Pearls Hogs the Road: A “Pearls
Before Swine” Treasury. By Stephan Pastis. Andrews McMeel. $18.99.
I’m Gluten Furious! A “Get Fuzzy”
Treasury. By Darby Conley. Andrews McMeel. $18.99.
Although comic strips are,
by their nature, a visual medium, they are also a verbal one – and the verbal
elements have become increasingly important as newspapers, the traditional
milieu of comic strips, have declined in circulation and importance and have
downsized strips accordingly. With so little space now allocated to comics as a
whole, much less to any single strip, the ability to use the art itself as a
major communicative element has declined dramatically. The days of a strip in
which art and words combined to produce something far greater than the sum of
its parts, as in Walt Kelly’s Pogo,
are gone forever – in newspapers, anyway. So this is the age of the verbal
strip, whether the words are simple and predictable to match the art (as in Garfield) or are the strip’s only real
point, with the art being almost unnecessary (as in Dilbert). A few cartoonists have forged a way through this jungle
of communications limitations by building their strips around wordplay, notably
puns; and as Oscar Levant once trenchantly observed, “A pun is the lowest form of humor –
when you don’t think of it first.” Stephan Pastis has made puns one of the
backbones of Pearls
Before Swine, using them and other forms of
wordplay continually and often torturing the language and the humor to such a
degree that the strip’s denizens end the “pun” sequences by attacking Pastis
himself – or rather Pastis-as-cartoon-character, himself a member of this
ensemble. The oversize “Treasury” volume called Pearls Hogs the Road, which includes all the cartoons
originally published in I’m Only
in This for Me and Stephan’s Web,
is packed with puns and other memorable (or perhaps not so memorable) verbal
assaults and insults. A typical example has Goat, the strip’s intellectual,
telling naïve and sweet Pig that he, Goat, wrote the City Council twice about
trash in an empty lot, including a ladder lying there, then asking Pig to bring
him “the latter ladder litter letter.” That is a four-panel weekday strip.
Longer Sunday strips have room for more-elaborate setups. One includes the don
of a local crime family, who owns a custom-built flashlight shaped like actress
Elizabeth Hurley that he lends to former Los Angeles Dodgers third baseman Ron
Cey, giving Pig the chance to ask, “Oh, Cey, can you see by the don’s Hurley
light?” You either get these or you don’t; you like their tortuous and tortured
setups and payoffs or you don’t. If you don’t, there is plenty of other Pearls madness to enjoy here
– or at least tolerate. There is a shark that encourages climate change because
a warming world will cause oceans to rise and give him more prey. There are
chickens that attack the Easter bunny for distributing eggs and becoming “world
famous for handing out someone else’s stolen kids.” There is a Wheel of Fortune
sequence in which two of the contestants are Andy Capp and a
Christianity-promoting B.C.
character. And there is a genuine big deal in several strips from 2014, which
were drawn collaboratively by Pastis and Bill Watterson, the first comics from
Watterson since his retirement from Calvin and Hobbes in 1985. (But the funniest
Watterson-related strip is one by Pastis in which his cartoon alter ego claims
to be Watterson in order to pick up a woman – the final panel shows the two in
bed, an unthinkable comic-strip scene not so long ago, with the woman smiling
happily in her sleep and Pastis thinking, “That was wrong.”) Pastis does more
than use words as the driving force of Pearls Before Swine: he uses them in profusion in
this “Treasury” volume itself to connect the strips with real life, explain
which ones worked and which ones did not, provide insights into his creativity,
and sometimes just make self-deprecating remarks: “I showed a butt crack on the
comics page. That’s the kind of thing that makes me a pioneer of the medium.”
Even fans of this strip who already have the two smaller-size collections
included in this “Treasury” may want this book for Pastis’ many comments – and
for covers (front, back, inside front and inside back) that are hilarious sendups
of the “biker mystique.”
The cover of the latest Get Fuzzy
“Treasury” collection is a good one, too, featuring Bucky Katt glaring from inside
a dresser drawer as inept Satchel Pooch – dressed in colors that appear to
celebrate both the U.S.A. and the LGBTQ movement – spills food all over
himself. But it is harder to argue for acquiring this book if you already have
the two smaller collections whose strips it contains, You Can’t Fight Crazy
and Cleanup on Aisle Stupid!
The strips themselves are absolutely packed with bizarre and often delightful
wordplay – indeed, Get
Fuzzy is even more word-focused than Pearls Before Swine – but Conley, unlike Pastis,
provides no remarks or commentary of any kind with the comics. So this is
simply a collection of two earlier collections – great to have if you do not
own the earlier books, but not especially necessary if you do have them. Of
course, if you have read and re-read the smaller collections so often that they
are falling apart, this “Treasury” will be a must-have. And it is indeed
tempting to read and re-read Get
Fuzzy, because a lot of the verbal byplay requires some thinking to get the
point, or all the points. In one strip, self-proclaimed genius Bucky is
studying the lives of “other” geniuses to find out how they handled “creative
blocks,” which Satchel thinks are Legos, a word that Bucky thinks refers to a
Greek philosopher. Elsewhere, Satchel tells Bucky, “I suspect you’re wrong, but
I’m unable to wordify my why.” And Bucky writes a book containing a character
called “the Catcher of the Dead” because “he is a collector of soles,” which
leads Satchel to ask what he does with the rest of the shoe, which leads Bucky
to comment on the character’s dominance over life, so Satchel says the word is
“souls,” so Bucky explains “not just
soles: tunas, flounders, crappies – any dead fish, really.” Also, Bucky
proclaims himself king of a new club and tells Satchel, “Neil before me,” so
Satchel does kneel (under protest), until Bucky notices that another cat – named
Neil – is actually behind him. Elsewhere, Rob Wilco, the resident human of the
strip and still far and away its weakest and least interesting character, tells
Satchel he is listening to “a seminal jazz piece,” which is “some of the
earliest truly American music,” and Satchel comments that they “beat Colombo
[to America] by a million years or something” to “make music without using
rock” and produce “Seminole jazz, rubber for chew toys, popcorn, Apache
cell-phone coverage.” And Bucky then chimes in to remind Satchel and Rob about
“kayak.com.” There is so much verbal byplay in Get Fuzzy,
and indeed so much verbal play, that this is almost one of the comic strips that
can be enjoyed without any pictures at all. But the character drawings, except
those of the expendable Rob, do add to the humor of the wordplay: Bucky and
Satchel have uniquely expressive facial expressions and body language. For
example, Satchel’s trademark wide-eyed, vacantly bewildered look as he dons a
Sherlock Holmes deerstalker hat to search for the missing toy that he himself
hid and now cannot locate – and that turns out to be stuck in his own skin
folds – is a perfect complement to Bucky’s description of Satchel as being “not
Miss Marple” but “Miss Lost-Her-Marples.” That’s “complement,” not
“compliment.” Or maybe, more likely, it’s both.
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