Recent Comments

  • DOuG pRATt: It’s a rare photo of what was a common scene.
  • Lia: I love that picture
  • DOuG pRATt: The title of this post is, as Denro noted above, a nod to the Firesign Theatre record, “How Can You...
  • jeaniebeanie: As for me, I love the visual pun that heads up this controversial blog! ;)
  • jeaniebeanie: Sacre bleu! She should sue!
  • Paul Howley: Glenn Becks’ life is an “open book”…his history has been revealed. Barack...
  • DOuG pRATt: I never questioned Beck’s right to hold the rally. Also, if it’s OK that Beck changed his...
  • DOuG pRATt: Oh. good point, Paul! I neglected to say that Sharpton is a total huckster. Frankly, I consider him to be...
  • Paul Howley: Palin, on the other hand, may be an idiot.
  • Paul Howley: How DARE someone hold a rally urging people to come together in a peaceful, non-violent way to encourage...

Links

Categories

Calendar

October 2007
S M T W T F S
« Sep   Nov »
 123456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293031  

Archives

Archive for October 16th, 2007

‘Schulz and Peanuts’ by David Michaelis

'Schulz and Peanuts' by David Michaelis

Well, the book is out, and I didn’t wait till Christmas. Don’t know when I’ll have a chance to read it from start to finish, but I have it.

Again I express my respect for the family of Charles Schulz, and their honest and understandable objections, complaints and concerns about this book; but having said that, it’s obvious from even a quick glance that it contains much more basic information than I have ever read before. For example …

Charles and Joyce Schulz
Charles and Joyce

(p. 223) In 1948, the nineteen-year-old Joyce had run off to New Mexico, fallen in love with a cowboy, married, gotten pregnant, been abandoned by her husband, and come home to Minneapolis to have the child — all within 20 months. When Sparky met her at a party, Joyce was twenty-two years old, divorced, with a baby and a curfew. Pulled away from a pretty face was her strawberry-blond hair.

He found her doing the dishes at her sister’s kitchen sink, and came over to help.

I strongly encourage you to read Nat Gertler’s commentary at The AAUGH! Blog. A couple more items about the book worth reading are a review in The New Yorker by author John Updike, and Newsweek’s take on the thing.

2 comments October 16th, 2007