart ; After many years, stops breathing, while asleep, with smile on face / William Grallo, Scott C. ; Killed by Daniel / Julia Wainwright, Marcus Thiele ; Friendly fire / Douglas J. Lane, Kelly Tindall ; Nothing / Pelotard, John Allison ; Cocaine and painkillers / David Malki, Jess Fink ; Loss of blood / Jeff Stautz, Kris Straub ; Prison knife fight / Shaenon K. Garrity, Roger Langridge ; While trying to save another / Dalisa Chaponda, Dylan Meconis ; Miscarriage / James L. Sutter, Rene Engström ; Shot by sniper / Bartholomew von Klick, John Keogh ; Heat death of the universe / James Foreman, Ramón Pérez ; Drowning / C.E. Guimont, Adam Koford ; ? / Randall Munroe, Kazu Kibuishi ; Cassandra / T. J. Radcliffe, Matt Haley ; Contributors / Mitch Clem & Nation of Amanda. -- Call no.: PS648.F3M23 2010 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Libraries. "Better the Spirit World than the Slammer!"* (Smacky Duck) / Ned Sonntag. 4 p. in All Duck (San Francisco, CA : Co., & Sons, 1972). -- Story opens in a prison library. -- Call no.: PN6728.45.C6A55 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Libraries. "Pathway to an Early Grave" 8 p. in Crime Must Pay the Penalty, no. 26 (June 1952). -- The first page takes place in a prison library. -- Call no.: PN6728.1.A2C7no.26 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Life. Cells / Scott Mills. -- Abingdon, MD : S. Mills, 1998. -- 20 p. : ill. ; 18 cm. -- Self-published mini-comic about prison life. -- Front matter includes acknowledgement of the Xeric Foundation. -- Call no.: PN6727.M525C4 1998 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Life. The Men / by Tom of Finland. -- North Hollywood, Calif. : House One of California, 1976. -- 48 p. : ill. ; 28 cm. -- CONTENTS: Introduction ; Finlandia ; Leather against flesh ; The Swimming Hole ; Beach Buddies ; The Loggers ; Sailors ; Prison Life ; Sunbathers in the Park ; Forbidden pleasures ; Sauna ; Bikers and Ranchers. -- Genre: Gay erotic. -- Call no.: PN6790.F523T6M4 1976 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Life in Japan. Doing Time / Hanawa Kazuichi ; translated by Shizuka Shimoyama and Elizabeth Tierman. -- Rasquera, Spain : Ponent Mon, 2000. -- 239 p. : ill. ; 21 cm. -- Translation of: Keimusho no naka. -- Comic book about prison life in Japan. -- Call no.: PN6790.J33 H33K413 2000 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Lights. "Accepting the Nobel Prize for Physics is Dr. Norris Eppley, inventor of a mechanism that prevents dimming of prison lights when the electric chair is used" (Charlie, Mar. 5, 1991) / by Rodrigues. -- Setting: Charlie is watching television. -- Call no.: PN6726 f.B55 "electric chairs" ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Ministry. 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.: PN6726f.B55 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Moons. "The Interplanetary Batman" (Batman) 8 p. in 80 Page Giant Magazine, no. 12 (July 1965); reprinted from Batman, no. 128 (Dec. 1959) -- Summary (by Ben Chabala): Batman and Robin have been wrongfully imprisoned on a prison moon, with the infamous space pirate Kraak. The dynamic duo break out of their cells and escape into the Forest of Peril, and Kraak guides them, hopefully, to freedom. As they run they are beset by robotic guards, deadly swamp amoebas, and the terrible Ram-Beast, but against all odds the strange trio emerges from the dangerous woods unscathed. As soon as they reach Kraak's secret hideout on the Claw Asteroid the conniving criminal double crosses our heroes, and Batman and Robin must fight for their lives if they ever want to see Earth again.-- Reprint data from Ken Gale and Gene Reed. -- Call no.: PN6728.1.N3B3no.128. Call no.: PN6728.3.N3E35no.12 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Nurses. "Incomunicado" (Memín) / argumento, Yolanda Vargas Dulché ; dibujo, Sixto Valcia B. 32 p. in Memín, no. 15 (1983). -- SUMMARY: In the house of correction, Carlos doesn't know if his mother is alive or not. A guard is killed in an escape attempt and the warden thinks Carlos did it. Carlos is put in a straight jacket and whipped by the warden. The warden then gets evidence that Carlos did not kill the guard, but decides to hide the evidence and hold Carlos incommunicado. The prison nurse knows the truth and promises to try and get word to Carlos's mother and friends. Meanwhile Ernesto, Ricardo and Memín come to the institution on visiting day but are denied access to Carlos. Memín sees a laundry chute and jumps in, landing in the prison's basement. -- Call no.: PN6790.M44M433no.15 ----------------------------------------------------- "Prison of Death." "Face to Face with the Swine!" (Captain America and the Falcon) / edited, written & drawn by Jack Kirby ; inked by Frank Giacoia ; lettered by J. Novak ; colored by P. Goldberg. 17 p. in Captain America, no. 206 (Feb. 1977). -- Appearances of Sharon Carter and Leila. -- Cover title: "Prison of Death." -- Call no.: PN6728.2.M3T25no.206 ----------------------------------------------------- "Prison of Despair" (Blackhawk) 12 p. in Blackhawk, no. 36 (Jan. 1951). -- Data from Gene Reed. -- Call no.: film 15791r.306 ----------------------------------------------------- "The Prison of No Escape!" (Superman and Batman) 18 p. in World's Finest Comics, no. 192 (Mar. 1970). -- Call no.: PN6728.1.N3W7no.192 ----------------------------------------------------- "The Prison on Wheels" 6 p. in Gang Busters, no. 54 (Oct.-Nov. 1956). -- Begins: "Country and state roads were cleared, traffic was re-routed, local police were on the alert! Why? This was the biggest, most dangerous mass movement of men in history! For within one week, a colossus of law enforcers had made the grim decision to transfer 3,011 convicts via The Prison on Wheels." -- Call no.: PN6728.1.N3G3no.54 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Pallor. 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.: PN6726f.B55 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Pit. Book one / Johnny Ryan. -- Seattle, Wash. : Fantagraphics Books, 2009. -- 120 p. : ill. ; 22 cm. -- About monsters and wrestling. -- Science fiction and alternative genres. -- Call no.: PN6727.R92P5 2009 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Pit. Book 2 / Johnny Ryan. -- 2nd ed. -- Seattle, Wash. : Fantagraphics Books, 2011. -- 115 p. : ill. ; 22 cm. -- Horror and alternative genres. -- Call no.: PN6727.R92P502 2011 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Pit. Book 3 / Johnny Ryan. -- Seattle, Wash. : Fantagraphics Books, 2011. -- 115 p. : ill. ; 22 cm. -- Horror and alternative genres. -- Call no.: PN6727.R92P503 2011 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Planet. Piranese : Prison Planet / Milo Manara. -- Rockville Centre, NY : Heavy Metal, 2004. -- 50 p. : col. ill. ; 32 cm. -- Cover title: Piranese, the Prison Planet. -- Science fiction genre. -- Call no.: PN6767.M36P513 2004 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Planets. Lion-O Walks the Plank : a Thundercats Adventure / by Regina King ; adapted from the teleplay by William Overgard ; illustrated by Mones. -- New York : Random House, 1986. -- 1 v. : col. ill. ; 21 cm. -- Summary: Attempting to aid a space police officer in foiling an escape from a prison planet, Lion-O is taken prisoner by a robot pirate. -- Call no.: PN6728.T514K5 1986 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Planets. "Paladnor, the Prison Planet"* (Mysta of the Moon) / art: Matt Baker? 8 p. in Planet Comics, no. 58 (Jan. 1949). -- Appearance of Dirk Garro; introduction of Capt. Tulac, Karil, and Tyra; villains Retho, Sindar both introduced. -- Data from Lou Mougin via the Grand Comics Database Project. -- Call no.: PN6728.1.F5P55m no.58 ----------------------------------------------------- "Prison Plops" 3 p. in Plop!, no. 9 (Jan./Feb. 1975). -- Data from Jerry Hillegas, Rodney Hinkle, Katie, et al. via Grand Comics Database. -- Call no.: PN6728.4.N3P55no.9 ----------------------------------------------------- "Prison Plops" 2 p. in Plop, no. 23 (Sept./Oct. 1976). -- Call no.: PN6728.4.N3P55no.23 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Plops. "The Escape" (Prison Plops) / Coram Nobis, writer ; Slim Johnson, art. 2 p. in Plop!, no. 12 (May 1975). -- Call no.: PN6728.4.N3P55no.12 ----------------------------------------------------- "The Prison Problem!" (Tessie the Typist) / MSW. 6 p. in Comedy Comics, no. 1 (May 1948). -- Begins: Skidsy, remember the fortune teller told you you're going on a long trip! -- Call no.: PN6728.1.M3C59no.1 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Psychiatrists. "El Prisionero que Volvió" (La Clinica del Crimen) 6 p. in Acción Policíaca, no. 82 (Sept. 1958). -- Narrator is prison psychiatrist Dr. Tom Rogers. -- Call no.: PN6790.M44A3no.82 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Psychoses. Index entry (p. 249) in Pulp Demons: International Dimensions of the Postwar Anti-Comics Campaign, ed. by John A. Lent (Madison, N.J. : Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 1999). -- Call no.: PN6710.P85 1999 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Punishment Cage. Entry (p. 148) in Wonder Woman : The Encyclopedia of Comic Book Heroes, v. 2, by Michael Fleisher (New York : Collier Books, 1976). -- Call no.: PN6725.F5v.2 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Puzzles. "The Riddler's Prison-Puzzle Problem!" (Batman) / Gardner Fox, story ; Frank Springer and Sid Greene, art. 15 p. in Batman, no. 260 (Jan./Feb. 1975) ; reprinted from Detective Comics, no. 377 (July 1968). -- Data from Bill Wormstedt, Lou Mougin, Craig Delich et al. via Grand Comics Database. -- Call no.: PN6728.1.N3B3no.260 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Riot. -- New York : Avon Periodicals, 1952. -- col. ill. ; 26 cm. -- Published no. 1 only. -- LIBRARY HAS: no. 1. -- Call no.: PN6728.2.A85P7 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Riots. 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.: PN6726f.B55 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Serial Numbers. "Asi es la Vida" 1 p. in Selva, no. 63 (Jan. 1958) and in Acción Policíaca, no. 76 (Mar. 1958), and in Selva, no. 65 (Mar. 1958). -- Gag cartoons about smoke rings, duck hunting, fresh lobster, and prison serial numbers. -- Call no.: PN6790.M44S36no.63. Call no.: PN6790.M44A3no.76 ----------------------------------------------------- "Prison Ship" 2 p. text in Airboy Comics, v. 7, no. 11 (Dec. 1950). -- Call no.: Film 15791, r.259 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Ships. "El Libro del Oeste" 1 p. in Rodeo, no. 41 (May 1958). -- Illustrated facts about a prison ship in San Francisco Bay, etc. -- Call no.: PN6790.M44R55no.41 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Suits. "You're Not Helping" (Top of the World, Dec. 4, 1999) / by Mark Tonra. -- Summary: A dog seems to be holding onto a man's prison suit with its teeth. -- Call no.: PN6726 f.B55 "dogs" ----------------------------------------------------- Prison System. "Joliet State Pokey"* (Mister Boffo, June 15, 2002) / Joe Martin. -- If the prison system weren't so impersonal. -- (The World and the Way It Would Be) -- Call no.: PN6726 f.B55 "Joliet" ----------------------------------------------------- "Prison Time For Cartoon" / Carl Archambeau Sr. p. 6A in The Lansing State Journal, September 30, 2008. -- Letter to the editor about an offensive editorial cartoon. -- Call no: folio NC1320.S35 2008 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison to Praise : the true story of Merlin R. Carothers / adapted by Tony Tallarico. -- Plainfield, N.J. : Logos International, 1974. -- 31 p. : col. ill. ; 26 cm. -- Title from cover. 1. Christianity--Comic books, strips, etc. I. Carothers, Merlin R. II. Tallarico, Tony. Call no.: PN6728.4.L6P7 1974 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Towers. "A Date with a Dream"* (A Date with Judy) 10 p. in A Date with Judy, no. 73 (Oct./Nov. 1959). -- Begins: "Oh, Sir Oogie! I'm so glad you came to save me from this prison tower in your shining armor!" -- Call no.: PN6728.1.N3D3no.73 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Town : Paying the Price / artist, Kevin Pyle ; writers, Kevin Pyle & Craig Gilmore. -- Northampton, MA : The Real Cost of Prisons Project, 2005. -- 16 p. : ill. ; 26 cm. -- Includes bibliographical references. -- Educational comic book. -- Call no.: PN6728.25.R4P7 2005 ----------------------------------------------------- "Prison Town : Paying the Price." The Real Cost of Prisons Comix / edited by Lois Ahrens. -- Oakland, Calif. : PM Press, 2008. -- 1 v. : ill. ; 26 cm. -- Includes bibliographical references. -- Contents: Preface / Lois Ahrens ; Introduction / Ruth Wilson Gilmore and Craig Gilmore ; Prison town--paying the price / Kevin Pyle and Craig Gilmore ; Prisoners of the war on drugs / Sabrina Jones, Ellen Miller-Mack and Lois Ahrens ; Prisoners of a hard life--women and their children / Susan Willmarth, Ellen Miller-Mack and Lois Ahrens. -- Summary (from SkyRiver): One out of every hundred adults in the U.S. is in prison. This book provides a crash course in what drives mass incarceration, the human and community costs, and how to stop the numbers from going even higher. This volume collects three comic books published by the Real Cost of Prisons Project. The stories and statistical information in each comic book are thoroughly researched and documented. -- Educational genre. -- Call no.: HV9471.R43 2008 ----------------------------------------------------- "Prison 2000 A.D." / Stan Lee, story ; Jack Kirby, pencils ; Dick Ayers?, inks. 5 p. in Strange Tales Annual, no. 2 (1963) ; reprinted from World of Fantasy, no. 16 (Feb. 1959). -- Data from George Olshevsky. -- Call no.: PN6728.3.M3S75no.2 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Visits. 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.: PN6726f.B55 ----------------------------------------------------- Prison Visits. "You're Financing Whose New Independent Film?"* (Bliss, Oct. 13, 2006) / by Harry Bliss. -- Summary: It's a prison visit by a dog who has found the loot. -- Call no.: PN6726 f.B55 "loot" -----------------------------------------------------On down the list