Team Cul de Sac: Cartoonists Draw
the Line at Parkinson’s. Edited by Chris Sparks. Andrews McMeel. $29.99.
There is nothing new
about cartoonists ardently espousing causes.
Thomas Nast brought down the notorious Boss Tweed and his corrupt Tweed
Ring with his single-panel cartoons in the 19th century; Walt Kelly
took on McCarthyism in the 1950s, when so many in the creative community
cowered before Wisconsin Senator Joe McCarthy’s assaults; Patrick McDonnell
uses Mutts today to explore the
plight of endangered animals and to argue, through “Shelter Stories” strips,
for the importance of adoption. But
cartoon explorations of diseases, and the use of cartoon art to raise awareness
of those illnesses and money to fight them, are relatively new. Tom Batiuk of Funky Winkerbean has been a trailblazer in the field, with Lisa’s Story (2000) and Lisa’s Story: The Other Shoe (2007)
about breast cancer, and the bold step of having his strip’s title character
featured in My Name Is Funky…and I’m an
Alcoholic (2007). Even before these
books, Batiuk and Chuck Ayers had created Safe
Return Home (1998), using characters from the Crankshaft strip in a sensitive and moving exploration of
Alzheimer’s disease.
It is in this
honorable line that Team Cul de Sac,
a creation of Web designer and comic aficionado Chris Sparks, belongs. Richard Thompson, creator of one of the best
and most highly regarded comic strips of recent years, Cul de Sac, has Parkinson’s disease, although so far there is no
evidence that the incurable neurodegenerative condition has affected his
writing or drawing. Sparks’ idea was to
enlist dozens of cartoonists to create art based on Thompson’s characters,
assemble all the work into this book, and auction the original drawings and
paintings online, with proceeds of the auction (plus some of the proceeds from
sale of the book) to go to Parkinson’s research by being donated to the Michael
J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson’s Research.
The idea was not only a thoughtful one but also, as it
turns out, an artistically fruitful one.
The contributions range from the merely wonderful to the truly
outstanding. Bill Amend (FoxTrot) shows four-year-old Alice and
her eight-year-old brother, Petey, as FoxTrot
characters. Jim Borgman and Jerry Scott (Zits) show Alice’s father’s tiny car, a
recurring element of Cul de Sac,
trying vainly to get past Jeremy Duncan’s gigantic sneakers, a recurring
element of Zits. Children’s-book illustrator Stacy Curtis
offers a portrait of Miss Bliss, who teaches Alice and her preschool friends at
Blisshaven Academy. Greg Evans has the
title character of Luann and Alice
making catty comments to each other. Paul
Gilligan has Poncho of Pooch Café
trapped in the cage that usually houses Mr. Danders, the Cul de Sac guinea pig. Cathy
Guisewite has her now-retired Cathy
title character show up with chocolate at Alice’s family’s house. Rick Kirkman of Baby Blues shows how to create a comic-book character, using his
character Wanda MacPherson and Thompson’s Petey as parallel examples. There are also contributions by fan Sandy
Jarrell and eight-year-old Raymond Jarrell, by Lynn Johnston of For Better or For Worse, by Ron
Ferdinand of Dennis the Menace, by
Patrick McDonnell of Mutts, by Stephan
Pastis of Pearls Before Swine, by Garry
Trudeau of Doonesbury, by Lincoln
Peirce of Big Nate, by Mark Tatulli
of Liō, by Mort Walker
of Beetle Bailey, by Jim Davis of Garfield, and even by the notoriously
reclusive Bill Watterson of Calvin and
Hobbes – in all, works by illustrators and animators and editorial
cartoonists and graphic-novel creators and comic-book artists and
caricaturists. Single-panel works,
drawings, paintings, multi-panel strips, works that pull Thompson’s characters
into other worlds or introduce other worlds’ characters into his – everything
is here, and just about all of it is marvelous.
In fact, all of it is
marvelous in terms of the spirit of pulling together, of helping Thompson and,
through him, all those afflicted with Parkinson’s disease. And every purchaser of this book – may there
be many! – is also contributing in his or her own way.
“Cause” cartooning always risks becoming heavy-handed,
but the great cartoonists who do it manage to avoid coming on so strongly that
they turn people off instead of on to the seriousness of their concerns. Thompson himself is never heavy-handed, and
is in fact not a contributor to Team Cul
de Sac except in his brief introduction and through the reprint in the book
of a Washington Post profile about
him that was published last year. But
Thompson’s spirit is as much a part of this book as are his characters. It would be naïve to think that any
collection of art, even one as well-intentioned and well-executed as this, will
be enough to find a cure for a disease as serious as Parkinson’s. But it would be a mistake not to find this attempt absolutely
wonderful, not only for its intentions but also for the truly wonderful riffs
on Thompson’s unique comic contributions that Sparks and the many marvelous
artists here have made possible, working as a team.