Peanuts kids in realistic comic
I'm a lifelong Peanuts fan, and it's very strange and slightly disturbing to see Charlie Brown and Lucy inserted into a "realistic" setting. As Eric Reynolds wrote on the Fantagraphics Flog!, "It's like that episode of THE SIMPSONS where Homer is transported to our earth." Here's the story behind it, from Harry-Go-Round:
LinkIn 1957, Charles Schulz seems to have given The Des Moines Register and Tribune permission to publish an eight-page comic (not drawn by him -ed.) in which Charlie Brown and Lucy fall out of a comic strip and into the arms of some unspecified dude who proceeds to give them a tour of the Register's offices and printing plant. At the end of this visit, drawn in a sort of modified Soviet realism style, the kids are taken back to their strip by a Register paper boy.
Besides answering a lot of questions about the newspaper business, this story tells us how large comic-strip characters are in relation to human beings--a lot smaller, apparently, though the blockhead and fussbudget grow to about half-human size when they land in Iowa. (The tourguide is able to walk around with Charlie Brown balanced on one shoulder and Lucy on the other.)

In 1957, Charles Schulz seems to have given The Des Moines Register and Tribune permission to publish an eight-page comic (not drawn by him -ed.) in which Charlie Brown and Lucy fall out of a comic strip and into the arms of some unspecified dude who proceeds to give them a tour of the Register's offices and printing plant. At the end of this visit, drawn in a sort of modified Soviet realism style, the kids are taken back to their strip by a Register paper boy.

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