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User:DoctorWho42/Five Cartoons

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Five Cartoons or 5 Cartoons are a series of cartoons by American cartoonist Gahan Wilson. It was collected in the 1969 book short story anthology The Best from Fantasy and Science Fiction: Eighteenth Series edited by Edward L. Ferman.

Publication history

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Originally the cartoons were published in the American magazine The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction from 1967 to 1968. They were collected as "Five Cartoons" for the 1969 short story anthology The Best from Fantasy and Science Fiction: Eighteenth Series.

"Well, I guess that pretty well takes care of my anemia diagnosis."

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"Well, I guess that pretty well takes care of my anemia diagnosis." was published in the July 1968 issue of The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction (F&SF). It was republished in the October 1979 issue of F&SF.

Smythe's

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"Smythe's" was originally published in the June 1968 issue of The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction.

"Better give the missus a touch, too."

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"Better give the missus a touch, too." was originally published in the February 1968 issue of The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction.

"How come we draw all the shaggy dog cases?"

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"How come we draw all the shaggy dog cases?" was originally published in the May 1968 issue of The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction,

"I think we've located the cause of that tie-up at Thirty-fourth Street and Seventh Avenue!"

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"I think we've located the cause of that tie-up at Thirty-fourth Street and Seventh Avenue!" was originally published in the October 1967 issue of The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction.

Contents

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"Well, I guess that pretty well takes care of my anemia diagnosis."

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Fantasy & Science Fiction v035n01 (1968 07) via Internet Archive

A man holds a cross against a vampire in a hospital ward. Doctors and hospital staff look on. A window reveals they're not on the ground floor. A caption declares "Well, I guess that pretty well takes care of my anemia diagnosis."

Smythe's

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Fantasy & Science Fiction v034n06 (1968 06) (PDF) via Internet Archive

An older man looks tiredly at a new shopfront display. It appears to be the latest fashion with bold patterns and polka dots. A sign says "Smythe's". There is no caption.

"Better give the missus a touch, too."

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Fantasy & Science Fiction v034n02 (1968 02) (PDF) via Internet Archive

Someone who works in automotive repair pumps air into the tires of a car. His uniform maybe says "Free Garage." The owner of the car, a husband, says something to the man air-pumping the tire. A woman, a wife, sits in the backseat. The caption reads "Better give the missus a touch, too."

"How come we draw all the shaggy dog cases?"

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Fantasy & Science Fiction v034n05 (1968 05) (PDF) via Internet Archive

A man with carrots in his ears, a man with a flea circus, an invisible man, a horse, three tiny people, and a ventriloquist with a dummy sit in a bar. The bartender says something to the barkeep. The caption says "How come we get all the shaggy dog cases"

"I think we've located the cause of that tie-up at Thirty-fourth Street and Seventh Avenue!"

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Fantasy & Science Fiction v033n04 (1967 10) (PDF) via Internet Archive

A news helicopter hovers over giant ape hands. The helicopter says "Station WWW Traffic Report" perhaps indicating what programme. The caption reads "I think we've located the cause of that tie-up at Thirty-fourth Street and Seventh Avenue!"

Reception

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In 1969, Science Fiction Review's Richard E. Geis opined "There are five cartoons by Gahan Wilson scattered through the book, and three are fine."[1] In 1970, Analog Science Fiction / Science Fact's P. Schuyler Miller called them "inimitable."[2] In 1970, Luna Monthly's J. B. Post noted the five cartoons in his review of The Best from Fantasy and Science Fiction: Eighteenth Series and Analog 7.[3]

References

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  1. ^ Richard E. Geis (August 1969). "Delusions". Science Fiction Review. Santa Monica, CA: Richard E. Geis. p. 32. Retrieved 2021-12-24.
  2. ^ P. Schuyler Miller (April 1970). "The Reference Library". Analog Science Fiction and Fact. New York, NY: Condé Nast. p. 168. Retrieved 2021-12-24.
  3. ^ Post, J. B. (March 1970). "Reviews". Luna Monthly. Oradell, NJ: Frank and Ann Dietz. p. 29. Retrieved 2021-05-09.
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