Contrasting holidays

I recently got the latest two of Fantagraphics small square themed strip reprints, Waiting for the Great Pumpkin and Snoopy’s Thanksgiving. What I find interesting is how different two books designed to be basically the same can be. They both reprint strips in the same format, generally one daily strip on a page. But the strip selection – the Great Pumpkin book focuses solely on reprinting strips from the 1950s and 1960s, with later strips only used for blowing up large for decorative purposes. The Thanksgiving book is made up I believe only of post-1960s strips. The Great Pumpkin book, focused on a particular (great) trope, does get a bit repetitive, as Schulz reintroduced the Great Pumpkin concept each year he used it, while Thanksgiving, not grounded in any specific Schulz invention, has less redundancy (perhaps a bit on the subject of Woodstock surviving the holiday.)

Both are still fairly nice little books. And if you get them, do take off the dust jackets and look at the well-selected images on the “boards”, as they’re called… although the image they chose for the board on the Thanksgiving book is the same one as the front cover of the upcoming Woodstock, Master of Disguise volume.

Classic finds
Review: Christmas Gift Certificates for You

When I ordered a copy of the 1981 Hallmark Peanuts product Christmas Gift Certificates for You, I reckoned it would be one of those novelty coupon books, each page removable and offering the recipient a walk in the snow, help taking down the tree, or some Peanuts-y equivalent thereof. I …

New releases
A pop-up shows up

Here Comes Charlie Brown!: A Peanuts Pop-up, Gene Kannenberg, Jr.’s adaptation of the very first Peanuts strip, is not the first Peanuts book to reprint only a single strip. There was at least one board book that did much the same thing. However, that board book was, at heart, a …

Classic finds
English Phrases to Comfort Your Heart

The next book in my Amazon Japan shipment falls into the adorable category of “Peanuts used to explain American culture”. English Phrases to Comfort Your Heart with Snoopy by Nobu Yamada falls into that category. It also falls into the category of “books which are meant to be destroyed”, as each …