Calendars (page-a-day for 2020): Non Sequitur; The
Little World of Liz Climo; Medical Cartoon-a-Day. Andrews McMeel. $15.99
each.
One of the longstanding traditions of
page-a-day calendars is to offer something light and/or witty every day in the
form of a cartoon – sometimes by an artist tackling multiple topics, sometimes
by a cartoonist focusing on a single subject. The nice thing about this is that
it brings a known sense of humor every day
to one’s desktop, dresser, kitchen counter, end table, or wherever these
stand-up calendars may be placed, creating a small element of both
predictability and humor in days that may otherwise be both humorless and
unpredictable. The only difficulty lies in choosing a particular one of these
daily-page offerings (usually with a single page for both Saturday and Sunday):
the choice depends on one’s individual sense of humor and sense of the world.
Luckily, there are so many excellent cartoonists out there, and so many
first-rate calendars showcasing their work, that there really is something for
just about everyone. Wiley Miller’s Non
Sequitur, for example, is one of the cleverest and most neatly drawn
cartoon sequences around, and even though the title means “it does not follow,”
Wiley’s followers (there are many) have no trouble following his particularly,
peculiarly out-of-kilter worldview and the characters through which he
expresses it (some of which, the comic’s title aside, do recur). One thing Wiley (who goes by that name rather than
“Miller”) does repeatedly is to imagine aspects of modern life being projected
back to “caveman” days. Thus, “the birth of social media” shows one
primitive-looking man who has just clubbed another over the head and who now
explains to two listeners, “I call it ‘instant messaging.’” Yep – that’s often
the effect of IM today. And then there is a panel called “the dawn of the
boardroom,” in which cavemen stand around an obviously nonfunctional square
wheel as one of them, clearly the boss, says, “What’s important here is that it
came in under budget.” Again, that is adept social commentary, highlighting the
modern (and, alas, longstanding) tendency to measure exactly the wrong thing. Also
here is a panel featuring two traditional-looking sidewalk newsstands, one
label “Facts” with no one paying attention and the other labeled “Shmacts” with
a big crowd in front of it. Umm…yep. That panel is on the same wavelength as
one showing two people in front of a store labeled “Outrage Inc.,” which has a
sign outside reading, “Spring Line of Talking Points Coming Soon” – the man in
the couple is telling the woman, “See? We still have things manufactured in
America.” That one manages to make a comment in several areas at once. For
something a bit lighter (well, usually), there are sequences involving Lucy the
pygmy Clydesdale and Danae, Willy’s cynical little-girl anti-heroine – two of
the few recurring characters (as opposed to recurring character types, of which there are many) in Non Sequitur. Wiley’s wit and humor
pervade the pages of this 2020 calendar and are a great recipe for enjoyment
for anyone sharing his skewed sense of strangeness and penchant for periodic
political jabs.
For those for whom Wiley may be a wee bit too sociopolitical in orientation, who
figure there is enough of that sort of thing in the real world and an
additional smidgen from a daily calendar page is just too much, there are
plenty of alternatives. The Little World
of Liz Climo, for example, is also filled with occurrences that “do not
follow,” is also very funny and offbeat in its outlook, but generally manages
to make its contact with reality weird without making it politically correct
(or, for that matter, politically incorrect). For example, Climo shows a
briefcase-carrying anteater arriving home, obviously after a day’s work, to
find a note: “I’ll be home late. Dinner is on the table.” And on the table
there is – an ant farm. Well, that makes perfect sense once you accept the idea
of anteaters having office jobs. Then there is the dinnertime scene of a rabbit
and a bear, the rabbit saying, “I made us a healthy dinner” and the bear
saying, “I had a terrible day.” So the rabbit removes the tablecloth, on which
two small plates of food have been resting, showing that the table itself is actually
a stack of boxed pizzas, and saying, “Don’t worry. I have a backup dinner.”
(And yes, it should be “healthful” dinner, but hey, no one is perfect –
certainly not cartoonists.) Then there are the two characters in the water,
with one of them spotting a fin moving toward them and saying, “OMG! SHARK!!!”
To that, the other character responds, “Dude, we’re sharks.” And so they are: “Oh. Right.” Elsewhere, there is
the sloth with a to-do list: “Hang from a tree branch. Relax.” Yes, that will
do it. And there is the piglet saying, “Happy Mother’s Day, Mom!” to a groggy
sow who asks what time it is – the reply being, “It’s 4 a.m. Will you make me
breakfast?” That is about as humanlike an interchange as will be found in any cartoons
featuring nonhuman characters. The Little
World of Liz Climo mixes and matches these various animals, and others, in
situations both likely and unlikely, using their interactions not so much to
shed light on human society as to make it easier to handle the everyday oddities
of the human world. Not a bad way to start every day.
Wiley and Climo set their sights on human
foibles of all sorts, but some page-a-day calendars have a narrower focus – or
rather a more-precise one. Jonny Hawkins’ drawings for Medical Cartoon-a-Day can be a great way for people in the
healthcare field – or people who have health challenges that they must face
each day – to make life a little bit lighter. One cartoon shows an “A.D.D.
Clinic” outside of which an enterprising person has set up a stand selling
fidget spinners. One has an M.D. who is clearly no longer young saying he likes
being a geriatric doctor because his patients call him “kiddo.” One shows the
entrance to a maternity ward: a set of doors bearing the word “PU-U-U-SH.” Then
there are the side-by-side medical offices of an orthodontist (labeled “we got
your front”) and a chiropractor (“we got your back”). And, in a separate
cartoon, there is a podiatrist’s office with a parking spot in front that is
marked “toe-away zone.” An occasional cartoon offers self-reflection of a sort:
“Which path less traveled should I take, the osteopath or the psychopath?” A
lot of these cartoons are determinedly old-fashioned, but some have up-to-date
themes, just to keep things interesting: one has a hospital patient falling
onto a just-arriving, unattended gurney marked “Uber,” and another has a doctor
telling a patient, “Yes, it’s an out-patient procedure. Actually, I can do it
with my smart phone.” And then there is the comment on a current nutritional
focus, with a doctor saying to a patient, “You’re starting to grow gills. Ease
up on the fish oil.” A lot of the humor here, however, is timeless, as in a
panel showing the desk of a respiratory therapist with three boxes of papers on
top: “In,” “Out,” and “In Again.” There are occasional animal cartoons here, in
one of which a snake is told, “I’m afraid you have athlete’s belly.” And,
rarely, there is something genuinely serious, which is all the more meaningful
because of its rarity: a Memorial Day cartoon shows “Veterans Memorial
Hospital” with the flag in front at half-staff, and the entire caption reads,
“Never forgotten.” By and large, though, the idea of Medical Cartoon-a-Day is to keep things light and amusing. As with
page-a-day calendars in general, the notion here is that life may be serious,
any given day may have its own heaping helping of uncertainty and difficulty
and unpleasantness, but there should be at least one thing on which people can
count every day of the year for a smile.
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