When you do something for fifty years running with no vacations or breaks or assistance, something has to give at some point. For Schulz, it was creative consistency. Thirty years into its run, Peanuts finally hits some barren patches. Strips that are not funny or clever. Strips where I wasn’t even sure what the joke was supposed to be. But if creative fatigue is present there are yet runs of inspiration to make up for the strips that cause you to say *sigh* or Augh! The good news, if one were looking for trends, 1982 is superior to 1981. Sally is, as always, wonderful. As school approaches she worries: “What if I can’t remember my locker combination? What if I forget my lunch? What if I can’t remember who married Louis the Millionth?” Charlie Brown leaning on the wall with Lucy feeling good because “This happens to be a good day…I haven’t done a single thing that was stupid.” Lucy asks “Have you done anything that was smart?” Peppermint Patty explains speed learning to Marcie, “Now I can get a D minus on Tuesday instead of Friday.”
Gags that are rooted in anxiety seem to find fresh angles. Gags rooted in whimsy slip to cloying. Many of those involve Snoopy and Woodstock. While the former involve Charlie Brown, Lucy, Sally, and Peppermint Patty: “What’s a summer reading list?” Peppermint Patty wonders. “These are books she has suggested we read just for pleasure…,” Marcie tries to explain. “For WHAT?” Some things defy understanding. Linus shares a worldly bit of wisdom, “Nothing goes on forever. All good things must come to an end…” After a panel of pondering, Charlie Brown asks, “When do the good things start?” They started some time in 1950 and continue into the 1980s and at least a little beyond for Peanuts.