Optimism Sounds Exhausting: A
“Dilbert” Collection. By Scott Adams. Andrews McMeel. $19.99.
The Weed Whisperer: A
“Doonesbury” Book. By G.B. Trudeau. Andrews McMeel. $19.99.
Comic strips have clearly
come of age when collections of them start appearing, on a regular basis, in
handsome “library edition” volumes. Andrews McMeel has been leading the way to
this new, higher status for cartoons for years. The late lamented Calvin and Hobbes got an enormous three-hardcover-volume
set priced at $150. The late lamented FoxTrot
got two oversized softcover volumes in a nicely designed slipcase. The late
lamented Cul de Sac got a similar,
equally attractive two-volume slipcased release. But thank goodness strips do
not have to be late and lamented to receive high-quality treatment in their
collections. Optimism Sounds Exhausting
is the second Dilbert collection to
appear as a full-color hardcover book with a color-coordinated cover and a
silhouette of a major character on the front. The first of these, Go Add Value Someplace Else, was yellow
and red with a Dilbert silhouette, while Optimism
Sounds Exhausting is yellow and green and has a silhouette of Wally – the
character who has raised laziness to an art form and does in fact make the
comment that is the book’s title. The characters in Dilbert have become more snarky and disrespectful of authority in
recent years, even to the point of insulting the company CEO (a character
introduced only a few years ago); but nothing they say or do makes the
slightest bit of difference in their Kafkaesque lives – which is exactly Scott
Adams’ point. In the type of mind-numbing corporation in which Dilbert, Wally,
Alice, Asok and the other characters work, all roads lead to the same dead end.
Dilbert has stayed in the characters’
office building more and more in recent years, although occasionally there are
futile interactions away from work to complement the ones during the workday.
The fact is that Adams does not need to have the characters venture far from
their cubicles to make his points about the demotivating and demoralizing
dehumanization of the modern big-corporation workplace. Furthermore, the fact
that Adams’ art is, at best, passable, is irrelevant, since he is good at
giving characters just enough expressiveness to put his points across. The fact
that Dilbert has no mouth (the vast majority of the time, anyway) is one
perfect case in point; another is Dilbert’s tie, which almost always droops and
then curves up at the end – meaning that when it does something different, that
is significant. In Optimism Sounds
Exhausting, for example, one unusually complex strip has Dilbert
approaching the Pointy-Haired Boss with the news that “Bill Ackman just took a
huge short position in our stock.” Even those who do not know who Ackman is
will know from Dilbert’s fully upturned tie and standing-up-straight hair
(another good visual cue to something upsetting) that this is a problem. The
boss, though, can only think of the late lamented Bloom County, whose cat character, Bill, constantly said “ack!” So
the boss says he is not worried about some cartoon cat. And of course that only
makes Dilbert’s nervousness worse. This strip alone may not be hardcover-book
quality, but there are plenty of others. In one, Dilbert points out that
“marketing is only legal because it doesn’t work most of the time.” This is in
the middle of a sequence about the company building emotionally manipulative
robots that constantly guilt-trip their owners into buying upgrades – quite a
business model there. Also here, Dilbert goes on several dates with a woman who
wants a relationship that will lead to marriage – which, Dilbert tells her, is
a financial contract, so how much money does she have? Then there are the
strips in which Wally gets the CEO to be his mentor, which goes as badly as
might be expected, except that the CEO insists Wally be made a vice president
“so it looks as if my mentoring works.” Then, understandably, Wally gets demoted
– after inventing a gigantic coffee cup that Asok the intern needs to carry on
his back all day, while Wally hangs onto the rear of the cup and drinks. In
another sequence, Wally becomes the firm’s chief economist “because nothing you
say makes sense” – it is all “babble talk” using randomly strung-together words
from economics and finance. None of this material is timeless humor, true, but
enough of it rings true so that the solidity of the handsome hardcover volume
seems justifiable: readers who keep the book for years will likely discover,
over time, that much (if not all) of what passes for business-related humor
here will promote as many wry chuckles in the future as it does now.
The art is far better and
far more integral to the quality of G.B. Trudeau’s Doonesbury than is the art of Dilbert
to Adams’ strip. And a good thing, too, because the art itself is likely to be
a strong reason for keeping Doonesbury
collections year after year. Without it, far too many of the strips become
dated far too quickly: Trudeau’s well-known political sermonizing (not that he
would call it that) is actually the strip’s weak link. The Weed Whisperer is a very attractive-looking book, and although
its title ties to a political event – the legalization of recreational
marijuana use in Colorado, and how that affects some of the strips’ characters
– that particular element of this book probably will not grow old especially quickly. It has, after all, strong social
relevance that is likely to resound for some time. It is the avowedly political
material that soon becomes flat-out boring in Doonesbury, because Trudeau, for all his artistic skill, has only a
single political point to make: all Democrats are, by definition, good, and all
Republicans are, by definition, bad. Considering how nuanced the rest of the
strip is, the juvenile quality of its politics is a real disappointment. But
Trudeau revels in it, proclaiming Doonesbury
in one strip to be “the most trusted name in Bushwhacking” (which, yes, is
funny, but also telling); elsewhere, expecting readers to identify Donald Trump
as a radio caller despite his name not being mentioned; still elsewhere,
including a reference to “Leader McConnell” that readers are expected to
understand immediately as integral to the punch line of a Sunday strip; and so
on. This is thin stuff. The much better parts of Doonesbury are the ones in which the characters simply try to get
on with their lives in the modern world – an interesting state of affairs,
since Trudeau does not particularly care about his characters, selecting ones
on which to focus based on what editorial point he hopes to make at any given
time. Still, the relatable elements of Doonesbury
are what keep it fresh: newlyweds Alex and Toggle have twins – they arrive
during Alex’s graduation from MIT – but economic factors force Alex to take a
job as a barista; perennial music icon Jimmy T. learns to make music directly
for his fans and send it out to them on the Web, unfortunately also discovering
that he can now only afford to live in his car; thoroughly un-self-aware
correspondent Roland Hedley mercilessly grinds out an unending series of
increasingly self-referential tweets; and, of course, Zonker Harris and nephew
Zipper head for Colorado to produce artisanal marijuana as the new legality of
pot arrives. Doonesbury is far less
freewheeling and in many ways far less amusing than it was in its early days –
it has, after all, been around for half a century. Once in a while, Trudeau
seems almost to realize this. At one point, during a Walden College reunion, he
shows Zonker sitting in a mud puddle, a famous and oft-repeated scene from much
earlier times; but now Zonker is wondering, “What was I thinking?” In another
strip, Trudeau brings back an actual black-and-white panel from early Doonesbury, in which a drug-sniffing dog
points a paw at a protesting-his-innocence Zonker and says, “J’accuse!” Now,
though, Trudeau has another character ask the Zonker of today, “The dog busted
you in French?” And Zonker replies, “That doesn’t make sense, does it? I
must’ve been on acid.” But it does make sense, or rather did, in early Doonesbury. In the glorious full-color
splendor of a now-revered and influential strip, though, it does not. But it sure
seems a lot funnier than the “Leader McConnell” line, which it is hard to
imagine ever being revived in some other context. Doonesbury is a one-of-a-kind strip in its complexity, its huge
cast of characters, its editorializing, its political savvy (no matter how
one-sided and superficial that may be), and its unique blend of characters who
look real with ones that most definitely do not: the alien sitting in a radio
station, for instance, and the underground-comic-book-inspired talking
cigarette, Mr. Butts. Doonesbury fans
will be every bit as glad to have the hardcover The Weed Whisperer as Dilbert
fans – with whom there is presumably very little overlap – will be to own Optimism Sounds Exhausting.
No comments:
Post a Comment