Incomplete Data - Issue not found. |
Incomplete Data - Issue not found. |
Incomplete Data - Issue not found. |
Incomplete Data - Issue not found. |
Incomplete Data - Issue not found. |
Incomplete Data - Issue not found. |
Incomplete Data - Issue not found. |
The recent issue is that of September 1999. The size is now 10" x 8"; the price is $3.00, and while the subtitle still indicates that this is For All Boys, there is no longer a circulation figure given on the coverbut there is a small box to Parents telling them that they may wish to review certain materials on pp. 37+ before passing on their child. The magazine contains 66 pages, all on slick paper and in lavish, arguably garish, color (and including a centerfold poster of dolphins, introduced by Garfield the Cat). The issue contains one piece of fiction, (though the authors name is not given in the Table of Contents, nor are those of any of the writers); it runs just a bit over two pages of text. There are six articles: ballooning; concrete canoes; competitive birdwatching; Boys Lifes choice for an all-star NFL football team; Garfield the Cat (again); and back-to-school backpack fashion. There are eleven pages of individual cartoons, including PeeWee Harris (now drawn in the style of, I think, THE JETSONS rather than the old standard cartoon style; no artist name given); Bible Stories is also still around but the others are new; several are puzzle pages rather than narrative. No space stuff, but Pedro the Burro (who now has his own comic strip as well as still running the letters column) is involved with evil twins from a mirror world. Columns include Hitchin Rack and Think & Grin plus others on Nature, Games, Collecting, etc. The guts of the issue, however (and the mysterious page 37+ feature) is an inserted SPIDERMAN comic book (part 1 of 4), not I think by its usual artist or writer (though I dont follow it and may be wrong) which is promoting an anti-drugs message (J. Jonah Jameson, surely a role model for all Spidey fans, refuses to run a suggestive movie ad, yadda yadda). Ads include instant chocolate milk, snack crackers, movie videos, computer games, Scout craft kits, compasses, and more computer games. And thats just about allthere seem to be far fewer ads than 1964. (No door to door selling scams any more.) The classifieds, now heavily illustrated, are split between Schools & Camps (same old) and Gifts & Gimmicks (no stamps, a few coins, but lots of magic tricks, gags, knives, plans for Go Karts, fake LightSabres, improve your golf and baseball skills bookelts, Green Tree Frogs Make Charming Pets, and so on; the biggest ad is for brand-name inline skate shoes. The backcover features SpiderMan again, shilling for the Got Milk? campaign. The reading level strikes me as upper grade school, which probably means its contemporary high school. But the reading level is almost beside the point, as the overwhelming impression of the magazine is that of comics, cartoons, photos, art of all sorts, with minimal text. Details supplied by Denny Lien. |
Incomplete Data - Issue not found. |
Details supplied by Denny Lien. |
Incomplete Data - Issue not found. |
Details supplied by Martin Wooster. |
Special Summer Reading Issue. Details supplied by Martin Wooster. |
Details supplied by Steve Miller. |
Details supplied by Steve Miller. |
Details supplied by Steve Miller. |
Details supplied by Steve Miller. |
Details supplied by Steve Miller. |
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