The Flying Ace’s keyring

Classic finds

When collecting Peanuts books, there are often times where I have to ask myself “is this a book?” One of these is an odd line of items that Hallmark out out in the 1970s, which I mentioned a couple times over the past decade. They are bound by a single key ring, the pages flip vertically. I just picked up my third of these  (or maybe four, but I can’t find the other one!) This is a book that Hallmark also put out in small, hardcover, definitely-a-book format, The Flying Ace. It’s a strip reprint, and in keyring format the panels reproduced on per page.

It’s only now that I realize that the keyring version actually has one more strip than the hardcover version (which was part of Hallmark’s Thoughtfulness Library imprint), which leads me to suspect that the keyring versions actually came first, and the books are adapted from them. Backing up this suspicion is that I’ve got one keyring book (It’s Only a Game – but it’s a Peanuts book, not a collection of the strip of the same name) that has no corresponding Thoughtfulness Library book that I’ve found.

I don’t see these pop up for sale very often, and at this point, I’m really unsure of how many different titles there are. I know that there are at least three. Or four. (I really need to organize the AAUGH.com Reference Library better. Step one: hit the lottery. Step two: hire someone to do it.) (Okay, I’m going to Vegas in a couple of days. One good jackpot ought to take care of it!)

Classic finds
TV Guide revelation

The latest addition to the AAUGH.com reference library is a TV Guide from February, 1980, which features an article about Peanuts, written by Schulz himself. In it, he discusses why some things work in the strip that don’t work in the animated specials, and he manages to do so in a …

Classic finds
Review: Christmas Gift Certificates for You

When I ordered a copy of the 1981 Hallmark Peanuts product Christmas Gift Certificates for You, I reckoned it would be one of those novelty coupon books, each page removable and offering the recipient a walk in the snow, help taking down the tree, or some Peanuts-y equivalent thereof. I …

Classic finds
Wheelnuts

 I just picked up the July 1964 issue of Drag Cartoons, a black and white comics magazine focused not on performative gender-bending as the youth must suspect, but on souped-up autos, including not just drag racers but hot rods as well. Did I pick it up because it had a …