Atomic Rabbit #3
☆ Be the first to review + Add to your collection — Join freeAfter a fox outwits Atomic Rabbit and takes over Rabbitville, the rabbit determines to stop the fox and restore peace to his community. That night, Atomic Rabbit destroys the carrot patch that gives him his strength to prevent the fox from ever returning. The next morning, Atomic Rabbit meets his cousin, who looks exactly like him, and together they work to reclaim Rabbitville. After a series of confrontations involving a sneeze-powered tornado, being blown to a desert island, and battling various creatures, Atomic Rabbit's cousin ultimately defeats the fox and his gang, restoring order to Rabbitville.
When a young rabbit's frantic tale of a giant chasing him lures Atomic Rabbit into what seems like an obvious trap, our hero discovers that sometimes the most outlandish stories turn out to be true—and he'll need more than his wits to handle a problem of genuinely giant proportions. Al Fago's "All About Giants" spins a clever yarn of deception and danger that keeps Atomic Rabbit scrambling to save the day.
Rabbitville's crime wave spirals out of control when Atomic Rabbit discovers that Fox has somehow figured out how to be in two places at once—hitting the countryside and the city simultaneously, leaving our hero stretched impossibly thin. As Fox's scheme grows bolder and the townspeople's faith wavers, Atomic Rabbit must uncover the truth behind the fox's impossible double act before Rabbitville falls completely under his paw.
When Atomic Rabbit's pal Wilbur calls for help from a locked room, our quick-thinking hero springs into action with a ladder to set him free. But once Wilbur makes it outside, there's a catch to their newfound freedom that neither of them saw coming.
Atomic Rabbit faces an unusual challenge when a saboteur fills his punching bag with sneezing powder during a demonstration for the Rabbit Boys Club. What follows is a cascade of atomic-powered sneezes that send the culprit flying and, in a stroke of ironic luck, accomplish exactly what the town had been asking for all along.
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Reprints
↩ Reprints Fawcett's Funny Animals #66 (1950), Fawcett's Funny Animals #69 (1951)
Reprinted in Ribtickler #7 (1957), Atom the Cat #12 (1958), Wotalife Comics #1 (1959), Atomic Rabbit & Friends #1 (1996)
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