Cynical Supersnoop

New releases

Working in the comics field and being a long-time reader of comic books, I’ve grown accustomed to the darker, cynical take on superheroes, depicting them with twisted motivations and deleterious effect. At times, it is quite well done (as in Watchmen); at other times, it’s a weak attempt deconstruction (like so many pseudo-Watchmen.) But at base, these are curious efforts, trying to show the dark underbelly of something that doesn’t actually exist. To some degree, the very form seems to be shaming you for enjoying a bit of fictional fantasy.

And I didn’t expect it to come from Peanuts.

In the Halloween taleĀ The Adventures of the Candy Crusader, just out from Hallmark, a pair of heroes (the Crusader and his sidekick, The Candy Corn Kid) go around “saving” candy… by which they mean stealing it from the trick-or-treaters who had properly earned their candy through the appropriate All Hallow’s Eve shakedown, for their own consumption!

The story, written by Bill Gray and well drawn by Rich LaPierre, is written with children’s book rhyming prose but drawn as a comic book, with multiple panels per page and the occasional word balloon. It ends as promised with a pop-up, but the announcement of the pop-up on the cover is a removable sticker, so if you’re giving it, there could be some actual surprise.

Hallmark is also offering an animated Candy Crusader figure, which spins while “Flight of the Valkyries” plays (you may remember that tune as the love theme from Apocalypse Now.)Oh, and also socks. In case your Halloween costume is “human wearing Candy Crusader socks” (or “ninja wearing Candy Crusader socks”; they very versatile!

New releases
“Books”

My grocery shopping today landed me two new Peanuts “books”. The more bookish of the two is the latest edition of The Great Big Book of Peanuts Word Seeks, volume 5 to be precise, which as I’ve mentioned before I’ll allow to qualify as a book… particularly because it not …

New releases
Review lightning roud

I’m a few books behind on reviews, so I’m going to try to kick them out simple and quick. The Big Book of Peanuts: All the Daily Strips from the 1990s is exactly the same in format as the four prior volumes of this series, despite it being distributed differently. …

New releases
The Doctor is a Liar

If you’ve been wondering “where can I find unlikely use of Peanuts imagery?”, the wonder no more! For I am here to tell you that it’s on the cover of Henry & Glenn Comics and Stories. “What is Henry & Glenn Comics and Stories?”, I hear you cry. Why, it’s …