Charles decided to forgo college and continue to cartoon, but he soon received his draft papers. Unfortunately, he received bad news about his family as well. His mother, who had been doing a lot better lately, had fallen ill once again. This time, however, there would be no recovery because her cancer could not be cured. Charles, who was nicknamed Sparky, was not happy with any of it, according to the author, “For Sparky, the most harrowing part of his mother’s torment was that no one told her that her disease was incurable. She remained in the dark until the bitter end” (127). Charles really wanted to have his mother see the fruits of his work, but she never had the chance. He felt so helpless and wished that they could’ve done more, but with the barber’s salary his father, Carl, was receiving and health care at the time, Dena Schulz had little chance of survival. The combination of his dad’s ultra busy schedule and his mom’s premature death may have carried over with him into his cartoons, which don't show adult figures just voices of the parents.
Michaelis, David. Schulz and Peanuts: A Biography. New York: HarperCollins Publishers, 2007.
Michaelis, David. Schulz and Peanuts: A Biography. New York: HarperCollins Publishers, 2007.
"Comics.com." Comics.com. 2008. Comics.com. 24 Nov 2008 .
2 comments:
Kyle, I have read multiple biographies on Schultz for outside readings. And I know that one reason he was so isolated was because he was sent forward a grade or to so he was smaller than all the other kids. I do agree that his childhood with a busy father and an ill mother contributed to his adult-less cartoons. His nickname "Sparky" also was in the name of his first cartoon. "Sparky's lil' Folks." I think he put much of his life into his cartoons.
It very interesting to see the parallels to his cartoon strips. It makes me wonder if other cartoon writers parallel to their own lives. I am curious as to what ethical choices/dilemmas he has faced or will face in the future and what you think about them.
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