From the Wilbraham Public Library book sale, Wilbraham MA USA, 2024.
Title: Very Funny, Charlie Brown
Date: 1968
Publisher: Fawcett Gold Medal
Writer: Charles M. Schulz
Artist: Charles M. Schulz
Paperback collection of Peanuts cartoons compiled from the larger collection You're Out of Your Mind, Charlie Brown Vol. 1. This was a great collection of older Peanuts material. It covers a lot of the classic jokes: Lucy pulling the football away, kites stuck in trees, baseball games rained out, and Snoopy doing everything at very high speed.
There was also a cartoon about the fear of nuclear war. And I appreciated all of the classical music references in Shroeder's scenes.
Interestingly, the adults do get dialogue rather than mumbles in these cartoons, although it does always come from off-panel.
This was a quick and enjoyable read.
Rating: 8/10
Showing posts with label fawcett. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fawcett. Show all posts
Thursday, November 14, 2024
Tuesday, September 6, 2011
Andy Capp Strikes Back

Title: Andy Capp Strikes Back
Date: 1967
Publisher: Fawcett Gold Medal
Writer: Reg Smythe
Artist: Reg Smythe
This is a 1967 paperback, reprinting Andy Capp comic strips from the London Daily Mirror. My grandfather was a big Capp fan back when he used to take his daily walk up to the corner for the newspaper.
For those not familiar with the strip, the setup is pretty straightforward. Andy is a lazy drunk who tries to get by mooching what he can off of his long-suffering wife. Andy is of the same archetype that gave us every other lazy male chauvinist character from Fred Flintstone to Al Bundy.
Andy dodges the rent collectors, sneaks out to the pub at every opportunity, and has the occasional run-in with the law. He's not a complete loser: He's a pretty competent footballer (aside from the occasional own goal) and handles himself quite well in brawls.
This was probably fairly edgy stuff in the 1960s, but it has more of a ring of nostalgia when read today. Much of that nostalgia is pleasant, but it does get uncomfortable in a few sequences when Andy's treatment of his wife shifts from verbal jabs to physical abuse. The fact that Andy is often on the receiving end isn't enough to erase the cringe factor, nor does the idea that this is simply a product of its times. Those particular jokes are simply not funny in today's world.
There are only a few such moments in this book, and there were a fair number of jokes that I did find funny. But it didn't make for entirely comfortable reading.
Rating: 4/10
Note: I've got this volume up for sale on Ebay here.
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