With twenty-five volumes to this series, each featuring more than three hundred pages of Peanuts comic strips, there's no better way to immerse yourself in the world of Charlie Brown, Shermy, Patty, Snoopy, Lucy, Linus, and Violet. Spanning all of 1953 and '54, the characters begin to clarify in this second volume, and we get a feel for which running gags will endure. We find a classic strip right away, January 7 of '53 (page three), about Lucy's expulsion from nursery school. That's followed January 14 (page six) by another classic, Charlie Brown grousing to Violet that he suspects she doesn't like him at all. January 15 (page seven) we're reintroduced to Charlie Brown's talent for crafting bizarre snowmen, and January 27 (page twelve) is a hilarious mixup between Schroeder and Lucy at his toy piano; he uses music vocabulary she mistakes for an out-of-the-blue term of endearment. January 30 (page thirteen), Lucy is carrying a small Charlie Brown doll. Charlie Brown is pleased...until he sees what she does with it. February 1 (page fourteen) is a Sunday of subtle Peanuts philosophy, with Lucy and Patty visiting the dime store. Patty can see over the counter to the toys, dolls, and trinkets, but Lucy isn't tall enough to look at anything more than the paneling and carpentry of the counter fronts. However enthusiastic a friend may be about an interesting subject, sometimes we have growing to do before we're able to match their comprehension and appreciation.
February 5 (page sixteen) Schroeder tells Charlie Brown he practices piano ten hours a day and can play a wide variety of classical pieces. When Charlie Brown responds that he saw a man on T.V. play piano with his nose, Schroeder wonders if a disciplined prodigy like himself will ever get his due. It's hard to earn acclaim in a world that's drawn to the sensational. February 8 (page seventeen) is a laugh-out-loud Sunday: as Lucy and Snoopy share a box of cookies, Lucy leaves the box behind to answer the doorbell, but "counts" the cookies to safeguard against Snoopy stealing. Insulted, Snoopy gobbles a few; with her eccentric counting, Lucy will never know...will she? The build-up and punchline are very funny. February 9 (page eighteen) Charlie Brown eats "spite" candy on the other side of a door closed against Snoopy. But how tasty are sweets when you eat them to spite a friend? Pleasures just aren't the same when you use them against someone you care about. February 19 (page twenty-two) is a type of gag that repeats intermittently, Lucy listening to a recording on her record player (in this case, it's the Georgie Porgy nursery rhyme). Her comment after it ends is hysterically funny. February 20 is a keen observation about appetite. Charlie Brown declines when Violet offers him ice cream, but he gradually warms to the idea and ends up craving it. How disappointing to learn there was no ice cream at all; what's more, the dessert wouldn't have crossed his mind if Violet hadn't offered. When you get excited about a treat, losing out on it is a real downer. March 5 (page twenty-eight) Charlie Brown expresses sadness at a song on the record player. But when the music ends, he asks Violet to replay it; sometimes a sad song does us good, even if it brings melancholy memories to the surface.
A classic Linus-and-Lucy gag marks March 8 (page twenty-nine), with Lucy mystified why her baby brother is such a bundle of nerves. The answer is obvious to anyone but Lucy. May 20 (page sixty) Lucy tells Patty how relieved she'll be when nursery school lets out for summer, though Lucy's choice of vacation activities sounds strangely similar to what she bemoans at school. It's more satisfying to learn and play because we like to than because it's mandated. May 25 (page sixty-three) is a classic joke, playing off Charlie Brown's feelings of inadequacy for an amusing insult, and June 28 (page seventy-seven) is an insightful look at children's games. When Charlie Brown and Shermy play Cowboys and Indians, they argue constantly over whether their "gunfire" hit its target. It turns out Charlie Brown has no interest in Cowboys and Indians; he enjoys verbal sparring. How similar to many who enter politics or law not because they love doing good, but want to intellectually hammer the opposition. July 7 (page eighty-one) is a theme broached repeatedly by Peanuts. When Charlie Brown sees Patty and Violet talking quietly, he assumes they're speaking negatively about him. However, we see that the conversation has nothing to do with Charlie Brown. A key aspect of humility is to not fool yourself into believing you're the center of other people's existence; it's also the only way to live in peace, not obsessing on what others think or say about you. July 20 (page eighty-seven) Charlie Brown has a blasé reaction to Schroeder telling him about the foreign piano pieces he's learned to play. "That's nice, Schroeder...I think everyone should have a hobby." How demoralizing to be a fine artist and have your labor regarded as nothing more than a casual pastime. I empathize, Schroeder.
July 24 (page eighty-eight) Charlie Brown admits he's a "lonesome cowboy." It's not easy having different interests when your peers pursue the latest fads; you feel left behind by the world. October 15 (page one hundred twenty-four) Charlie Brown is stunned that Patty invites him to her party. He's dull at parties, he says, no fun at all, but he's glad she's asking. After Charlie Brown's spiel, though, maybe Patty has changed her mind. As the saying goes, “If you put a small value on yourself, rest assured that the world will not raise your price.” December 5 (page one hundred forty-five) is a well-known strip, Snoopy licking Linus's face and Lucy restraining her brother, who wants to reciprocate. December 18 (page one hundred fifty-one) is a classic, Lucy explaining that her mother is teaching Linus to feed himself by sending him to bed without supper if he knocks his bowl off the table three times. The punchline is quintessential Charles Schulz. Peanuts is replete with sophisticated music humor, and January 2, 1954 (page one hundred fifty-seven) is a famous example. Charlie Brown's George Frederick Handel pun is not appreciated by Schroeder. Another classic sprouts up January 7 (page one hundred sixty), Charlie Brown and Patty arguing over ownership of a snowman. Patty taking her half and going home is hilarious. January 14 (page one hundred sixty-three) Violet derides Snoopy for his trick of balancing full glasses of water on both outstretched ears. She says it's a waste of time, considering all the world's problems. The criticism deflates Snoopy, but sometimes we should admire a skill because it's impressive in its own right, not based on whether it's more broadly useful. Otherwise, we miss wondrous things people can devote themselves to achieving.
Another famous strip comes along January 18 (page one hundred sixty-five), Schroeder staying home from school to celebrate a birthday. Which classical musician is it this time? February 6 (page one hundred seventy-two) is good old-fashioned Peanuts comedy, Violet inquiring as to what Charlie Brown likes just so she can reject him more thoroughly. February 26 (page one hundred eighty-one) is an insight into artistic sensitivity. Like Charlie Brown, we often convince ourselves we're looking for honest opinions of our work, when in reality we want positive reactions even if they're not the whole truth. It's a candid strip for a cartoonist to create. Peanuts turns out some excellent Schroeder jokes, and March 26 (page one hundred ninety-three) is one of this book's best. The jack-in-the-box visual gag is wildly funny. April 15 (page two hundred two) is a wordplay bit featuring the title of a book Charlie Brown is reading, and April 24 (page two hundred five) is another hysterical commentary by Lucy about a record she listens to, the song "Mary Wore Her Red Dress." The punchline is sublime. May 9 (page two hundred twelve) begins a rare Sunday miniseries, lasting four consecutive Sundays. Lucy, a golf prodigy, enters the Women's State Amateur Championship and improbably is on the brink of victory...until a complication stops her. More music comedy comes our way May 20 (page two hundred seventeen), Lucy misinterpreting a word Schroeder uses about song styles on a Chopin record he purchased. July 13 (page two hundred forty) is a momentous occasion in Peanuts history: the introduction of Pig-Pen, who's as dirty on day one as any day since. Who doesn't love Pig-Pen despite (or because of) his inexorable cloud of dust?
October 12 (page two hundred seventy-nine) Schroeder again runs up against the world's ignorance in relation to his talent. Schroeder knows classical music like a scholar, but it's Charlie Brown's knowledge of baseball history that engenders Violet's admiration. Will Schroeder's genius ever be recognized? October 23 (page two hundred eighty-three) Snoopy gets tired of his position in front of the T.V. being usurped, and humorously overreacts to make his point to Charlie Brown. While preparing for Halloween on October 29 (page two hundred eighty-six), Schroeder figures he'll wear a jacket over his ghost costume if it's cold out, but Patty is right: somehow it seems to diminish the effect. The visual is amusing, as is the case for the October 30 strip, when Charlie Brown's mother can only spare a washrag for his ghost costume, not a full sheet. November 3 (page two hundred eighty-eight) Charlie Brown and Lucy gaze at the night sky, and Lucy wonders why Charlie Brown never thinks about how he'd react if the moon fell on his head. It's not an imminent threat, but thinking in unusual ways expands our minds beyond arbitrary barriers we otherwise put in place. Lucy has a point when she asks, "How come you never think about things like that?" November 30 (page three hundred) Charlie Brown is surprised to meet Charlotte Braun, a kid who talks too loudly and wants it clearly known she's not related to Charlie Brown. December 9 (page three hundred four) Lucy compares the likelihood of her eventual marriage to Charlie Brown or Schroeder, and Charlie Brown rails against Schroeder for giving even more extreme odds than he himself offered Lucy. December 20 (page three hundred nine) Charlie Brown attempts to teach Linus to blow up a balloon, but the toddler somehow blows square balloons. Charlie Brown and Lucy think something is wrong with Linus for how he inflates balloons, but is there? Is it not a gift to do something that brings variety to a world awash in homogeny? That always was Linus's special knack. December 29 (page three hundred twelve) is a fresh, funny sight gag to finish this book with a flourish, a return to Charlie Brown's snowman art but with a new angle. Peanuts heads into 1955 with a bright future, already perhaps the best comic strip of its era.
I love Charles Monroe Schulz and Peanuts. The subtle humor and insight, the neighborhood camaraderie among the kids and the overall upbeat feel in spite of Charlie Brown's well-earned pessimism make the strip a work of art that uniquely enhances children's literature. Peanuts brought comfort via daily newspaper for half a century, and does the same today for those who read Schulz's books. I'd rate Volume 2 of The Complete Peanuts at least two and a half stars, perhaps the full three, and I recommend it to anyone wondering what they might be missing. I take every opportunity to spend an afternoon with Charlie Brown and the gang.