The Complete Cul de Sac. By
Richard Thompson. Andrews McMeel. $75.
Just when you think
everything that can be said and done in a suburban-family comic strip has
already been said and done, just when you think any form of comic-strip art
that can be created has already been produced, along comes a strip like Cul de Sac to show that you have no idea
what you are thinking. Although saying “a strip like Cul de Sac” is misleading, since there really is no other strip
like Richard Thompson’s. Or rather was
no strip like his – Cul de Sac ended
its far, far too short run in September 2012, having debuted in syndicated form
a mere five years earlier, in September 2007 (although Thompson produced
individual sequences for The Washington
Post as far back as 2004).
Cul de Sac literally means “bottom of the bag,” although in French
it should really be cul du sac, which
in either case is a synonym in English (and, hey, maybe in French, too) for “faceless
suburban dead-end street.” So haut du sac
would place something in the opposite position in the bag, on top, which is
emphatically where Thompson’s strip belongs. There is nothing even close to
faceless about these cartoons; in fact, the characters’ faces are among the
strip’s many remarkable qualities, being so brilliantly individualized as to be
instantly recognizable even for readers who see them without the attached
bodies. And with the bodies, the
characters are even more distinguished, not only precocious four-year-old Alice
Otterloop (a longstanding comic-strip type given multiple new twists here) and
her eight-year-old brother, Petey (with his lightbulb-shaped head and
cynical/pessimistic worldview), but also the Otterloop parents and grandmother,
the highly individualized kids at Blisshaven Preschool (and Miss Bliss
herself), and such subsidiary but endlessly fascinating characters as Mr.
Danders, the erudite guinea pig; possibly imaginary proto-adult Ernesto Lacuna;
oversize marimba player Viola d’Amore; and even more oversize (as in gigantic
but correctly proportioned) explosions-oriented budding cartoonist Andre Chang.
One of the many remarkable
things about Cul de Sac is how
quickly it transcended its origins as a local feature for the Washington, D.C.,
area: the name Otterloop, for example, is from “Outer Loop,” the term used for
the counterclockwise portion of the Beltway that rings Washington, and the very
earliest strips even showed some D.C. features. It is obvious in retrospect
that Thompson’s wonderful writing and drawing deserved national (and maybe even
interplanetary) distribution, but this was by no means clear at the start, when
his strips ran on Sundays and were done as watercolors. The entire history of Cul de Sac is spread out for everyone to
see in Andrews McMeel’s marvelous two-volume set of oversize paperbacks,
slipcased to provide all the gravitas
that a reader could possibly desire.
It would have been better,
though, if Andrews McMeel had been unable to produce this set – at least for
many years. For the unfortunate reality is that Thompson, who was diagnosed in
2009 with Parkinson’s disease, had to stop doing the strip in 2012 to focus on
his medical treatment, and it is only because Cul de Sac no longer exists that this full retrospective is
possible. The valiant late attempts to keep the strip going, with guest
cartoonists drawing certain weeks and Thompson collaborating to produce others,
are all here, providing a sad conclusion to the books even though some of the
fill-in artists’ work happens to be quite marvelous (and sometimes shows
Thompson’s characters in a new and fascinating light). Thompson is only 57, far
too young to be memorialized through a release like this one – but for all the
bittersweet elements of The Complete Cul
de Sac, it has to be said that few cartoonists of this or any time have
created a body of work so sensitive and special as Thompson’s. The
multitudinous concepts, from Petey’s dioramas and out-of-body experiences, to
Alice’s manhole-cover dances, to the trebuchets built by the never-seen brothers
of Alice’s friend Dill, to Alice’s grandmother’s habit of throwing deviled eggs
at passing cars, to the ever-growing and possibly multidimensional tube slide, show
a mind as fertile and inventive as any that cartooning has been fortunate
enough to possess. And the pithy and frequently pointed comments that Thompson
offers beneath many of his collected strips only deepen their impact, whether
he is talking about a particular skateboard ramp being “a joy to draw” or
explaining how one Sunday sequence “started out as a parody of shampooese: the
weird hybrid language used on hair-care products.” It is a tremendous shame that readers did not
have a chance to enjoy 20 years or more of Thompson’s brilliant blend of
amusement and outstanding comic-strip art. It is a tremendous joy to have The Complete Cul de Sac as a celebration
of the years of wonder and wonderfulness that he did provide.
Gee, thanks!
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