Entertainment Literary By Tierney Williams, Jerry McPheerson and TIERNEY WILLIAMS, JERRY MCPHEERSON, JERRY MCPHEERSON November 30, 2004, 8:00pm Share: X Facebook ShareCopied to clipboard The Complete Peanuts 1950-1952 Charles M. Schulz (Fantagraphics Books) The original emo kid—no, wait. The original indie rocker. Charlie Brown represents, to most people, that black-striped yellow shirt and holiday TV specials. But before that sell-out bullshit, Brown was fucking nihilistic and punk as hell. This collection of the very earliest Peanuts strips attests to that. Every serialized venture that lasts for more than a year eventually gets diluted, even the best ones like Strangers With Candy. Charlie Brown and his gay friends stuck around for about 5,000 years, so by the end they were a quagmire of “pithy” observations and quasi-Protestant life lessons. But here, in the beginning, the characters wander around bleak landscapes, backbite each other viciously, and try to figure out where God went. They stop just short of shooting up. It’s like No Exit with little round-headed tykes, and it kind of rules. TIERNEY WILLIAMS Underworld 5: My Little Funny Kaz (Fantagraphics Books) The indie comics world is unlike any other indie American artistic venture. It differs from indie rock in that faux-naivety is not prized. It differs from indie art in that most of the major players in comics can actually draw. It differs from indie comedy in that it is funny. It differs from indie film in that…there are no actors in it? OK, that one’s a stretch. Kaz is a god of comics. Holy shit, is he funny. That’s why he’s read by millions of people in tons of daily papers. But, since he is in comics, he isn’t a household name even though he is 20,000 times smarter and funnier than, say, Ray Romano or fucking Garrison Keillor. Underworld is Kaz’s main venture, a daily strip that has been making people with brains piss their pants for over ten years, and this is the fifth Underworld anthology. It’s also the best so far. It has all the strips that have been in the back of Vice in the last year, plus about 75 more. If you need any more convincing, Kaz has also written for Spongebob. Buy this book today. JERRY MCPHEERSON When We Were Maakies Tony Millionaire (Fantagraphics Books) Hmm, have you noticed that all three books in this month’s Literary section are from Fantagraphics? Either they fucking rule, or their press guy Eric Reynolds gives the best blowjobs I have ever had. Tony Millionaire, as you learned on our Employees page, makes his Vice debut this month. There isn’t too much to say about him other than that he is one of the best draftsmen and storytellers ever born, and that he carries on proud American traditions like Little Nemo in Slumberland and old nautical tales and dirty jokes and Henny Youngman. That is the lineage this fucking dude is in. Go to maakies.com, get all his books, and see. Even girls like his comics. JERRY MCPHEERSON MoreFrom VICE Introducing: The Streetwear Psycho 06.25.24 By Nick Thompson John Rocker Was the Real-Life Kenny Powers from ‘Eastbound and Down’ 06.20.24 By Sammi Caramela Tech Libertarians Fund Drug-Fueled ‘Olympics’ Where ‘Doping’ Is a Slur 02.02.24 By Maxwell Strachan The 203 Biggest Pop Culture Moments of 2023 12.18.23 By VICE Staff