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Other editions of book Matthew Looney's Invasion of the Earth

  • Matthew Looney's Invasion of the Earth

    Jerome Beatty Jr., Gahan Wilson

    Paperback (Avon Books, March 15, 1972)
    Matthew Looney's Invasion of the Earth
  • Matthew Looney's Invasion of the Earth

    Jerome Beatty

    Mass Market Paperback (Avon, Jan. 15, 1983)
    Avon Camelot 23069 Trade Paperback 6th Printing; First Camelot Printing Oct 1972; original copyright 1965. 160 pp. Size 7.5" by 5" by 0.5". Binding intact; no loose pages. Front cover shows faint folding crease; half title page (being the front free endpaper) has stamp of former owner's name and address; otherwise, covers and pages clean and unmarked. B&W illustrations by Gahan Wilson, including 32 full-page. From the back cover: "The Moon People realize there IS life on Earth because Earth has bombed the Moon!" The Moon sends an expeditionary force to invade Earth that includes Matthew, who gets inadvertently left behind. Of course, life on Earth is full of dangerous animals, including humans, poisonous oxygen, and deadly water. Read how Matthew gets home again!
  • Matthew Looney's Invasion of the Earth

    Jerome Beatty Jr., Gahan Wilson

    Paperback (Young Readers Press, March 15, 1967)
    None
  • Matthew Looney's Invasion of Earth

    Jr. Jerome Beatty

    Hardcover (William R. Scott, Inc., March 15, 1965)
    None
  • Matthew Looney's Invasion of the Earth: A Space Story

    Jerome Beatty

    Hardcover (Harpercollins Childrens Books, Dec. 1, 1985)
    An expedition force from the Moon is sent to invade the Earth but leaves the planet in such haste that Matthew Looney is left behing.
  • Matthew Looney's Invasion of the Earth

    Jerome Beatty

    Hardcover (Harpercollins Childrens Books, June 1, 1965)
    Jerome Beatty Jr began this series in the early 1960s, at the dawn of the Space Age, when 20th-century children were especially fascinated by the likelihood of space missions and adventures to the Moon in their own lifetimes. The NASA Apollo Program figures into the stories as well. For example, in one episode, Matthew witnesses the Earthlings' first feeble attempts to "explore" the Moon. Beatty uses Matthew Looney's curiosity about the Earth and his desire to embark on voyages of discovery as a literary device. His readers identify with Matthew Looney because of their own yearning for adventure and fascination with space exploration. Kids in the 1960s, growing up in a time when human beings were first exploring space, would see themselves in the young Moon-boy who was growing up in his own era of early space exploration.
  • Matthew Looney's Invasion of the Earth

    Jerome Beatty

    Paperback (Avon Books, Jan. 1, 1983)
    An expedition force from the Moon is sent to invade the Earth but leaves the planet in such haste that Matthew Looney is left behing.