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February 23, 2004The Complete Peanuts 1950-1952, by Charles Schulz
But it wasn't quite as true in 1950, when Schulz started Peanuts. I'd never seen his early Peanuts comics, because most of them hadn't been reprinted until this month, when Fantagraphics published The Complete Peanuts: 1950-1952. The reason these early comics hadn't been reprinted is because the characters hardly look like the Peanuts everyone knows. Schroeder and Linus are infants who can't talk, and Snoopy is a puppy who acts like a puppy. All the characters are much more childlike. It would have been too confusing for readers used to the fully-developed characters. But in this book we get to see that the Peanuts looked like when they were still evolving, and what a treat it is! The artwork is delicate and cheery, and the kids run around doing kidlike things – pretending to be spacemen, or cowboys and Indians. The stories are funny without resorting to gags (which has always been a strength of Schulz's). I really think this book shows Schulz at his best. The book itself is lovingly designed by Seth (creator of the comic Palookaville), and Fantagraphics promises that it is the first of a seried of 25 Peanuts books, reprinting every strip from 1950 to 2000. I'm not sure what year Snoopy changed from a quadruped to a biped but that's when I'll stop buying the books. /
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ABOUT MAD PROFESSORMark Frauenfelder's Mad Professor Bizarre Science Experiments Book. RECENT ENTRIESWalt Disney Treasures - Mickey Mouse in Black and White Night Fisher Stikky Night Skies Sneaky Uses for Everyday Things Thinking Physics: Understandable Practical Reality Caffé Vincente Espresso Blend That's What I Call Sweet Music Twentieth Century Eightball Tiki Flea Ukulele It's Only Temporary ARCHIVES BY MONTHARCHIVES BY CATEGORY |
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