Skip to main content
Esquire Classic
Issues
Topics
Contributors
Sign In
Subscribe
cartoon
"Gee, What An Angle! If I Only Had My Candid Camera Here!”
May
1
1942
"Gee, What An Angle! If I Only Had My Candid Camera Here!”
May
1
1942
View Article Pages
cartoon
"Gee, What An Angle! If I Only Had My Candid Camera Here!”
May
1
1942
Sign In to read this article
Get instant access to 85+ years of Esquire.
Subscribe Now!
Exclusive & Unlimited access to
Esquire Classic - The Official Esquire Archive
Every issue Esquire has ever published, since 1933
Every timeless feature, profile, interview, novella - even the ads!
85+ Years of outstanding fiction from world-renowned authors
More than 150,000 Images — beautiful High-Resolution photography, zoom into every page
Unlimited Search and Browse
Bookmark all your favorites into custom Collections
Enjoy on Desktop, Tablet, and Mobile
View Full Issue
More From This Issue
ARTICLE
Convoy Town, 1940
May
1942
By
CHARLES RAWLINGS
SPORTS
Britain’s Sport Goes to the Dogs
May
1942
By
TREVOR WIGNALL
Varga Girl
Song for a Lost Spring
May
1942
By
PHIL STACK
FICTION
The Other Side of the River
May
1942
By
HAMILTON BASSO
FICTION
You Don’t Wind a Sundial
May
1942
By
DONALD BARR CHIDSEY
FICTION
What Do You Hear From Your Heart?
May
1942
By
JOE ABRAMS
Unlock every article Esquire has ever published.
Subscribe Now!
Exclusive & Unlimited access to
every timeless profile, interview, short story, feature, advertisement
, and much more!
More From This Issue
ARTICLE
Convoy Town, 1940
May
1942
By
CHARLES RAWLINGS
SPORTS
Britain’s Sport Goes to the Dogs
May
1942
By
TREVOR WIGNALL
Varga Girl
Song for a Lost Spring
May
1942
By
PHIL STACK
Cartoons
Cartoon
“You Might at Least Take Your Hat Off When You're Talking to a Lady"
September 1933
cartoon
"We’re Teaching Him to Walk—the Finance Company Took the Car"
OCTOBER 1941
cartoon
“I Just Got a Great Idea for a Song, Mac—'when Ma Comes Marching Home'!"
JULY, 1943
cartoon
cartoon
"By Now the Whole Army Is Probably Down with It—I Kissed Everybody"
AUGUST 1941
cartoon
"Why Don't You Give Me My Gifts Early This Year, Dear—so I Can Exchange Them in Time for Xmas?"
JANUARY 1942
cartoon
"Sorry, But for Anything Above the Second Floor You'll Have to Pay in Advance"
OCTOBER 1944
Get instant access to 85+ years of Esquire.
Subscribe Now!
Exclusive & Unlimited access to
Esquire Classic
Everything Esquire has ever published