Marvel Mini-Books, 1966

Befitting my endless fascination with outré and small narrative delivery systems, I finally added a set of these wonderful little gumball prizes to The Collection: produced in 1966, the Mini-Books won the Guinness World Record for the smallest books ever made, an honor which I believe they still hold. In the pics below, you can see just how small these little things are. Ordered the recent Abrams facsimile set (featuring Mark Evanier commentary) so I can actually peruse them without worry of them falling apart. Beautiful little examples of comics – and the Marvel Age of comics – history.

Dick Tracy & the divergent delivery systems

As in love as I am with my now-complete (28/27) collection of DICK TRACY Big/Better Little Books, I'm equally fascinated by two other tomes – both, like the Big/Better Little Books, from Whitman (the form of both is comparable to Big Little Books, newspaper strip reprints told via prose on the left, illustration on the right, repeat for x number of pages) that arrived on the same day: 1934's "The Big Big Book," THE ADVENTURES OF DICK TRACY – essentially a hardback phonebook version of a Big Little Book requring a vinyl album cover to protect– and 1938's DICK TRACY, THE DETECTIVE, a 32-page stapled mini the size of two matchbooks, a Penny Book, that fits in the palm of my rather small adult hands and is perfectly at home in a baseball card plastic sleeve (that took me forever to unearth in the boxes and boxes of collections from my formative years), delivery system bookends to a decade of experimentation:

Indeed, my Dick Tracy collection represents the widest variety of narrative delivery systems of anything on the shelves, Big Big to normal to Big Little to Penny (the form of the innards does, however, remain a constant regardless of the size of the delivery system itself), a collection born as much of love of a character (which I'll write about at some point) as it is a tribute to the fruits of endless experimentation in Depression-era delivery systems that shouldn't have survived the history they represent; that they did is nothing short of a miracle and a testament to the power of a beloved character.