04 July 2019

Two Thousand Years Ago...

As we saw this morning, Grower-Of-Large-Turnips (Latin names, y'know?) and his beloved Bear have been seized by corrupt government officials and their futures look bleak.

But, how did this sad state of affairs come to pass?

Let us check in with Eric St. Clair and Bob Eismann to see...


As noted above, the to-be-continued ran this morning. Here's a quick link if you didn't already read it, or wish to look again.

Now on to the exciting conclusion!


Justice And The Bear was a self contained story, not an ongoing series. So, as they say in the wallow - that's all, folks.

He did, however, managed to snag the cover of Treasure Chest Of Fun & Fact for his second chapter -


That may be all for this odd little bit of fun, but there's plenty more stashed away in the Treasure Chest with almost 500 issues published from the mid-40s to early '70s.


page art by Bob Eismann for Treasure Chest Of Fun & Fact #s 407 - 409 (1966)

A Lusty Specimen! And Ripe For My Purpose!

The mind continues to wander on its own. After Monday's post on Birbal we were supposed to follow with a post on Akbar The Great. You all saw how that worked out. I kind of thought we'd get there today.

Meanwhile, the mind wanders off into weird territory...


...and we're all left wondering what's going on. Guess we'll have to come back and find out, huh?

page art by Bob Eismann from Treasure Chest Of Fun And Fact v22 #2 (1966)

03 July 2019

The Ways Of Tantri Are Stange Indeed

Well...
Didn't expect That.

What's "That"?
Let's work up to it. (Fret not. No Inquisitions, Spanish or otherwise, are involved)

After the previous post, i went hunting for some information on Tantri The Mantri, hoping to at least find his first appearance. As is not infrequently the case, it turns out that there's a reason why the Universe prompted me to go looking at this time. Not only is Tantri still appearing in Tinkle, but he's also in the news!

Unfortunately, it didn't really help with my primary quest. Both the Telegraph of India and The Hindu report that Tantri's first appearance was this one, from Tinkle #85...



I'm not really buying that. I found that story i was talking about earlier in issue #51...


...and this one comes from #53...


...#77...


...#81...


I cannot say with certainty that this is a complete listing of appearances from before the alleged debut. I have only about a hundred out of the first 420 issues, so - lots of holes. Those are the tales i spotted while flipping through the issues i have here.

Anyway...
Why is Tantri in the news?

As i said above, it's certainly unexpected to me -
After 35 years of trying, Tantri was finally crowned King in the April issue of Tinkle. The kids had been asking for it for a long while; he tries so hard, y'know.

How did he finally succeed in taking the throne? What dastardly, conniving plot finally delivered the crown to his head?


35 years of loyal service.
He was named successor when Raja Hooja died. Of natural causes, one might presume. It seems unlikely that one of his plans actually worked out in his favour.

Of course, the decision to put an evil clown on the throne has nothing to do with current politics on the other side of the globe, right? Kind of wish i had a subscription these days.

page art by Ashok Dangre for Tinkle #s 51, 53, 77, 81, & 85 (1984, 1985)

02 July 2019

You Deserve This Crown, Tantri...

Thrice have we visited with Birbal. But, if modern politics shows us anything it's that we're more likely to find evil clowns running the show. So let's look at another figure from Indian comics who's less Birbal and more Black Adder - a court adviser named Tantri The Mantri. Mantri means a Sage (one who thinks and says, from the Sanskrit), for those of you who might be wondering.

Tantri The Mantri was a long running feature in Tinkle, the comic magazine for children at which we've glanced previously. The earliest strip i've seen is from around #50, but i'll have to do some deep digging to try to find when he debuted. I've yet to find a good database that covers comics published in India. For example, the Grand Comics Database has indexed 11 out of 530 issues.

Today we'll look a little later in the run. These strips were scattered between #209 to #289...






I'll go hunting for that first one i saw with the mechanical flying elephant for next time...

page art by Ajit Vasaikar, Asit, Shayam Desai, and Seema Mande for Tinkle #s 209, 254, 275, 283 & 289 (1990, 1992, 1993, 1994)