Snoopy’s Masterpiece

Classic finds

img_0687Among the other things that my pal David Folkman has worked on is The Comics: An American Tradition, a newspaper supplement from (if I’m dating this correctly) the early 1970s. This 16 page newsprint item has reprints of comics from across the era of strips (including a 1951 Peanuts strip), with short text pieces. But it’s the museum-themed cover that’s of most interest to me, with a number of artists drawing their characters (although that Hal Foster-signed Prince Valiant is actually drawn by John Cullen Murphy.) And they all drew on the same board. Charles Schulz, who was not local, was the last artist to add his work, and filled the space where Beetle Bailey’s Otto was already looking on, creating a slight interaction (and thus a crossover!) with that character.

I love Snoopy’s masterpiece; his art follows the habit of his novel writing, throwing everything in there. There is both sun and moon, paratrooper and tomahawk-wielding Native American, a log cabin and golf. Snoopy is leaving nothing to chance; whatever element it takes to make a work a masterpiece is somewhere in there!

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Classic finds
Charles M. Schulz: Pinko scum?

As with most of my history finds, I found the column when I was looking for something else, something only related because they both had the term “comic strip.” But there it was… George Boardman, PhD, was telling the world that there was a problem with socialist propaganda on America’s …

New releases
Peanuts Storybook Treasury

The Peanuts Storybook Treasury slams 18 of the Simon Spotlight storybooks from 2015 through 2021 into a single hardcover volume. In order to get them all into 304 pages, it cheats just a little bit, skipping over the covers and individual copyright pages, and occasionally combining what had been two …

Classic finds
A set completed and a mystery solved

Twenty years ago when I first published a collection of It’s Only a Game by Charles Schulz and Jim Sasseville, I proudly announced that it was the first reprint collection of the strip ever! But then I saw at auction a little pamphlet that looked like this: and I later found …