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The Complete Life and Times of Scrooge McDuck #1

The Complete Life And Times Of Uncle Scrooge Volume 1

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The Definitive Collection, prepared under the watchful eye of cartoonist Don Rosa. The Man, The Myth, the Mallard! From his shoeshine stand as a plucky young lad to his globe-spanning quests for long-lost treasures as an adult, Uncle Scrooge McDuck has lived a life of legend ― a legend founded by Scrooge’s creator Carl Barks and rocketed to new heights by Don Rosa in his signature series,“The Life and Times of Scrooge McDuck! ”Now you can read all 12 chapters of Rosa’s internationally acclaimed and Eisner Award–winning series, completely and meticulously restored under Rosa’s own supervision.Join Scrooge, a very young Donald Duck, the Beagle Boys, Flintheart Glomgold, and more for Scrooge’s epic life story ― with plenty of guest stars along the way, including P.T. Barnum, Buffalo Bill, Geronimo, Jesse James, Jack London, Czar Nicholas II of Russia, Annie Oakley, Robert Peary, and President Theodore Roosevelt! Full-color illustrations throughout.

230 pages, Hardcover

First published April 9, 2019

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171 people want to read

About the author

Don Rosa

397 books395 followers
Keno Don Hugo Rosa, known as Don Rosa, is an American comic book writer and illustrator known for his Disney comics stories about Scrooge McDuck, Donald Duck, and other characters which Carl Barks created for Disney-licensed comic books, first published in America by Dell Comics. Many of his stories are built on characters and locations created by Barks; among these was his first Duck story, "The Son of the Sun" (1987), which was nominated for a Harvey Award in the "Best Story of the Year" category.
Rosa created about 90 stories between 1987 and 2006. In 1995, his 12-chapter work The Life and Times of Scrooge McDuck won the Eisner Award for Best Serialized Story.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 56 reviews
Profile Image for Jesús.
378 reviews28 followers
January 15, 2021
This is Scrooge McDuck’s life retold as a comedic version of There Will Be Blood or Absalom, Absalom or Citizen Kane. It is the story of a self-made man (duck?) whose intense ambition is both his greatest asset and his weightiest curse.

The art is astonishingly good—absolutely effing brilliant in more than a few places. Sure, cartoonist Don Rosa borrows deeply from his Duck-drawing predecessor, Carl Barks, but Rosa has a greater eye for panel composition and visual detail.

My only major gripe is that I wouldn’t feel comfortable reading this with or giving this to a young reader—which is a shame since this is an artist and a character that I would otherwise *love* to share with my young son. Rosa thoughtlessly carries over too many racist caricatures that he inherited from Barks into his take on Scrooge McDuck. The various “locals” and “natives” who Scrooge encounters in his global expeditions are almost always a ridiculous brown, black, red, or yellow stereotype. It’s unfortunate and sullies an otherwise incredible work.
Profile Image for Petr Nakasharal Fabián.
250 reviews2 followers
April 5, 2020
Nostalgie jako prase. Je krásný občas nebejt zklamanej z věcí, který člověk jako malej baštil. Kačery jsem četl naposledy v nějakejch deseti letech a tenkrát jsem byl fanatik. Měl jsem předplacenej klasickej časopis Kačer Donald, všechny ty knížky, který k tomu vycházely, trička, hračky... No prostě jetej. A pak jsem na ně zapomněl. Doteď! :D
Don Rosa je velký jméno spojený s kačerama a zrovna Skrblíkovo “origin” mi přišel při tom procházení komiksů jako fajn volba. Moje obavy z infantilnosti byly uplně lichý. Naopak, všechny ty nenápadný vtipy v pozadí jsou hodně dospělý a občasný píchnutí do sociálně-politický sféry až depresivně výstižný. To je ale jenom takovej bonus, kterej by byl k ničemu nebejt skvělejch příběhů. V životě Skrblíka se tu skáče dost rychle, žádný období nestihne nudit a zároveň pěkně funguje vývoj postavy.
Celý je to vlastně velkej fan servis a bez toho, aniž by se sám v sobě babral a byl směšnej.
Jo a art ani není třeba zmiňovat. Miluju.
4,5
Profile Image for Ed Erwin.
1,166 reviews127 followers
September 17, 2020
The origin story (stories, really) of Scrooge McDuck, pieced together from various clues in older published stories about him. Since I did not grow up reading about McDuck, it doesn't have much nostalgia effect on me, and it is not as "adult" as the stories I like. But it is really well done.

(I only read the first 6 of these 12 stories.)
Profile Image for Adrian Santiago.
1,161 reviews20 followers
February 7, 2023
Escuchando Music Inspired by the life and Times of Scrooge, de Tuomas Holopainen me decidì a una ràpida lectura de esta historia.

No soy fan de Disney, ni de Donald... pero vaya que està bueno. Para mì, en el sentido de la acciòn y còmo Scrooge sabe vencer la adversidad y tantas cosas malas que le suceden. Es una combinaciòn de El Alquimista con Indiana Jones.

Y aunque me caga la historia de los Fantasma de Scrooge, al mismo tiempo como que me saca de onda que casi casi la moraleja de la historia es que debes tener ambiciòn en la vida y ganar un tesoro para ser respetado por los demàs y para el orgullo de tu familia. Quizà solo es una idea que ya no envejeciò bien para nuestra època de vibrar alte y ser feliz por y para ti.

Pero en general està buena la historia, es divertido.
Profile Image for James-Michael Smith.
47 reviews6 followers
May 5, 2025
A pure delight. If you grew up watching DuckTales and wondered how Scrooge made his fortune, here's the story. Some of it is done in the vintage Disney stereotype style that can be offensive (especially the story about the African tribal chief!). But it's very tongue-in-cheek and seemed to me to be intentionally mocking 1940s racist tropes. The artwork and the coloring are excellent and a refreshing throwback to the days of newsprint.
Profile Image for Vance.
17 reviews
August 15, 2024
obviously a great adventure, but more importantly comic art just does not get better than this
Profile Image for Matt.
1,424 reviews11 followers
December 7, 2020
I've wanted to read this since it came out (in 94!)
Did not disappoint! Fun adventures, great drawing gags. It's interesting to see people (like his family) try to help Scrooge be nicer and it remained a constant tension of him fighting back and almost going too far/being too greedy.
Might not read more Disney comics unless its vol 2.
Profile Image for Ørjan.
57 reviews
August 22, 2022
Et kjempeartig gjensyn! Nostalgien var sterk. Historiene er fulle av humor og underfundige detaljer. Man får stort sett alt av svar man kunne tenke seg fra en prequel til Donald.

Noen av historiene, spesielt i første halvdel, holder ikke toppnivå.
Profile Image for Albus Eugene Percival Wulfric Brian Dumbledore.
573 reviews96 followers
June 1, 2025
«the Dirty Dozen...»

Qualche tempo fa, durante una notte buia e tempestosa, il mio pusher letterario preferito mi disse, seppur a mezza bocca e in maniera evasiva: «Il a un paquet de douze de dope que même le meilleur 'snow'... ».
Come facilmente avrete inteso, il tizio è... çavasansdire... un franscese o si... spaccia (l’ho detto no?, è un pusher) per tale.
Attraverso canali che non starò qui a rivelare, sono venuto in possesso di queste dodici sporche dosi, e devo dire che aveva ragione... uno sballo!

Premesso che tutto quanto sta scritto sotto è stato scopiazzato dal libro e (la massima parte) da wikipedia, due righe per Don Rosa, l’autore e il suo ispiratore, Carl Barks The Duck Man

Don Rosa, pseudonimo di Keno Don Hugo Rosa (Louisville, 29 giugno 1951), è un fumettista e illustratore statunitense. Famoso autore e disegnatore disneyano di origini italiane. Don Rosa viene considerato l'erede di Carl Barks.
Barks (1901 – 2000), fumettista e pittore statunitense, è considerato uno dei più grandi maestri della storia del fumetto ed è senz’altro tra gli autori di fumetti Disney più amati e celebrati al mondo.

Nel 1987 Don Rosa iniziò a creare le sue storie con Paperone contenenti numerosi riferimenti alle precedenti storie di Barks. Nei primi anni '90 la Egmont lo incaricò di creare la versione definitiva della biografia di Paperone con relativo albero genealogico. Il progetto diventò The Complete Life and Times of Scrooge McDuck.

L’autore, nel rispetto assoluto della narrativa barksiana, si è divertito ad imbastire una storia che si sviluppa su un arco temporale di circa settanta anni (1877-1947), inserendo personaggi dell’universo Disney, ma anche personaggi ed episodi storici, citazioni letterarie e da film, luoghi geografici, che di quel periodo storico hanno fatto parte e lo hanno caratterizzato.
Insomma, un... Giro del Mondo (e della Storia) in Settanta Anni!

Che il Gran Coniglio Sansusì vegli sull’eclettico sapiente Savasandir. In aeternum!

Di seguito, troverete riporati i dodici capitoli in cui si divide la Saga, e per ognuno, alcune notizie, curiosità, dettagli che hanno reso la mia lettura/avventura più consapevole e... indimenticabile.
Ma tutto quello che potrete leggere, nulla potrà aggiungere al fascino e alla bellezza della storia che avrete sotto gli occhi, se deciderete di regalarvi questa affascinante lettura.

1877-1880 The Last of the Clan McDuck
Conte Braccio di Ferro: Guglielmo di Aquitania o Guglielmo II di Poitiers, conosciuto come Guglielmo Braccio di Ferro, oppure Guglielmo Fortebraccio (937 – 996), fu conte di Poitiers e duca d'Aquitania dal 963 al 993.
Rannoch Moor: è una brughiera paludosa di circa 50 miglia quadrate a ovest del Loch Rannoch, in Scozia. Castle McDuck, l’antica dimora della famiglia di Paperon de' Paperoni, il Clan McDuck, si trova a Dismal Downs, da qualche parte a Rannoch Moor.
Il Mastino dei Whiskerville: evidente riferimento al romanzo di Arthur Conan Doyle Il mastino dei Baskerville

1880-1882 The Master of the Mississippi
Wabash Cannonball: negli anni Ottanta del XIX secolo, negli Stati Uniti, il treno Wabash Cannon Ball collegava Chicago, in Illinois, con El Paso, in Texas.
Horace Greely (1811 – 1872): politico e giornalista statunitense. Fondatore e editore del New York Tribune. Alimentò il Mito della Frontiera come luogo delle opportunità. Famoso il suo slogan "Go West, young man".
Deadwood Dick: Deadwood era una cittadina del South Dakota. Deadwood Dick è un personaggio che compare in una serie di “dime novels”, pubblicate tra il 1877 e il 1897 da Edward Lytton Wheeler (1855-1885).
Battello a vapore Drennan White: La Drennan White era un leggendario battello che solcava il Mississippi, affondato intorno al 1850. Si narra che al suo interno fossero custoditi centomila dollari d'oro, mai ritrovati.
Segna due!: riferimento allo scrittore statunitense Samuel Langhorne Clemens (1835 – 1910), in arte Mark Twain. Lo scrittore, che era stato anche pilota dei battelli a vapore sul Mississippi, aveva adottato lo pseudonimo Mark Twain, in omaggio al grido in uso nello slang della marineria fluviale degli Stati Uniti per segnalare la profondità delle acque: "by the mark, twain!".
Kentucky Derby: il Kentucky Derby è una competizione ippica, riservata ai purosangue inglesi di tre anni, che si svolge annualmente, sin dal 1875, all'ippodromo Churchill Downs di Louisville nel Kentucky.

1882-1883 The Buckaroo of the Badlands
Banda dei fratelli James: Jesse James (1847 – 1882) è stato un pistolero e fuorilegge statunitense. Insieme al fratello Frank e ai fratelli John, Cole, Jim e Robert Younger, compì numerose rapine a banche e treni unionisti in Missouri, Kentucky, Iowa, Texas, Mississippi, Minnesota. Famoso, e da me molto amato, il film I cavalieri dalle lunghe ombre (The Long Riders) (1980), con la regia di Walter Hill... Mirabolante!
Pista di Chisholm: da San Antonio in Texas, traversava il Red River e il Cimarron, giungeva in Kansas vicino alla cittadina di Caldwell e infine ad Abilene.
Murdo MacKenzie (1850 – 1939): imprenditore scozzese naturalizzato statunitense, direttore della Prairie Land and Cattle Company in Colorado.
Badlands, Dakota: Il parco nazionale delle Badlands è un parco nazionale situato nel Dakota del Sud. Copre una superficie di quasi mille chilometri quadrati. L'area è nota per le imponenti formazioni calanchive, che i nativi chiamavano mako sica ("terre cattive").
Il Grande Cielo del Montana: Il soprannome "Big Sky Country" per lo stato del Montana si riferisce al cielo sconfinato e ampio che sembra dominare il paesaggio, insieme al Sea of Grass... “Quanto verde tutto intorno e ancor più in là, Sembra quasi un mare l'erba...”. Nel 1952, Howard Hawks diresse il bel film The Big Sky, con Kirk Douglas.
Maltese Cross Ranch: prima che diventasse presidente, Theodore Roosevelt fece costruire nel territorio del North Dakota, la Maltese Cross Cabin, una capanna che lui utilizzò dal 1883 al 1884.

1883-1885 The Raider of the Copper Hill
New York e la luce elettrica: il 4 settembre del 1882, per la prima volta Thomas Edison illumina 59 case a Manhattan, intorno al suo laboratorio di Pearl Street.
Marcus Daly e la Anaconda Copper Mining Company: L'Anaconda Copper Mine a Butte, nel Montana, fu una delle più grandi miniere di rame del mondo. Nata come miniera d'argento, fu acquistata nel 1881 da Marcus Daly, un immigrato irlandese, per trentamila dollari.
1849, “Legge dell’Apice”: La legge federale General Mining Act del 1872 stabilì le pratiche e le regole dell'attività mineraria. A Butte, la disposizione più importante fu la Legge dell'apice (The Law of the Apex). L'apice è definito come il punto in cui una vena minerale raggiunge la superficie per formare un affioramento. La legge dell'apice diceva che se una vena raggiungeva il suo apice in superficie all'interno di una concessione mineraria, il proprietario della concessione poteva seguire la vena nel sottosuolo ovunque andasse, anche se si estendeva sotto le concessioni minerarie adiacenti. Di questa disposizione si servì Frederick Augustus Heinze, fondatore della Heinze's Copper Trust Company, per la rivendicazione sulla ricchissima vena Anaconda. La Corte distrettuale della Contea di Silver Bow sostenne la richiesta di Heinze, ma alla fine fu respinta dalla Corte Suprema del Montana.
New York e Statua della Libertà: La statua della Libertà è un simbolo di New York e degli Stati Uniti d'America ed è situata all'entrata del porto sul fiume Hudson al centro della baia di Manhattan, su Liberty Island. Dono della Francia al popolo degli Stati Uniti, fu realizzata dal francese Auguste Bartholdi, con la collaborazione di Gustave Eiffel, che ne progettò la struttura reticolare interna in acciaio. La statua eleva una fiaccola al cielo, mentre con l'altra mano tiene una tavola che reca la data della Dichiarazione d'indipendenza degli Stati Uniti d'America, il 4 luglio 1776.

1885 The New Laird of Castle McDuck
Dismal Downs, “cala la notte buia e tempestosa”: cita la leggendaria frase di Snoopy "It was a dark and stormy night" di Schultz, che a sua volta citava il Capitolo 65 de I tre moschettieri di Dumas, che a sua volta citava l'incipit del romanzo “Paul Clifford” del 1830, dello scrittore inglese Edward Bulwer-Lytton, che a sua volta citava una frase del diario del naufragio di Doddington, pubblicato nel 1757!
Buffalo Bill e la lotta col coltello alla maniera indiana: Buffalo Bill, pseudonimo di William Frederick Cody (1846 – 1917), è stato un militare statunitense. Cacciatore di bisonti, esploratore, attore e impresario teatrale. Divenne eroe nazionale dopo un corpo a corpo con il capo indiano Mano Gialla nel 1876. Nel 1883 creò il Buffalo Bill Wild West Show.
Toro Seduto: Sitting Bull in inglese, in lingua originale lakota Tatanka Yotanka (1831 – 1890) è stato un nativo americano, capo tribù dei Sioux Hunkpapa. Famoso per la schiacciante vittoria, ottenuta nella battaglia del Little Bighorn nel giugno 1876, sul colonnello George Armstrong Custer del Settimo cavalleggeri.
Arrivare alla fine dell’arcobaleno: San Patrizio e la leggenda irlandese dell’arcobaleno e della pentola d’oro.

1886-1889 The Terror of the Transvaal
Witwatersrand: è un sistema di colline ricche di oro in Sudafrica. La famosa Witwatersrand Gold Rush del 1886 portò alla fondazione di Johannesburg.
Kimberley e la miniera di diamanti: La corsa ai diamanti iniziò nel 1871 a Kimberley, in Sudafrica, con la scoperta di uno dei più grandi giacimenti della storia. La più famosa miniera a pozzo a cielo aperto fu Il Big Hole che si iniziò a scavare nel 1871.
Ottentotti: popolazione indigena dell'Africa australe, così denominata dai primi colonizzatori olandesi.
Sfida all’OK Corral: e che ve lo dico a fare?
La Legge a ovest del Pecos: Phantly Roy Bean junior (1825 – 1903) è stato un eccentrico giurista statunitense. Proprietario di un saloon, si autoproclamò giudice di pace della Contea di Val Verde in Texas. Grazie alla sua lunga carriera venne definito "The Law West of the Pecos". Nel 1972, John Huston diresse The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean, con un ispirato Paul Newman che interpreta la parte del giudice.

1893-1896 The Dreamtime Duck of the Never-Never
Pizen Bluff e la Banda dei fratelli Dalton: originariamente, i fratelli Dalton (Frank, Grat, Bill, Bob e Emmett) erano stati dei Marshall in vari stati dell’Ovest. Nel 1887, Frank venne ucciso durante una sparatoria. L’incontro degli altri quattro fratelli con Bill Doolin portò alla costituzione della Doolin-Dalton Gang, conosciuta anche come Wild Bunch. La banda fu annientata nel 1892, durante il Coffeyville Raid, in Kansas. Nel 1973, gli Eagles composero la splendida canzone “Doolin-Dalton” e nel 1969 Sam Peckimpah diresse lo straordinario Il mucchio selvaggio (The Wild Bunch).
Kalgoorlie in Australia: fondata nel 1893 durante la corsa all'oro e per questo chiamata anche Golden Mile.
Didgeridoo: una sorta di flauto suonato facendo vibrare le labbra e utilizzando la respirazione circolare. Lo strumento è originario delle popolazioni aborigene dell'Australia settentrionale.
John Philip Sousa (1854 – 1932): è stato un compositore e direttore di banda statunitense, conosciuto soprattutto per le sue marce.

1896-1897 The King of the Klondike
Skagway in Alaska: La sua fondazione risale al 1897, durante la corsa all'oro. Si calcola che più di 40.000 cercatori d'oro diretti nello Yukon passarono per Skagway.
Wyatt Earp: Wyatt Berry Stapp Earp (1848 – 1929) è stato un pistolero statunitense. Sceriffo, cacciatore di bisonti, giocatore d'azzardo, e gestore di saloon nel Selvaggio West, compreso il Dexter Saloon di Nome. Noto soprattutto per aver partecipato alla sparatoria all'O.K. Corral, spalleggiato dai fratelli Virgil e Morgan e con Doc Holliday. Wyatt usava la Colt Buntline Special ("Peace Maker Single Action") che gli era stata donata dalla Colt's Manufacturing Company quando era sceriffo di Dodge City.
Salsapariglia: bevanda gassata di origine anglosassone e americana, tradizionalmente preparata con l’estratto di radice di Salsapariglia (Smilax aspera) e altri aromi.
Bonanza Creek: corso d'acqua nel Territorio dello Yukon, in Canada. Verso la fine del XIX secolo, il Bonanza Creek è stato il cuore della corsa all'oro del Klondike. Prima del 1896 il torrente era conosciuto come Rabbit Creek. Il nome fu cambiato dai minatori in onore dei milioni di dollari in oro trovati nel torrente e nei suoi dintorni.
Chilcoot Pass: è un passo di alta montagna che attraversa le Boundary Ranges delle Coast Mountains in Alaska. Durante la corsa all'oro del Klondike, alla fine del XIX secolo, fu utilizzato da cercatori e spedizionieri per attraversare le montagne. Superare il Chilkoot Pass era fondamentale per raggiungere il Klondike. I viaggiatori erano chiamati “stampeders”. Durante l’inverno, gli operai tagliarono il ghiaccio in 1500 gradini, che vennero chiamati “Scala d'oro”.
Overland Trail: via di trasporto, lunga 330 miglia, costruita all'epoca della corsa all'oro del Klondike, tra Whitehorse e Dawson City nello Yukon, in Canada.
Paul Bunyan: gigantesco taglialegna ed eroe popolare del folklore americano e canadese. Il personaggio ha origine nella tradizione orale dei taglialegna nordamericani, e fu poi reso popolare dallo scrittore William B. Laughead (1882-1958).

1898-1902 The Billionaire of Dismal Downs
Calisota: immaginario stato degli Stati Uniti d'America, appartenente all'universo Disney, citato per la prima volta da Carl Barks, che per idearne il nome fuse i nomi di California e Minnesota. Lo Stato affaccia sull’Oceano Pacifico. Lo stemma dello Stato è un papero dorato in campo blu.
Auld Lang Syne: è una canzone tradizionale scozzese. È un brano di congedo eseguito la notte di capodanno per salutare l'anno appena terminato, o l'ultimo giorno di studi tra compagni di scuola, o alla fine del servizio militare e così via. Il testo della canzone è un invito a ricordare con gratitudine i vecchi amici e il tempo sereno trascorso insieme.

1902 The Invader of Fort Duckburg
Ricordate il Maine!: Il Maine era una nave della Marina degli Stati Uniti che affondò nel porto dell'Avana il 15 febbraio 1898, contribuendo allo scoppio della Guerra ispano-americana. I giornali statunitensi affermarono che gli spagnoli erano responsabili della distruzione della nave. La frase "Remember the Maine! To hell with Spain!" divenne un grido d'appello all'azione. Anche se l'esplosione del Maine non fu una causa diretta, servì come catalizzatore che accelerò gli eventi che portarono alla guerra.
Rough Riders: Rough Riders (Rudi Incursori) fu il nome che venne dato al 1st United States Volunteer Cavalry, un reggimento formato nel 1898 nel corso della guerra ispano-americana, ed entrato in azione a Cuba. Il comandante in seconda dell’unità era Theodore Roosevelt, che pochi anni dopo diventò Presidente degli Stati Uniti. Nel 1898, il termine diventò molto popolare dopo che Buffalo Bill aveva chiamato in questo modo il suo famoso spettacolo Buffalo Bill's Wild West and Congress of Rough Riders of the World.

1909-1930 The Empire-Builder from Calisota
William Randolph Hearst: Hearst (1863 – 1951) è stato un editore, imprenditore e politico statunitense. È divenuto celebre, oltre che per la sua smisurata ricchezza, anche per avere creato uno dei più grandi imperi mediatici di sempre, influenzando fortemente lo stile giornalistico e l'opinione pubblica statunitense. La sua vita nel 1941 ispirò il capolavoro cinematografico di Orson Welles Quarto potere (Citizen Kane).
Farò loro un’offerta che non potranno rifiutare: citazione della famosa frase di Don Vito Corleone, interpretato da Marlon Brando, “I'm going to make him an offer he can't refuse”, nel film Il Padrino (The Godfather).
Robert Peary: Robert Edwin Peary (1856 – 1920) è stato un esploratore statunitense che ha sostenuto di aver raggiunto per primo il Polo Nord, il 6 aprile 1909.
Uova Reali Fabergé: Le Uova Fabergé sono delle opere di gioielleria realizzate come uova di Pasqua e ideate presso la corte dello zar di tutte le Russie da Peter Carl Fabergé, fra il 1885 e il 1917. Fabergé fu nominato da Alessandro III di Russia, gioielliere di corte e incaricato di costruire ogni anno un solo uovo di Pasqua!
John Jacob Astor: Astor (1864 – 1912), è stato un imprenditore, inventore, scrittore statunitense. Finanziò la guerra ispano-americana e fu proprietario del celebre Waldorf-Astoria Hotel. Perì nel naufragio del Titanic. Ai primi del Novecento era una delle persone più ricche del mondo, con un patrimonio netto di circa 87.000.000 di dollari quando morì (equivalenti a 2,4 miliardi di dollari nel 2021).
“A casa è il cacciatore, a casa dalla collina”: Robert Louis Stevenson è sepolto sul Monte Vaea, che sovrasta Vailima, il piccolo villaggio montuoso nell'isola di Samoa, nel sud dell'Oceano Pacifico, dove Stevenson trascorse gli ultimi anni della sua vita. Questi versi sono tratti dall’epitaffio che lui stesso compose e che oggi si possono leggere sulla sua lapide: «Under the wide and starry sky, Dig the grave and let me lie. Glad did I live and gladly die, And I laid me down with a will. This be the verse you grave for me: Here he lies where he longed to be; Home is the sailor, home front sea, And the hunter home from the hill.»

1947 The Richest Duck in the World
Natale 1947: un omaggio conclusivo al Canto di Natale di Dickens. Con Paperone che si presenta così a Paperino, accompagnato dai tre nipotini: “Io sono il fratello di tua madre... tuo zio... Paperon De’ Paperoni!”
Cartello davanti alla proprietà di Paperone: “Lasciate perdere il cane! ATTENTI AL PROPRIETARIO!”
Profile Image for Frank.
154 reviews7 followers
April 30, 2019
This is the classic story by Don Rosa. It's hard to add to the already strong chorus of praise this book has received. It's apex comic story-telling. On par with those series that are oft cited - but far less known than them.

It's really, really good.
Profile Image for Richard Rogers.
Author 5 books11 followers
June 27, 2019
This was a Father's Day gift from my son, who apparently listens when I rant and also has a "read whatever you enjoy ethos," two qualities I admire.

As far as comics go, I prefer stories that are contained in a single issue, with unambiguous art, boundless creativity, and a generally positive outlook toward the world and life. Kids' comics like Uncle Scrooge (and Richie Rich and Hot Stuff, things like that) are more to my taste than most superhero comics or other "sequential art"--even though I am officially quite old and haven't looked at them much since the 70s. I shared this opinion (about comics, not about being old) as we wandered around the local convention, and my alert son hunted down this volume for me.

Worked out good--I really liked it.

Don Rosa's Scrooge, a European version of the familiar Disney character and comic, is well done. He tells Scrooge's biography in a way that answers some questions and makes the character more sympathetic than ever, with engaging art and fun stories. I'm not really sure who the audience is supposed to be, but I liked it, and I'm eager to find others by him.

Sometimes you just want to read about a prospecting duck riding an emu across the Outback, you know?
Profile Image for Casey.
206 reviews
November 5, 2021

I recently watched DuckTales (2017), and was pleasantly surprised on how much I enjoyed it since I was never a fan of the old DuckTales. So after I nerded out and dug a little deeper into the backstory, to learn that there is a "Duckverse" based off of Donald Duck, which let's be honest who would've thought, ya know. All this lead me to get The Complete Life and Times of Scrooge McDuck; I needed to know the family behind the Duckverse that Carl Barks and Don Rosa created.

I wasn't disappointed. The first volume of how Scrooge McDuck earned his riches was chock full of adventures, wonderful art, and a ton of history which was fun to read. I will note that it is definitely a product of its time...so some of it is yikes... This will most likely be a re-read for me, and I'm sad I didn't discover DuckTales earlier. I'm looking forward to Volume 2 and will start digging into Carl Barks' Donald Duck comics as well.

Profile Image for Abigail Pankau.
1,987 reviews18 followers
June 9, 2019
Don Rosa wrote a 12-part series chronically the life of Scrooge McDuck, from his humble beginnings to when he made his fortune to when his nephew & great-nephews joined his life in later years. These stories include all the tidbits & references that Scrooge shares about his early life in the Donald Duck & Scrooge McDuck comics written by Carl Barks, so that they fit the canon. All 12 stories are included in this volume.

It's fun, especially if you enjoy the old Donald Duck comics or the DuckTales TV series. And you get to see what crazy adventures Scrooge tried at various points in history, and how he earned his fortune. But you also get to see how he became a horrible stingy miser.
Profile Image for Ted.
235 reviews25 followers
August 8, 2022
Great stuff! A fun read with excellent graphics throughout. Twelve chapters outline Scrooge's life story and numerous offbeat pursuits from 1877 to 1947. Haven't read a comic book in the last 65 years - so this was a pleasant return to my childhood reading adventures. I'd quite forgotten the joy of comic books but this collection has brought the whole experience back to me - big time! Looking forward to reading Volume 2.
Profile Image for Billy D. Baskett.
1 review
June 15, 2019
The life and times of Scrooge McDuck

This is a blessing for this old man. I have always loved Disney characters and none more than Uncle Scrooge and Donald Duck.
Thanks for taking them a step further.
Profile Image for KS.
36 reviews11 followers
July 3, 2019
Best Illustration book I have read! Documenting a life from young to old, the stories of Scrooge Mcduck are excellent to read, whilst weaving into them important life lessons to bear in mind at all times.
Profile Image for Robyn Cain.
338 reviews1 follower
December 17, 2019
Very enjoyable! Scrooge McDuck has always been one of my favorite Disney characters and I grew up reading the Uncle Scrooge comics. This large volume had many details of his early life that I didn’t know and it clicked some of the details together.
985 reviews2 followers
April 6, 2024
A chance encounter with a Gladstone comic book in 1986 changed the life of cartoonist Don Rosa forever.

Don Rosa grew up showing great artistic talent. Rosa went through grade school and high school submitting strips for various educational and local publications. Despite working towards a degree in civil engineering at the University of Kentucky, Rosa continued to fine tune his craft submitting art for a pair of fanzines devoted to Carl Barks and the Disney ducks as well as the college paper, The Kentucky Kernel where Rosa contributed a strip devoted to political satire. Despite not considering himself a political cartoonist, Rosa won an award in 1969 for his work and was later named one of the top college artists in the nation by The Journal of Higher Education.

After graduating, Don Rosa went to work at his family's construction business which was started in 1900 by his grandfather, an Italian immigrant. Rosa was resided to work primarily in the family business while moonlighting part time as a cartoonist with a weekly strip called The Adventures of Captain Kentucky that appeared in The Louisville Times. However, the endeavor was far from satisfying for Rosa and in 1982, the cartoonist retired outright.

It appeared that fate had destined for Don Rosa to work the rest of his days selling the Italian tile and marble products that his family had become legendary for. Then one day fate changed Rosa's career path once again. Upon stumbling upon a Disney comic published by Gladstone, Rosa learned that Disney was once again publishing books based on their properties in the United States and were in need of American writers and artists to fill those pages. Rosa grew up a fan of Carl Barks' Donald Duck and Uncle Scrooge adventures and he felt destined to be the one to usher in the next generation of Duck tales. Rosa contacted editor Byron Erickson who agreed to a tryout. The result was a globetrotting search for treasure between Scrooge McDuck and the dastardly Flintheart Glomgold in 'The Son of the Sun.' In 1987, Rosa's Disney debut was nominated for a Harvey Award for Best Story of the Year.

After a few more stories, Rosa prayed ways with Disney as the company had a policy that would not return artwork back to the artist. However, Rosa's affiliation with the residents of Duckburg was far from over. The hit syndicated cartoon DuckTales brought forth a resurgence in both the original works of Barks, along with Rosa's newer adventures. After learning about how popular his Disney stories had become in Europe, Rosa freelanced for the Denmark based Gutenberghus, now know as Egmont.

In 1990-91, word started to spread that Disney was wanting to issue a miniseries on the long and stories life of Scrooge McDuck. Rosa encouraged Egmont to select one of their employees for the task as the international publisher had an impressive team of artists and writers that could execute the job successfully. Egmont's editors agreed and recommended Rosa for the job. Beginning in 1991, Rosa crafted The Life and Times of Scrooge McDuck.

The 12-chapter miniseries chronicled Scrooge's Scottish childhood fraught with poverty and lessons in hard work through his numerous failures in business until Scrooge finally struck gold literally in the Yukon Gold Rush of the late 1890s. The story comes to a close right where Carl Barks introduced the world to Scrooge McDuck in the 1947 story 'Christmas on Bear Mountain.' Having become the richest person in the world, Scrooge lives alone as miser until he decides to test his remaining relatives, nephew Donald Duck and his grand-nephews Huey Dewey and Louie, in order to see if they are worthy of inheriting his countless riches.

Building upon the foundation Carl Barks laid decades earlier, The Life and Times of Scrooge McDuck answers questions long posed by Disney comic readers. How did the Beagle Boys come to be a perennial thorn in the side of Uncle Scrooge? Why does Flintheart hate McDuck so much? Why is that first dime so important to Scrooge? Plus, the entire family tree of Clan McDuck is explained, giving away many of the secrets of the old family castle as well as finally understanding where Granny, lucky duck Gladstone Gander and other residents of Duckburg relate to Scrooge McDuck and his kin.

In 1995, The Life and Times of Scrooge McDuck won the Eisner Award for Best Serialized Story from appearing in issues of Anders And & Co. from 1992-1994. American audiences would be introduced to the story in the pages of Uncle Scrooge #285-296 beginning in late 1994.

Over the following years, Rosa would craft several 'fill-in' stories that added to the mystique of Scrooge McDuck's life but do not have to be ready in any order in relation to the 12-part miniseries. An emergency surgery as the result of a detached retina would be the final straw in a career marred by low pay, creative differences and royalties in regards to intellectual property rights leading Rosa to ultimately retire from comics in 2008. He still continues to tour the convention circuit and conducts semi-annual signing tours in Europe where he enjoys superstar status.
Profile Image for Anthony L. Wolf.
38 reviews2 followers
August 18, 2023
I strongly believe in the value of coming back to an experience you loved as a child in later years. It's true, sometimes you lose that first magic – but other times doing so allows you to see things under an entirely new light. This is what's happening to me as I flip through the pages of Don Rosa's masterpiece.

It was around 2004 when my dad gave me the Life and Times of Scrooge McDuck for the first time. It was in Italian, on a much smaller format than this hardcover version, and I remember falling in love with it all the same. A lot has happened since then, including myself moving to a new country – and as I read these stories again, years later, taking in every detail of the beautiful art and the deep layers of story development, I realise how much of an influence Uncle Scroogey had on me as a kid.

I feel an almost family-like closeness to Scrooge and the cast of characters in this book. They guided me through my childhood years, and even though I could not fully grasp the importance of Scrooge's character development at the time, there was a certain magic in his whole story that kept me glued to the pages as a kid as well.

Scrooge taught me that we can create our own opportunities.

That we can achieve anything we set our mind to do, with hard work and ambition and dedication.

That you may come from humble origins, but you can always aspire to be something greater.

And even though I'm the farthest person from the hustle culture there is, I recognise the value of believing in yourself to make your dreams come true and find your own happiness. Yet Don Rosa's origin stories are a powerful reminder that your deepest wishes can also be your heaviest curse. Scrooge's chronological tale is one of toughies, sharpies and smarties – of how living in this bitterly human world can corrupt the kindest and purest soul. In the end, it's down to us what we choose to be as a person.

Ultimately, Scrooge's journey is one of new beginnings – and, like many new chapters in real life, it is made stronger by an inevitable bittersweet flavour.
136 reviews2 followers
September 26, 2024
THIS is the story I've heard people rave about for all these years? I was disappointed.
To be fair, it was written in the early 90s, before the art of graphic novels was as developed as it is now. By historical terms, it's notable - I was impressed by the slow build-up that establishes Scrooge as tough and skilled, eventually leading to his triumphs. But that's about the only good thing.
It mimics Carl Banks' classic Scrooge comics, but with only brief hints of the joy and inventiveness that defined them. Instead, this is a slog through failed venture after failed venture until Scrooge strikes it rich, and then a tally of how selfish and miserable he was once he started making money. There are plenty of examples of the people he hurts along the way, with about the flimsiest attempt at a redemption at the end that you could imagine. Scrooge's rich, selfish nature was always a problem in these stories, but at least they don't usually center it like this. Instead, this is a big Boomer fantasy about how he deserves it because of his hard work, and the fact that he made everyone (including him) miserable doesn't matter because at least he has his memories.
It's also heavily dependent on racial caricatures. Even when this was written, I assume that that was seen as an homage to older adventure stories. 30 years later, it's horrifying.
Profile Image for Matthew.
547 reviews6 followers
August 20, 2023
Don Rosa has a more detailed style than Barks (there are more lines anyway), but he’s much stiffer and not as clean. With Barks, simplicity comes from mastery, lending his works a bravura lacking in the labored Rosa. Rosa has little feel for movement, beyond the standard duck poses cribbed from Barks. Other characters and backgrounds look influenced by Dr Seuss or even Robert Crumb. The storytelling flows well and is clear for the most part. Sometimes it gets wordy.

What we have here is the tale of how Scrooge gained his fortune but lost his soul. So, very similar to his eponym, Ebeneezer. He travels from his native Scottish highlands to America and seeks his fortune on the Mississippi, in the badlands, in the Yukon, South Africa, and Australia on grand quest full of wild adventures with acute highs and lows. The transformation from earnest chap to penny-pinching skinflint is convincing as Rosa delves into Scrooge’s character in a way not possible in the short adventures drawn by Barks. On the whole this is a wonderful book.
Author 6 books9 followers
February 8, 2020
I haven’t read Carl Barks’ Scrooge McDuck stories (and it looks like I need to) but it’s not hard to see what drew Don LaRosa to the character. Scrooge is complicated — shrewd, greedy, dyspeptic, disillusioned, courageous, and capable of equally immense acts of kindness and selfishness.

LaRosa brings all these threads together in his “biography” of Scrooge McDuck, constructing a through-line for the character that highlights all of Scrooge’s many sides and shows how they evolved from each other. He does this while mixing up countless genres, stitching in references to many of the Barks adventures, and even writing around a mysterious “untold” story close to Scrooge’s heart. It’s a stunning achievement, and funny as hell to boot.
Profile Image for Sarah.
177 reviews7 followers
March 12, 2022
I wasn't expecting too much when I started reading this - but damnit, "The Life and Times of Scrooge McDuck" is so good! Following the rise and fall of the richest duck in the world, this comic is a classic Bildungsroman, showing how Scrooge became the duck most people associate him with - the miserly Scotsman who likes to bathe in his money. Each chapter highlights the moments of Scrooge's life which made him they way he is; some moments are tragic, some hilarious, and some make you question whether you actually want to root for Scrooge or not. Rosa really did deserve that Eisner Award for his character study!
618 reviews2 followers
August 12, 2020
Classic comic that tells the origin of Scrooge McDuck and how he obtained his fortune, along the way, encountering other classic characters like the Beagle Brothers, Gryo Screwloose and of course, his nephews, Huey, Dewey, & Luey. Don Rosa crafts a hilarious but heartfelt story that shows how Scrooge's quest for riches made him both better and worse in the process (he did it through hard work but neglected his family and friends along the way). His cartoony art is perfect as well, capturing the look of the 'DuckTales' TV show along with the great Carl Barks. A must read for any Disney fan.
11 reviews
June 13, 2021
I was so excited when I found this series! I read a lot of Uncle Scrooge and Donald Duck comics when I was a kid, but I never knew there was an award-winning 12-stories comic series by Don Rosa who created the backstory of Scrooge McDuck. It is obviously a must read if you love Uncle Scrooge comics!
Profile Image for Lauren.
574 reviews
February 22, 2020
I’m not super into graphic novels but I had to get my hands on this book. I wouldn’t call this great & in part, my excitement over a DuckTales related graphic novel made enjoy this book. I realize this. BUT this was also just a fun read.
101 reviews3 followers
September 26, 2020
I was a devout fan of Disney comics as a kid and I read my copies of the Life and Times of Scrooge McDuck until they fell apart. I was so thrilled to be able to share these with my 7 year old son and read them at bedtime. We both loved it.
Profile Image for Jackie.
143 reviews1 follower
November 5, 2020
Only the best from Keeno Don Rosa. This epic is sooooo good & such a wonderful way to honor Uncle Carl. If you love the Ducks, you gotta read this & it's companion book. Worth the money & something to share with others, especially the young 'uns!
Profile Image for Jonathan Beckner.
61 reviews
June 5, 2025
Rosa isn't my favorite Duck artist, but his talent and storytelling are undeniable, even with the dated nature of one story in particular, and he takes on the Herculean task of creating a history and family tree of a true original American Fable.
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