Big Nate: Silent but Deadly. By Lincoln Peirce. Andrews
McMeel. $9.99.
The “Mutts” Spring Diaries. By Patrick McDonnell.
Andrews McMeel. $9.99.
I’m Not Your Sweet Babboo! A “Peanuts” Collection. By Charles M. Schulz.
Andrews McMeel. $9.99.
Packaged with pull-out posters, “More to
Explore” sections and other enhancements, some of Andrews McMeel’s comics
collections are aimed directly at children – a fact that shows that so many of
the same comic strips are, when taken as a whole, not just for kids. Of course, among modern strips as among older
ones, some cartoonists do primarily target younger readers – as Lincoln Peirce
does with Big Nate, whose presumed
audience is around the same age as the strip’s sixth-grade central character. Nate’s
inflated sense of his own importance, intelligence and abilities is the central
element of the strip, and the fact that Nate never lets life get him down when
it is repeatedly shown that he is less than he imagines himself to be is what
makes him appealing (and a potential role model for readers of the same age).
Peirce specializes in “character comedy,” with Nate and the rest of the cast
(mostly his classmates and teachers at P.S. 38) being known quantities whose
interactions with Nate and with each other provide the humor. Thus, in Silent but Deadly, what is funny about a
series in which super-brain Gina falls for silly and clumsy but cute and
endearing Chad is that Gina having a crush on anyone is so out of character, while Chad being oblivious to Gina’s feelings is in character. And when Gina finds out
that Chad does not “like” like her (or any girl), and that affects how well she
does on a test, her vow never again to “let personal feelings get in the way of
academic achievement” makes perfect sense because of who she is. The “character
comedy” elements of Big Nate even
extend beyond the humans in the strip: an especially funny sequence in Silent but Deadly involves Spitsy, the
inept, cross-eyed dog (who always wears a protective Elizabethan collar), and
Pickles, the cat belonging to Nate’s friend Francis, having a “lovers’ spat”
that is resolved by playing “their song.” The book’s slightly scatological
title refers to Nate’s super-sensitive nose being able to identify all sorts of
things and people by sniffing the air – the point being that Nate does have some quirks that set him well
apart from everyone else, but spends most his time over-estimating his
abilities in areas where he does not
excel. One area where Nate is strong is basketball, and one of the best
sequences here has him involved in a one-on-one dispute with another team’s
point guard, who is considered far better than Nate and makes sure Nate knows
it. The climax of this series of strips has Nate doing the unexpected:
bypassing his own ego and helping someone else on his team score the winning
basket, thus taking the arrogant opposing point guard down a peg and showing
that when he has to, Nate can actually take others’ needs and feelings into
account. It does not happen often, but it does happen occasionally – and is one
reason kids of Nate’s age (and probably their parents) will find Silent but Deadly and the other Nate
collections so amusingly interesting. The full-color, pull-out poster of the
book’s front cover is a little something extra to enjoy.
Patrick McDonnell’s marvelous Mutts strip is very clearly aimed at
adults, with its frequent bows to fine art, earlier comics, and societal issues
such as conservation and the adoption of animals from shelters. But some of the
characters in Mutts are children, and
the sweet simplicity of many of the strips easily crosses generational lines,
as is shown in The “Mutts” Spring
Diaries. This is the fourth Diaries
collection: the first was simply The
Mutts Diaries, the second was for winter, and the third was for autumn.
Presumably a summer grouping will show up at some point. The selected strips
within these collections are put together to reflect whatever season is
mentioned in the book’s title, which means The
“Mutts” Spring Diaries is mostly about new growth, showers that being
flowers, Easter, birds returning from flights south, and so forth. Those themes
show up here with typical Mutts
twists, as when Mooch the cat perches in a tree and sings discordantly from a
branch, leading a nearby bird to tell Earl the dog, “I hate karaoke night.” Earl
and Mooch are the central characters around whom Mutts is built, and some of McDonnell’s uses of them are sheer
genius, as in one panel in which multiple Earls and Mooches rain down in a
setting that duplicates the famous “rain of men” in René Magritte’s painting Golconda. Not all readers, adult or
child, will catch all the art and older-comics references in Mutts, but it is not necessary to do so
in order to enjoy a strip that is generally drawn very simply but contains
considerable depth of thought: Mutts
may seem childlike but is not childish. McDonnell has a lot of fun with stereotypical
comic-strip scenes, as in one strip showing Earl and Mooch lying on a hilltop
watching clouds, as many other characters have elsewhere. In Mutts, the two friends see an elephant,
then a pink sock (Mooch’s favorite toy), then a fish, and then simply a cloud,
leading Mooch to exclaim, “Finally!” Also here are strips in which McDonnell
embellishes literary or environmental quotations: “The Earth is what we all
have in common – Wendell Berry” includes three black-and-white panels of
elephants, people in a city, and a polar bear, followed by a larger, full-color
panel of Earl and Mooch siting beneath a tree and contemplating nature all
around them. Even when Earl and Mooch act doglike and catlike, they do it with Mutts flair, as when Mooch finds a ball
and Earl cannot stop himself from insisting that Mooch throw it (Earl’s eyes
get huge and he exclaims “Throw it!” again and again and again). Mooch
complies, but comments to the reader (in his particular style of speech), “I
think it shmight be time for an intervention.” There are also several “Shelter
Stories” here, in which endearing animals warmly and amusingly ask readers to
choose a special friend at a local animal shelter. And the “More to Explore”
section at the back of the book fits McDonnell’s themes well, showing how to
build a bird feeder and giving information and suggestions for backyard bird
watching.
The latest Peanuts reprint contains both
a pull-out poster and a “More to Explore” section, the latter focused on
helicopters because of one especially noteworthy sequence included in the book:
the comic-strip series that for the first time has Sally calling Linus her
“sweet babboo” (first use: January 27, 1977). Linus strongly objects to the
characterization – hence this book’s title – but the phrase became one of
Charles Schulz’s lasting contributions to comic strips. It shows up during a
series of strips in which Linus is stuck on a slippery barn roof and has to be
rescued by Snoopy, who functions as a helicopter piloted by Woodstock – hence
the helicopter-oriented material at this book’s conclusion. Both the helicopter
rescue and the “sweet babboo” phrase result from a “love triangle” involving
Linus, Sally and a girl named Truffles, whose appearance is unusual for a Peanuts character: she has a bigger nose
and much bigger eyes than Schulz’s other characters do. Truffles disappeared
after the “sweet babboo” series, showing up for the last time on January 29,
1977; adult fans who may remember her will enjoy rediscovering her in this
collection. The book includes several other notable multi-strip sequences as
well. One of the longest and funniest has Peppermint Patty enrolling at a
private school because she is not a very good student – and ending up in an
obedience school for dogs, courtesy of a brochure she gets from Snoopy. She
does well and graduates, only to be told – after she brings in her diploma to
prove her graduation, also bringing along her lawyer (yes, Snoopy) – that she
was not in a school for human children after all. Her explosive anger at Snoopy
over the whole incident leads to her fighting (outside the visible panels) with
the never-seen cat next door (whose name, we learn in this collection, is “World
War II”). She thinks the cat is Snoopy in disguise – but the real Snoopy shows
up at the last minute to turn the tide of the fight and repair his relationship
with Peppermint Patty. The complexity of this series and the way the
characters’ personalities are interrelated and used to advance the story show
just how skillful Schulz was once he had developed his characters fully and
figured out multiple ways to involve them with each other. This is also clear
in other extended sequences in I’m Not
Your Sweet Babboo! There is, for example, one in which Snoopy falls in love
and decides to get married; invites his brother, Spike, to be best man; and Spike
runs off with the bride, who is never seen – and who then deserts Spike for a
coyote. Another extended Snoopy sequence features another minor female
character, this one named Molly Volley – a tennis player with a hair-trigger
temper who first appeared on May 9, 1977 and lasted a lot longer than Truffles
did: Molly’s final appearance was on September 16, 1990. In the series in the
current collection, Molly and Snoopy play doubles; Molly dominates the play and
yells her calls loudly at the other (unseen) players; but at the very end, when
there is a question about whether a ball hit by the other team was in or out,
Snoopy indicates honestly that it was in, so he and Molly lose (and she does
not appreciate the “smak” on the cheek that Snoopy gives her in consolation). Schulz
had the remarkable ability to make young readers think Peanuts – a strip that was a major influence on McDonnell, among
other cartoonists – was intended for children, while simultaneously having
adults realize just how grown-up some of the strip’s themes, interactions and
concepts could be. This latest collection confirms once again the unique way
that Schulz managed to make Peanuts
truly a comic strip for the ages – all ages.
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