Follow

    Alley Oop

    Character » Alley Oop appears in 617 issues.

    Alley Oop is a strong caveman that lived in the prehistoric kingdom of Moo, and that started to time-travel when he met dr. Wonmug from the 20th Century.

    Spotlight On: The Library of American Comics Essentials: Alley Oop

    Avatar image for gmanfromheck
    gmanfromheck

    42524

    Forum Posts

    259238

    Wiki Points

    192642

    Followers

    Reviews: 472

    User Lists: 2

    Edited By gmanfromheck

    Here's another spotlight on a really cool recent release. IDW has collected some of the classic newspaper comics featuring Alley Oop, the time traveling caveman.

    No Caption Provided

    When this book came out and I would mention Alley Oop to people, I was surprised at how many people didn't know who or what I was talking about. I'd say, "You know, the caveman that was able to time travel in the daily newspaper comics."

    You can check out our hands on video at the top of the page to really get a feel for the presentation of the book.

    Alley Oop was created by V.T. Hamlin and first appeared in newspapers in late 1932. He didn't always time travel. His adventures originally were in the kingdom of Moo.

    No Caption Provided

    Alley Oop had a pet dinosaur, Dinny. His girlfriend was Oola and of course we had King Guz who sort of ruled the kingdom (I saw sort of because many times it seemed like Queen Umpateedle really ruled).

    With this release, we see when and how Alley Oop and Oola started time traveling, which happened in 1939.

    No Caption Provided
    No Caption Provided

    What always struck me as odd as I didn't know Alley Oop had time traveling adventures for some time. I started out reading his stories in the Sunday comics. It was actually later, when I had a paper route, I discovered he had some scientist friends and he traveled through time. It kind of blew my mind.

    If you think about, being able to travel through time must have given V.T. Hamlin a huge amount of room to tell all sorts of stories.

    No Caption Provided

    What I really love about this release is the format. It's a little oddly shaped with dimensions at 1.2" x 11.5" x 4.5". It really works having one strip per page rather than several, shrunk down, on the same page. One of the things I immediately fell in love with was Hamlin's art. Having the strips presented this way allows for the art to be larger and you can really admire the detail. Other comics from this period or later sometimes felt as if they were skimping on the details.

    This release contains 336 pages and retails for $24.99. Even if you haven't heard of Alley Oop before, it's worth checking out. Chances are if you don't know who he is, maybe your parents will.

    I do hope we see more releases like this. There was always something about Alley Oop that fascinated me but it was difficult for me to always keep up with reading the newspaper on a daily basis when being a kid was so demanding. The book was released earlier this month so you should be able to find it at stores or online.

    Make sure you check out the video at the top of the page to really get a sense of the size of the book.

    Avatar image for Iceslick
    iceslick

    865

    Forum Posts

    0

    Wiki Points

    0

    Followers

    Reviews: 83

    User Lists: 0

    @g_man: No Tony I don't know who he is. I don't even think my parents do either because they barely read newspapers back in the days. Like the majority people do now these days (not read newspapers), maybe that's why they don't know who he is. lol I do think this looks pretty cool though, I really like that book is opened in newspaper strip format. It can make it easier to read I think and I think those Superman or Spider-Man newspaper strips should look like that and that's a cool bookmark. I think I might check it when I go to the comic book store in the city whenever I'm in the city (Another reason why I do digital there's no comic book stores where I live. :-()

    I also researched that the "alley-oop" saying comes from the French called "allez-oop" which people say out loud when a circus acrobat is about to leap. So, I guess I kind of get where the phrase came from.

    http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/alley-oop

    This edit will also create new pages on Comic Vine for:

    Beware, you are proposing to add brand new pages to the wiki along with your edits. Make sure this is what you intended. This will likely increase the time it takes for your changes to go live.

    Comment and Save

    Until you earn 1000 points all your submissions need to be vetted by other Comic Vine users. This process takes no more than a few hours and we'll send you an email once approved.