Examples of the
full page Sunday strip were printed in
The Comic Strip Century (1995, reissued in 2004 as
100 Years of Comic Strips), edited by
Bill Blackbeard, Dale Crain and James Vance. Moores' dailies and Sundays have appeared in
Comics Revue monthly, as have the first Scancarelli strips. In 1995, the strip was one of 20 included in the
Comic Strip Classics series of commemorative US
postage stamps.
''Frank King's Gasoline Alley Nostalgia Journal'' In 2003, Spec Productions began a series of softcover collections, ''Frank King's Gasoline Alley Nostalgia Journal
, reprinting the strip from the first Rectangle'' panel (November 24, 1918). To date, four volumes have appeared: • Volume 1, November 24, 1918, to September 22, 1919 • Volume 2, September 23, 1919, to March 2, 1920 • Volume 3, March 3, 1920, to July 25, 1920 • Volume 4, July 26, 1920, to December 31, 1920
Walt and Skeezix In 2005, the first of a series of reprint books,
Walt and Skeezix, was published by
Drawn & Quarterly, edited by
Chris Ware and included contributions by
Jeet Heer. The first volume covers 1921–22, beginning several weeks before baby Skeezix appears. These reprint only the daily strips, with Sundays slated to appear in another series:
Sunday Press In 2007,
Sunday Press Books published
Sundays with Walt and Skeezix, which collects early Sunday strips in the original size and color.
Dark Horse In 2014,
Dark Horse Comics published
Gasoline Alley: The Complete Sundays Volume 1 1920–1922 and
Gasoline Alley: The Complete Sundays Volume 2 1923–1925 in hardback.
Dick Moores Moores' work on the strip was published in three different collections, all currently out of print, as well as being serialized in
Comics Revue magazine: • ''Gasoline Alley: Comic Art as Social Comment: Changing Life in America Over More Than Half a Century as Seen Through the Eyes of a Unique 'First Family''', Avon/Flare, 1976. Introduction by
Nat Hentoff, history of the strip with 1970s continuities. •
The Smoke from Gasoline Alley, Sheed and Ward, 1976. •
Rover from Gasoline Alley, Blackthorne, 1985. Collects the strips introducing Slim and Clovia's adopted son Rover. On October 9, 2012, IDW Publishing's imprint
The Library of American Comics published a hardback collection titled
Gasoline Alley, Volume 1, collecting several years of the daily strip by Frank King and Dick Moores. ==Radio==