Dick Moores (1909–1986)
Author of Gasoline Alley
About the Author
Image credit: Dick Moores c. 1984
Works by Dick Moores
Mikkes merkelige fødselsdag 1 copy
Associated Works
Gladstone Comic Album No. 17: Mickey Mouse in The World of Tomorrow (1989) — Inker — 18 copies, 1 review
Walt Disney's Silly Symphonies — The Complete Comics, Vol. 4: 1942-1945 (2019) — Illustrator — 11 copies
Gladstone Comic Album No. 26: Mickey and Donald and The Seven Ghosts (1989) — Illustrator — 9 copies, 1 review
Walt Disney's Comics and Stories #94, July 1948 — Illustrator — 1 copy
Comics Revue #186 — Contributor — 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Moores, Richard A.
- Other names
- Dick Moores
- Birthdate
- 1909-12-12
- Date of death
- 1986-04-21
- Occupations
- cartoonist
illustrator
comic book writer-artist - Awards and honors
- Reuben Award (1974)
- Relationships
- York, Sarah (daughter)
Moores, William York (son) - Nationality
- USA
- Places of residence
- Fairview, North Carolina, USA
- Burial location
- Fairview, North Carolina, USA (in Family plot ∙ near Asheville ∙ NC)
- Associated Place (for map)
- North Carolina, USA
Members
Reviews
If I picked my 5 favorite comic strips of all time, Frank King's "Gasoline Alley", begun in 1919 and continued as what may be America's longest-runnning story in any format until 1960, when Dick Moores took over, would certainly be on that list. Moores did a fine job, but was not King's equal in art or depth of story. However, he was able to keep the charm and nostalgic simplicity of the strip and its characters alive, and this book which shows several story arcs from the 1960's and 1970's show more is a distinct pleasure to the "Gasoline Alley" fan. All the stories are fine, with a few departures from form (the rapacious Pert sacrificing a well-paying client's interests in favor of doing the right thing, the often dim-bulb junkman Joel cleverly saving handyman Rufus from humiliation). And one story, about a conniving ventriloquist and his charming little-girl dummy, has moments of sheer and surreal genius. I only wish the current strip would allow Walt to die a graceful death. He may be the world's only 300-pound 111-year-old, and it's been a ridiculous strip for a long time. The strip itself may still have worthy characters to mine stories from, but the last original character needs to go, and the strip revived by somebody who will respect King's body of work as Dick Moores did. show less
This is labelled "A Cartoon Story for New Children", and features an ecology story from "Gasoline Alley" in which Nina, awakened to the ecological damage caused by automobiles, buries her car keys and resolves to do without driving. Her plan backfires, but her point is made. Gently humorous without much preachiness, this is a nice story from a strip which in its earlier days by Frank King was one of my all-time favorites. It hasn't yet entirely gone downhill at this point.
Gasoline Alley is not the strip it was under Frank King, but it was still a pretty decent strip at the time of this story, which features the introduction of Rover, a child of the dump, and his adoption by Clovia and Slim. At this point the style and art are reminiscent of "Little Orphan Annie" , another sentimental favorite.
A collection of an early adventure strip by Dick Moores from the 1930's. Moores worked on "Dick Tracy" and later "Gasoline Alley", so it's no surprise that his style here is familiar. This is a competent and decently darawn action strip, but not particularly special.
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 19
- Also by
- 57
- Members
- 58
- Popularity
- #284,345
- Rating
- 4.2
- Reviews
- 4
- ISBNs
- 6
- Languages
- 1
- Favorited
- 1




