M. Thomas Inge
M. Thomas Inge (1936-2021) was Robert Emory Blackwell Professor of the Humanities at Randolph-Macon College. He edited or authored over sixty volumes, including books on Charles M. Schulz, the comics, William Faulkner, and Oliver W. Harrington. Inge was general editor of two University Press of Mississippi series, Conversations with Comic Artists and Great Comics Artists.
Will Eisner
Conversations
Conversations with the influential and revered comics artist
Naming the Rose
Essays on Eco's 'The Name of the Rose'
Essays by Hans Kellner, Lois Parkinson Zambora, Mark Parker, Michael Cohen, Joan DelFattore, Pierre L. Horn, H. Aram Veeser, Helen T. Bennett, Jocelyn Mann, Deborah Parker, Roger Rollin, and Jackson R. Bryer and Ruth M. Alvarez
Dark Laughter
The Satiric Art of Oliver W. Harrington
An appreciative retrospective of the art created by the man Langston Hughes called America’s greatest black cartoonist
Charles M. Schulz
Conversations
A biography in interviews of one of America’s best-loved comic strip masters
Conversations with William Faulkner
Collected interivews with the Nobel Prize-winning author who many believe to be one of the greatest writers of the twentieth century
Anything Can Happen in a Comic Strip
Centennial Reflections on an American Art Form
A keepsake album for all fans celebrating the centennial of the funny papers
Comics as Culture
These ten essays by one of America’s foremost authorities on popular culture survey the influence of the comic strip and, despite the legions of detractors, show it to be an art form that has enriched and reflected most of American culture.
The Comics
Insights into the aesthetics of one of popular culture’s favorite art forms
The Dixie Limited
Writers on William Faulkner and His Influence
A dazzling collection of writers worldwide on the massive authority of the Nobel laureate
My Life with Charlie Brown
Autobiographical essays, introductions, articles, reviews, and lectures that tell the personal tale of the Peanuts creator and America’s great comic strip