Review: The Legend of Blackbeagle the Pirate

New releases

Hallmark has come out with a new hardcover storybook, The Legend of Blackbeagle the Pirate. This volume is very much a follow-up to last year’s The Adventures of the Candy Crusader, with again being focused on characters that Snoopy and Woodstock choose to play on Halloween, again with rhyming text by Bill Gray and art by Rich LaPierre. And once again it ends with a pop-up final page, although this time it doesn’t advertise itself as a pop-up book on the cover. Our animal duo go out on pirate missions… which are seeking buried treasure, until it’s time for a raid on a Halloween party to steal all the treats (only to share them in the end with the folks they stole them from, because this is after commercial Peanuts products, and as such will tend to show the characters as particularly generous and giving.)

I’m not a big fan of in-verse storytelling for Peanuts. It seems to lay another level of texture onto the work that it wasn’t built for. In this form, we don’t get to hear Snoopy’s thoughts like we do in the strip, nor have all the motion-filled expression of the animated Snoopy. We get narration instead. LaPierre’s drawings are good, but he seems to have the most joy in the party scenes, getting to show all the other characters in their costumes.

But Shermy is dressed as the Great Pumpkin, and as a true believer, I consider that sacrilege.

Hallmark has, unsurprisingly, offered a stuffed tie-in to the book. (Indeed, one might suspect that creating new tie-in merch was much the point of having a series of Snoopy-in-costume books.)

Itty-bitsy Snoopy pirate figure

They are also offering a pirate Snoopy travel mug, but this is clearly not the same pirate. The patch is on the other eye! (Although to be fair, this is actually the eye that Snoopy has covered in strips where he played Blackbeagle, in the late 1990s.)

Share the news!
New releases
RECOMMENDED: Goodness and Good Grief!

I somewhat slough off a lot of Peanuts books aimed at children. I can appreciate that the people making them are doing good work, but at the same time feel that a properly formatted book of the actual comic strips would actually serve the kid better. But then, I’m a …

Animated Peanuts
Officially, it’s a “Super Chubby”

When I reviewed the 2015 book adapting the TV special It’s the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown, I had this to say: The book that’s titled It’s the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown (adaptation by Kara McMahon, art by Scott Jeralds) takes basically the whole special and simplifies everything. It briefly tells you that Charlie …

New releases
Review: Letters to Snoopy

Ah, I’m behind in reviewing some things, but I need to clean up my living room of book clutter in preparation for an upcoming oarty… and if I want to remove a Peanuts books from the room and put it up in the AAUGH,com Reference Library, I have to review …