Author: | Charles M. Schulz | ISBN: | 9781497663107 |
Publisher: | Peanuts Worldwide | Publication: | May 26, 2015 |
Imprint: | Peanuts | Language: | English |
Author: | Charles M. Schulz |
ISBN: | 9781497663107 |
Publisher: | Peanuts Worldwide |
Publication: | May 26, 2015 |
Imprint: | Peanuts |
Language: | English |
It’s a hole-in-one for Peanuts fans, when “the world famous golf pro” hits the greens in this classic comic strip collection.
Just because he barks doesn’t mean he’s going for the “rough.” From the starting tee to the final hole, Snoopy aims to win—at least until he reaches the halfway hut. With his birdie friend, Woodstock, as his caddie, this Beagle is on par with the best!
In October 1950, the first Peanuts strip premiered in seven national newspapers. Charles M. Schulz’s seemingly simple creation—illustrations of large-headed kids using vocabulary and facing situations far beyond their years—became a well-known, well-loved comic strip and grew to have an enormous global impact. Though the last original Peanuts comic appeared in papers on February 13, 2000, the day after Schulz passed away in his sleep, his work continues to be read in more than two thousand newspapers around the world.
It’s a hole-in-one for Peanuts fans, when “the world famous golf pro” hits the greens in this classic comic strip collection.
Just because he barks doesn’t mean he’s going for the “rough.” From the starting tee to the final hole, Snoopy aims to win—at least until he reaches the halfway hut. With his birdie friend, Woodstock, as his caddie, this Beagle is on par with the best!
In October 1950, the first Peanuts strip premiered in seven national newspapers. Charles M. Schulz’s seemingly simple creation—illustrations of large-headed kids using vocabulary and facing situations far beyond their years—became a well-known, well-loved comic strip and grew to have an enormous global impact. Though the last original Peanuts comic appeared in papers on February 13, 2000, the day after Schulz passed away in his sleep, his work continues to be read in more than two thousand newspapers around the world.