Charles Schulz was an American treasure - an artist, philosopher, and keen observer of human life
- BILL CLINTON,
It's impossible to think of another popular art form that reaches across generations the way the daily comic strip does . . . at the pinnacle of that long tradition, there was Charles Schulz
* Seattle Times *
The world of <i>Peanuts</i> is a microcosm, a little human comedy for the innocent reader and for the sophisticated
- UMBERTO ECO,
Republishing <i>Peanuts</i> in one gorgeous volume after another is really the first time we can truly take a step back, appreciate Schulz's work as a whole and ultimately wrap our arms around the accomplishment of Charles Schulz. Sometimes, happiness is a warm book
* Huffington Post *
These timely re-issues illustrate not only the skill and subtle brilliance of his work but also the origins of the form beyond simple merriment
* Sunday Times *
All sorts of important writers have marvelled at the glorious simplicity of [Schulz's] draftsmanship and his unerring jokecraft, all underpinned by a quiet melancholy and stoicism . . . by some miracle, the entire <i>Peanuts</i> oeuvre is gradually being republished in this country, by Canongate . . . in lavishly appointed hardback . . . Unlike almost everything you read as a child, they are actually better than you remember them
* Spectator *
As essential as pop texts get
* The Onion *
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Charles M. Schulz was born in Minneapolis, Minnesota in 1922 and grew up in Saint Paul. He gained a reputation worldwide as a cartoonist for his work on Peanuts. He died in 2000.
Lynn Johnston is a Canadian cartoonist, well known for her comic strip For Better of For Worse. She was the first woman and first Canadian to win the National Cartoonist Society's Reuben Award.