This is Volume 11 of The Complete Carl Bark's Disney Library
Collects:
Walt Disney's Comics and Stories(1940)#135 - The Big Bin on Killmotor Hill
Four Color(1942)#367 - Treeing Off; A Christmas for Shacktown; Christmas Kiss; Projecting Desires
Walt Disney's Comics and Stories(1940)#136 - Gladstone's Usual Good Year
Walt Disney's Comics and Stories(1940)#137 - The Screaming Cowboy
Walt Disney's Comics and Stories(1940)#138 - Statuesque Spendthrifts
Walt Disney's Comics and Stories(1940)#139 - Rocket Wing Saves the Day
Walt Disney's Comics and Stories(1940)#140 - Gladstone's Terrible Secret
Walt Disney's Comics and Stories(1940)#141 - The Think Box Bollix
Four Color(1942)#408 - Full Service Windows; The Golden Helmet; Rigged-Up Roller; Awash in Success
Walt Disney's Comics and Stories(1940)#142 - Houseboat Holiday
Walt Disney's Comics and Stories(1940)#143 - Gemstone Hunters
Four Color(1942)#408 - Stable Prices; The Gilded Man; Armored Rescue; Crafty Corner
Walt Disney's Comics and Stories(1940)#144 - Spending Money
*The third volume of Fantagraphics’ reprinting of Carl Barks’s classic Donald Duck and Uncle Scrooge work, like the previous volume Uncle Scrooge: Only a Poor Old Man, focuses on the early 1950s, universally considered one of Barks’s very peak periods.
Originally published in 1951, "A Christmas for Shacktown" is one of Barks's masterpieces: A rare 32-pager that stays within the confines of Duckburg, featuring a storyline in which the Duck family works hard to raise money to throw a Christmas party for the poor children of the city’s slums (depicted by Barks with surprisingly Dickensian grittiness), and climaxing in one of the most memorable images Barks ever created, the terrifying bottomless pit that swallows up all of Scrooge's money.
But there's lots more gold to be found in this volume (literally), which features both the "The Golden Helmet" (a quest off the coast of Labrador for a relic that might grant the finder ownership of America, reducing more than one cast member to a state of Gollum-like covetousness) while "The Gilded Man" features a hunt for a rare stamp in South America — two more of Barks's thrilling full-length adventure stories.
But that's less than half the volume! This volume also features ten of Barks's smart and funny 10-pagers, including a double whammy of yarns co-starring Donald's insufferable cousin ("Gladstone’s Usual Very Good Year" and "Gladstone’s Terrible Secret"), as well as another nine of Barks's rarely seen one-page Duck gags… all painstakingly recolored to match the original coloring as exactly as possible, and supplemented with an extensive series of notes and behind-the-scenes essays by the foremost Duck experts in the world. *Source: fantagraphics.com