Talk:An Altar Boy Named Speck
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Created before 1953
editI realize the "created" date is sourced, but the source is clearly in error. I'm sitting here with the first collection, and it bears a copyright date of 1952... and the copyright page of a second volume can be found in an Amazon listing, and that, too, is 1952. So I'm removing the 1953 date, even if I'm not sure what date to put in. (I'm betting 1953 was the year it was picked up for national syndication; originally, it was in Catholic Action of the South.) --Nat Gertler (talk) 04:57, 10 December 2020 (UTC)
- And I lose my bet - given this 1952 article, the panel was being syndicated before 1953. --Nat Gertler (talk) 19:08, 13 December 2020 (UTC)
My conflict of interest
editI have a potential conflict of interest for this page, as I'm a publisher considering doing some Speck reprints. (Things I start as research often go that route.) I think I'm doing strict factual coverage, but if anyone thinks any of my edits are improper, feel free to revert and to let me know. --Nat Gertler (talk) 19:08, 13 December 2020 (UTC)
Additional sources
editI am accumulating sources here to use for a possible future requested edit... but if anyone sees anything they want to add, feel free to put it in the article.
- Tut LeBlanc died February 23, 1953, at which time Speck was syndicated in 23 papers. "Originator of Speck Cartoons Dies Suddenly of Heart Attack", Catholic News Service, February 28, 1953
- LeBlanc's prior work had included cartoons for Progressive Farmer, Southern Sportsman, Sunday Visitor, The Grail, Extension Magazine, and Voice of St. Judge. "Up-and-Doing Altar Boy in Catholic Paper Cartoon Breaking into Book World", Catholic News Service, March 28, 1952.
- The panel retained its original named, An Altar Boy Named "Speck", at least well into its original run, as witness this 1967 example, or this 1969 syndicated letterhead. We may need to think about putting quote marks, whether single or double, into the page title.
Requested addition of new collections
editThis edit request by an editor with a conflict of interest has now been answered. |
Two changes, under "Collections":
- For the line: An Altar Boy Named “Speck” (Lafayette, LA: Tribune Printing Plant, 1952)[1] - reprinted by Our Sunday Visitor. please change ending to reprinted by Our Sunday Visitor and About Comics. -- the existence of the About Comics edition can be verified at its Amazon listing -- which should not be used as a reference as it is a sales page, but the book itself is a reference for its existence.
At the bottom of the list of Ahern collections, add:
- Speck the Altar Boy: The Collection Compilation (Camarillo, CA: About Comics, 2021) - reprints both Hanover House books as a single volume.
That, too, can be verified through its Amazon listing.
My conflict of interest is that I am the publisher of both of these volumes. However, their inclusion is consistent with the list as it previously existed. --Nat Gertler (talk) 19:47, 11 May 2021 (UTC)
- Not done for now: Could you provide another source, Amazon is not considered a reliable source. Heart (talk) 03:12, 13 June 2021 (UTC)
- @HeartGlow30797: First off, per WP:RSPAMAZON, "Amazon is a reliable source for basic information about a work (such as release date, ISBN, etc.)". As I said, the books themselves serve as reference, as each book describes the history of its content on the copyright page and in the intros -- both of which are included in the previews on the copyright page of the book. If you want something you can link to, the publisher website has pages for both An Altar Boy Named 'Speck' and Speck the Altar Boy: The Collection Compilation, and being that this info that these books exist and are reprints of other books are neither unduly self-serving nor exceptional claims, these should be acceptable under WP:SELFSOURCE. So I'll hope you'll feel comfortable with one of these three sources in adding the information I've suggested. --Nat Gertler (talk) 04:03, 14 June 2021 (UTC)
References
- ^ Bates, John C. (Fall 2018). "Portraits of Catholics with Western Pennsylvania Connections: The Famous, the Forgotten, and the Unknown". Gathered Fragments: 82.