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Erscheint vorauss. 7. April 2026
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"Curse me kilts!" As soon as Scrooge McDuck became the world's richest miser, a rascally rogues' gallery assembled to rob him. Now Fantagraphics launches the new Disney Greatest Comics Collection with a wild anthology of these beloved bad guys at their best... and worst! Flintheart Glomgold, "The Second-Richest Duck," is here in Carl Barks' 1956 classic! Sorceress Magica De Spell is out to get "The Midas Touch," then turns Duckburg sideways in Don Rosa's "A Matter of Some Gravity!" The Beagle Boys pull Scrooge's simoleons skyward in Barks' "The Money Well," then turn his assets liquid in…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
"Curse me kilts!" As soon as Scrooge McDuck became the world's richest miser, a rascally rogues' gallery assembled to rob him. Now Fantagraphics launches the new Disney Greatest Comics Collection with a wild anthology of these beloved bad guys at their best... and worst! Flintheart Glomgold, "The Second-Richest Duck," is here in Carl Barks' 1956 classic! Sorceress Magica De Spell is out to get "The Midas Touch," then turns Duckburg sideways in Don Rosa's "A Matter of Some Gravity!" The Beagle Boys pull Scrooge's simoleons skyward in Barks' "The Money Well," then turn his assets liquid in Rosa's "Cash Flow!" Playboy billionaire John D. Rockerduck debuts in Barks' "Boat Buster," then outspends Scrooge again in Flemming Andersen's "Crash Course"! Plus never-before-collected tales starring Dutch tycoon Velma Vanderduck, space-monkey Tachyon Farflung... and more! See these classic adventures outfitted with new commentary by Disney historians Jim Fanning and David Gerstein, plenty of extras... and more surprises than Scrooge's Money Bin has booby-traps. (With all these villains around, he'll need them!)
Autorenporträt
Carl Barks (1901-2000, b. Merrill, Oregon; d. Grants Pass, Oregon), one of the most brilliant cartoonists of the 20th century, entertained millions around the world with his timeless tales of Donald Duck and Barks's most famous character creation, Uncle Scrooge. Over the course of his career, he wrote and drew more than 500 comics stories totaling more than 6,000 pages, most anonymously. He achieved international acclaim only after he semi-retired in 1968. Among many other honors, Barks was one of the three initial inductees into the Will Eisner Comic Awards Hall of Fame in 1987. (The other two were Jack Kirby and Will Eisner.) In 1991, Barks became the first Disney comic book artist to be recognized as a "Disney Legend," a special award created by Disney "to acknowledge and honor the many individuals whose imagination, talents, and dreams have created the Disney magic." He has been similarly honored in many other countries around the world.