Along with The Owl and the Pussycat, this book, The World According to Lucy, was at the back of my mind when I started the Tiny Books project. It was a gift from my mother when I was quite small, and unlike The Owl and the Pussycat, has survived the many, many moves (including our most recent interstate move some two and a bit months ago) without going AWOL for too long, although it took this recent move for it to resurface!
It is a cloth covered hardcover, 10cm x 13.5cm, published by Hallmark Cards in 1971 - clearly part of a gift range. It contains a series of four frame strips, one to a page, that cover Lucy's position on a number of different issues, bringing into play many of Charles Schulz's other beloved Peanuts characters.
Lucy has always been my favourite of the Peanuts crew. Perhaps because she's not afraid to speak her mind, no matter how unpopular that might make her. She's been a somewhat controversial figure, I think, because she
certainly wasn't what was considered the role model for girls when I was
growing up. She's argumentative, opinionated, and loud with it!
Despite often being treated quite badly by Lucy, Charlie Brown, Shroeder and Linus keep coming back for more, which always suggested to me a level of regard they had for her - maybe they're drawn to her strength, as none of them are particularly strong characters. Her forthrightness appears to always slide off Snoopy's back, however.
I loved Peanuts as a kid, and I still enjoy it now, although it doesn't appear as regularly in the papers as it once did. Twenty had never heard of it - he went completely blank when I made a comment once that was based on a Peanuts strip. There's a level of daily ordinariness and innocence that is the core of Schulz's gang of neighbourhood kids (and dog) that is quite lacking in more contemporary cartoons, which are largely based in the realm of fantasy and superhero genres. That it was, and is, read in comic strip form rather than animation - although there have been various animated specials, and the Peanuts movie from 2015, I didn't like any of them - seems to have removed it from the sphere of today's average kid.
The world was a simpler place when Schulz started drawing Peanuts, and that is very much reflected in the strip, and this book. Was it a better place? Maybe, in some respects. As a self-confessed old-fashioned type, the appeal of Peanuts is timeless - even if today's kids are out of step with that very timelessness and fail to enjoy Schulz's celebration of the mundane!
At last, literature I can understand! Welcome back, my friend. You have long been missed; you and the Peanuts gang. Nothing has yet come along to replace them, at least not that I have seen. Beavis & Butthead, The Simpsons, and Spongebob just don't have the magic. Of course, American politics has become something of a cartoon lately...
ReplyDeleteThe less I say about American politics, the better! Our own are pretty warped and twisted too of late...
DeletePeanuts makes sense...in a way none of the politics do!!
Lovely to have you back.
ReplyDeleteMy best memory of Peanuts is one of the boys suddenly saying "Bleurr! I'm aware of my tongue!"
And I know how he feels. You suddenly can't stop noticing something that is there all the time. It's dreadful. Trust me. You don't want to be aware of your tongue.
Peanuts was wonderful. Insightful and simple and innocent all at once. My favourite character was always Snoopy, especially in his Joe Cool disguise. Great!
Hi Georgina - LOL, that's hilarious. I don't remember that one at all! I do love Snoopy, but I come back to Lucy as my ultimate favourite.
DeleteAnd yes, the layers in strips like Peanuts. They don't - as Jack said in his comment above - write them like that any more. More's the pity!