Monday 2 February 2015

Panel 12: Charing Cross Road

First blogged on The Daily Constitutional , these posts take us on a virtual Cartoon & Comic Book Tour of London – 20 stops on a metropolis-wide search for all things illustrated. 

I'll be taking in everything from Gillray and Hogarth, to Scooby Doo and on to Deadpool and beyond! In addition I'll guide you to the best in London comic book stores as well as galleries that showcase the best in the cartoonist's art. 


Panel 11. London Explorer & The Charing Cross Road

All the comic books featured so far in this series can be acquired fairly easily – I always recommend Orbital Comics in Great Newport Street, and Gosh! in Berwick Street is another fave (more of them later). The Cartoon Museum also has an excellent bookshop.

(Support your local bookshop!)

This time, however, I'm introducing an element of sport into my Cartoon & Comic Book Tour of London. The thrill of the chase, if you will.

You're going to have to browse for this one.

The forgotten art of browsing, particularly in secondhand bookshops, is one of London’s great pleasures. The coffee emporia may have moved in on the Charing Cross Road, but there are still more good secondhand bookshops than you can shake a stick at here in London. And should a shop assistant approach and ask “May I help you?” (very unlikely in London’s secondhand bookshops!) we can provide you with two answers with which to reply. You can either say:

“I’m looking for what I didn’t know I wanted” (the definition of browsing).

Or you can say, “Do you have a copy of…”



Peter Jackson’s London Explorer



The book is long out-of-print but remains an essential part of any London library. This paperback volume is a collection of cartoons by Peter Jackson. Jackson worked on the old London Evening News (defunct since 1980 when it was incorporated into the Evening Standard) and for that paper he crafted a lovingly illustrated series on the history of London in cartoon form. (The graphic novel is nothing new.)

The volume we came across (at Black Gull Books in East Finchley) has no date in the flyleaf, but the accompanying London Underground map in the back has no Victoria Line so we estimate it to be some several years before 1967.

Jackson’s illustrations (“with supporting text by W. Crawford Snowden”) covered a different area of London each instalment. Succinct and revelatory, his drawings bring London’s history to life with a mixture fact, fable and cartoon fun touches (such as King Charles II snuggling up to Nell Gwynn and her orange on the Fleet Street section, illustrated here).




Jackson’s encyclopaedic knowledge of London grew from his love of the metropolis and he was a renowned collector of historic prints, maps and London ephemera. He drew for the Evening News from 1940 to 1980 and his other series include London is Stranger Than Fiction and Somewhere to Go. He passed away in 2003.


Good luck hunting for his book! Make your first stop Charing Cross Road…




… with Any Amount of Books and Henry Pordes always worth a visit. (Worth noting that the Wetherspoons pub at No.105, now the Montagu Pyke, was once the Cambridge Circus Cinematograph Theatre  – in the 60s this was a "cartoon cinema" presenting animated films amid a programme of news and shorts.)

The legendary Foyles bookshop, now at home in its swanky new premises at 107 Charing Cross Road also has a very healthy graphic novel section. Last year they commissioned a number of cartoon artists to depict the history of that great bookshop…





The panel above is the work of Warren Pleece. Warren started drawing comics with his writer brother, Gary in the late 80s and 90s and then went on to working as an artist on numerous titles for the Vertigo imprint of DC Comics. His latest books include The Great Unwashed and Montague Terrace, published by Jonathan Cape.




You can view the whole series – and go shopping, of course – at the Foyles website: www.foyles.co.uk







There are eight more stops to go on our Cartoon & Comic Book Tour of London! Panel 13 will be posted later this week!


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