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Bloom County: The Complete Digital Library, Vol. 3

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Specially formatted digital edition! Collecting every strip from January 1, 1983, through December 31, 1983, in chronological order. Berkeley Breathed’s Bloom County burst onto the American comic scene in December 1980 and it soon became one of the most popular comic strips of all time. The endearing and quirky denizens of the strip included Milo Bloom, Steve Dallas, Michael Binkley, Cutter John, Bill the Cat, and Opus the Penguin. Bloom County was a strip that dealt with many issues relevant to the period. Occasional “Context comments” are added throughout this collection, giving the reader a greater understanding of the time. This is the first time Bloom County has been collected in a digital library. IDW will add more volumes, one year per volume. Each newspaper strip is reproduced in chronological order from first to last. Great effort has been made to ensure the highest production values are achieved.

375 pages, Kindle Edition

First published August 3, 2012

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About the author

Berkeley Breathed

86 books415 followers
Guy Berkeley "Berke" Breathed is an American cartoonist, children's book author/illustrator, director, and screenwriter, best known for Bloom County, a 1980s cartoon-comic strip which dealt with socio-political issues as seen through the eyes of highly exaggerated characters (e.g. Bill the Cat and Opus the Penguin) and humorous analogies.

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Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews
Profile Image for Bill Coffin.
1,286 reviews8 followers
July 22, 2022
This is a composite review of Bloom County: The Complete Digital Library Vols. 01-09, by IDW.

Amid the many newspaper comic strips out there, some reach a level of success where they kind of transcend the medium and become a social phenomenon unto themselves In the 80s, there were several such strips, of which Bloom County was one of the most noticeable.

Clearly riffing off of Garry Trudeau’s Doonesbury, Bloom County tracked the goings on of a small, fictional town by the same name somewhere in Iowa. Featuring recurring characters such as Milo Bloom, Michael Binkley, Steve Dallas, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Opus the Penguin, Bill the Cat, Cutter John, Hodge-Podge, Portnoy, and a host of additional side characters, this daily ran for a full decade as a mirror of - and sometimes guide to - 1980s American politics and pop culture. By 1989, Berkeley Breathed had had enough and ended the strip, moving on to a new Sundays-only strip called Outland, which would go on to feature some of the characters from Bloom County. From there, he would do another strip called Opus, featuring Opus from the previous two strips. But Bloom County is where it all came together, and if you red newspaper comics in the 80s, it was impossible to escape. But was it any good? Or was it the kind of thing where you just accepted its presumed brilliance and didn’t ask any questions?

Thankfully, IDW’s Bloom County: The Complete Digital Library offers a comprehensive collection of the strip, which includes margin notes from Breathed on certain strips where he feels the need to clarify a dated cultural reference, or offer his own thoughts on the strip itself. Most newspaper strips are not meant to be consumed entirely in a marathon reading; they are meant to become part of your background. So when you binge them, they read differently than they do when you consume them 30 seconds at a time, once a day, over 10 years.

That said, this collection, for its thoroughness, ultimately falls short on two fronts. One of them is on IDW. The other is on Breathed.

IDW deserves credit for publishing this, but the format really could use work. Featuring only one daily strip per page, most of these volumes is empty space. Margin notes are short and infrequent, so really, the volumes themselves could have been far shorter, and the series itself packed into half the number of volumes. Given that the folks who are going to buy this are completionists, that’s shearing the sheep awfully close.

But the real problem here is the content. I know, it’s sacrilege to criticize Bloom County. I loved it back in the day but never really asked myself why I stopped reading it halfway through. Now, I know. It’s just not that good. Sure, it did innovate in some areas - like having human and talking-animal characters interacting with each other. But when it’s not ripping off Doonesbury so much it prompts pointed letters from Garry Trudeau (something Breathed seems proud of), it’s trading in a particularly wan and lazy kind of pseudo-editorial humor from the “people are stupid, everything is terrible” camp that confuses name-dropping for insight. It’s all just superficial, equal-opportunity grumpiness that requires little thought from the author and even less from the audience. More than a few times, Breathed notes he was in an altered state of mind when we wrote a particular strip - he doesn’t need to explain himself. It shows. Editorial cartoonists protested when Bloom County won the Pulitzer for editorial cartooning. They were right to do so.

Eventually, the strip devolves into over-baked zaniness that feels like a perpetual first draft of something better. Much of it carries a whiff of desperation, as if it knows it’s not as funny as The Far Side, as insightful as Calvin & Hobbes, or as pointed as Doonesbury. Storylines far outstay their welcome, spinning their wheels for months. There is a recurring strain of misogyny in the humor, the stories, and the characters. And Breathed’s eye-rolling margin notes about which strip he couldn’t do today because of changing social norms makes all of this age that much more poorly. Breathed would go on to say that he retired the strip so it didn’t join the ranks of long-running zombie strips that aren’t funny, just comfortingly familiar. But despite its mammoth popularity at the time, that’s all this strip really was, too.

Breathed had a good run in the 80s. This strip was right for its time. And there are definitely diamonds in here. But if you weren’t there to experience it when it was happening, reading this now will likely leave you wondering what all the fuss was about. Some strips will be funny 100 years from now. Bloom County stopped being funny four or five years before it ended. And honestly, it was just never that hilarious in the first place. Novel, yes. Hilarious? Only if you were a high school boy who hadn’t gone through your Ayn Rand phase yet.
Profile Image for Paul.
182 reviews7 followers
March 1, 2019
Berkeley Breathed is well in his stride in this collection of strips of 1983. Everything I said about the 1982 volume remains true. Opus, Milo, Binkley, Steve Dallas, and all the rest bounce off one another in delightful ways. This year sees the debut of Oliver Wendell Jones, who would become a stalwart, and Yaz Pistachio, who, alas, wouldn't. We also see the tearful goodbye to Bill the Cat, as Breathed figures the one-note joke is over. But Bill, the ultimate bad penny, will naturally be back. I can't wait.
Profile Image for Laura Hartness.
338 reviews18 followers
March 24, 2020
Excellent as always

I never tire of Berkeley Breathed’s wit and social commentary. I doubt we’d even agree on some main political & religious issues, but his humor transcends that. I’m so grateful his strips have been published in their entirety. I’ve missed so much, even owning the print books, as they were not comprehensive until these new volumes were issued.
Profile Image for Shawn Thrasher.
2,025 reviews50 followers
October 25, 2020
This volume covers the year 1983; if you were (like me) a Bloom County reader back in the day, all the familiar characters are already here, plus a few more who disappear (some by the end of this year).

Reading Bloom County in the 1980s was like watching The Daily Show during the Bush II years or Randy Rainbow videos now. Sharp, funny, memorable, and zeitgeisty.

Profile Image for Gav451.
749 reviews5 followers
February 24, 2018
Still brilliant. The characters begin to find their mojo. As Opus comes into focus Mr Limekiller goes out, which is a shame because he had the ability to make me laugh.

Its a great easy read. The characters are charming and funny. The jokes are genuinely funny and there are many wonderful moments.

Berkeley Breathed has class. I am still slowly reading through these. Dipping in and out when my soul needs a lift and it it still brilliant. I know there is some real class to come.

While Calvin and Hobbes is innocently charming this is far more satirical and sharp. Both are great but this was a love of mine at 18 and remains so. It has been so long since I first got into that.

Buy any of them and you will not regret it.
Profile Image for Raul.
Author 1 book12 followers
January 3, 2023
An elegant time capsule wrapped up in nostalgia

I love catching up on all of the Bloom County I missed as a child. Mr. Breathed was very talented both as an illustrator and social commentator. What I love most is that you can't make out for certain his political affiliation and nor should you. A strip like this just couldn't be made in today's hostile, polarized climate.
Profile Image for Dana Larose.
415 reviews15 followers
March 18, 2016
I probably read this all before but a lot of them were unfamiliar. I think the heyday of my Bloom County reading will be volumes 7 and 8. Still decently funny and I'm finding the truly dated references entertaining.
Profile Image for Ame.
1,451 reviews
May 23, 2016
I mean, Limekiller probably didn't have a shot at the Presidency anyways, but we all missed out on having Opus as a VP...
Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews

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